78 W. Va. 460 | W. Va. | 1916
Meredith Harman and Harry P. Harman were partners as Harman Brothers. They had a contract with the Government of the United' States for constructing a post office building at Point Pleasant, W. Ya. In the course of the construction of said building, they made a contract with the plaintiffs, Alexander Meyers and Samuel H. Meyers, partners as Meyers
It is also alleged that the defendants are largely indebted to other persons for work done and materials furnished for said building, now due and unpaid; and that the defendants are non-residents of the state of West Virginia, and have no property in West Virginia out of which any of their claims can be satisfied, except some materials of various kinds on hand at said building, and an unpaid balance' of $7,912.31 upon the contract price for the construction of the post office building.
Plaintiffs further aver: ‘ ‘ That the defendants have nearly completed said post office building and will very soon be ready to turn the same over to the United States Government and receive the final payment thereon and are preparing to withdraw from the State of West Virginia with such property as they may have or be able to secure; and there is great and imminent danger that they may secure and'dispose of and make away with the said sum owing to them, the said defendants, by the United States as aforesaid, and put the same beyond the jurisdiction and reach of this court, and beyond the reach of your orators and said creditors of defendants, and that the said property of defendants, or a. material part thereof, will be lost or misappropriated, and your orators’ just claim be left unpaid and with nothing within the jurisdiction of this court or within this state to satisfy the same; and your orators charge, that, unless restrained and enjoined from doing so, the defendants will misapply, dispose of, put beyond the jurisdiction of this court and remove from this state, or otherwise put beyond your orators’ reach, all the property aforesaid, leaving your orators’ just claims and the just claims of other creditors unpaid and without the means of payment available. That the tangible property of defendants within this state and subject to attachment, a large part of which has already been attached by other creditors, is whol
The prayer of the bill is for an injunction to prevent defendants from disposing of their property, and from collecting the claims against the Government for balance on the price of the post office building, or assigning any part of it, or applying it to their own use-, and for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property and to demand and receive the money due or owing to the defendants from the Government of the United States, on account of the construction of said post office building, and that there may be an accounting between them, and that plaintiffs be adjudged the sum of $1,525.99 and any other sums found due them.
The injunction was awarded and a receiver appointed, February 5, 1914, without notice to defendants. On the 2nd day of March, 1914, the defendants appeared, demurred to the bill, and moved to dissolve the injunction and discharge the receiver. The demurrer was overruled, and motion to dissolve the injunction and discharge the receiver refused. Thereupon the defendants filed their answer. The cause was heard upon the bill, answers, and exhibits, and the court refused to dissolve the injunction or discharge the receiver; and from that decree the defendants have appealed.
This court will not dismiss the appeal as presenting a moot question, upon the mere allegation that one of the parties has been discharged in bankruptcy pending the appeal. ' The ■fact will have to be made to appear by proper pleadings in the ■circuit court, A discharge in bankruptcy does not ipso facto oust the state court of jurisdiction. Bank v. Cootes et al., 74 W. Va. 112. But it is said that the claim for which the appellees sued in the circuit court has been paid, and there is no longer any substantial controversy between the parties. It must be borne in mind that the claim or demand of appel-lees was. not the only thing in controversy, nor indeed the principal thing. Appellants challenged the jurisdiction of the circuit court. They say that this suit is without equity .jurisdiction, and it was to test this question that the cause was brought to this court. To dismiss the appeal now would >be to leave the parties in the circuit court just where they were when the appeal was awarded. The principal question —that of equity jurisdiction — would not be disposed of. If the circuit court has jurisdiction, it may, notwithstanding the debt was paid pending the suit, pass on the validity of the injunction and receivership, and in dismissing the case give costs to the plaintiffs. If the circuit court has no juris•diction, then the suit in that court would be dismissed without costs. The appellants therefore have the right to have this court pass upon the question of the jurisdiction of the ■circuit court. Although the debt has been paid, there remains a controversy between the parties which the appellees cannot ■evade by motion to dismiss the appeal.
Proceeding to pass upon the question of equity jurisdiction, we find that the substance of all the charges against the defendants is that the defendants owed the plaintiffs some
The decree of the circuit court will be reversed.
Reversed.