Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
*422 Relators seek a writ requiring respondents district court and judge thereof to set aside an order striking plaintiff’s complaint in intervention from the files in the action entitled O. L. Brackman, Plaintiff v. Albert H. Kruse, Commissioner of Agriculture of the State of Montana, and Thomas E. McMasters, Dairy Commissioner, Defendants.
That action was brought for a declaratory judgment determining that the imposition of license fees on sellers of oleomargarine by section 2620.45, Revised Codes, is unconstitutional and void.
The relators’ petition to intervene was accompanied by their tendered complaint in intervention; an order was made ex parte permitting the intervention and directing the filing and service of the complaint in intervention, which included an answer to plaintiff’s complaint, the interveners joining with thе defendants in resisting plaintiff’s contentions. On the following day the plaintiff filed both a motion to strike the complaint in intervention and a demurrer to that complaint. His motion was thereafter granted by the trial court -on the ground “that the interest of the interveners is not the direct and immediate interest in the matter in litigation contemplated by section 9088, Revised Codes of 1935, and further that interveners’ interests are already adequately represented by the original defendants. ’ ’ In other words, the court’s conclusion was that the relators were not properly entitled to be heard as parties to the action, whatever the merits of their tendered complaint in intervention might be.
For reasons stated below, it is unnecessary to discuss the allegations of the complaint, the answеr, the petition for leave to intervene, and the complaint in intervention.
This court said in State ex rel. Thelen v. District Court,
“We think, however, that petitioner should hot have been denied the right to intervene for failure to tender a complaint in this case. The petition asking leave to intervene stated facts sufficient to show petitioner’s interest in the property, and showed the grounds upon which the intervention rests. It gave the adverse party as much information in that regard as could a complaint filed upon leave of court.”
In other words, while it is regarded as the best' practice to serve and tender the proposed complaint in intervention along with the application for permission to intervene, and if so served and tendered the complaint in intervention may be considered with the application .upon the issue of the right to intervene, it is no necessary part of that application, its chief mission being as a pleading in the main action, after intervention granted.
An order permitting intervention may be vacated on motion where permission to intervene should not have been granted. 47 C. J. 114, see. 218. This is particularly true undеr statutes like ours, which permit the allowance of intervention without the requirement of a prior hearing upon notice to the litigants; for no other remedy is available. Manifestly, however, a motion directed against the petition and order of intervention is something quite different from a motion or demurrer directed against the complaint in intervention itself; for the first attacks the prоpriety of the existence of the complaint in intervention and of its consideration by the court, while the second regards it as before the court as a pleading in the main
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cause and attacks its sufficiency as such. That they are entirely separate matters is manifested by this court’s holding, in Burgess v. Hooks,
By plaintiff’s motion he questioned the relators’ right to intervene and thus the court’s jurisdiction to hear them as interveners, but by his demurrer to the complaint in inter-Arention he must be held to have assented to that jurisdiction by tendering to the court the issue of law whether that pleading stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
In State ex rel. Bingham v. District Court,
This court unanimously held that the objection raised by her motion “challenges the jurisdiction of the court over the person of the defendant, may be waived, and is saved only by appearing specially for the purpose of urging it. Schilling v. Reagan,
In that case an attempt had been made to preserve the effect of the special appearance by the statement in the demurrer that the right to rely upon defendant’s motion to strike was expressly reserved, thus demonstrating that there was no intent to waive the motion; but this court said: “It may be that, to say that a party ‘waives’ such objections by any act constituting a general appearance is not a technically accurate statement, as a ‘wаiver’ is ‘the intentional relinquishment of a known right’ (27 R. C. L. 904), and to constitute a waiver of a right there must have been an intention to waive (In re Estate of Nix,
In Cooke v. Myers,
In Beale v. Lingquist,
In Paramount Publix Corporation v. Boucher,
Here likewise the plaintiff’s submission to the court of the question of the legal sufficiency of the pleading is utterly inconsistent with the contention that that pleading was not properly before the court because the interveners had not properly established their right to file it.
Since the plaintiff’s objection to relators’ рresence in the action as interveners must be deemed waived by his demurrer to their complaint in intervention, it is clear that the respondent court and judge had no jurisdiction to grant that objection. For the same reason this court has no jurisdiction in this proceeding to determine whether one who seeks a declaratory judgment holding a statute unconstitutional may prevent the intervеntion of others interested in sustaining the statute as valid.
Let a peremptory writ issue directing respondents to annul .the order striking the relators’ complaint and answer in intervention.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I. do not believe that plaintiff, Brackman, by demurring to the complaint in intervention waived his right to stand upon his motion to strike which raised the jurisdictional right of the *428 court to hear intervenors. The rule is well settled that jurisdiction of thе court cannot be conferred by consent. Of course, Brackman could have waived the right to object to the court’s jurisdiction over him but he is not raising that point. He submitted to the jurisdiction of the court over him when he filed his complaint. The question here is, has he taken such action that the court must allow the intervenors to remain in the case whether they have a sufficient interest in the cáse to be heard or not. I do not think so.
In
And in Brown v. Saul, 4 Mart., N. S., La., 434,
I think the court of its own motion has the right to strike a complaint in intervention if the court thinks the intervenor has not a sufficient interest in the litigation to entitle him to intervene, even though the point is not raised by the litigants. I do not agree that the demurrer is inconsistent with the motion. It is in harmony with it. Both the motion and the demurrer question the sufficiеncy of the allegations of the complaint in intervention to show sufficient facts to entitle intervenors to intervene. -In fact, when the cause is again considered by the judge of the trial court, entertaining the view that he does, he will be obliged to sustain the demurrer to the complaint. In *429 tervenors, who have alleged everything that can be alleged showing their interest, will then be obliged to come to this court again to have the point determined which is now before the court.
Under the rule above quoted from
I think the motion to strike should be considered on its merits and that Brackman did not waive the right to stand upon it by demurring generally to the complaint in intervention. I think we should determine the point whether the intervenors have a sufficient interest in the subject matter of the action to entitle them to come into the case by intervention.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
On July 2, 1945, complaint was filed in the District Court of Lewis and Clark County in cause of action numbered 19801, entitled O. L. Brackman, plaintiff v. Albert H. Kruse, Commissioner of Agriculture of the State of Montana, and Thomas E. McMasters, Dairy Commissioner, defendants, and on Sept. 27, 1945, the defendants filed their answer to such complaint. Thus did the District Court acquire jurisdiction of the persons of the parties plaintiff and defendant.
On January 28, 1946, the relators in the instant proceeding filed in the District Court a petition for leave to file a complaint in intervention in said cause No. 19801 and on the same day the District Court, on such ex parte application, issued an order permitting the relators, each and all, to become parties *430 to said district court action under the general designation “Intervenors” and to file forthwith their complaint in intervention and answer to the complaint of plаintiff in union with defendants. Thereupon a complaint in intervention and answer was filed by intervenors and thus did the District Court acquire jurisdiction of the persons of the intervening relators.
On January 29, 1946, the plaintiff O. L. Brackman filed in the District Court a written motion to strike from the files the complaint and answer of the intervenors which had been filed on the preceding day. The motion was made upon the grounds (1) that the complaint in intervention fails to set forth sufficient facts to allege an interest of intervenors in the matter in litigation, in the success of either plaintiff or defendants or in an interest against both as required by section 9088, Revised Codes, (2) that the interests of the intervenors, if any, are already represented, (3) that the intervenors are not entitled to intervene in said action, and (4) that the answer оf intervenors is improperly made a part of their complaint in intervention.
On the same date, to-wit: January 29, 1946, the plaintiff filed a demurrer to the complaint in intervention on the sole grounds that it “does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. ’ ’ By the filing of the motion to strike from the files and the demurrer, the plaintiff, in effect, concedes jurisdiction of the District Court оver the persons of the intervenors.
While it is quite true that parties seeking to challenge the jurisdiction of the court over their persons waive the right so to do when they contend that through some defect in the process of the court or its service the court is without jurisdiction unless such jurisdictional question is raised at the earliest opportunity (State ex rel. Bingham v. District Court,
In the instant case it is quite clear that the District Court had jurisdiction over the persons of the plaintiff, the defendants *431 and the intervenors at the time plaintiff’s general demurrer and motion to strike the intervenor’s pleading from the files were interposed, and it is equally clear that the court’s jurisdiction over the persons of the parties is not challenged by either the motion or the demurrer, each of which, conceding that the facts are as alleged in the complaint in intervention, nevertheless urge that under the statute such allegations fail to show a right in the relators to intervene in the action, which is to say’ that the allegations of the complаint in intervention are insufficient to state a case entitling relators to intervene.
The majority opinion fails to observe the distinction between the waiver of the right to challenge the jurisdiction of the court over the person of a party not properly brought within the jurisdiction of the court- and the right to challenge the jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter of the action. State ex rel. Bingham v. District Court, supra, is wholly inapplicable to the facts of the instant case and I find nothing therein which says that in a case where the court’s jurisdiction of the persons of the parties is conceded that a party may not challenge the sufficiency of a pleading either by general demurrer or by a motion to strike from the files or that when a pleading is wholly insufficient it may not be stricken from the files even though its sufficiency has also been attacked by a general demurrer.
