106 Wash. 569 | Wash. | 1919
The relator herein was made a party defendant in a suit brought against himself and the community of which he is a member, in the superior court for King county. Process was served upon him in Skagit county. In due time he appeared in that action by serving and filing a motion to make the complaint more definite and certain, and also a motion for
We have recently had occasion to re-examine the questions here involved, and to restate the law with reference to changes of venue, in State ex rel. Schlosberg v. Superior Court, ante p. 320, 179 Pac. 865, and no further discussion of the principles involved seems necessary. Were the facts contended for by the plaintiff herein as to his place of residence admitted, and were there no other facts involved, then the discretion of the trial court would not be invoked, and plaintiff would be entitled to have the case transferred to the county of his residence for trial, as a matter of right. State ex rel. Martin v. Superior Court, 97 Wash. 358, 166 Pac. 630, L. R. A. 1917 F 905. But here, not only are the facts as to residence denied, but the question of the convenience of witnesses was a fact upon which the trial court was called upon to pass, and one which appeals peculiarly to the discretion of the court. We said in State ex rel. Schlosberg v. Superior Court, supra:
“If the case did present such question of fact then it invoked discretion which could be exercised either way, and if the superior court for Spokane county erroneously exercised it, it did no more than commit-error in the exercise of a vested jurisdiction. And so with the superior .court for Skagit county, when it had the motions for change of venue before it; it had conflicting facts as to the convenience of witnesses and whether the ends of justice would be best subserved in that county or in another, which invoked the discretion of the superior court for Skagit county, and if it erred in the exercise of that discretion it did no more than commit error, which could not affect its jurisdiction; in other words, if the lower courts erroneously exercise their discretion, not arbitrarily or capriciously, but merely as an error of judgment, denying no inherent justice to any of the parties in the case, then*572 we cannot control that discretion by peremptory writ in advance of appeal, where the question may be finally litigated on a final appeal. ’ ’
The showing as to residence before the trial court, when it passed upon the motion, -was exceedingly meager, based wholly upon affidavits of the defendant seeking the change, and the traversing affidavits contained statements which raised an issue of fact, which, it is true, was hot directly decided. The question of the convenience of witnesses, upon which the ruling was based, is clearly one of fact, and while the facts set forth in the affidavits presented on behalf of the - plaintiffs below were not directly denied by the reply affidavit, yet their force and effect were challenged in the argument here, -and were no doubt so challenged in . the argument below, thus presenting a question of fact which invoked the discretion of the trial court, whose finding thereon we would not be disposed to overrule, however presented. Under such conditions, the writ sought cannot issue.
Writ denied.
Chadwick, C. J., Mount, Mitchell, and Holcomb, JJ., concur.