44 P.2d 504 | Utah | 1935
On petition of plaintiffs, an alternative writ of prohibition was issued by this court commanding the district court of Salt Lake county to desist or refrain from further proceedings in that certain cause pending before it entitled R.W. Burton as Receiver of Ashton-Jenkins Company, a corporation, Plaintiff v. Charles W. Gibbs, otherwise known as C.W. Gibbs, and Charles W. Gibbs Company, a corporation, Defendants, and until such time as the said court should find the issues in such cause in favor of plaintiff and against defendants, and enter and file findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment therein, or to show cause why it should not enter and file findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment therein. The matter is before us on petition of plaintiffs, answer of defendants, briefs and oral arguments of the attorneys for the respective parties.
The cause of Burton as Receiver v. Gibbs et al., in the district court is a suit in equity wherein Burton, as receiver of Ashton-Jenkins Company, a defunct corporation, sought to set aside assignments of certain designated mortgages, side or partnership notes, and other documents connected therewith, made by Ashton-Jenkins Company a short time prior to its going into the hands of a receiver. The assignments were made to Charles W. Gibbs, one of the officers of that corporation, and by him assigned to another and by such other to the Charles W. Gibbs Company, a corporation. In the prayer plaintiff asks that the assignments be set aside, that the property be turned over to the plaintiff, and an accounting *316 be had of all moneys received by defendants, or either of them, by reason of such assignments, and for general relief.
The cause of Burton as Receiver v. Gibbs et al., in the disspect to the equitable issue, the right of plaintiff to have the contracts of assignment set aside and annulled. The court thereafter announced that he had decided the issue in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants, and 1-3 ordered the defendants to render an accounting, as prayed for in plaintiff's complaint, on a day fixed. This decision by the court is shown only in the order directing the accounting and not by any findings of fact, conclusions of law or decree. Plaintiffs here contend that the trial court is without jurisdiction to proceed with the accounting until it has made findings of fact, conclusions of law, and made and entered its decree adjudging plaintiff below to be entitled to the property in suit, and that they are entitled to have that issue fully determined by the trial court and on appeal before they can be required to submit their books and accounts to inspection in an accounting proceeding. Whether an appeal would lie from such a judgment or decree, if one is made and entered, is not directly before us, and we do not pass on that. The only issue is whether the district court was about to proceed "without or in excess of the jurisdiction." R.S. Utah 1933, 104-69-1. The pending suit is one in equity to set aside contracts of assignment and to recover the property assigned and any moneys collected thereon while in possession of defendants. In such suit two inquiries were involved: First, whether plaintiff below is entitled to have the contracts of assignment set aside on the grounds alleged; and, second, the state of the account with respect to collection of moneys on the notes thus assigned. The district court concededly had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter. A court of equity, assuming jurisdiction to determine whether assignment contracts should be set aside, ordinarily has jurisdiction to settle the whole controversy, and if it finds the contracts of assignment are void *317
for the reasons alleged, to then require an accounting of moneys received by defendants during the time the property was in their possession, and to enter judgment for return of the property assigned, and for any amount found to have been collected to which plaintiff is entitled. 1 C.J. 616; Probst v. Bearman,
This court recently decided the case of Benson v. Rozzelle
(Rozzelle v. Third Judicial District Court), 85 U. 582,
The alternative writ is withdrawn and the petition of plaintiffs herein dismissed. Costs to defendants.
ELIAS HANSEN, C.J., and EPHRAIM HANSON, MOFFAT, and WOLFE, JJ., concur.