29 Nev. 459 | Nev. | 1907
By the Court,
This is an application for a writ of mandamus against Frank P. Langan, District Judge of the First Judicial District of the State of Nevada, for the purpose of compelling him to hear a motion to dissolve or modify an injunction or increase the injunction bond in the case now pending in the
It appears from the record in this case that the plaintiffs filed a complaint against the above-named defendants for the purpose of recovering from said defendants a two-thirds interest in 100,000 shares of the capital stock-of the Goldfield Consolidated Mines Company of Nevada of the approximate value of half a million dollars. Upon filing of the complaint, an injunction was secured from the district court on a bond in the sum of $15,000, enjoining the defendants from delivering to their codefendant Botsford the said stock in question until the determination of this suit. Upon the petition of the defendant Botsford for the removal of said cause to the Circuit Court of the United States in and for the Ninth District of Nevada, the district court of Esmeralda County remanded said case to said United States Circuit Court on or about the 1st day of February, 1907, and thereafter, to wit, on the 12th day of June, 1907, the said United States Circuit Court remanded said cause back to the said district court in and for Esmeralda County for trial.
Subsequent to February 1,1907, when said order of removal was made from the said state court to the United States Circuit Court and prior to June 12, 1907, when the order remanding said cause from said United States Circuit Court back to said district court was entered, to wit, on the 6th day of March, 1907, and while said cause was pending on removal in said United States Circuit Court, the plaintiffs caused to be issued an alias summons out of the said state court, and caused said alias summons to be served by the sheriff of Esmeralda County upon said Charles H. Botsford, the relator herein, on or about the 7th day of March, 1907, and on the 12th day of June, 1907, the plaintiffs, through their attorneys, caused
On or about the 7th day of June, 1907, said Charles H. Botsford filed in said cause in said state district court a motion to vacate and set aside said default, and on the 29th day of June, 1907, after hearing arguments upon said motion, Judge Langan, district judge of said state court, entered an order vacating and setting aside the said default, and thereafter, to wit, on the 6th day of August, 1907, plaintiffs perfected an appeal to this court from said order setting aside said default.
Upon the 2d day of August, 1907, the relator herein, through his attorneys, served upon the attorneys for said plaintiffs Van Riper and Hutchinson a notice that on Monday, the 12th day of August, at the county court house of Lyon County, Nevada, at the Town of Dayton, in said county, they would apply to the Honorable F. P. Langan, the respondent herein, Judge of the First Judicial District Court aforesaid, to hear a motion to dissolve or modify the injunction theretofore granted in said cause, or to increase the bond of the injunction theretofore issued, and on said date attorneys for said plaintiffs appeared and entered a protest against proceeding with the motion to dissolve or modify the injunction or to increase the bond for the injunction, and the said district court, after considering the said protest, declined to proceed, and refused to hear the said hearing or entertain the same in any way, and announced that, during the pen-dency of the appeal from the order vacating and setting aside the default, he would not proceed with said motion or any motion of like character.
Upon the hearing of the application for a writ of mandamus in this court, counsel for the plaintiffs appeared and demurred to the sufficiency of the petition, and further moved to dismiss the application of relator for a writ of mandamus upon the ground that the defendants had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law. Upon the overruling of the demurrer as to the sufficiency of the petition, counsel for relator moved that the appeal of plaintiffs in the ease entitled L. C. Van
Stripping the application- for a writ of mandamus and the motion to dismiss said appeal of their immaterial points raised, the real decisive question involved in the merits of this application for a writ of mandamus and motion to dismiss said appeal is whether or not an appeal lies to this tribunal from an order setting aside or vacating a default entered by the clerk. As the motion to dismiss the appeal raises the same point, to wit, as to whether or not an appeal which is granted at this time in the case of Van Riper, et al. v. Botsford, et al., infra, lies from an order setting aside or vacating a default entered by the clerk, as is desired and attempted to- be accomplished through the means of the extraordinary writ of mandamus, applied for by relator, it is plain that relator has a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law which is now effective in his favor, and for this reason the application for a writ of mandamus is hereby ordered dismissed.
The sole question to be determined now before the court is whether or not an appeal lies to this court from an order setting aside or vacating a default entered by the clerk. Section 3425 of the Compiled Laws, being section 330 of the civil practice act, relating to appeals in civil actions, reads as follows: "An appeal may be taken: First — From a final judgment in an action, or special proceedings commenced in the court in which the judgment is rendered, within one year after the rendition of the judgment. Second — From a
An appeal to this tribunal is a matter purely of statutory right, and, unless authorized by statute, any attempted appeal taken from an order not appealable is void, and therefore could not confer any jurisdiction upon this court to act. It is clear that, where an order is nonappealable, no jurisdiction can be conferred on or entertained by this court by the perfecting of an attempted appeal. Under our construction of the statute above quoted regarding appeals, we are of the opinion that the order in question from which the appeal in the present case is attempted is nonappealable. (Rauer’s Law and Collection, Co., Inc., v. Standley, 84 Pac. 214; Jordan v. Hutchinson, 39 Wash. 373, 81 Pac. 867; Bowen v. Webb, 34 Mont. 61, 85 Pac. 739; Thornburg v. Gutridge, 46 Or. 286, 80 Pac. 100; Burbank v. Rivers, 20 Nev. 81, 16 Pac. 430.)