delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a summary judg-ent for defendant in an action in which plaintiff claimed $298,000 damages against a district judge for orally instructing the clerk of the district court not to accept papers from defendant for filing until they had been reviewed by the judge.
The controversy arose when Mr. Linde, a non-lawyer, filed certain pleadings and
In the present case the motion to dismiss and the objection thereto, both supported by affidavits, were heard before another judge. Summary judgment was entered under the provisions of Rules 12(b) and 56, W.R.C.P., for defendant; this appeal is taken therefrom.
In his brief plaintiff flagrantly violates both the letter and the spirit of Supreme Court Rule 12 by failing to cite any available precedent or the pages of authorities relied on and contents himself with mere reference to the “Constitution of the United States,” “Constitution of the State of Wyoming,” and “Wyoming Business Corporation Act.” His argument is neither cogent nor subject to any reasonable analysis as to validity, and we are not required to notice such unsupported claims of error. Nichols v. Pangarova, Wyo.,
As near as we can gather from plaintiff’s brief and oral argument, taken together with the response, his contentions turn on three points:
1. Can a non-lawyer who is a major stockholder in a corporation and has authority from its officers appear in court by pleadings or otherwise on behalf of the corporation ?
2. If question number one is resolved in the affirmative, resulting in the April 23 order of the court being erroneous, was its action nevertheless within the well established rule of judicial immunity?
3. If notwithstanding the propriety of the court’s order the judge’s oral instruction to the clerk of court not to accept unapproved pleadings was erroneous, does the rule as to immunity apply?
Concerning the first and second points, the law is well established that although a party to an action may appear in his own proper person without the representation of an attorney he is not entitled to appear for or on behalf of a corporation regardless of his interest in it or any authorization which he may have from the corporation. Some exceptions have been made to this rule as to appearances in justice of peace or minor courts and in hearings before administrative agencies, but the prohibition is substantially uniform as applied to appearance in courts of record. The problem is discussed at some length in Annotation,
“A composite of the rule in the decided cases, overwhelmingly sustained by the authorities, may be thus stated: A natural person may represent himself and present his own case to the court although he is not a licensed attorney. A corporation is not a natural person. It is an artificial entity created by law and as such it can neither practice law nor appear or act in person. Out of court it must act in its affairs through its agents and representatives and in matters in court it can act only through licensed attorneys. A corporation cannot appear in court by an officer who is not an attorney and it cannot appear in propria persona. * * * ”
We adopt these holdings and conclude that the trial judge was justified in striking the pleadings as related to Nuclear State Enterprises, Inc., and in advising Mr. Linde orally that he was not entitled to appear on behalf of the corporation.
As to plaintiff’s third point, it has long been the rule that courts of general jurisdiction are exempt from liability of civil action for their official acts even if in excess of their jurisdiction — although a distinction is observed between excess of jurisdiction and the clear absence of all jurisdiction over the subject matter.
1
Bradley v. Fisher,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Plaintiff, of course, has not contended that the judge did not have jurisdiction over the subject matter.
