102 Ind. 14 | Ind. | 1885
From the complaint in this case the following facts appear: Alfred and John C. S. Harrison were partners doing business as bankers in the city of Indi.anapolis, and were the owners of real and personal property,, some of which was partnership,property, and some the individual property of the several partners. On the 18th day of July, 1884, Alfred Harrison filed, in the office of the clerk of the Marion Superior Court, a petition in which John C. S. Harrison was described as defendant. It was averred in the petition that the plaintiff and defendant were partners; that on account of insolvency they were unable to continue 'their partnership business. It was also averred that as a firm they were possessed of real and personal property, and that they were owing debts; that the partnership ought to be dissolved, and its affairs wound up. The prayer was, that a receiver should be appointed to take charge of the assets of the firm, etc.
With the petition Alfred Harrison also filed the following paper: “Alfred Harrison v. John C. S. Harrison. The defendant, John C. S. Harrison, admits the allegations of the
Immediately upon the filing of the foregoing papers, Alfred Harrison presented them to the Honorable Lewis C. Walker, one of the judges of the Marion Superior Court, at chambers, in vacation, without any other proceedings having been taken thereon, and asked for the appointment of a receiver. Thereupon the judge made an order placing the assets of the firm in charge of the sheriff of Marion county, and held the matter of the appointment of a receiver under advisement.
It is further averred that on the 19th day of July, 1884, being still in vacation, Alfred Harrison filed, in the clerk’s office, and presented to the judge at chambers, a supplemental petition, wherein he showed that both he and his partner were the owners of certain individual property, real and personal, which they were each willing to surrender for the benefit of their creditors, and praying that an order should be made turning their individual property over to a receiver to be appointed.
It is also alleged that no process was issued upon this supplemental complaint, and that John C. S. Harrison did not appear thereto, either in person or by attorney, but that at the time it was filed and presented Alfred Harrison filed and presented with the supplemental petition the following paper, purporting to be executed by John C. S. Harrison :
“ The State of Indiana', Marion County, ss :
“Alfred Harrison v. John C. S. Harrison. No. 32,604. Answer to supplemental complaint.
“John C. S. Harrison, defendant in the above entitled cause, says that he admits the allegations of the supplemental complaint of the plaintiff herein, and consents to the surrender of .il of his individual property in the manner and for the purpose mentioned in said complaint.
“John C. S. Harrison,'Defendant.”
At the time the proceedings above recited took place, the appellant, Pressley, was a creditor of the firm, and on the 25th day of August, 1884, fecovered a judgment against its members for $9,929.02 in the Marion Circuit Court. On this judgment execution was issued, which, at the commencement of this suit, on the 30th day of August, 1884, remained in the hands of the sheriff.
After reciting in detail facts of which the foregoing is the substance, the complaint charges that the appointment of the receiver in the manner stated was without the jurisdiction of the judge, and therefore void.
The relief prayed is that the lien of the appellant’s judgment and execution should be declared to be prior to the claim and right of the receiver, and that he be directed to pay the claim of the appellaiit as a preferred lien.
A demurrer was sustained to the complaint, and the correctness of this ruling is the only question in the record. The case has been ably and elaborately argued on both sides.
On behalf of the appellant, it is contended that no receiver could be appointed until an action was pending, and that because no process was issued, and no appearance was entered for the defendant, before the receiver was appointed, no action was pending, and that, therefore, the appointment was void.
The contention of the appellees is, substantially, that a party against whom the appointment of a receiver is asked, may appear before the judge at any time and plead to the application, resist or consent to the appointment, and that, therefore, the papers filed by Alfred Harrison, who was the plaintiff in the petition, for John C. S. Harrison, the defendant, was such an appearance and answer as gave the judge jurisdiction to make the appointment.
Under the code of 1852, in which it was provided that “a receiver may be appointed by the court” in certain cases, it was held that an appointment made by a judge in vacation was void. Newman v. Hammond, 46 Ind. 119.
The act of 1875, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 115, provided, substantially, as the chancery practice did, “ That receivers shall not be appointed by any court, in any case, until the adverse pai’ty shall'have appeared and answered in the action pending, or shall have had reasonable notice of the pendency of the action and the application for such appointment.” May v. Greenhill, 80 Ind. 124.
By the code of 1881, section 1222, it is provided: “A receiver may be appointed by thq court, or the judge thereof in vacation, in the following cases; * * * * Second. In actions between partners, or persons jointly interested in any property or fund.”
It will be seen from the statute above quoted that a receiver may now be appointed by the court or judge in vacation, in actions between partners. As to the time when the appointment may be made the statute is silent. A receiver may be appointed “ in actions,” etc., is the provision of the statute. By the ancient practice of the court of chancery in England, a receiver was not appointed until after the coming in of the defendant’s answer, but it is now settled, both in this country and in England, that the appointment may be made before answer, provided a special necessity therefor is shown to exist. High Beceivers, secs. 105, 106.
Unless under extraordinary circumstances, as where the defendant had left the State to avoid process or the like, the
We think this rule prevails without substantial modification under existing statutes. We know of no decided case, except where the court was authorized by statute to preserve the'estates of infants and lunatics, in which a receiver was appointed before a suit was pending.
If an immediate necessity therefor is shown to exist, the application for a receiver may be entertained when the action is commenced, which, under the rule here, is when process is issued, or an appearance to the action is entered, in the manner recognized, but as the appointment of a receiver in any case is a provisional remedy, auxiliary to the action or the relief prayed for therein, neither the court in term nor judge, in vacation can acquire jurisdiction to appoint a receiver until there is an action pending. The application for a receiver is an interlocutory proceeding in a pending suit. Brinkman v. Ritzinger, 82 Ind. 358; Dale v. Kent, 58 Ind. 584; Merchants’, etc., Bank v. Kent, 43 Mich. 292. Unless it is shown that on account of absence, or for some other cause, process can not be served on the defendant, the application should not be entertained until after service and notice.
The action pending is the principal thing; the application for, and appointment of, a receiver is a mere incident, to preserve the subject of litigation until the decree is given, and made effectual; and as necessary to the incident, the action must be pending. Such applications are properly made on written motion or petition, with notice to the defendant. Affidavits, or, in the discretion of the court or judge, oral testimony, may be heard in support of or against the motion, but no pleadings are contemplated so far as respects the motion or application. This was ruled in Pouder v. Tate, 96 Ind. 330, where it was held that an offer to file a demurrer
As it is a prerequisite to the power of a judge to act upon the application for a receiver, that there should be a case pending in which the receiver is to be áppointed, and as in the motion for the appointment nothing is before the judge for determination except the application, and as to such application no pleadings are proper, it may well be doubted whether in any case jurisdiction to make such appointment could be acquired by a judge at chambers by the voluntary appearance of the defendant to such motion where no process had issued, and no appearance was entered in the case.
The obstacle which stands in the way of upholding the appointment which is assailed here, however, is found in the fact that no action was pending at the time, and in the further fact that John C. S. Harrison did not appear before the judge either in person or by attorney.
It is impossible to hold that signing and delivering to the plaintiff in the case the several papers above set out, and the presentation of them by him to the judge, constituted an appearance by the defendant, either to the action or to the proceeding'before the judge.
An unbroken line of decisions of this court has settled the rule that in order to confer jurisdiction over the person of a defendant in a judicial proceeding, where process has not been issued and served, his presence in court, either in person or by attorney, is indispensable. McCormack v. First Nat’l Bank, 53 Ind. 466; Rhoades v. Delaney, 50 Ind. 468; Craig v. Glass, 1 Ind. 88; Ferrand v. McClease, 1 Ind. 87; Harris v. Stanton, 4 Ind. 120; Comparet v. Hanna, 34 Ind. 74; Scott v. H , 14 Ind. 136; Willman v. Willman, 57 Ind. 500; Paulus v. Latta, 93 Ind. 34.
In Robinson v. Board, etc., 37 Ind. 333, it was said: “Assuming that the proceeding was of an adversary character,
Even if it were conceded that a receiver might in any case be appointed before the action was pending, where the defendant appeared before the court or judge, it must nevertheless be held that the appearance of the defendant must have been in a manner which is recognized by the law as an appearance. It can not be maintained that such an appearance was entered in this case.
Actions in which receivers may be appointed must be actions in which there are adversary parties. A receiver can not be appointed in an ex parte proceeding. Hardy v. McClellan, 53 Miss. 507. This being so, it must result from the very nature of things, that one adversary litigant, without express statutory authority, coiled not appear for and give jurisdiction to the court or judge over the other.
It is of the essence of judicial proceedings which can not be ex parte, that they should be inter partea, and as a proceeding in which a receiver may be appointed can not be an ex parte proceeding, it results that there must be upon the record and before the court or judge adverse parties. One party to an adversary proceeding can not do anything, nor can he be authorized to do anything by the other, which can give the court or judge jurisdiction over him exceptas the statute has enacted.
As the statute does not authorize, and public policy forbids, one party to appear for the other, it must be held that where it appears, as here, that the only jurisdiction which the court or judge had over the defendant was such as was acquired through the agency of the plaintiff in appearing for him, its proceeding was without jurisdiction and void.
It is said by counsel for the appellees that the papers signed
We have no doubt that parties to a controversy in an action pending may consent to the appointment of a receiver. We know of no authority, however, for partners to go before a court in term, or a judge in vacation, without a suit pending, and by mutual consent effect a voluntary assignment in the manner here proposed.
The statute enacted for that purpose points out the appropriate means to that end, and it declares further that all other assignments shall be deemed fraudulent and void.
The ai’gtunent is made that as this is a collateral attack upon a judgment, the jurisdiction of the court or judge will be conclusively presumed. This contention can not prevail. The complaint in this case avers, and the demurrer admits, that at the time the receiver was appointed no action was pending, that no process had been either issued or served on John C. S. Harrison, and that he did not appear to the action or motion, either in person or by attorney.
From this admission it results that the judge acquired no jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the receivership or of the person of the defendant, and the appointment was, consequently, not merely irregular, but absolutely void.
When the record of a court of general jurisdiction is silent upon the subject of the service of process, the presumption will be indulged that jurisdiction of the person was acquired as against a collateral attack. Parties to the record in such cases, and those in privity with them, will not be heard to
As we have already observed, a judge in vacation exercises only limited statutory power, and in such cases it must affirmatively appear that such a state of facts existed as warranted the exercise of jurisdiction. Cobb v. State, 27 Ind. 133; Britton v. State, ex rel., 54 Ind. 535; Newman v. Manning, 89 Ind. 422; Nicholson v. Stephens, 47 Ind. 185.
The appellant here is a stranger to the proceeding assailed, :and as such it is competent for him to allege and show the want of jurisdiction, and consequent invalidity of the proceeding.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, with directions to the court below to overrule the demurrer to the complaint.
Elliott, J., did not participate in the decision of this .cause.