Rеlator seeks mandamus to require respondent Judge to set aside an order entered March 17, 1965, quashing service, dissolving attachments and garnishments and dismissing relator’s action against Louis Lesser Enterprises and D & L Construction Company and to reinstаte said cause so it may proceed on its merits. Respondent has stayed this order until this court rules on the petition for mandamus. Both parties have filed motions in this Court for judgment on the pleadings.
Relator’s petition against Lesser and D & L (foreign corporations based in Californiа) alleged they were engaged in a joint venture to build housing at Fort Leonard Wood and that Clarence W. Franks was a subcontractor whom they owed $82,348.38; that relator (qualified to do business in this state), having furnished Franks’ performance bond, completed his work at an additional cost of $151,172.71; and that relator was the owner of this claim in the total sum of $233,521.09 by subrogation and assignment. Relator’s petition, in a second count, stated a claim for the same amount based on fraud.
On garnishment prоceedings, Emerson Electric Company disclosed it was obligated to Lesser for monthly rents and taxes on real estate, which it appears is $4,125.00 per month and annual taxes, totaling more than $33,000.00 in rentals at the time the case was heard in this court. Notice of commencement of suit by attachment and garnishment was given to both defendants by registered mail and also such notice was served on Lesser in California by a deputy sheriff. Both defendants, appearing specially, by the same counsel, filed motions to dismiss, which the court sustained. Respondent’s brief summarizes the grounds of the motions as follows: “(1) Lack of in rem jurisdiction as the present Relator had previously caused exactly the same property purported to be attached herein to become subject to the process of the District Court for the Western District of Missouri; (2) a lack of in personam jurisdiction because of invalid service; (3) lack of venue; (4) a multiplicity of suits between the same parties concerning the same subject matter; (5) failure to provide security for costs; (6) absence of the real party in interest; (7) failure to join other indispensable parties; (8) forum non conveniens; and (9) failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted.”
Respondent’s first contеntion is that whether the dismissal was right or wrong relator’s only remedy is by appeal. However, there is no final appealable judgment in this case because the order of dismissal entered by the court on March 17, 1965, was by order made the next dаy, March 18, 1965, stayed until April 2, 1965, to allow relator time to apply to an appellate court for an appropriate writ. Thereafter, on April 1, 1965, when relator’s petition for mandamus had been filed in this court, the stay of the dismissal ordеr of March 17, 1965, was “extended until the Supreme Court of Missouri rules on said petition for a writ of mandamus.” All this is admitted in respondent’s return and thus it is clear that the order of dismissal has not been entered as a final judgment but only amounts to an indication of the ruling аnd
Thus the next question is whether mandamus is available as a remedy under the circumstances of this case. We have held mandamus is an apprоpriate remedy when the court dismisses a case on the ground that it does not have jurisdiction as a matter of law and not depending upon the determination of any facts. State ex rel. Fielder v. Kirkwood,
This claim is that garnishment hеrein does not give the court jurisdiction because the property (amounts due Lesser) “has been at the instance of this same plaintiff (relator) been brought into the custody and control of the U. S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri prior to the institution of this proceeding by subsisting order of such court.” Respondent cites 14 Am.Jur. 446, Courts, Sec. 251, that “property in the possession of one court is not liable to seizure on process from another court”; and that “where propеrty has been seized under process from a Federal court and is in the custody of the marshal, the right to hold it is a question for the determination of the Federal court under the process of which it was seized, and possession cannot be interfered with by a state court.” However, in this same section it is stated: “Where one of the courts has thus secured possession or dominion of specific property, the suit in the co-ordinate jurisdiction to affect the same property should be stayed until the proceedings in the court which first obtained jurisdiction are concluded or until ample time for their termination has elapsed.” In 1 C.J.S. Actions § 133, p. 1411, it is stated: “Where, however, the action is in rem or quasi in rem, that court, whether state or federal, which first takes possession or control, actual or potential, of the res, will exercise its power to completion and the other court should stay proceedings before it pending the determination in the other court.”
The pendency of an action (either personal or in rem) in either a state or a federal court does not entitle the defendant to abatement of a like action in the other; although in actiоns in rem “the court first acquiring jurisdiction of the res retains it until the authority of the court is exhausted
On this subject of jurisdiction, the United States Supreme Court said in Penn General Casualty Co. v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania ex rel. Schnader, Attorney General,
Apparently the court’s view was that it did not have jurisdiction because of
Stay of proceedings is not a matter of right but involves the exercise of some discretion by the trial court as to granting and as to duration; but it would be an abuse of discretion to refuse a stay properly required by the circumstances. 1 Am.Jur.2d 624, Actions, Sec. 97; 1 C.J.S. Actions § 133, pp. 1410-1412; Ryan v. Campbell Sixty-Six Express, Inc.,
It is ordered that our peremptory writ of mandamus be issued for that purpose.
