4 Kan. 240 | Kan. | 1867
Per Curiam,
This was an application for an order of injunction addressed to the district court of Wyandotte county. The relief sought to be obtained was, ¡among other things, the restraining of the defendant below from proceeding to enforce a certain judgment rendered by said district court, on the 10th day of April, A. D.
Having reference to the record of the said judgment, and the proceedings in the district-court preliminary to its rendition, we find that the * case was one in attachment begun and prosecuted in the ordinary way, and as pointed out by the statute. Property was attached, and the defendants were attempted to be Served by publication.
These proceedings, it is claimed, were insufficient, as being informal, and not in accordance with law in matters of substance. But we think that all questions of this sort are out of the case, 'inasmuch as we find, on looking further into the record, that there was an ,appearance of .attorneys for and in behalf of the defendants, from the time when such appearance was or could be required, until the final judgment was rendered in
Now, as'faefore stated, this plaintiff alleges that he was not present at the said trial; that he did not have notice of it, and that he did not employ or authorize any attorney to represent himself or his co-defendant therein; but he does not go farther than this, and, for all that he shows, the other defendant might have faoth faeen present at the trial and employed and authorized attorneys to appear for himself and this plaintiff, or he might have given authority to some.other person to so employ attorneys.
.It is not claimed but what it would have faeen competent for Thatcher to have so employed attorneys to defend the case for himself and Wheatley, and that if he did so, faoth of them would fae bound thereby. They had faeen partners in business together, were so at the time the. obligations on which suit was brought were executed, and such obligations were executed as partnership obligations. It is not to fae supposed that one of the partners could not bind the other in relation to the partnership business, and we repeat, that for all that appears, Thomas F. Thatcher ¿might have so bound his co-defendant in this case. We think, therefore, that the petition of the plaintiff in error, as presented to the district court, was fatally defective in the particulars referred to, and consequently that the refusal of the court below to grant the injunction on account of any matter or objection as connected with this judgment was well founded.
In his petition, the plaintiff complains of another judgment rendered against him fay the said district court upon a certain deed of trust, and alleges that there was no proper service upon him in the case in
■ The jjlaintiff also alleges that the defendants, or some of them, have commenced other suits, having reference to the property involved in the two judgments before referred to, and asks that such defendants may be restrained from further prosecuting their said actions.
We think that he utterly fails to show that he is entitled to any such order, and beside, it is very doubtful if, in any such case, an injunction can issue at all. There are respectable authorities to that effect, but we will not attempt to examine them here, as upon the whole case presented by the plaintiff to the district court, it is clear, to our minds, that he was not entitled to any restraining order. He wholly fails to bring himself within the provisions of law as settled by our statutes, and the decisions upon the subject of injunctions.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.