5 Wash. 387 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The learned judge who tried this cause seems to have proceeded upon the theory that the judgment rendered in the case of Lorenz v. First Bank of Orting was binding upon the appellant, to the extent at least of authorizing the court to include therein the order complained of, simply because the appellant was, at that time, an officer of the defendant corporation.
This is, we think, an erroneous conception of the law applicable to the case. The appellant was not a party to that action, was not served with process therein, and no relief was asked as against him. The mere fact that the summons was served upon him as a representative of the defendant for that purpose did not make him a party to the action. Such service was for the purpose of bringing the defendant bank into court, and for that purpose and no other it was effectual. Ex parte Hollis, 59 Cal. 405.
By what authority, then, did the court adjudge that the appellant wrongfully took the securities in question from the safe of the defendant, prior to the commencement of the action, and that he should return them to the receiver? Obviously the court had no such authority, and the order was therefore void.
It is true that property in the possession of a receiver is deemed to be in the custody of the court, and anyone who, with notice of the receiver’s appointment, in anyway interferes with his possession is liable to punishment as for a contempt of court. Beach on Receivers, § 245. But the
In this case the evidence shows clearly that the notes, at the time appellant was ordered to deliver them to the receiver, and also at the time he was adjudged guilty of a contempt of court and committed to prison for failing to comply with the order, were in the custody of the National Bank of the Republic, and by it held as a pledge to secure the payment of an indebtedness from the defendant in the original action. And this fact being undisputed, it follows that appellant would have been excused for not delivering them to the receiver, even if the order to do so had been a valid one. Register v. State, 8 Minn. 214.
We are of the opinion that the judgment in this proceeding is neither supported by law nor warranted by the evidence. It is therefore reversed and the appellant discharged.