46 Fla. 474 | Fla. | 1903
On April 19th, 1901, appellee filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Volusia county against appellants, praying for maintenance, alimón}^ and a writ of ne exeat against her husband, John P. Bronk, and an injunction against the fraudulent disposition of the property of John P. Bronk by him and his son, Frederick Bronk. A writ of ne exeat was allowed against John P. Bronk and he was taken into the custody of the sheriff on his failure to file the bond required, and an injunction was granted against the fraudulent disposition of the property of John P. Bronk by him and his son. John P. Bronk moved for a dissolution of the writs of ne exeat and injunction, and .Frederick Bronk demurred to the bill. On a hearing of the motion and demurrer the court refused the motion and overruled the
A motion was made to dismiss the appeal as to John P. Bronk on the ground, first, that John P. Bronk is in contempt of the process of the court below, the issuance of which he is, in this cause, appealing from; second, that the said John P. Bronk, by his escape from the custody of the sheriff of Volusia county, who held him under process in this case herein appealed from, and his flight without the State of Florida, can not be heard to complain of the order for the issuance of such process.
The appellee further moved this cortrt to dismiss the following assignments of error of said appellant John P. Bronk, and strike the same from the files of this court, and to refuse to entertain the same, for the following reasons: The 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 6th and 7th assignments, for the reasons assigned as a cause for dismissing the appeal. The fifth assignment because it was shown on and by the record that said appellant has no interest in the order, and said appellant did not join in the demurrer, and has no appealable rights involved therein.
The motion was supported by the sworn return of the sheriff showing that John P. Bronk, who had been taken into his custody under the writ of ne exeat, had escaped therefrom and had withdrawn himself from the jurisdiction of the court.
On hearing, the court declined to dismiss the appeal of JohmP. Bronk, but continued that part of the motion relating to striking or refusing to entertain the assignments of error until the final hearing. The following are the assignments of error of John P. Bronk: 1. The court erred in its order and decree of April 19th, 1901, granting a writ of ne exeat.
2. The court erred in granting writ of ne exeat without requiring bond of complainant, and without permitting defendant to be heard as to the ability of complainant to give bond.
4. The court erred in its order of April 19th, 1901, granting temporary injunction ag'ainst appellant.
5. The court erred in overruling the demurrer of Frederick Bronk to the bill of complaint.
6. The court erred in denying defendant’s motion to dissolve the injunction and quash the writ of ne exeat.
7. The court erred in its order and decree of April 12, 1901, denying defendant’s motion to dissolve the injunction and quash the writ of ne exeat, and remanding defendant to the custody of the sheriff.
This case having been reached for final disposition, it now appears by another sworn return of the sheriff that John P. Bronk has not returned to his custody, and is now out of the jurisdiction of this court. The appellant having, since he took this appeal, voluntarily placed himself in contempt of the orders of the court below, and having gone beyond the jurisdiction of this court so that no order or decree it might make in the premises could be personally enforced against him, we are confronted with the question whether he has a right to a hearing on questions based on the injunction and ne exeat orders. Doubtless the general rule is that a party is not deprived of any strict legal right to be heard by placing himself in contempt of the court, especially if there be other means available by which the court may enforce its orders. Hovey v. Elliott, 167 U. S. 409, text 428, 17 Supt. Ct. Rep. 841, and cases there cited. ■But the right to be heard upon appeal or writ of error has not been held to be one which a party can not deprive himself of by his voluntary act of putting himself in contempt of the court by escaping from custody and evading the. power and process of the law and the courts. It is distinctly held in the above cited case, on pages 443 and 444, that such a question was not involved in that suit. In this State it is decided that an appellate court will refuse to hear a criminal case on writ of error, where the plaintiff in error
After the filing of the record here appellee suggested a diminution of the record and prayed for a certiorari to bring up a certain record of the Circuit Court of Volusia county, viz: the record in the case of John P. Bronk v. Annie T. Bronk, containing the proceedings in a divorce suit between John P. Bronk and a former wife, which record was used in evidence before the judge below when he passed upon the questions presented by this appeal. This court granted the certiorari on the authority of Caro v. The Pensacola City Company, 19 Fla. 766. In obedience to the writ the judge below has certified that said record was used as evidence before him when he made the orders appealed from, and a copy thereof is here. A motion is now pending here on the part of appellants to strike this record
These rulings dispose of, all pending motions.