9 Wash. 668 | Wash. | 1894
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— By this proceeding it is sought to prohibit the superior court of Pierce county and W. H. Pritchard, respondents, from further proceeding in a certain cause which had been brought in that court against the petitioner and other defendants. It sufficiently appears from the return to the alternative writ heretofore issued that, within the time prescribed by law, three of the defendants appeared in the action, filed a demurrer to the complaint, and an affidavit of merits, and demanded that the cause be removed for trial to the county of King, in which, it was shown by the affidavit, the defendants all resided. The other defendant was not served until some time after this proceeding was had. The court denied the demand for the transfer of the cause, and proposed to further proceed therein, and the
Various preliminary questions have been raised by respondents relating to the jurisdiction of this court to issue its writ of prohibition in cases of this kind, and as to other questions going to the procedure, but it is not necessary for us to say more in regard thereto than that they have been settled by several decisions of this court adversely to the contention of respondents. See State, ex rel. Cummings, v. Superior Court, 5 Wash. 518 (32 Pac. 457); North Yakima v. Superior Court, 4 Wash. 655 (30 Pac. 1053); State, ex rel. Campbell, v. Superior Court, 7 Wash. 306 (34 Pac. 1103).
The only question which we shall consider is as to the sufficiency of the proceeding to entitle the defendants to the transfer of the cause. These are attacked upon two principal grounds, one that the affidavit of merits was insufficient, and the other that all of the defendants did not join in the application. In determining as to the sufficiency of the affidavit of merits, the object for which it was filed must be taken into consideration. Under our statute a resident of any county is entitled as a matter of right to be sued in the county in which he, or some of his co-defendants, reside, but for the purpose of preventing judgments rendered in good faith from being open to collateral attack by a showing subsequent to their becoming final, to the effect that none of the defendants were residents of the county in which they were rendered, the legislature has wisely provided that notwithstanding this absolute right on the part of a defendant to be sued in the county of his residence, this right shall not so avail him as to deprive the court of another county in which an action has been brought of jurisdiction, unless he appears and raises the question as to which is the proper county as provided by statute. It will be seen that the right to have
We are aware that the decisions in the State of California, and perhaps in some of the other states, seem to have been based upon a different theory, but in our opinion these courts have lost sight of the fact, that the exception by which the court in which the action has been brought is allowed to retain jurisdiction is one of necessity, and was only enacted to effect the absolute right of transfer to the county of the residence so far as was necessary to protect the validity of judgments rendered where no motion for transfer had been made. Under the liberal construction of this statute, which we think it should receive, the affidavit of merits in the case at bar was sufficient. It is true that it is not therein stated that the whole case had been
The other objection is untenable, for the reason that, at the time this demand for transfer was made, there had been no service upon the other defendant, and the fact that he was served before the court had passed upon the sufficiency of such demand could not affect the rights of the parties as determined upon its presentation.
There was another suggestion made by the respondents growing out of the fact that the defendants did not appear at the time the motion for the transfer came on to be heard, but we think it sufficiently appears from the record that the court did not deny the application on that account, but determined it upon its merits. But, whatever may be the fact as to this, the rights of the defendants could not be determined by the action of the court in regard thereto. So soon as the defendants had made the demand for the transfer, as provided by the statute, the right of the court to further proceed in the matter was terminated, and the only thing left for it to do was to transfer the cause to the proper county for trial.
It is further suggested that it does not appear that there was any defense to the entire cause of action, but, in our opinion, it was sufficient if it appeared that there was something to try between the parties, and that this did appear.
Anders, Stiles and Scott, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — I think the affidavit of merits filed in this case was entirely insufficient under all the authorities. Neither do I think, as is indicated by the majority opinion, that a defendant has any natural right to have the case tried, or the action brought, in the county where he resides. He has a right to have it tried there simply because the law gives him that right, when he complies with certain conditions which the law imposes, and he should be held to as strict a compliance with those conditions as with any other conditions imposed by the law. Not having complied with the requirements, the writ should, therefore, be denied.