262 Mo. 256 | Mo. | 1914
Original proceeding by prohibition.
Defendants in an injunction suit pending in a division (to-wit, respondent MeQuillin’s of the St. Louis Circuit Court, as relators, apply here by petition on August 14, 1914, for a writ prohibiting that court from proceeding further, and made the plaintiffs in said injunction suit parties respondent with Judge Mc-Quillin. Presently, on that application, a preliminary rule issues in vacation to show -cause. Presently, respondents make return showing such cause as they had why our preliminary rule should not be made permanent. Thereupon relators file a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Thereby they insist that the preliminary rule should, as a matter of law, ripen into a permanent writ on the admissions and facts shown by the pleadings. Thereupon (without any evidence on, or determination of, controverted facts) the case is submitted on briefs and oral argument.
Under such circumstances, the motion for judgment on the pleadings is a challenge, in legal effect, to the legal sufficiency of respondents’ return. Hence it is from admissions and allegations of that return, we must get the facts, if at all. [State ex rel. v. Shields, Judge, 237 Mo. 333-4.] Attending thereto, the case is this:
In July, 1914', respondents Albrecht and Stage, as members and trustees of St. Louis Lodge No. 3, Loyal Order of Moose, joining with them a domestic corporation, designated as “St. Louis Lodge No. 3, Loyal Order of Moose,” as plaintiffs, brought suit in the St.
The bill was filed, as said, (1) on behalf of the local lodge, (2) the controlling majority of the board of trustees, who sued not only as such but as members of the local lodge, and (3) on behalf of any other members who care to join and share the burdens and privileges arising therefrom. It prays for a temporary in
Thereupon, on due assignment to his division, Judge McQuillin issued an order citing defendants to. show cause why a temporary injunction should not issue. Thereupon defendants, other than the banks (who stood mute below) came in and attempted to show cause why no preliminary injunction should issue. They filed no demurrer or answer to the bill, but they filed a paper called a “return,” and verified this by affidavit. . This “return” did not challenge the sufficiency of the bill as a pleading, neither specially nor generally, because of not stating facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, but in substance it averred (this by way or in the nature of a denial) that the supreme lodge was a corporation under the laws of Indiana with power to sue and to be impleaded as such. It then set forth, broadly, the purposes of the Indiana corporation as fraternal, benevolent, charitable and educational, to assist needy members and their families and their widows and orphans, to encourage patriotism and obedience to the laws of their country, tolerance in religion, etc., etc.; that the supreme lodge organized the named local lodge and granted it a charter in the terms provided by the constitution and laws of the supreme lodge for the government of local lodges. It then goes on to make certain admissions as to the ownership of the real property and the control of the personal property by the board of trustees of the local lodge, but avers that the local lodge was at all times subject to the jurisdiction and bound by the laws of the supreme lodge; admits Warde has taken possession and holds possession and is using “whatever
As further justification and excuse of the conduct of Warde and those he joined with himself in making and continuing the alleged trespasses, they by way of said “return” went on to aver that the “dictator,” under his authority as such, revoked the charter of the local lodge “in due course” and on such revocation authorized Warde to take possession of the property of the local lodge, and he did take possession and now holds it, with all such properties, moneys, etc., as the properties of the supreme lodge, and was so in such possession before the bill was filed; that the local lodge has no existence because of such forfeiture and confiscation and none of its members have any right to the possession, custody or control of any of said property; that there is a “supreme forum” provided by the constitution and laws of the supreme lodge, to-wit, a “court” authorized to hear and determine disputes between the supreme and local lodges or between any lodge and its members; that this supreme forum on “appeal” has jurisdiction of the controversy we have outlined, but that plaintiffs have taken no such appeal, wherefore it is the duty of defendants to hold the property subject to the direction of the supreme forum and of the supreme lodge; that the supreme lodge is not insolvent and now by its agents offers to enter its ap
Such in brief is the showing made below to Chancellor McQuillin, in chambers, we assume, and before the return term, before answer, or demurrer.
Presently he issued a temporary injunction, conditioned on the filing of a $10,000 bond, restraining defendants until further order of the court from trespassing on the property in question or interfering with the entrance of the members of the local lodge and from disposing of or assuming control over the moneys of the local lodge, or of the property belonging to the lodge, or withdrawing such moneys from the banks named. The injunction bond was presently filed, and the order granting a temporary injunction was served upon defendants prior to the filing of the petition in this court in the instant case for prohibition.
The return in the instant case shows not only the foregoing facts, but it goes on to challenge the validity of those provisions of the by-laws and constitution of supreme lodge under which relators here (defendants below) sought to justify the confiscation, forfeiture and forcible seizure by trespass and retention by continuing trespasses and force of arms of the property of the local lodge and the personal property of the 2100 members thereof, alleging that the confiscation was contrary to law and without due process of law; that the act of taking possession was an unlawful act, a trespass pure hnd simple, as was the forcible denial of access to the clubhouse and property by the members of the local lodge, for which grievances, it is alleged, there was no proper and adequate remedy at law, and which trespasses defendants below (relators here) threatened to repeat and continue; that respondent Mc-Quillin had jurisdiction of the persons of defendants and of the class of cases to which this controversy belongs, to-wit, the subject-matter, and that a writ of prohibition ought not to issu.e against him, thereby al
It is on such a record we are called on to adjudge whether our permanent writ shall go prohibiting Judge MeQuillin from entertaining further jurisdiction of the injunction suit. We have come to the conclusion our preliminary rule, improvidently made, stands to be quashed, and that a permanent writ must be denied; because:
(a) As a foreword it is not amiss to repeat some propositions often announced, but sometimes blinked, to-wit:
(1) in the first place, a writ of prohibition will only go to keep an inferior court within the orbit of its jurisdiction. It is an extraordinary writ and no recourse must be had to it except where ordinary remedies are unavailing — the maxim being that in law we have recourse to what is extraordinary when the ordinary fails. (Recurrendum est ad, etc.)
(2) In the second place, lack of jurisdiction may exist with reference to subject-matter generally (e. g., the class to which the case belongs) or it may exist with reference to the parties to the suit, or it may exist with reference to excess of jurisdiction in the concrete case itself.
(3) In the third place, the mere power to grant a writ of prohibition (or other extraordinary writ, barring quo warranto at the instance of the Attorney-General) is not of so much importance in determining the question of writ or no writ as is the question of the discretion of this court when it is called upon to exercise the power. The right and settled doctrine is that
(4) In the fourth place, from that right doctrine, another flows as a corollary, to-wit, that in the congested state of our docket.in appealed cases this court will wisely exercise a sound discretion in refusing to draw to itself jurisdiction in the first instance on prohibition to determine the merits of controversies lodged in circuit courts, except ón a clear showing of lack of jurisdiction as a matter of law as distinguished from matter of fact, and that ordinary remedies by appeal, error or certiorari are absent.
If authority be needful or useful to sustain one or the other of those primary and basic propositions, such authority will be found in the pronouncements of one or the other of the following cases (some in one and some in the other): State ex rel. v. Shelton, 238 Mo. l. c. 292 et seq.; State ex rel. v. Sale, 188 Mo. l. c. 496 et seq.; State ex rel. v. Stobie, 194 Mo. l. c. 52; State ex rel. v. Lucas, 236 Mo. l. c. 32; State ex rel. v. Shields, 237 Mo. l. c. 334 et seq.; State ex rel. v. Robinson, 257 Mo. 584 (vide closing remarks of opinion by Brown, J.); State ex rel. v. Kansas City Gas Co., 254 Mo. l. c. 531; State ex rel. v. Tracy, 237 Mo. 109.
It is in the light of the foregoing guiding propositions this case must be ruled, if it is "to be disposed of secundum regulam.
(b) We shall assume on the record here that it goes without even saying that the circuit court had jurisdiction of (1) the parties and (2) the subject-matter, to-wit, the issuing of a temporary injunction, to be followed by. a permanent one or by its dissolution on the application of equity principles to the facts ascertained on final hearing, in term, on answer or on motion to dissolve, or on joint hearing on both. Now, ac-' cording to all good doctrine, the presence of jurisdiction in those prime essentials is an insurmountable barrier to the issuance of our writ of prohibition, unless,
(c) With so much determined, we confront the question of an excess of jurisdiction in the concrete case. Attend to that view of it.
It is argued by learned counsel for relators that the bill for injunction did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in divers particulars, hence prohibition lies. We will not cumber this opinion by enumerating them, for they one and all may be grouped together and held to amount to one, namely, either the bill was demurrable, or was subject to a motion to make more definite and certain what was obscurely alleged or only inferentially charged.
As to that we say: The sufficiency of the petition was not challenged by demurrer below. The court, so far as we can see, made no ruling on its sufficiency. Plow it might rule in due course is hidden in the womb of the future, and is discoverable only by the event, barring the occult vision of a seer, which latter we utterly disavow as a judicial attribute. It has been held in some cases, on the facts present in those cases, that if the sufficiency of the petition has been challenged in the circuit court and ruled adversely to demurrant so that it was settled once for all that the trial court entertained an erroneous view in excess of its jurisdiction and was g'oing to put it in force, the remedy by prohibition might be invoked. But, on such facts as we are now dealing with, there is a better doctrine applicable to this extraordinary remedy, one finding abundant place in our decisions, to the effect that the circuit court does not lose jurisdiction by mere error in ruling on a demurrer or otherwise when such error is eorrectible on appeal or writ of error. We need not pursue that line of thought because the record we are dealing with is no such record. In this case we
On prohibition the determinative question here is not one of mere pleading below, where pleadings are amendable (and often need amendment). It rises to the dignity of one of jurisdiction in the strictest sense. In that view of it, in the Sehubach-McDonald case, supra, are pertinent observations, viz.:
‘ ‘ The matter, therefore, compresses itself into the question whether or not a basic subject-matter, over which a court of equity has jurisdiction, was presented to the circuit court for adjudication by the injunction suits. That is, whethér a matter was presented which that court has power to deal with, and not whether such a matter was inartificially or defectively presented. In other words, the question is one of jurisdiction and not of pleading, for if the court had jurisdiction over the
“The writ cannot rightly be employed to compel a judicial officer, having full jurisdiction over the parties and a cause, to steer his official course by the judgment of some other judge, or to substitute the opinion of another court for his own in dealing with topics committed by the law to his decision. [In re N. Y., etc., Steamship Co. (1895), 155 U. S. 523.]”
The questions learnedly discussed by counsel pro and con not only on the merits but on the sufficiency of the bill were all for disposition below in the first instance, and not for disposition here by a side stroke on prohibition. "We have purposely avoided discussing them, so that we may not put the trial chancellor in leading strings when on some interlocutory step or on final hearing when all the facts are in, he comes to decide this or that one of them.
The premises considered, the preliminary rule is quashed and the permanent writ denied. It is so ordered.