257 P. 831 | Nev. | 1927
There was no showing of fraud or irreparable injury, or that relator had absconded, or was insolvent, or that he did not have property within jurisdiction. Mere fact that relator was nonresident was insufficient. High, sec. 117.
The $834 in question was seized by sheriff as property of relator under attachment and so held when action terminated in dismissal. Attachment immediately became functus officio and sheriff was charged with duty to return property. Rev. Laws, 5162.
Where personal property is in possession of third person, not party to receivership, under claim of title, court should not order its receiver to take possession; separate suit should be instituted. Enforcement of such order is restrained by prohibition. High, sec. 145; Stuparich v. Court,
Court had no jurisdiction to make order for service of summons by publication. To uphold validity of order, respondents must proceed on theory that second action was quasi in rem to subject certain res ($834) to process of court, since no personal judgment could be rendered, there having been no personal service upon Hatch. There is distinction between proceedings strictly in rem and quasi in rem. Lee v. Silva,
Right of appeal does not foreclose relief by prohibition against unlawful receiverships. Issuance of writ is discretionary. Havemeyer Case, supra; State v. Court, 111 Am. St. Rep. 962; S.L.R.R. v. Wear, 33 L.R.A. 341.
Relator has no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law and need not first make application to lower court for relief before asking for writ. Chaplin v. Court,
Court had undoubted jurisdiction of subject matter. Whether it had jurisdiction of relator was question within its determination. If it erred remedy was by appeal. Mines v. Court, 27 P. 532; Agassiz v. Court, 27 P. 49.
Demurrer should be sustained as application for writ does not show petitioner applied to inferior court for relief. Walcott v. Walls,
Upon the filing of the complaint in the equity suit the court made an order appointing a receiver with general powers, and ordered that he take charge of all property of the copartnership, particularly specifying the $834 *286 which came into the hands of the sheriff in the action at law, and also ordered the sheriff to turn the same over to such receiver. The orders were made on the day the suit was filed, and without notice to Hatch. The receiver qualified immediately upon being appointed, and forthwith demanded the money of the sheriff. On the following day, June 11, 1926, the court made an order directing the service of the summons by publication. Thereafter, and on June 12, the sheriff paid the money over to the receiver who had given the bond and taken the oath of office.
The matter has been submitted on the general demurrer to the petition and the briefs of counsel.
The petitioner makes two contentions in support of his right to the writ: First, that the court had no jurisdiction to make the order appointing a receiver; and, second, that it had no jurisdiction to make the order for service of summons by publication.
1-3. The first contention is based upon the fact that there had been no service of summons or notice to the petitioner of the application for the appointment of a receiver, in support of which our attention is directed to the case of Hettel v. District Court,
The contention that the court had no jurisdiction to make the order for the publication of the summons is equally devoid of merit.
4. The plaintiff in the receivership matter claims that the money in question is partnership assets. While the petition nowhere specifically avers that the money in question is the individual property of Hatch, such is the theory of the petitioner, and, upon the authority of Stuparich v. Superior Court,
This money is subject matter within the jurisdiction of the court, and in the circumstances, we think, for the purposes of this matter, we are justified in assuming that it is a portion of the assets of the partnership.
5. "Jurisdiction of the res is obtained by a seizure under process of the court, whereby it is held to abide such order as the court may make concerning it. * * * So, also, while the general rule in regard to jurisdiction in rem requires the actual seizure and possession of the res by the officer of the court, such jurisdiction may be acquired by acts which are of equivalent import, and which stand for and represent the dominion of the court over the thing, and in effect subject it to the control of the court." Cooper v. Reynolds, 10 Wall. 308,
In 15 R.C.L. p. 632, it is stated that, while seizure of the property is necessary in order to confer jurisdiction to enter a judgment in rem, it is immaterial whether the proceedings against the property be by an attachment or bill in chancery or other equivalent, if it be substantially *288
a proceeding in rem. To the same effect is the case of Bruff et al. v. Thompson et al.,
We think the order appointing the receiver and directing the sheriff to deliver the money to such receiver, who immediately qualified upon his appointment, was equivalent to an actual seizure. It tied up the money, and resulted in its coming into the hands of the receiver, who is an officer of the court.
6, 7. It is contended that, since the order of publication was made the day before the money actually came into the hands of the receiver, there was no jurisdiction over the subject matter, and hence the order is void. We cannot agree with this contention. It is the well-recognized rule that the title and right of possession in the receiver relates back to the time of appointment. High on Receivers (4th ed.), sec. 136. In this case the order directing the sheriff to turn the property over and the demand therefor by the receiver were made before the order of publication. The money in question was seized, so far as the petitioner is concerned, prior to the making of the order of publication.
8. It is contended that there is no allegation of insolvency of Hatch, and hence no receiver should have been appointed. We held in the Sugarman matter, supra, that in a suit in equity for the dissolution of a partnership and an accounting such an allegation is not necessary.
9, 10. The writ of prohibition issues only in the sound judicial discretion of the court for the furtherance of justice. In the circumstances of this case we feel that the ends of justice do not demand the issuance of the writ sought.
It is ordered that the application be denied, and that these proceedings be dismissed, with leave to the respondent court to proceed, after allowing the petitioner ten days from the service of a copy hereof within which to move or plead in said court as he may be advised. *289