219 Mo. 667 | Mo. | 1909
This is an original proceeding in this court by which relators seek by mandamus to compel Hon. Henry C. Riley, Judge of the Circuit Court of Mississippi county, to set aside an order of dismissal heretofore entered by him in said court in a cause then pending wherein James M. Potter was plaintiff and Thomas Bullivant et al., were defendants, and to reinstate the cause, and to proceed with said cause and to hear and determine the same.
This court issued its alternative writ of mandamus, the allegations of which are, in substance, as follows: That relators and one Francis J. Bullivant, son of Thomas Bullivant, are the only heirs at law of dames M. Potter, deceased, who died January 5, 1896; that relators are all non-residents of Missouri, but said Francis J. Bullivant is a resident 'of Missouri; that two of relators (naming them) are minors and appear by their next friend, Samuel W. Fordyce; that at the time of his death, James M.
Such are tbe facts recited in tbe alternative writ.
By way of return tbe respondent says: that be admits that be is judge of tbe circuit court of Mississippi county; admits making tbe order of dismissal; that be denies having any knowledge of tbe death of Potter, either individually or otherwise; that said order was made on tbe application of L. D. Grove, an attorney at law, who was attorney of record for Potter, who, at tbe time, represented be was attorney for Potter; that said order so made is not void, nor subject to collateral attack, nor tó be set aside upon motion unless motion be made within three years. Tbe return then proceeds in this language:
“Respondent further says that on heretofore tbe -day of April, 1906, and at tbe regular April term of tbe circuit court of Mississippi county, Missouri, one Francis J. Bullivant, as an heir at law of tbe said James M. Potter,'presented to tbe court bis mo; tion to set aside .the order of dismissal made and entered in tbe cause wherein said James M. Potter was plaintiff, and Thomas Bullivant and others defendants; that upon tbe presentation of said motion it was stipulated and agreed by tbe parties thereto, that tbe said James M. Potter was dead at tbe time said judgment and order of dismissal was entered; that upon tbe bearing- of said motion it was further shown to tbe court, by tbe introduction in evidence of certified copies of tbe land records of Butler county, Missouri, tbe situs of tbe lands in controversy in said suit, that tbe said James M. Potter, tbe plaintiff in said cause, bad, by bis general warranty deed dated January 3, 1896, and which said deed is duly recorded in Book No. 53 at page 141, tbe same being one of tbe land records of Butler county, Missouri, conveyed to Jane 0. Potter one of tbe relators herein said lands. That it was further shown to tbe court*677 that the said Jane C. Potter had, by her quitclaim deed, dated the 19th day of April, 1901, and recorded in Book No. 49 at page 488, the same being one of the land records of Butler county, Missouri, conveyed all her right, title and interest in and to said lands to parties other than the relators herein or either of them.
“Respondent further says that upon the hearing of the motion of the relators to set aside the judgment and order of dismissal and reinstate the cause of James M. Potter versus Thomas Bullivant and others, it was not shown to the court that the relators or either of them had acquired any right, title or interest in the lands in controversy in said suit.
“Respondent further says that from the order and judgment of the court in overruling relators’ said motion, the relators have an adequate remedy by appeal.
“All of which is respectfully submitted.”
To this return, relators filed their plea, in substance as follows: They deny that L. D. Grove represented to respondent that he was attorney - for James M. Potter, when the order of dismissal was made; they aver that it is mandatory upon respondent to reinstate and .redocket the cause; they aver that section 795, referred to, but not specifically named in respondent’s return, is not applicable to this case; they deny that upon the hearing of the motion of Francis J. Bullivant, any deeds or certified copies thereof were introduced showing that James M. Potter had conveyed to parties other than relators; they aver that the alleged deed from James M. Potter to Jane C. Potter, who is one of the relators herein, was notoriously fraudulent and void and was never in fact executed and that at the time it was claimed that it was executed, the said James M. Potter was in extremis and was in an unconscious and comatose condition, and because the said alleged instrument
To this pleading, respondent filed no replication.
This court appointed Hon. Arthur L. Oliver as a commissioner to take the testimony in the cause and report the same, together with his finding of facts, to this court. Such has been done and the findings so found by the commissioner are as follows:
“First. I find that the relators, Jane C. Potter, Dexter D. E. Potter, Mary 0. Nasmith, Eliza Buchner, Edith Potter, a minor, and Eobert Potter, a minor, together with one Francis J. Bullivant (who is not a party to this suit) and were at the time of filing of relators’ petition for mandamus, the sole and surviving heirs, as children and grandchildren of one James M. Potter. That the said James M. Potter died intestate on or about the 30th day of December, 1895. That the respondent, Henry C. Eiley, is*679 and was at all times mentioned in relator’s petition the dnly elected, qualified and acting judge of the circuit court of Mississippi county, Missouri.
“Second. I find that prior to the death of the said James M. Potter, during the month of September, 1890, he, the said James M. Potter, instituted a suit in equity, against one Thomas Bullivant, Stephen M. Chapman, Charles F. Hendricks, Byrd Duncan, Patrick Harmon, and ¥m. F. Neal, defendants, in the circuit court of Butler county, wherein it was sought by the plaintiff Potter to have certain alleged encumbrances set aside, which had theretofore been given by him on his lands located in Butler county, Missouri, or to have the status of these encumbrances determined by the court. That this original suit was transferred by change of venue to the circuit court of Mississippi county, Missouri, where the cause of action was there dismissed as to all defendants except Thomas J. Bullivant and Stephen M. Chapman. That in October, 1892, the issues of this original suit were finally submitted to the respondent, H. C. Riley, as Judge of the Circuit Court of Mississippi County, aforesaid, and a judgment (which was not offered in the hearing before me) was by him rendered in favor of the plaintiff, James M. Potter. That thereupon one J. Perry Johnson was appointed as referee to ascertain and determine the value of certain improvements on the lands then in litigation, and that said referee thereafter filed his report, to which the. defendants, Bullivant and Chapman, filed their exceptions.
“Third. I further find that thereafter, while the exceptions to the referee’s report of defendants Bul-livant and Chapman were pending in said circuit court of Mississippi county, and before they were ruled upon by the respondent, H. C. Riley, one L. D. G-rove, who I find was acting as the attorney of James M. Potter in his lifetime, appeared as Potter’s attorney,*680 on the 7tla day of April, 1896, and had the following order made on record:
“ ‘James M. Potter, plaintiff, vs. Thomas Bulli-vant et ah, defendants.
“ ‘Prom Butler connty.
“ ‘Now comes the plaintiff, by attorney, and on motion this cause is dismissed.
“ ‘It is therefore considered and adjudged by the court that the defendants recover of ■ and from the plaintiff the costs and charges herein expended and that execution issue therefor. ’
“I find that at the time the above order was made, James M. Potter, the plaintiff, had then been dead about three months, but the evidence fails to show that any evidence of death was ever made known to the court, at or prior to that time, or that the court of its own knowledge knew of Potter’s death. The evidence does show that on the same day in another and different suit wherein James M. Potter was defendant, his death was suggested and not denied, and one Jane Potter was made party defendant.
“Fourth. Tour commissioner further finds that thereafter, to-wit, on the 8th day of October, 1907, the relators herein by their attorneys, filed a motion in the circuit court of Mississippi county, wherein they sought to have the court set aside the order of dismissal made in the case of James M. Potter vs. Thomas J. Bullivant et al., on the 7th day of April, 1896, and that said motion was by the respondent, H. O. Riley, overruled. That at the time of the submission of this motion, on October 8, 1907, it was stipulated and admitted by the parties in said motion, and offered before the respondent H. 0. Riley, in support of said motion, the following:
“ ‘First: That James M. Potter, the plaintiff in the above entitled suit, died on or about the 30th day of December, 1895, and before the order of dismissal was made in said suit.
*681 “ ‘Second: That Eliza Buchner, Mary G-. Na-smith, Jane C. Potter, Dexter D. E. Potter, Edith Potter, and Robert Potter, together with Francis J. Bullivant, are interested as heirs at law of James M. Potter, deceased, who was formerly the plaintiff in the above styled suit.’
“I further find that at the time of the submission of relators’ motion in October, 1907, there was no evidence introduced on the hearing of said motion in the circuit court of Mississippi county, Missouri, and before the respondent, showing that James M. Potter had prior to his death conveyed the lands in controversy. But that on another and different motion filed by one Francis J. Bullivant (who is not a party to this suit) on April, 1905, and passed upon by the respondent on the 5th day of October, 1906, defendants in that motion offered at sometime in vacation certain exhibits to the respondent, in support of their contention that said James M. Potter had conveyed said lands in controversy.”
Such are the facts pleaded and the facts proven in this record.
I. In respondent’s brief we are cited to section 795, Revised Statutes 1899', as being of force and vitality in this cause. This section permits the setting aside of judgments for irregularities upon motions filed within three years after the terms of their rendition. This motion was filed long after the expiration of the time prescribed by this statute, and as we take it was not intended to be a motion under this section of the statute. A motion contemplated by this statute must be one based upon an irregularity which is patent on the record, and not one depending upon proof dehors the record. [Phillips v. Evans, 64 Mo. l. c. 22; Latshaw v. McNees, 50 Mo. l. c. 384; Powell v. Gott, 13 Mo. l. c. 461.]
The motion in question is more in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis, the very purpose of which
In the case of Craig v. Smith, supra, there was both a patent error of record, i. e., the sheriff’s return, which showed a non est as to the moving defendant, and an error of fact, in this, that the attorneys representing two of the defendants (there being three including the movant) had filed an answer for defendants without specifying for which defendants the answer was intended, when they had no authority to appear for but two and not for the party filing the motion to vacate the judgment. The motion was filed within three years, and this court treated it both as a motion in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis and as a motion under the statute, now section 795, Revised Statutes 1899.
In 5 Ency. Plead, and Prac., 26-27, the office of the writ is thus described and defined: “The office of the writ of coram nobis is to bring the attention of the court to, and obtain relief from, errors of fact, such as the death of either party pending the suit and before judgment therein; or infancy, where the party was not properly represented by guardian, or cover-ture, where the common law disability still exists, or insanity, it seems, at the time of the trial; or a valid
In Powell v. Gott, supra, we said: “This was a motion to set aside a judgment obtained against an infant who appeared by attorney. The judgment was rendered in 1841, and the motion was made in 1847, about two years after the defendant attained his majority. The motion was supported by several affidavits, both of the petitioner and others of his family, to establish the truth of the facts stated therein. The motion was overruled by the circuit court. This is in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis. The object of this motion is to correct an error in fact, upon which certain proceedings in law have been based.”
And in this State it has been held that no Statute of Limitations applies to such proceeding. [Powell v. Gott, 13 Mo. 458; Latshaw v. McNees, 50 Mo. l. c. 384.]
In the latter case it is said: “As this error does not appear upon the face of the pleadings, it can only be brought to the attention of the court by a proceeding in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis. The usual way is by motion supported by affidavits or evidence. If the motion is sustained the husband and wife are allowed to make any defense to the merits they may have, and the case is retried. This motion is allowed at any subsequent term after final judgment. I know of no Statute of Limitations against such a motion. The Statute of Limitations in regard to irregularities applies to such as appear on the face of the proceedings, and not to such as are brought before court by evidence aliunde, as in this
The relators herein are proper parties to file snch a motion in the original case. They are the heirs at law of Potter and are injured by the judgment. They are privies to the record as- such heirs of Potter. In 5 Ency. Plead, and Prac., 31, this rule is announced: “A writ of error coram nobis can only be procured by one who is a party, or privy to the record, or injured thereby.”
See also Holford v. Alexander, Assignee, 12 Ala. l. c. 289, wherein, on a discussion of who can sue out such a writ, it was said: <£It is laid down in the elementary boohs that a writ of error can be brought by him only who was a party or privy to the record, or injured by the judgment, and who consequently will derive advantage from its reversal. Heirs, executors, administrators, reversioners, remaindermen, terre tenants, or a husband who marries after a judgment against his wife, and perhaps others, who are not parties to the proceeding sought to be revised, may join in the prosecution of a writ of error.” Numerous cases are cited by the court in support of this point.
II. Respondent contends, among other things, that the judgment of dismissal was voidable 'only and not void, and being only voidable it cannot be attached in this, a collateral proceeding, as he terms the case in hand.
That the death of Potter terminated the relationship of Grove and Potter as attorney and client cannot be questioned. [Weeks on Attorneys at Law, secs. 248 and 256.] That the judgment of dismissal was on the motion of Grove is a fact found and undisputed.
But the immediate question before us is, does the death of a party to a suit, after being duly under
The author has collated a number of authorities, and among them the old case of Coleman v. McAnulty, 16 Mo. 173. In this case,, our court, speaking through Scott, J., said: “In the ease of Warder v. Tainter, 4 Watts 278, the court says the authorities are abundant to show that in no case is a judgment rendered by a court of general jurisdiction considered void on account of the death of the defendant having taken place before the rendition of it; that, at most, it is only voidable. If the death of the defendant will not render a judgment void, no reason is perceived why the death of the plaintiff should have that effect. There being, then, a valid sale under a writ, supported by a judgment not void, the title of Coleman passed by it.”
Vanfleet, in his work on Collateral Attack on Judicial Proceedings, sec. 602, undertakes to give the reason for the rule thus: “Jurisdiction over the parties being shown by the record, any movement for or against them is an implied finding that they are in life and legally competent to protect their rights. The recital usually is that the parties, either in person or by attorney, are present, or neglect, after due notice, to be present. Those are matters to be determined from the evidence; and the determination is not
The case of Coleman v. McAnulty, supra, has been cited and approved upon tbis question in the following cases: Fithian v. Monks, 43 Mo. l. c. 521; Bank v. McWharters, 52 Mo. l. c. 35; Lewis v. Coombs, 60 Mo. l. c. 48; Posthlewaite v. Ghiselin, 97 Mo. l. c. 425.
Our cases are not wholly uniform on the subject. In Sargeant v. Rowsey, 89 Mo. 617, Sherwood, J., holds that where a defendant in an action to foreclose a mortgage dies during the pendency of the suit and a decree is entered without suggestion of death and the bringing in of the heirs, a sale under such decree carried no title and is a nullity.
The Missouri cases seem to agree that if at the institution of the suit the defendant was in fact dead, then the judgment was a nullity. But on the other .hand the Sargeant case, supra, seems to stand alone, in the list of cases wherein the court had acquired jurisdiction of the person and the subject-matter prior to the death. It is true that in the case of Hinkle v. Kerr, 148 Mo. 43, Brace, P. J., touches the questions, and the distinction between the two classes of cases, i. e., those cases wherein the party was dead at the institution of the suit, and those cases wherein the party was alive and duly served with process at the institution of the suit, but dies pending the action and before final judgment, somewhat tenderly and suspiciously and in a degree doubtingly, yet the case finally passed off on the question that the party was a woman under coverture.
However, GaNTt, P. J., in the case of Shea v. Shea, 154 Mo. l. c. 606, gets back to the old mooring of the McAnulty case, supra, and summarizes the Missouri doctrine thus: “It is well settled.in this State, whatever may be the judicial opinion in other jurisdictions, that an action begun and prosecuted against a defendant who was dead when it was begun is absolutely void and can be attacked collaterally as
So, too, says Black, J., in Williams v. Hudson, 93 Mo. l. c. 528: “As the representatives of Bougher and Crapster were not made defendants in the tax suit, and as Bougher and Crapster were dead when that suit was commenced, the judgment, as to them and their representatives, is void. Had they died after suit commenced and service of process upon them, another question would he presented; hut a suit commenced and prosecuted against a dead man gives the court no authority to enter judgment against him; the judgment is void as to him.”
The learned annotator of L. R. A., in vol. 49, l. c. 160, in commenting on the case of Eager v. Vickery (Kansas case), which holds the judgment void: says: “The majority of cases hold that a judgment taken against a party who dies after suit, hut before judgment, is not void. These cases generally hold that such judgments cannot he attacked collaterally; that they are erroneous and voidable, and that they are open to an attack in the proper manner, by motion or by writ of error cor ami nobis, etc.” To like effect is Freeman on Judgments. [1 Freeman on Judgments, sec. 153.]
From all we conclude the right rule to be, that if the party dies during the pendency of a suit wherein the court by legal process has acquired jurisdiction over both the person and the subject-matter, but be
And in the case at bar we hold that if the vitality of this judgment of dismissal is dependent solely upon the one question of the death of Potter pending the suit, such judgment cannot be attacked or impugned in this, a collateral proceeding.
' III. Relators say that they do not depend entirely upon the question that the judgment is void because Potter was dead at the rendition thereof. They in addition urge that the cause was under submission, and say that the dismissal was without authority of law and therefore void upon the face of the record itself. In other words that under the record disclosures and the law such act was nugatory and void. In this contention relators plant themselves behind Revised Statutes 1899, section 639,, which reads: “The plaintiff shall be allowed to dismiss his suit or take a nonsuit at any time before the same is finally submitted to the jury, or to the court sitting as a jury, or to the court, and not afterwards.”
' A reference to the facts found by our commissioner shows that in the original suit' of Potter v. Bullivant et al., the cause was submitted to the court who found in favor of Potter, that is to say, that the deeds in question were mortgages and not in fact deeds. Our commissioner further finds that a referee was appointed “to ascertain and determine the value of certain improvements on the lands then in litigation, and that said referee thereafter filed his report, to which the defendants, Bullivant and! Chapman, filed
But going back to the further findings of our commissioner, we see that there is a finding to the effect that in 1890 James M. Potter instituted a suit in equity against Bullivant and Chapman and others in the circuit court of Butler county, wherein it was sought by plaintiff to have certain alleged encumbrances set aside, or to have the status of the same determined by the court; that by change of venue said cause went to Mississippi county where a dismissal was taken as to all defendants except. Bullivant and Chapman. Then our commissioner in words finds and says: “That in October, 1892, the issues of this original suit were finally submitted to the respondent, H. C. Eiley, . . . and a judgment was by him rend
If from this record of found facts there was either a final judgment in this case, or the whole case was before the court under submission, then, either of said conditions would be fatal to the contention of respondent. First, if there was a final judgment, then the order of dismissal should not have been entered and being entered at a later term was coram non judice. [Mohler v. Wiltberger, 74 Ill. 163; Long v. Thwing, 9 Ind. 179; Danforth v. Lowe, 53 Mo. 217.]
And, secondly, if the whole case was under submission and no final judgment, then the order of dismissal was in the face of an express statute, section 639, supra, and void on the face of the record.
(a). Was the judgment entered a final judgment? In determining this question in addition to the facts found we must take into consideration the undenied allegations of the alternative writ. Such undenied allegations stand as admitted. [13 Ency. Plead, and Prac., 734.] The above authority says: “All matters well pleaded by the relator which are not denied by the respondent in express terms are admitted to be true. Insufficient answers have the same effect.”
Speaking of the original suit of Potter v. Bulli-vant et al., the alternative writ says: “And on the twelfth day of October, 1892, the cause was finally submitted to the court upon the pleadings and evidence, for its determination of the issues thereby joined, and the court thereupon made and entered of record a decree determining that the said James M. Potter was the owner of the said real estate, that certain deeds given by said James M. Potter to said Thomas
This allegation stands undenied by the return and is therefore admitted. This coupled with the facts found fully show the character of the judgment. Was it a final judgment? We are of opinion that the decree or judgment in the Potter case was not a final judgment. Whilst it settled the principal equities, it left other matters to be passed under review by the court, before the full equities could be adjudicated. The decree pleaded determined that the deeds were mortgages, but the petition or bill in equity not only prayed for that relief, but, as averred in the alternative writ, it further asked the chancellor to determine their respective interests in and to the said real estate. A part of this controversy was determined by the chancellor, but another part was referred to a referee. Before final decree the report of the referee must necessarily pass under the judicial review of the chancellor. The amount of the mortgagee’s interest in the lands could not be decreed until this report was made to and passed upon by the court.
In Black on Judgments, sec. 41, it is said: “The difficulty appears to arise in relation to those decrees which, while settling the general equities of the cause, leave something for future action or determination. And the true rule seems to be that, if that which remains to be done or decided will require the action or consideration of the court before the rights involved in the cause can be fully and finally disposed of, the decree is interlocutory; but it is none the less final if, after settling the equities, it leaves a necessity for
And in section 44 the same author says: “The most difficult cases in which to draw the line between final and interlocutory decrees, are those in which the decree, after finding the general equities, orders reference to a master for some specific purpose. Yet there are not wanting principles upon which to base a reasonable and accurate distinction in these cases. As the condensed result of the numerous authorities on the subject, we may formulate the following specific rules: First, where a decree is made disposing of the general equities of the case, but ordering a reference to a master to ascertain damages, or to find certain facts, or to do anything else necessary to be done before a final adjustment of the rights of the parties can be had, if the functions of the master are to be judicial, and not merely ministerial, and the provisions depending on his report are not already incorporated in the decree, then the decree is interlocutory and not final. Second, where a decree ascertains and fixes all the rights of the parties, but a reference is ordered to a master to do or ascertain something that is necessary to carry the decree into effect, if the functions of the master are to be merely ministerial and not judicial, or if all the consequential directions depending on the result of the proceedings before him are given in the decree itself, then the decree is' final and not interlocutory. To take a single illustration,- — -the reference of a case to a master, to take an account upon evidence, and for the examination of the parties, and to make or refuse allowances affecting the rights of the parties, and to report his results to the court, is not a final decree. For his report is subject to exceptions from either side, which must be brought to the notice of the court before it can be available. It can only be made so by the court’s overruling the excep
The decree for our review, whilst not before us in haec verba, evidently provided for the referee to take evidence upon two questions, i. e. (1) the value of improvements placed on the lands by defendants, and (2) the amount of the mortgage debt. And further that such referee report to the court. In such case there could he no final decree until the.report of the referee and the exceptions thereto were passed upon by the court.
Again, discussing final and interlocutory decrees, 23 Cyc. 786, says: “Although there cannot be two final judgments in the same case, it is sometimes proper to enter an interlocutory judgment before the final disposition of the case. Generally speaking the judgment is final if it at once disposes of the entire controversy settling the rights of the parties, and leaving nothing for further consideration; but interlocutory if it merely settles some preliminary point or matter, or reserves for future determination some detail essential to the complete adjustment of the subject of litigation. The judgment is ordinarily final when rendered in pursuance of a general verdict, or on submission of the entire case to the court, or on a submission for decision on the pleadings. But an interlocutory judgment may be entered where it is necessary to frame an issue on which the parties- may properly go to trial, or on overruling a demurrer, where leave is given to amend the pleading or to plead over, or where the court has not before it all the papers necessary to settle the form of the final judgment, or reserves the decision of some point affecting the amount recoverable or the right to modify the judgment, or finds it necessary to appoint a master or referee to find issues in the case, unless where the action to be taken on the coming in of his report is definitely prescribed. So also a judgment is generally interlocutory
In the case at bar it was necessary to appoint a master or referee to find issues in the case, and the action to be taken on the coming in of his report was n.ot definitely prescribed by the decree under which he was appointed.
We take it that there was left a very material portion of this case to be passed upon by the court upon the coming in of the report of the referee. The judgment mentioned in the alternative writ is not a final judgment as we read and understand the cases, so that the contention of relators that no order of dismissal could be made because of a final judgment is untenable.
(b). If the judgment was not final, as we have found, then was the case under submission, so as to make section 639 applicable? We think not under the record before us. There is nothing to show that there had been any hearing upon the report and exceptions taken thereto. Had the record disclosed that there had been a hearing upon these exceptions and this report, and the chancellor nisi had taken the same as submitted to him for judgment thereon, a different case would be presented. By section 714, Revised Statutes 1899, the parties were entitled to argue their exceptions to the report of the referee. The law says: “‘and shall be argued without delay,” thus showing that a hearing is contemplated before a submission. Under the facts before us this cause had not been finally submitted to the court so as to bring it within the purview of section 639, supra.
TV. By our first paragraph we reach the conclusion that the motion filed by relators in the original
Prom this it follows that the peremptory writ should be refused for two reasons, (1) because the relators had the right to file the motion to vacate, and after receiving an adverse judgment thereon had the right to appeal, and, (2) because the judgment of dismissal is only voidable, and cannot be attached in this proceeding. We cannot compel the court to proceed with the cause so long as this voidable judgment remains in force. Nor can we say that if relators had the right to file the motion to vacate the judgment, as we conclude they did have, they then did not have ample redress by way of appeal from the order or judgment overruling their motion.
In this State a motion to vacate a judgment for error of fact, and not for patent error of record, supported by evidence dehors the record, takes the place of the common law writ of error coram nobis, and is in the nature of an independent and direct attack upon the judgment in the court committing the error. A judgment upon such a motion is within itself a final judgment from which an appeal will lie.
But even if there was a question as to this, of which we think there is none, yet the judgment of dismissal and for costs in the original proceeding was a
The peremptory writ should be denied, .and it is so ordered.