48 Neb. 755 | Neb. | 1896
The Home Fire Insurance Company instituted an action in the district court of Douglas county to foreclose
The primary question presented is that stated as the first ground of the motion to strike the bond from the files, to-wit: Is there any authority for superseding an
Owing to this difference between the rule on the subject in this state and the rule in many others, as well as the very broad differences between our statute and most others, the cases cited on behalf of the appellants have little or no application to that before us. Thus, State v. Johnson, 13 Fla., 33, was based on statutes making the
In Swing v. Townsend, 24 O. St., 1, the action was for the construction of a will, an order to sell real estate, and for distribution. Receivers were appointed in the court below. An appeal having been taken from the decree, the supreme court held that the appeal did not supersede the receivership and that the powers and duties of the receivers continued notwithstanding. It would seem, however, from Eaton & H. R. Co. v. Varnum, 10 O. St., 622, that an order appointing a receiver was not at that time in Ohio an appealable order, as it is made here by section 275 of the Code of Civil Procedure. In the Matter of the Real Estate Associates, 58 Cal., 356, it was held that an appeal from an order adjudicating insolvency and appointing a receiver did not suspend the functions of the receiver, the court saying: “For obvious reasons it would be dangerous to hold that the functions of the receiver are suspended during the appeal. It may be imperatively necessary to the preservation of the estate that his functions should not be suspended.” This case has a certain significance from the fact that section 945 of the California Code of Civil Procedure bears a close analogy to our section 677, subdivision 3; but other provisions of the California law are so different that we cannot give -the case the weight which it would otherwise be entitled to.
A series of cases in Tennessee is instructive. That state has a statute which provides that “the supreme court in term or either of the judges in vacation may grant writs of supersedeas to an interlocutory order or decree or execution issued thereon as in case of a final decree.” (Statutes of Tennessee, vol. 2, sec. 3933.) It would seem that the language of this statute was broad enough to authorize, by a liberal construction at least, the allowance of a supersedeas on. appeal from an order appointing a receiver; but the Tennessee court holds
The foregoing comprise all the cases to which the briefs direct our attention, as well as those most nearly approaching the question before us which an independent examination has brought to our attention. There are other cases treating an order appointing a receiver as one which should be superseded by appeal in the absence of express statute; but these cases emanate from jurisdictions following the old English practice, which we have shown does not prevail in this state. For several reasons we think that section 677 of the Code should not be so construed as to authorize a supersedeas of an order appointing a receiver pendente lite as a matter of right. In the first place, as already intimated, the third subdivision, which provides for orders directing the delivery of possession of real estate, is the only provision which could apply, and the condition of the bond in such case is merely that the appellants will not commit waste. If the sole object of a receivership is to prevent waste, that object can be more readily accomplished and with less hardship by an injunction. If the object is to otherwise-preserve the property, or to sequester the rents and profits, the condition of the bond would be entirely inadequate to the protection of the party on whose application a receiver was appointed. In the next place it has been held that the district court may, in a proper case, appoint a receiver after decree and pending an appeal, and this in the case of a mortgage foreclosure after an order of confirmation. (Eastman v. Cain, 45 Neb., 48; Philadelphia Mortgage & Trust Co. v. Goos, 47 Neb., 804.) The propriety of such an appointment may largely depend upon the fact that a bond conditioned under the
In holding that a party may not, as a matter of right, supersede an order appointing a receiver, we do not hold that a supersedeas may not be granted in the discretion of the court. This court has already held that a writ of ouster in. a quo warranto case and a writ of mandamus are writs which may not be superseded as a matter of right;, but it has also held that the court may in its discretion allow a supersedeas in such cases. (Gandy v. State, 10 Neb., 248; State v. Judges, 19 Neb., 149; Cooperrider v. State, 46 Neb., 84.) It is quite clear from the record that the district court has been proceeding on the theory that there was no authority whatever for a supersedeas in this case, and has not exercised, or been called upon to
Order accordingly.