127 Mo. App. 469 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
One of the judges of this court in vacation, issued a preliminary writ of prohibition to respondents prohibiting them, and each of them, from further proceeding or entertaining jurisdiction in a certain cause pending in the circuit court of New Madrid county, wherein Bert E. Fenn, Robert g. Rutledge, M1. W. Powell, administrator of the estate of Mal H. Powell, deceased, J. O. More and T. W. Corley, are defendants, and to show cause before this court at the October term why the rule of prohibition should not be made absolute. The respondents appeared and showed cause by their several returns to the preliminary writ, to which the petitioner has filed demurrers. The petitioner Bert F. Fenn, is an attorney residing in the city of gt. Louis. The respondent James V. Conran, is an attorney residing in the city of New Madrid, the respondent Henry C. Riley, is judge of the circuit court of New Madrid county and the respondent J. H. Bishop, is judge of the probate court of said county. On August 3, 1907, James V. Conran instituted a suit for an injunction in the circuit court of New Madrid county against the parties whose names we have given, to-wit; Robert S. Rutledge, Bert F. Fenn, M. W. Powell, administrator of the estate of M. H. Powell, deceased, J. O. More and T. W. Corley. As the circuit court of New Madrid county was not in session at the'time nor the judge of it within said county, Conran applied to the Hon. J. H. Bishop, judge of the probate court for a preliminary writ of injunction, and on Conran’s filing an injunction bond in the sum of |5,000, the writ was granted and the papers certified to the circuit court of the county, where the cause is still pending. It appears from the return of Judge Bishop, that the only knowledge he had regarding the merits of Conran’s cause of action was what appeared in the petition for an injunction. However, notice of the application for the writ had been given to the defendants in the suit against whom the writ was
“It is ordered that a temporary injunction be granted here, enjoining the said Robert S. Rutledge, Bert F. Fenn and T. W. Corley, their servants, agents and employees and confederates from prosecuting further in any way, manner or form, a case now pending in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, styled Bert F. Fenn, plaintiff, v. James Y. Conran, defendant, and being based upon allegation of verbal slander and being same case in which plaintiff attempted to take depositions before T. W. Corley on the 25th day of July, 1907, and being the last case filed in the said circuit court of the city of St. Louis, in which service has been had upon the the said James V. Conran, and from the proceeding further with said case until final determination of the case now pending in the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri, on appeal from the circuit court of Ste. Genevieve county, MO'., and from the further annoyance, harassment and aggravation of the said James V. Conran and from the institution of any other further actions against said James Y. Conran touching upon, based upon, or connected with or growing out of the transactions and matters in the petition stated until the final determination of the case now pending and upon which service has been had in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, until the further order of this or the circuit court of New Madrid county, Missouri, upon the plaintiff filing a bond conditioned according to law, in the sum of five thousand dollars, with W. Y. Conran and S. R. Conran as sureties, which bond is herewith filed and approved;
It was after the granting of the above preliminary injunction, that Fenn applied for a writ to prohibit the respondents in the present case, to-wit, James V. Con-ran and Henry 0. Riley, judge of the circuit court of New Madrid county and J. H. Bishop, probate judge of the same county, from further proceeding with said injunction proceeding instituted by Conran against Fenn and others. The reason assigned why the writ of prohibition should be made absolute is that the circuit court of New Madrid county has no jurisdiction of said suit and is acting beyond and in excess of its jurisdiction. It is within the jurisdiction of equity, on a proper showing in the proper forum, to prevent by injunction a multiplicity of suits, and a court of equity could not properly be prohibited from hearing a cause which applied for injunctive relief against such a grievance. Nor would it he sufficient to authorize prohibition that there is no merit in the suit for injunction, or that the petition for said writ is demurrable. Those would be matters for the attention of the court of first instance, subject to review by the court of last resort, and would not go to the jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the cause. [State ex rel. v. Lewis, 76 Mo. 370; State ex rel. v. St. Louis Court of Appeals, 99 Mo. 216, 12 S. W. 661.] It is inconceivable how Conran’s action against Fenñ and Mai H. Powell for slander and conspiracy, can adjudicate the issues in the slander suit by Fenn against him. Con-ran’s suit for slander could have no other basis than the