4 Wash. 655 | Wash. | 1892
By this proceeding, petitioner seeks to prohibit the superior court of King county from proceeding in a certain action therein pending against the city of North Yakima, on the ground that said court has no jurisdiction. Some questions are raised as to the regularity of the issuance and service of the alternative writ, but, in our opinion, the questions thus presented are not of sufficient importance to require special consideration at our hands, or to prevent a hearing upon the merits.
The jurisdiction of the court below to proceed in the cause therein pending, is attacked upon two grounds: (1) That the court has no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action; and (2) that it has no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant. The object sought by such suit is to prevent the defendant from applying a certain fund belonging to it, and on deposit in the First National Bank of North Yakima, to any other purpose than that for which it is alleged to have been created, until the claims of the plaintiff growing out of his connection with the construction of a system of sewerage for said city have been adjusted and paid. In his complaint he alleges that it is his intention to bring an action at law against said city growing out of such matters, and he seeks to enjoin said city from using said fund until he can prosecute such action to final determination. -
Is a suit of this nature transitory or local? Sec. 158, Code Proc., provides, among other things, that all questions involving the right to the possession or title to any specific article of personal property is local. It is contended on the part of the petitioner that this provision covers said action. That the object of said suit is to determine the status of a specific fund which is, within the meaning of said statute, a specific article of personal property. On the other hand, it is contended by the respond
The second question, presented as above stated, is one of great importance, and in the brief time in which we have thought it was proper for us to hold an action of this kind under advisement we have been unable to examine it as
A large number of other cases have been cited by petitioner which tend more or less strongly to sustain its contention that such corporation cannot be sued out of its county. But one case directly in point has been cited by respondent to establish the contrary doctrine. That was the case of Clarke v. Lyon County, 8 Nev. 185. This case seems to fully support the contention of the respondent. But it must be remembered, in determining the force which should be given thereto as an authority, that the Nevada courts largely follow the rule of decisions in the courts of California, and in those courts it has been held that an action, however local, would not be dismissed for want of jurisdiction when commenced outside of the proper county. Such courts have uniformly held that under such circumstances the only remedy of the defendant was by change of venue. With such a ruling as a basis for its action, the argument of the Nevada court could well be sustained. In this state, however, the rule as to the commencement of suits purely local is entirely different; here it is held that such suits must be‘commenced in the proper county, and that if they are commenced in any other they will be dismissed, on motion, for want of jurisdiction. We are constrained to follow what we think to be the rule established in Pennsylvania. It follows that the superior court of King county had no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant.
The writ must issue as prayed for in the petition.
Stiles and Scott, JJ., concur.
Anders, O. J., concurs in the result.
Dunbar, J. — I concur in the result for the reason that there seems to be no adequate remedy by appeal.