Wayne v. Alspach

116 P. 1033, 20 Idaho 144, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 79
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 116 P. 1033 (Wayne v. Alspach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne v. Alspach, 116 P. 1033, 20 Idaho 144, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 79 (Idaho 1911).

Opinion

WALTERS, District J.

This is an appeal brought to review the order of the district judge in granting a temporary injunction. The record discloses a controversy among the members of a religious organization denominated the ‘ ‘ Church of God of Payette,” and who had disagreed as to the proper interpretation of the doctrines, practices and teachings of said church, each side maintaining that they were the true followers of the orthodox church, and each likewise maintaining that the others were seceders and wanderers from the true faith. The plaintiffs below, who are respondents in this court, by their complaint set forth the above-mentioned matters in substance and asked for an injunction against the defendants, who are appellants here, whereby the plaintiffs ^sought to restrain.the defendants from denying to them the use for purposes of worship of the church house or bethel belonging [147]*147to said religious organization. An order for a writ of preliminary injunction, as it is styled in the transcript, was without notice accordingly issued by the district judge, which by its terms afforded the plaintiffs the temporary relief sought.

Within several days thereafter the defendants, through their counsel, appeared before the district judge at chambers and obtained a revocation of said writ of injunction and the order upon which the same had been based theretofore made, the district judge assigning as the reason for such order of dissolution that the relief granted was a writ of injunction for affirmative relief having the force and effect of a writ of restitution, and by which plaintiffs were restored to the possession of said real property theretofore in the possession of defendants, and that no notice in writing was given of the application to the defendants for five days prior to the making of such order. Within six days after the date of the order of dissolution last mentioned, the plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal to this court from said order of dissolution, and filed bond as by law required. However, contemporaneously with the giving of the notice of appeal and filing bond upon appeal to this court, the plaintiffs filed and caused to be served their second notice of application for temporary injunction, and this time served such notice upon the defendants and the notice and a copy of the moving papers upon one of the defendants, and thereby informed the defendants that at a certain time, before the district judge, and which was greater than five days from the time of the service of the notice, that the plaintiffs would cause said application to be heard. By such second application plaintiffs sought the same relief as theretofore asked, and based their request for such temporary injunction upon the complaint and affidavits first filed.

Upon the return day of said motion counsel for defendants filed a special appearance and moved to quash the service of such notice. The record fails to disclose the ruling of the district judge upon said motion to quash; it, however, does disclose that at the same time or upon the return day of said second motion made by plaintiffs for a temporary injunction, [148]*148the defendants appeared generally by answer, meeting in detail the allegations of the complaint, and also by which they asked affirmative relief against the plaintiffs, seeking to quiet title in the defendants as against the plaintiffs, and further asking that plaintiffs be restrained by temporary injunction from molesting or in any way interfering with the church property in dispute, or defendants’ possession thereof. At the time of filing their answer there was filed the affidavits of a large number of the defendants in opposition to the application for temporary injunction made by the plaintiffs, and in support of their own application for a temporary injunction sought by them.

It appears from the record that the application for the temporary injunction made by each of the parties to said action was at the same time presented to the trial judge, and he ordered that the application of each of them be in part granted and in part denied, — that is, he directed that defendants should have possession and use of said church property except during one certain interval on the Sabbath day and two certain intervals during the week-time, when the defendants should permit the plaintiffs the free and uninterrupted use of-such church property for the purposes of worship, and enjoining defendants from interfering with such religious or proper social exercises as the plaintiffs may wish to conduct during said designated hours. The defendants thereupon prosecuted their appeal to this court from the order granted last above mentioned, and it is such order which is here upon review.

Appellants designate several specifications of error, and which seem to logically grow from two positions taken by them: (1) That the district judge erred in granting the order appealed from, in that at the time of granting said order the court had lost jurisdiction over the matter involved, because of the plaintiffs’ appeal from the order setting aside or dissolving the first order of injunction. (2) That the showing before the trial judge at the time of granting the order for temporary injunction does not authorize such order, and is [149]*149an unwarranted and improper conclusion to be drawn from tbe pleadings and affidavits filed at said time.

1. Discussing tbe questions presented by appellants in tbe order above designated, and in relation to the jurisdictional question, appellants urge that inasmuch as the respondents here had filed their notice of appeal and bond on appeal from the order made dissolving the first temporary injunction, that the district judge was without jurisdiction to entertain a second motion of like import, and consequently the order made under said motion is without jurisdiction. It will be noted from the above statement of facts, however, that appellants did not raise this question of jurisdiction in the lower court, but made their general appearance by answer to the merits and filing certain .affidavits and asking for affirmative relief against the plaintiffs, and therefore respondents urge that this court cannot be concerned with the jurisdictional question presented by counsel for appellants.

This phase of the case does not seem to be attended with any conflicting decisions, neither does it seem to require the application of abstruse or involved law, as it must be conceded that if the trial judge had jurisdiction over the subject matter and of the persons named as parties, his jurisdiction was complete, and not to be questioned. As our statutes give to district judges the jurisdiction to make an order such as the one here appealed from, he therefore had jurisdiction over the subject matter. It must be noted that in an inquiry as to jurisdiction the phrase “subject matter” is used in its broad and comprehensive sense, and is not confined to an inquiry as to some special or particular defect in the proceeding pending.

“Jurisdiction over the subject matter is the right of the court to exercise judicial power over that class of cases; not the particular case before it, but rather the abstract power to try a ease of the kind and character of the one pending; and not whether the particular case is one that presents a cause of action, or under the particular facts is triable before the court in which it is pending, because of some inherent facts which exist and may be developed during the trial.” (Brown [150]*150on Jurisdiction, p. 4; Richardson et al. v. Ruddy, 15 Ida. 488, 98 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 P. 1033, 20 Idaho 144, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-v-alspach-idaho-1911.