63 Neb. 34 | Neb. | 1901
This proceeding was brought to obtain a writ of mandamus commanding certain officers of the Greater-America Exposition to draw, issue and deliver to relators an unconditional warrant upon the treasurer of said corporation for the payment to them .of the sum of $10,000. The district court allowed the writ. Error Avas taken to this court, which held that the proceedings below were unwarranted and the writ improvidently allowed, reversed the judgment and remanded the cause. Horton v. State, 60 Nebr., 701. A motion for rehearing having been filed on behalf of relators, Avhich was not disposed of until the opening of the January, 1901, term of this court, a mandate issued on January 28. This mandate was not filed or docketed in the district court until March 23. Two days before, on March 21, the relators appeared in that court and procured an order of dismissal. When the mandate Avas filed, this order Avas set aside ex parte at the instance of defendant, on the ground that it had been rendered prematurely, and on the same day, March 23, on motion of the defendant Horton, supported by an affidavit showing that $10,000 of the moneys of the corporation had been paid to, and obtained by, relators under and by virtue of said writ of mandamus, an order issued requiring relators to show cause on or before March 30 Avhy restitution of said moneys and interest thereon should not be awarded. The relators, having been served with said order, appeared specially and objected to the jurisdiction of the court. At the hearing, the district court held that it had jurisdiction to render the order of dismissal on March 21, that it had no jurisdiction to set such order aside on March 23 nor to enter the order to show cause on the same date and sustained the objections. Error is prosecuted from this ruling.
The jurisdiction of the supreme court over its own judgments and orders is, in general, the same as that of any other court of record, and hence it may alter or modify such judgments or orders and correct its mandates accordingly at any time during the term at which they are rendered, unless its mandate has been filed and acted upon in the lower court prior to the end of the term. Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U. S., 410, 415; People v. Nelliston, 79 N. Y., 638; Trowbridge v. Sickler, 48 Wis., 424, 428. Obviously there must be some point of time at which the jurisdiction of the one court ceases and that of the other court attaches, and, Avhile the subject is not free from judicial conflict, we think the sounder rule draws the line at the time Avhen the mandate is acted upon and carried into effect. Merriam v. Gordon, supra; People v. Nelliston, supra. But it may be observed that the weight of authority fixes the transfer of jurisdiction at the time Avhen the mandate has been filed in the court below. Leese v. Clark, 20 Cal., 387; Zorn v. Lamar, 71 Ga., 85; King v.
We think the general rule that the court has full power and control over its judgments and orders during the term at which they are rendered applies to an order of dismissal entered at the instance of a plaintiff, the same as to any other order. If the right of a plaintiff to dismiss were absolute and the action of the court following thereon ministerial only, the rule might not apply. But this right is not absolute in the sense that the court has no power over, or discretion with respect to, its exercise. On the contrary, the court, in its discretion, may refuse to dimiss whenever justice to the court, or its officers, or to any of the parties, requires imposition of terms, or retention of the cause upon the docket. Sheedy v: McMurtry, 44 Nebr., 502, 503; Beals v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 53 Nebr., 602. In the case first cited this court said: “The existence of the right of a plaintiff to dismiss at any time during the pendency of a cause, as a general proposition, must be qualified, and is not absolute in the sense that it takes the subject without the control of the court in which the cause is pending, so that it can not, within its discretion, impose the condition of the payment of costs as obligatory and precedent to a dismissal of the action.” This discretion has been exercised to require payment of costs. Sheedy v. McMurtry, supra; to protect rights of attorneys under agreements as to fees, Byron v. Durrie, 6 Abb. New Cas. [N. Y.], 135; to protect a defendant in his plea of estoppel from the danger of possible transfer of a lien, Stevens
^ Where a party to a cause has obtained money or property under or by virtue of a judgment which is afterwards • reversed, the court has power to compel restitution by summary proceedings in that cause. ^ Anheuser-Busch
It is recommended that the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings under the order to show cause why restitution should not be adjudged not inconsistent with this opinion.
By the Court: For the reasons set forth in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings under the order to show cause why restitution should not be adjudged not inconsistent with said opinion.
Reversed and remanded.