72 Neb. 837 | Neb. | 1904
In April, 1904, there was held in the village of Gothenburg an election of members of the board of trustees of the village. At the close of the election, and before the votes had been canvassed, one John Strahle,' alleging that lie was an elector of the village of Gothenburg, began a proceeding in the county court of Dawson county to contest the election of Carroll, Weideranders and Ellingsworth, three of the candidates at said election, each of whom had received, it is conceded, a majority of the votes cast at the election for the office of trustee. On the same day that he commenced this contest in the county court, the said Strahle began an action in the district court for Dawson county for the purpose of enjoining the board of trustees of the village of Gothenburg from canvassing the votes cast at the election, and in that action he obtained from the county judge1 of Dawson county a temporary order of injunction restraining the board of trustee's from canvassing the vote. Afterwards, his contest proceedings having been tried in the county court, and having resulted against him, and having been taken to the district court, both actions were tried in the district court, and determined against the contestant Strahle. lie has brought both actions to this court for review. The district court, having upon the final hearing dissolved the temporary injunction restraining the board from canvassing the yotes,
In Calvert v. State, 34 Neb. 616, the plaintiff in error had been adjudged guilty of contempt in violating an injunction order of the district court, and in reversing that judgment the court by Maxwell, C. J., said :
“The question presented to this court is the power of a judge at chambers, upon the issues presented, there being disputed questions of fact, to make the orden- in question. In any casi1 where the court or judge has jurisdiction and grants an injunction during the pendency of a suit, the injunction while in force must be obeyed. A court should exercise great care in granting such relief, and only where it is clear the injury to the plaintiff will be great or irreparable; but having granted it the adverse party should move to dissolve or modify and cannot disregard it with impunity. A court must insist that its legitimate orders be obeyed. This is necessary both for the protection of private rights and those of the public.. If the court or judge1 exceeds his jurisdiction, however, his action in the in-emises is like that of any other person who acts without authority. * * * Suppose the owner of a farm, or one or more city lots, should apply for an injunction to restrain the construction of a railway across his land, and should set forth the same facts as to his ownership and possession as the defendant has done in this case, and the railway company should allege tin1 same facts as are stated in the plaintiff’s petition, would the court or judge on a preliminary hearing have authority to tie the hands*840 of the landowner and permit the adverse party to divest him of his rights and destroy his possession? The statement of the case carries with it a full answer. The judge, in effect, has undertaken to dispose of the merits of the. case without a hearing. A temporary injunction merely prevents action until a hearing can be had. If it goes further, and divests a party of his possession or rights in the property, it is simply void. People v. Simonson, 10 Mich. 335; Port Huron & G. R. Co. v. Judge, 31 Mich. 456; Salling v. Johnson, 25 Mich. 489; McCombs v. Merryhew, 40 Mich. 72; Arnold v. Bright, 41 Mich. 207; Tawas & B. C. R. Co. v. Judge, 44 Mich. 479, 7 N. W. 65. Judge Cooley, in Arnold v. Bright, supra, says: ‘The court of chancery has no more power than any other to condemn a man unheard, and to dispossess him of property prima facie his, and hand over its enjoyment to another on an ex parte claim to it. In several cases it has been decided that possession of lands is not to be disturbed by means of a preliminary injunction. Hemingway v. Preston, Walk. Ch. (Mich.) 528; People v. Simonson, 10 Mich. 335.’”
It is said by Mr. High in his work on Injunctions, vol. 2 (4th ed.), sec. 1425:
“While it is thus seen that courts of equity exact the most implicit obedience to the writ of injunction,. and •treat its wilful violation as a most flagrant contempt of court, the doctrine is to be understood with the qualification that the court has jurisdiction over the subject matter in controversy. And if the court has no jurisdiction over the matter involved, or if it has exceeded its powers by granting an injunction in a matter beyond its jurisdiction, its injunction will be treated as absolutely void, and defendants cannot, in such case, be punished for contempt for its alleged violation. For example, when an injunction is issued against a board of township officers to restrain them from holding an election which they are authorized by law to hold, equity having no jurisdiction to interfere in such case, there can be. no disobedience of the injunction and no attachment for contempt, since the*841 mandate of the court is absolutely void. So where a court has exceeded its powers by granting an injunction in a matter over which it has no jurisdiction, as by enjoining a board of municipal officers from canvassing the returns of an election, the court having no power to hear or determine such controversies, its injunction will be treated as absolutely void, and a punishment inflicted for its violation will not be upheld.”
One of the cases referred to by Mr. High in support of this doctrine is Dickey v. Reed, 78 Ill. 261. Tn that action an injunction had been granted restraining the common council of the city of Chicago from canvassing the returns made to them by the judges and clerks of election. The defendants were advised by their counsel that the injunction was void, and that they might safely disregard it. The council then proceeded to canvass the returns. They were cited for contempt by t]w circuit court from which the injunction had issued, and upon judgment being entered punishing them for such contempt they appealed to the supreme court. In the opinion it is said:
“Public policy does not require such a jurisdiction, even if it could sanction it. If the power were admitted, where would its jurisdiction end? Suppose a person were to conceive a law to have been unconstitutionally enacted, could he, by bill, restrain the governor and all other officers from executing it until a hearing could be had and the law declared valid? Suppose a citizen, in his hostile opposition to a governor elect, or from other motives, were to conceive that he had obtained his apparent majority by fraud, could he apply to a court for and obtain an injunction to restrain him from becoming inaugurated, until by delays and appeals, the term for which he had been (fleeted should expire, and thus defeat the will of the people? * * * In this case there was a complainant, who had exhibited a bill, and there was a subject matter for litigation, and the controlling question is, whether the court, under any circumstances, could have power to hear, determine and decree in reference to it. If not, then the*842 whole proceeding was coram non jndice. The law under Avhich this election Avas held, neither in terms nor by implication confers the power. Nor is it. asserted that the court liad facts before it AAdiich required it to take judicial cognizance, and hear, adjudicate and decree. On the contrary, the court refused to continue the injunction, thus virtually deciding that the court was poAverless to afford the relief sought, and thereby permitting the injunction to come to an end by the terms of the order aAvarding it, and Ave are clearly of opinion that it aauis not a case for equitable interposition. * * * In Walton v. Develing, 61 Ill. 201, it Avas held, Avliere an injunction Avas issued to restrain-officers‘from holding an election, and it Avas disobeyed, that they were not amenable to the process or liable to be punished for a contempt in disobeying the Avrit. And it was upon tin* grounds that the writ was Amid for the. want of power, and the law required the officer to perform this particular duty. The distinction was there taken that, Avhere the court, has poAver over the subject matter, and authority to take such jurisdiction, and the court acts, its process must be obeyed; but Avhere the poAver is Avholly Avanting, then the process is void, and need not be.obeyed. The same rule Avas recognized and applied in Darst v. People; 62 Ill. 306. So the doctrine is by no means novel in this court.”
In State v. Gibbs, 13 Fla. 55, 7 Am. Rep. 233, the court said:
“It is insisted by the relator that the proceedings by the canvassers Avere illegal and void, because they were enjoined by the order of a judge of the circuit court from further proceeding until the further order of the circuit judge; and that the respondents did proceed to declare the partial result of the election, of Avhich the relator complains, before the dissolution of the injunctional order and without a further order of the judge. We think the order of the circuit judge. Avas unadvisedly made, and that in its form and effect it Avas essentially a perpetual injunction, It forbade the further proceeding until permis*843 sion should he granted by the judge, and was in effect the abrogation of a statute which authorized and required them to proceed with reasonable dispatch, and it was therefore illegal.”
Scott v. McGuire, 15 Neb. 303, was an action to enjoin the county commissioners “ ‘from removing the county seat * * * or any of the county offices or county records or papers’ from the town of La Porte to the town of Wayne.” An election had been held upon the question of removing the county seat, and it appeared in the case inferentially that the result was in favor of Wayne. The opinion, after stating that the object of a contest of election is to have the declared result of the election vacated, says:
“This, however, cannot be reached by an order of injunction restraining county officers from removing their office's -to the relocated county seat, and transacting business there', but by a judgme'nt formally seating aside' the re'sult arrived at and de'e*lare>el by the canvassers of the votes cast at the election, in an action brought to contest it. Such an injunction would cennpel a violatiem by the'se officers of a positive commanel of the statute * * * that on the relocation of the county seat, they ‘forthwith remove their respective offices, anet all county records, papers, and prop-e'.rty in tlmir office's or charge to the place where saiel county se>at shall have been relocated/ a severe' penalty being provident in case of a refusal to do so. This is a valiet enactmemt. which the courts have no right to disregard by requiring others to disobey it.”
And so the statute provides that immediately after the election the board shall canvass the votes, and that a contc'st. may be begun after (not before) the canvass is made. The injunction in this case attempted to prevent this canvass of the votes. There can be no circumstances under our statute which will authorize the courts to so interfere and stop the election board from performing this plain statutory political duty. It follows that the injunction order made by the district cc ‘ was absolutely void
It was said by the supreme court of Illinois in Dickey v. Reed, supra:
“It is true that officers and others may be embarrassed as to their course of action in such cases. They must act at their peril under all such circumstances. They can, as the parties did in this case, call to their aid able counsel, learn their duty from all available sources, and then act and abide the consequences. If the advice they procure be wrong, it will be their misfortune, and the incorrect advice will not excuse the offense or mitigate the punishment.”
It does not appear that these respondents took the advice of counsel with special reference to their disinterested duty in the matter. The relator herein is at least equally innocent with themselves, and the ordinary rule for taxing costs must be applied. The costs of these proceedings therefore will be taxed against the respondents A. G. Carlson, F. E. Carlson and Habbe Janssen. •
Writ allowed.