105 Wash. 192 | Wash. | 1919
F. J. Wilson, a stockholder in the Pacific Coast & Norway Packing Company, seeks, by his
In September, 1914, the plaintiff, Nevin, commenced this action in the superior court for King county against the defendant packing company, seeking recovery of a money judgment, and also seeking the appointment of a receiver for the defendant and its property. No one other than Nevin and the packing
Upon the filing of the petition, the superior court issued its order to show cause, a's a process to bring into the case all the parties named in the petition against whom relief was sought. This order was in usual form, directing the parties to show cause why the relief prayed for in the petition should not be granted, was made returnable ten days after its issuance, and was within that period served upon the parties against whom relief was sought. The parties, other than the receivers, appeared specially and made motions to quash the order to show cause and the service thereof as a process seeking to bring them into the case and compel them to respond to the petition, challenging the court’s jurisdiction for want of proper process directed against and served upon them. The receivers moved to strike the petition from the files of the case upon the ground, in substance, that the court had not acquired jurisdiction of the other parties against whom relief was sought, that their presence in court was necessary to the determination of the matters presented in the petition, and that the matters so
Did the court acquire jurisdiction of the persons, other than the receivers, against whom the petition was directed and from whom an accounting was sought? It seems to us that this question must be answered in the negative, since they, with the exception of Nevin, were not parties to the action before the filing of the petition, and they never became such by the issuance of a summons nor by any general appearance in the action. If the order to show cause and the service thereof can.be said to be a sufficient process to bring these parties into the case as defendants, manifestly a defendant sued upon a simple debt obligation can be brought into the action as a defendant and compelled to answer or suffer a default against him by the issuance and service of a mere order to show cause, instead of by the issuance and service of a summons as prescribed by our statute relative to the commencement of civil actions. To permit such a method of procedure to be substituted for the issuance and service of a summons would be to ignore the plain provisions of the statute. Rem. Code, § 220. State ex rel. Boardman v. Ball, 5 Wash. 387, 31 Pac. 975, 34 Am. St. 866; Cherry v. Western Washington Industrial Exp. Co., 11 Wash. 586, 40 Pac. 136; State ex rel. Nolte v. Superior Court, 15 Wash. 500, 46 Pac. 1031; Interior Warehouse Co. v. Hays, 91 Wash. 507, 158 Pac. 99. It seems quite clear to us that the quashing of the order to show cause and the service thereof was proper, and that the court’s order to that effect must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Was the court in error in refusing to entertain Wilson’s petition by the striking of it from the files of the case upon the motion of the receivers made in that be
Treating Wilson’s petition as one directed against the receivers and the plaintiff herein alone, it possibly could have been entertained by the court as a petition for intervention, had it been timely filed, but having been filed three years after the appointment of the receivers and the commencement of the administering of their trust, and presumably about the same length of time following the entry of the final judgment upon the claim of the plaintiff, Nevin, in the action, the
By wbat we bave said we do not want to be understood as in tbe least impairing Wilson’s right, as a stockholder of tbe defendant packing company, to petition tbe superior court looking to tbe compelling of tbe receivers to properly account, as such, in tbe receivership, or to make any application to'the trial court looking to tbe compelling of tbe proper performance of tbe duties of tbe receivers as such. His right to so apply to tbe superior court in this action is, of course, tbe same as that of any stockholder of tbe defendant packing company.
Tbe orders appealed from are affirmed.
Mount and Holcomb, JJ., concur.