349 So. 2d 710 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1977
The controversy between the primary parties, Commercial Bank of Okeechobee
On January 21,1977, the Bank procured a judgment against one Richard C. Heyward in the sum of $7,784.64, which judgment was rendered by the Circuit Court of the Nineteenth Circuit in and for Okeechobee County. Pursuant to a writ of execution issued by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Okeechobee County, fifty head of cattle were levied upon by the Sheriff of Marion County, Florida,
The second chapter in this episode began on February 24, 1977, by Kenneth E. Proctor filing a complaint against the Sheriff of Marion County in the Fifth Judicial Circuit, wherein he alleged that the above mentioned writ of execution had been issued by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit of Okeechobee County; the subject cattle are the sole property of Proctor; and that Proctor had no adequate remedy at law. Pursuant to the prayer in this complaint, Circuit Judge Swi-gert of the Marion County Circuit Court, without notice, entered his order enjoining the sale that was scheduled for the next day conditioned upon Proctor posting a bond in the sum of $8,000.00, which bond Proctor posted. The Marion County Sheriff’s return filed February 28, 1977, reflects: “Sheriff’s levy dissolved, as per order signed by Judge Swigert, dated February 28, 1977. Writ returned unsatisfied . ..” Pursuant to motion, the Bank was permitted to intervene in this proceeding, and upon denial of its motion to to dissolve the injunction, it filed a notice of interlocutory appeal in this court.
The subject matter of the third chapter in this episode is a suggestion for writ of prohibition filed by the Bank in this Court on June 10, 1977, against Judge Swigert, as the respondent. By its suggestion, the Bank, after basically alleging the facts recited above, concluded that Section 56.16,
The Prohibition Action
By its suggestion, the Bank contends that Judge Swigert was without jurisdiction to initially enter the temporary injunction and to retain jurisdiction to determine ownership of the cattle. Supportive of the Bank’s assertion of absence of jurisdiction in the Marion County Circuit Court is the recent opinion of our sister court in Budget
In the instant case, the pleadings allege and it is not disputed that Judge Swigert is a Circuit Judge of Marion County; that the cattle were located in Marion County; and that the Sheriff of Marion County was in the process of selling said cattle at public auction in Marion County. Judge Swigert had jurisdiction of the cattle, he had jurisdiction of the sheriff, and as a circuit judge of this state, he was empowered to enter a temporary injunction.
The office of prohibition is not limited to the absence of jurisdiction; the writ may lie to restrain an excess of jurisdiction.
So, we come to grips with the basic question: Did Judge Swigert, under the admitted facts of this case in entering the temporary injunction, act in excess of his jurisdiction? The answer is yes.
Interlocutory Appeal
Having reached the conclusion that prohibition is the proper remedy, the matters
The interlocutory appeal is dismissed.
. Situated in the Fifth Judicial Circuit.
. Situated in the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit.
. Sec. 56.21, Fla.Stat, provides, in part: “. . the time of such notice [30 days] may be shortened in the discretion of the court from which the execution issued . . ..”
. Sec. 56.16, Fla.Stat., provides, in pertinent part:
", . . If any person other than the defendant in execution claims any property levied on, he may obtain possession of the property by filing with the officer having the execution an affidavit by himself, his agent or attorney, that the property claimed by him belongs to him and by furnishing the officer a bond with surety to be approved by the officer in favor of plaintiff in double the value of the goods claimed as the value is fixed by the officer and conditioned to deliver said property on demand of said officer if it is adjudged to be the property of the defendant in execution and to pay plaintiff all damages found against him if it appears that the claim was interposed for the purpose of delay.”
. Budget Landscape Nursery, Inc. v. McMillin Investors New York Corp., 343 So.2d 640 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977).
. Adams v. Bums, 126 Fla. 685, 172 So. 75 (1936).
. 1 Crandall, Florida Common Law Practice, Prohibition § 473 (1928).
. State v. Hutchins, 101 Fla. 773, 135 So. 298 (1931).
. Time Financial Services v. Hilliard Mobile Homes, Inc., 329 So.2d 362 (Fla. 1st DCA 1976).