25 Minn. 148 | Minn. | 1878
The object of this action was to correct a misdescription of premises occasioned, as is alleged, by inadvertence and mutual mistake in the execution of certain powers of attorney, and a certain deed made in pursuance thereof, on September 22,1876, for the purpose of conveying to the plaintiff certain premises purchased by him of the defendants, and to reform such instruments in conformity with the actual agreement and intention of the parties thereto. Defendants made no answer to the complaint, but suffered a default to be entered against them. After such a default, the appellant herein, Mr. Whitcomb, procured, upon his affidavit accompanied with a proposed complaint as intervenor, an order upon the plaintiff to show cause why, upon the facts and grounds therein stated, he should not be permitted to intervene in the action and become a party thereto, by filing and serving his said complaint, for the purpose of defending the action as such intervenor. Upon the hearing, the application was denied, and the order to show cause discharged. From this order the intervenor appeals to this court, and the plaintiff makes the preliminary objection that the appeal will not lie, because the order is not an appealable one, and a dismissal of the appeal is asked.
The statute (Laws 1876, c. 50, amendatory of Gen. St. c. ■66, § 111,) under which the right to intervene is asserted, does not seem to contemplate the necessity of obtaining any prior leave of the court to serve and file a complaint, in order to become a party intervenor in an action. In case a party brings himself within the statute, by the facts stated in his complaint, his right of intervention would seem to be an absolute one, not dependent upon either the favor or discretion of the court. All he is required to do is to serve and file, within the proper time, the requisite complaint, and he thereupon
Thus considered and treated, the order which is the subject of this appeal is not an appealable one, under Gen. St. c. 86, § 8, subd. 6, because it is not an order made in a special proceeding, or upon a summary application in a civil action after judgment. The term special proceeding, as used in this clause of the statute, has no reference to any judicial proceeding or decision had or made in and during the progress of a civil action to judgment. The order in question was made in the civil action already commenced and pending, and, if appealable at all, it must be because of some other provision of the statute. It is not covered by the fifth subdivision of the same section, as is suggested by appellant’s counsel, because it neither determined the action, nor prevented the rendition of a judgment therein. Does it fall within the third subdivison, as an order “involving the merits of the action, or some part thereof ? ” If the order, in its effect, passes upon or determines any positive legal right or interest of the appellant in the matter in litigation in the action, which, by the statute, he is authorized to interpose therein for adjudication, as an intervenor, or if it deprives him of any opportunity of intervening in respect to any such right or interest,
The statute provides that “any person who has an interest in the matter in litigation, in the success of either of the parties to the action, or against either, or both, may become a party to any action or proceeding between other persons, either by joining the plaintiff in claiming what is sought by the complaint, or by uniting with the defendant in resisting the claim of the plaintiff, or by demanding anything adversely to both the plaintiff and defendant, or either of them, either before or after issue has been joined in the cause, and before the trial commences. The court shall determine upon the issues made by the intervention at the same time that the issue in the main action is decided, and the intervenor has no right to delay; and if the claim of the intervenor is not sustained, he shall pay all the costs of the intervention. The intervention shall be by complaint, which must set forth the facts on which the intervention rests; and all the pleadings therein shall be governed by the same principles and rules as obtain in other pleadings.” Laws 1876, c. 50. (Gen. St. 1878, e. 66, § 131.)
The doctrine of intervention, as embodied in the statute, evidently originated, in this country, in the civil code of Louisiana, whence it was subsequently taken and incorporated
In the case at bar, the proposed complaint of appellant discloses no interest in the matter in litigation between the original parties to the action, such as entitles him to intervene therein. The sole object of the action is to reform certain powers of attorney from defendants to one Sharpe, authoriz
The order in no way involves the merits of the action, or any part thereof; as well might it be claimed that an order prohibiting him from intervening in the action, for the purpose of enforcing a claim against one of the parties thereto founded upon a personal tort, or upon a promissory note, was an adjudication upon any of his rights in respect to such action. It simply determines that, upon the alleged facts, he is an utter stranger to the matter in controversy, and hence-has no right to interfere in the litigation. As bearing upon the appealable character of the order, as involving the merits, see St. John v. West, 4 How. Pr. 329, where a question somewhat analogous is discussed.
Appeal dismissed.