Rumney v. Donovan

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action wasi commenced in the district court on February 13, 1903, by the plaintiffs, to foreclose an alleged vendor’s lien upon certain personal property. In addition to this, the prayer of the complaint was. that a receiver be appointed to take posr session of such property. Upon application ex parte, the court on the same day appointed Wm. T. Luddy receiver, and directed him toi take immediate possession of the property in controversy, consisting of certain stock cattle. From the1 order appointing the receiver the defendant Donovan appealed to this court, and upon his application an order was made by the justices of this court on February 14, 1903, staying all proceedings in the district court until the further order of this court, and particularly staying all proceedings under the order appointing such receiver. This order was made to be effective upon the appellant, Donovan, giving a sufficient undertaking, to be approved by the clerk of this court. Such an undertaking was approved and filed by the clerk on February 18, 1903.

On March 20, 1903, the respondents filed a motion to- dismiss *71the appeal on the ground that the order appointing the receiver, made ex parte, is not an appealable order. This motion was heard, considered, and denied by this court on the 30th day of March, 1903. On March 28th an application was made to var-éate the order staying proceedings upon the ground that the order appealed from is not an appealable order, and because of certain defects in the record on appeal. On the same day an application was made by appellant to this court for an order directed to the receiver, requiring him to show cause;, if any he had, why he should not be punished for contempt for refusing to return to1 the possession of the appellant the property in controversy, then in the possession of such receiver. The application was made upon affidavits setting forth the facts herein der tailed, and the fact that, after filing the stay bond required of him by this court, appellant demanded the return of such prop>-erty from the receive!’, and the refusal of the receiver to' comply therewith. An order to show cause was issued, and upon return thereof the cause was argued and submitted. The affidavit of the receiver, filed in answer to1 tire order to show cause, raises no material issue of fact; and the; only questions before this court for determination are whether the order made by this court staying proceedings in the lower court should he vacated, and whether such order operated, ipso' facto, to require of the receiver a return of the property to thei possession of the appellant, from whom it was taken.

1. Upon the first proposition we may say that, upon the motion to dismiss the appeal herein, this court considered the same matters as are; now contended for upon this motion, and in refusing to dismiss the appeal we held that the order appointing the receive!*, though made ex parte, was an appealable order, under Section 1722 of the; Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by an act of the Sixth legislative assembly approved February 28, 1899 (Session laws of 1899, p. 146), which provides: “An appeal may be taken to the supreme court from a district court in the following cases. * * * (2) * * * From an order appointing or refusing to appoint a receiver.” *72That decision became the law of this case upon that question, aud we reiterate it now. Authorities have been cited in support of respondents’ contention that noi appeal lies from an order made ex parte appointing a receiver, but those' decisions are by courts from states having different statutory provisions from ours, or from states whose statutes have not been called to our att nation To give to Section 1722 the construction asked for is to read into its language qualifying provisions not contem-pla,ted by the framers of the law. This we cannot do: The section gives the right of appeal from evea-y order appointing a receiver, and that, too, in plain and explicit terms, which are not susceptible of a construction which would limit materially their operations. Upon suggestion of diminution of the record, the apparent defects in that regard have been cured.

2. Did the supersedeas operate, ipso facto, to require the receiver to return the property? "We are of the opinion that it did. The effect of the stay was to suspend the operations of the order appointing the receiver. From the moment it became effective there was nothing which ha could do under the order appointing him. Iiis haaids were stayed, so far as carrying out the order of the district court was concerned. That order rer quired hiin to take immediate possession of the property, and when that order was suspended by the supersedeas the right of the receiver to retain such possession, as against the party from, whom possession was obtained, ceased. “Where an appeal is taken from an order appointing a receiver, pending a determination of which a supersedeas is ordered or granted, the functions, powers', and duties of the receiver are thereby suspended.” (23 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d Ed.), 1127; Boston & Montana Consol. C. & S. M. Co., v. Montana Ore Purchasing Co. et al., 27 Mont. 431, 71 Pac. 471.) In State ex rel. Railroad Co. x. Hirzel, Judge, 137 Mo. 435, 37 S. W. 921, it was said: “We are obliged to hold that he (the judge) was in error in not- requiring the receiver to let go when the appeal bond was approved and the appeal perfected. ** * *• So the approval of the bond in the Spencer case operated to stay all proceedings *73to enforce the receivership order; and, as incident to that stay, •it had'likewise the effect to release the property to the party from whom it had been taken by reason of the order of appointment of the receiver.” Farmers’ Nat'l Bank v. Backus, 63 Minn. 115, 65 N. W. 255, was a case wherein the receiver had taken possession before the appeal was perfected. Said the court: “The supersedeas does not undo or render nugatory any action of the receiver already had under the order before the appeal was taken and the bond duly filed, but it terminates the right of the lower court, and its officer from farther acting in the matter. It suspends the operation of the order, or, as has been said, ‘paralyzes’ the arm of the receiver. His authority to proceed is absolutely stayed and suspended by operation of law. The rights and powers of the receiver being suspended, of which he was duly notified, he should have restored possession of the premises to the appellant; for, his authority to take being inoperative by the suspension, his; authority to hold was equally so, both being derived from the same order. The legal effect of the appeal and supersedeas was to withdraw from the receiver the right to the possession of the property, and vest tliat right in the party from whom it had been taken.” (State v. Johnson, 13 Fla. 33; Continental N. B. & L. Ass’n v. Scott, 41 Fla. 421, 26 South. 726.) There is nothing in the language used by this court in Forrester & MacGinniss v. Boston & Montana Consol. C. & S. M. Co., 22 Mont. 430, 56 Pac. 868, in conflict with the views herein expressed. The applicar tion for an order vacating the order staying proceedings is denied.

Inasmuch, however, as the receiver apparently acted in perfect good faith, under advice of counsel, and with reference to a question not heretofore passed upon in this jurisdiction, and upon this hearing manifested a disposition to cheerfully comply with the order of this court, we deem the contempt committed a technical one, and are not disposed to impose any hardship upon the receiver.

The order of this court is that the receiver, Wm. T. Luddy, *74be, and be is hereby, adjudged guilty of contempt of this court, and bis punishment fixed at a fine of $1 — 'the amount of the costs incurred in this proceeding.