158 P. 1072 | Idaho | 1916
On March 10, 1916, Evans State Bank filed its complaint in the district court of the fifth judicial district, in and for Power county for the foreclosure of two mortgages, one conveying real estate and the other personal property, executed by the above-named plaintiffs in order to secure the payment to the bank, by themselves, of a promissory note for $5,000, on which, it appears, there was due and unpaid the sum of $4,564, together with interest at the rate of twelve per cent per annum from October 25, 1915. The personal property described in the chattel mortgage consists of livestock, farm machinery and agricultural implements, owned and held in Power county, and it is alleged in the complaint in the foreclosure case that the defendants therein, Margaret Skeen and Lafayette Skeen, are wholly insolvent and unable to pay any deficiency that may remain after the sale of the mortgaged property; that they have sold a portion of the mortgaged chattels without the knowledge or consent of the bank and have appropriated the proceeds of the sale to themselves and have not accounted therefor; that the personal property described in the mortgage, if left in the hands of the defendants, Skeen and Skeen, is in danger of being lost, removed and materially injured, and that there is a prior mortgage upon the real estate in favor of the Union Central Life Insurance Company to secure the payment of $7,000, which is wholly and completely unsatisfied and is prior to the lien of the mortgage of Evans State Bank, and that the property mortgaged to the bank will bé insufficient to discharge the debt due to it if it is not all sold and applied thereto. The plaintiff in the foreclosure suit asked that a receiver be appointed and on March 13, 1916, the defendant herein, Honorable J. J. Guheen, Judge of the district court,
This is an original action commenced in this court to procure the issuance of a writ of prohibition directed to the defendants, the district court and Honorable J. J. Guheen, Judge thereof, commanding them and each of them to desist from taking, or causing or permitting to be taken, any further proceedings under the order appointing the receiver and adjudging that said order be null and void for want of jurisdiction of the defendants to make it. This court issued an alternative writ of prohibition and the defendants have demurred to plaintiffs’ petition and have moved to quash the writ.
Counsel for plaintiffs insist that the district court and the judge thereof were without jurisdiction to make the order appointing the receiver, for the reason that there was no affidavit filed showing the necessity therefor; that while the complaint is in positive terms and is verified by the cashier of the bank in conformity to the provisions of our statute, the verification contains the recitation that the allegations contained in the complaint are true as he verily believes, and does not state that he knows them to be true.
It is insisted that a complaint so verified cannot take the place of an affidavit to prove the necessity for a receiver
We have examined the complaint in the foreclosure suit and find it to be sufficient as a pleading. Whether or not it possesses any evidential value is a question which might become important in another form of action than this, but which we do not deem it necessary to decide in disposing of this case.
See. 4994, Eev. Codes, which provides: “The writ of prohibition .... arrests the proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board or person when such proceedings are without or in excess of the jurisdiction of such tribunal, corporation, board or person,” limits our present inquiry to a determination of whether or not the district court is acting within the jurisdiction conferred upon it by law.
This court held in Olden v. Paxton, 27 Ida. 597, 150 Pac. 40, that “before a writ of prohibtion will lie, two contingencies must arise; first, that the tribunal, corporation, board or person is proceeding without or in excess of its jurisdiction; second, that there is not a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.” (See, also, Dakan v. Superior Court, 2 Cal. App. 52, 82 Pac. 1129; Board of Home Missions v. Maughan, 35 Utah, 516, 101 Pac. 581, 24 L. R. A., N. S., 874; State ex rel. Lyon v. Police Court, 53 Wash. 361, 101 Pac. 1082; Conlan v. Superior Court, 12 Cal. App. 420, 107 Pac. 577; Rust v. Stewart, 7 Ida. 558, 64 Pac. 222; Utah Assn. of Credit Men v. Budge, 16 Ida. 751, 102 Pac. 390, 691.)
General original jurisdiction is conferred upon district courts by see. 20, art. 5, of the constitution, wherein it is provided: “The district court shall have original jurisdiction in all cases, both at law and in equity.....” Authority to entertain suits to foreclose chattel mortgages is provided in sec. 3412, Eev. Codes, as follows: “Any mortgage of personal property, when the debt to secure which the mortgage was given is due, .... may be foreclosed by action in the district court having jurisdiction in the county in which the property is situated.”
It is further contended that the district court exceeded its jurisdiction in ordering the receivership without notice, because there was no showing of necessity for such action; also in appointing the receiver, because it appears from the complaint that the chattel mortgage was not the primary security for the payment of the debt, but that the primary security consisted of a mortgage upon a large amount of real property and that such security had not been exhausted; also in maintaining and continuing the receivership when, at the hearing of the motion of plaintiffs herein to vacate it and set it aside, it was shown that the plaintiff in the foreclosure suit had security upon approximately $30,000 worth of real property by a mortgage which was subsequent and subject to a first mortgage given to secure about $7,650, and that it also had a chattel mortgage upon approximately $6,000 worth of personal property to secure the payment of its claim of $4,564.
What we have heretofore said about the scope and purpose of the writ of prohibition disposes of these contentions. .Thedistrict court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter in the foreclosure suit, and did not exceed its jurisdiction in appointing the receiver and in ordering the sale, but proceeded under-authority expressly conferred by law. If it committed errors they cannot be corrected in this form of action.