Nevada Reports 1917-1918 (41 Nev.) PDF
Nevada Reports 1917-1918 (41 Nev.) PDF
Nevada Reports 1917-1918 (41 Nev.) PDF
1, 1 (1917)
REPORTS OF CASES
DETERMINED BY
THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF NEVADA
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OCTOBER TERM, 1917
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41 Nev. 1, 1 (1917) Zelavin v. Tonopah Belmont Development Co.
[No. 2144]
PETER ZELAVIN, Respondent, v. TONOPAH BELMONT
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY (a Corporation), Appellant.
[149 Pac. 188; 161 Pac. 736]
1. CostsOn AppealPrinting ExpensesFiling and Serving Cost BillCourt Rule.
Under Sup. Ct. Rule 6, par. 2, providing that a party, desiring to recover as costs his printing expenses,
shall within five days after the decision of the cause file with the clerk and serve on the opposite party a
cost bill, stating the actual cost of the printing, service thereof on the opposite party within such time is as
necessary as its filing with the clerk.
2. CostsOn AppealRule of CourtEnforcement.
Sup. Ct. Rule 6, par. 2, making the filing and service of cost bill within five days after decision of cause a
condition to recovery of printing expenses as costs, not being for the convenience of the court or tending to
facilitate its business, its enforcement is not subject to its discretion.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; Cole L. Harwood, Judge.
In the matter of cost bill of appellant, to which respondent filed objections with the Clerk of
the Supreme Court. From the Clerk's adverse ruling, he appeals. Ruling reversed. (For
opinion on former appeal, see 39 Nev. 1.) Hugh H.
41 Nev. 1, 2 (1917) Zelavin v. Tonopah Belmont Development Co.
Hugh H. Brown, H. R. Cooke, and Geo. B. Thatcher, for Appellant:
Respondent objects to the item of $75 claimed in the cost bill for premium paid surety
company for undertaking on appeal and stay of proceedings. This expense is especially
allowed by statute. (Rev. Laws, 699.)
The objection that the cost bill was not filed and served within apt time, as provided by
rule 6, subdivision 2, Rules of the Supreme Court, is not well taken, and is disproved by the
records of the court.
Dixon & Miller, for Respondent:
There was no service of the cost bill upon the attorneys for the respondent, either within
the time allowed by law or the time granted by one of the justices. Respondent is entitled to
have the rule strictly enforced. Service upon respondent of a verified cost bill is as much a
part of the rule as the filing of it with the clerk, and certainly no such service was made or
was shown to have been made.
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Respondent filed with the clerk of this court objections to the cost bill of appellant, and
from an adverse ruling has appealed, pursuant to paragraph 3 of rule 6 of this court.
1, 2. While several objections are urged to the cost bill, we deem it necessary to consider
only one of them, which is that the cost bill was not filed and served within the time required
by paragraph 2 of rule 6, which reads:
Either party desiring to recover as costs his expenses for printing or typewriting in any
cause in this court, shall, within five days after the decision of the cause, file with the clerk
and serve upon the opposite party a verified cost bill, setting forth or stating the actual cost of
such printing or typewriting, and no greater amount than such actual cost shall be taxed as
costs.
The decision in the case was filed June 5, 1915. On June 11, 1915, appellant filed its cost
bill with the clerk of the court, but there is no showing that service was made on respondent
on that or on any other day, except as it appears by inference from respondent's brief that it
was served on June 12.
41 Nev. 1, 3 (1917) Zelavin v. Tonopah Belmont Development Co.
served on June 12. It is urged that as appellant did not receive notice of the decision until
June 6, that the cost bill was filed in apt time. Conceding for the purpose of this case that this
contention is correct, yet the service on respondent was not made within the required time.
Such service on the respondent within the time required by the rule was as necessary as the
filing of the cost bill with the clerk. We think that the law applicable to the situation which
confronts us in this matter was established by this court in Haley v. Eureka County Bank, 20
Nev. 423, wherein it is said:
The courts may rescind, modify, or repeal their rules, or, in establishing them, may
reserve the exercise of discretion; but where there is no such reservation in the rules, and they
remain in full force, and are not in any respect repugnant to the provisions of the statute, they
have, as before stated, the force and effect of law, and are equally binding upon the court and
litigants, and should be applied and enforced in all cases, and upon all questions coming
within their provisions. * * *
It is true that rules are sometimes adopted by courts, for their own convenience, which
may be enforced or set aside at their own will and pleasure, as deemed meet and proper under
the circumstances of each case. Such rules are mere engines to promote convenience in
business, and when, from any peculiarity, they require to be suspended or waived, in order to
promote justice, the power which made them can and ought to suspend them.' (Wallace v.
Clark, 3 Woodb. & M. 362.) But the rule under consideration is not of such a character.
The filing of a cost bill is not a matter of convenience to the court, nor could it tend to
facilitate the business of the court, since it must be filed, if at all, subsequent to the
disposition of the case by the court. Therefore we do not think this is an instance in which the
court can exercise its discretion.
For the reasons given, the ruling appealed from is reversed, and it is ordered that the
objection to the cost bill be sustained.
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41 Nev. 4, 4 (1917) Walker v. Walker
[No. 2265]
AUGUSTA ELIZABETH WALKER, Respondent, v.
CHANDLER MERRILL WALKER, Appellant.
[164 Pac. 653]
1. DivorceDisposition of PropertyStatute.
The power of the court given by Rev. Laws, 5841, to make such disposition of the property of the parties
as shall appear just and equitable in granting a decree of divorce, is limited by Const., art. 4, sec. 31,
Stats. 1864-65, c. 76, and Stats. 1873, c. 119, determining the property rights of husband and wife.
2. DivorceDisposition of PropertyStatuteImplied Repeal.
Rev. Laws, 2166, determines the rights of the parties to the community property on dissolution of the
marriage, though the earlier statute, section 5941, empowering the court to dispose of the property on
granting a divorce, has not been amended or repealed in terms.
3. DivorceEffect on Property RightsStatutes.
Under Const., art. 4, sec. 31, Stats. 1864-65, c. 76, and Stats. 1873, c. 119, fixing the property rights
of husband and wife, the dissolution of the marriage does not of itself operate to change the property rights.
4. DivorceProperty RightsPower of CourtWife's Separate PropertyStatute.
The declaration of Rev. Laws, 2172, that neither husband nor wife has any interest in the property of the
other, is subject to the exceptions of section 2173, allowing either to enter into any contract with the other
subject to the general rules which control the actions of parties occupying relations of confidence and trust
towards each other, and under the latter provision, one spouse may acquire an interest, legal or equitable, in
the separate property of other which the court, in granting a divorce, can protect under section 5841.
5. DivorceProperty RightsPower of CourtRight of Guilty PartyWife's Separate
Property.
Where a husband whose wife was granted a divorce for his misconduct had settled on her at the time of
the marriage property of the value previously agreed on, which had in the meantime enormously increased
in value, and which left the husband without property of his own, the court can, under the power to dispose
of the property as shall appear just and equitable given by Rev. Laws, 5841, protect any equity of the
husband in such property notwithstanding his guilt, which is only one of the factors to be considered in
determining the property rights.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; R. C. Stoddard, Judge.
Suit by Augusta Elizabeth Walker against Chandler Merrill Walker for divorce. From a
judgment for plaintiff after motions to strike the answer and a general demurrer thereto were
sustained, defendant appeals.
41 Nev. 4, 5 (1917) Walker v. Walker
demurrer thereto were sustained, defendant appeals. Judgment and case remanded for
determination of the property rights of the parties.
Ayres & Gardiner, for Appellant:
The relief asked by the appellant is based upon the first sentence of the statute (Rev. Laws,
5841), which has never been qualified by subsequent legislation or decision, and is not out of
harmony nor inconsistent with any other portions of the statutes. To be litigated, property
rights must be pleaded. (Howe v. Howe, 4 Nev. 473; Bowers v. Bowers, 78 Pac. 430; Dodds
v. Dodds, 98 Pac. 748.)
Division of separate property of spouses upon divorce. (Raper v. Raper, 50 Pac. 502;
Martin v. Martin, 87 N. W. 232; Budlong v. Budlong, 86 Pac. 648; Webster v. Webster, 26
Pac. 864; Shequin v. Shequin, 152 N. W. 823.)
The authorities recognize no distinction, under statutes similar to ours, whether wife or
husband receive the divorce and whether wife or husband own the property. (Fields v. Fields,
27 Pac. 267; Campbell v. Campbell, 112 N. W. 481; Kolbe v. Kolbe, 97 Pac. 236; Gallagher
v. Gallagher, 61 N. W. 1104; Wuest v. Wuest, 17 Nev. 217; Lake v. Bender, 18 Nev. 361.)
The procedure of appealing upon property rights alone, without disturbing the divorce, has
been sanctioned by this court. (Lake v. Bender, 18 Nev. 361.)
If there ever could arise a case in which the court would depart from the ordinary rule of
division, and under their power of doing what was just and right make such provision as
would meet the extraordinary circumstances of a particular case, this is one which strongly
demands the interposition of the court. (Fitts v. Fitts, 14 Tex. 443.)
Cole L. Harwood, for Respondent:
In the absence of statutory provisions, a court has no power to divide property, even in
favor of the innocent wife, against the guilty husband. (Bishop, M. D. & S., chap. 35, par.
1117.) The statutes do not authorize the giving of any of the separate property of the
innocent wife to the guilty husband.
41 Nev. 4, 6 (1917) Walker v. Walker
giving of any of the separate property of the innocent wife to the guilty husband. (Johnson
v. Garner, 223 Fed. 756; Darrenberger v. Haupt, 10 Nev. 43.) Section 5841, Revised Laws,
cannot be construed separate and apart from section 5843. (Wuest v. Wuest, 17 Nev. 217.)
All the statutes upon the subject in hand must be construed together as parts of one whole.
(Lake v. Bender, 18 Nev. 361; Powell v. Campbell, 20 Nev. 232.)
No court has jurisdiction to divest the wife of her separate property, whether she be innocent
or guilty. If this power exists, it must be contained in the statute. (Bishop, M. D. & S., supra;
Powell v. Campbell, supra; Reid v. Reid, 44 Pac. 564.)
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
Augusta Elizabeth Walker brought her suit in the District Court of the Second Judicial
District of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Washoe, against her husband,
Chandler Merrill Walker, for a divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. Her complaint, after
charging the defendant with numerous cruelties, indignities, and gross misconduct, alleges:
That there has been no issue of said marriage, and there is no community property; that
the plaintiff has independent means sufficient for her own support, and does not desire any
alimony from the defendant.
The answer of the defendant denies the acts of cruelty charged in the complaint, and, by
appropriate language, justifies, palliates, or explains his own conduct by charging the plaintiff
with various acts of misconduct as being calculated to, and which did, bring about the
condition of which plaintiff complains; and continues as follows:
Defendant further alleges: That about two weeks before plaintiff and defendant were
married and after they had become engaged to be married, the father of plaintiff came to
defendant and urged him to make a marriage settlement upon the plaintiff. That defendant
finally agreed to give plaintiff the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), which was about
one-third of all the property defendant had. That pursuant to said promise defendant gave
to plaintiff, shortly after their marriage, one hundred shares of the capital stock of the
Canadian Ford Company, Ltd., a corporation then and still conducting an automobile
factory in Walkerville, Canada; that at said time said stock was worth approximately one
hundred dollars {$100 per share, or ten thousand dollars {$10,000); that it has since
greatly enhanced in value and that it is now worth the reasonable market value of at least
two million dollars {$2,000,000).
41 Nev. 4, 7 (1917) Walker v. Walker
property defendant had. That pursuant to said promise defendant gave to plaintiff, shortly
after their marriage, one hundred shares of the capital stock of the Canadian Ford Company,
Ltd., a corporation then and still conducting an automobile factory in Walkerville, Canada;
that at said time said stock was worth approximately one hundred dollars ($100 per share, or
ten thousand dollars ($10,000); that it has since greatly enhanced in value and that it is now
worth the reasonable market value of at least two million dollars ($2,000,000).
That defendant, in the year 1911, pursuant to said promise, gave to plaintiff certain real
property of the value of forty thousand dollars ($40,000).
That about the time of the transaction last mentioned defendant gave to his son the
balance of his property and the defendant now has no property nor means of his own and is
dependent upon his son for his support.
That commencing almost immediately after marriage, plaintiff failed to manifest any
affection for defendant and with great frequency told him that she married him only for his
money and defendant alleges, upon and according to his information and belief that plaintiff
had married defendant only for his money and that prior to the time of the consent of
defendant to said marriage settlement it was agreed between plaintiff and her father that
plaintiff would, if her father could secure from defendant a settlement of $50,000, pay to her
father the sum of $20,000, which agreement has never been fulfilled in whole or in part.
Wherefore, the defendant prays that the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff
and defendant be dissolved; that the court ascertain and determine all property of the parties
and of each of them and its value; that the court make such disposition of the property of the
parties as shall appear just and equitable, having regard to the respective merits of the parties,
to the condition in which they will be left by the divorce, and to the party through whom the
property was acquired; that the property given plaintiff by defendant, or such portion thereof
as may be equitable, be restored to defendant; for such other and further orders as may
be meet in the premises, and for general relief."
41 Nev. 4, 8 (1917) Walker v. Walker
thereof as may be equitable, be restored to defendant; for such other and further orders as may
be meet in the premises, and for general relief.
Upon the coming in of the answer the plaintiff moved to strike the portion quoted, and also
interposed a general demurrer, and directed the demurrer to the paragraphs quoted. The court
sustained both. The defendant thereupon declined to plead over, and the court, on the first day
of August, 1916, granted to plaintiff a divorce, and made no disposition of the property of the
parties, or either of them. The defendant appeals to this court from the judgment and from the
orders sustaining plaintiff's motions.
1. The pleadings involve the construction of the first sentence of section 5841, Revised
Laws, which is as follows:
In granting a decree of divorce the court shall also make such disposition of the property
of the parties as shall appear just and equitable, having regard to the respective merits of the
parties, and to the condition in which they will be left by such divorce, and to the party
through whom the property was acquired, and to the burdens imposed upon it, for the benefit
of the children.
This language manifestly intended to confer upon courts power to make an equitable
division of the property of the parties upon the dissolution of the marriage. (Wuest v. Wuest,
17 Nev. 223.) But since the adoption of our constitution and the enactment of a law more
clearly defining and differentiating the property rights of husband and wife (Const., art. 4,
sec. 33, Stats. of Nev., 1864-5, 1873), it is evident that it is incumbent upon courts, in making
disposition of the property of the parties in granting a divorce, to consider the fact that now
all property of husbands and wives is held in common or belongs solely to one or the other.
(Lake v. Bender, 18 Nev. 404.)
Keeping in view this fact, in determining what estate is now embraced by section 5841,
courts are controlled by the limitations placed thereon by the subsequent law defining and
differentiating property rights of husband and wife.
41 Nev. 4, 9 (1917) Walker v. Walker
defining and differentiating property rights of husband and wife.
2. It is evident that the later act controls the disposition of community property upon the
dissolution of the marriage, although section 5841 has not been amended or repealed in
terms. (Lake v. Bender, supra; Johnson v. Garner, 233 Fed. 756; Rev. Laws, 2166.)
But no mention is made in the act of the disposition to be made of the separate estate of
the parties.
We are now asked to do by interpretation what the legislature has failed to do by express
enactment.
3, 4. So manifest is the intent of the constitution, and the later law passed pursuant to its
requirement, to create, define, and fix the status of a legal separate estate in husbands and
wives, that to now hold that the dissolution of the marriage in itself operates to change a rule
of property would not only be repugnant to the organic law but would be abrogative of the
law passed pursuant to its injunction. The declaration, however, in the later act, that neither
husband nor wife has any interest in the property of the other (Rev. Laws, 2172) is subject to
the exceptions therein provided for, namely:
Either husband or wife may enter into any contract, engagement, or transaction with the
other, or with any other person, respecting property, which either might enter into if
unmarried, subject in any contract, engagement, or transaction between themselves, to the
general rules which control the actions of persons occupying relations of confidence and trust
towards each other. (Rev. Laws, 2173.)
By the latter provision it is manifest that one spouse may acquire an interest, legal or
equitable, in the separate property of the other, and when such property is brought under
review in a divorce proceeding the court is vested with jurisdiction by the former act (section
5841) to make such disposition thereof as may appear just and equitable; otherwise the
injured party is without a remedy.
While the later law severs the unity of husbands and wives in their property relations, it is
not designed to undo all the obligations which depend upon the marriage status, nor is
there anything in the act which negatives the power of a court of equity, when the
marriage relation is dissolved, to inquire into the existence of the property of either
spouse when brought under review; the conditions surrounding it; the transactions,
contracts and obligations of the parties concerning it, with a view of making such decree
as will attain right and justice between the parties under all the circumstances which may
attend the particular case.
41 Nev. 4, 10 (1917) Walker v. Walker
undo all the obligations which depend upon the marriage status, nor is there anything in the
act which negatives the power of a court of equity, when the marriage relation is dissolved, to
inquire into the existence of the property of either spouse when brought under review; the
conditions surrounding it; the transactions, contracts and obligations of the parties concerning
it, with a view of making such decree as will attain right and justice between the parties under
all the circumstances which may attend the particular case.
We conclude that the two statutes may justly and reasonably, in a proper case, operate
without antagonism, and that the retention of section 5841, Revised Laws, which has
continued its existence since 1861, is a statutory recognition of the power of a court of equity,
when the coverture is to be broken and the marriage relation dissolved, to make such
disposition of the property of the parties as their interest therein may appear, having regard to
the limitations imposed by both statutes. It is insisted by respondent that no facts, defenses, or
counterclaim is averred in the answer of appellant upon which to base the relief demanded in
its prayer.
5. The appellant by his pleading admits his own misconduct, and condones that of the
respondent by joining with her in her prayer for a divorce. The answer also impugns
respondent with constructive fraud, but does not charge it in positive terms, and, confessedly
with unclean hands, asks to have restored to him property conveyed to the respondent,
voluntarily or involuntarily as the case may be, as a reasonable provision for her support. The
respondent, on the other hand, because of domestic differences, now seeks by an action for
divorce to appropriate to herself the difference between what may be rightfully hers by virtue
of an alleged settlement upon her shortly after the coverture in 1906, and its present enhanced
value, upon the ground that in law it is rightfully hers, or that it is justly due her by reason of
the appellant's misconduct in making the marital relation impossible.
41 Nev. 4, 11 (1917) Walker v. Walker
marital relation impossible. The alleged settlement upon the respondent was originally for
$50,000. Its present approximate value is $2,000,000. The unusual situation here presented
leads us to the statute for its solution.
The statute provides that in case a divorce is granted the court shall make disposition of
the property as therein stated. The division of property is but an incident to, or consequence
of, a divorce upon which it depends; but the divorce does not depend upon the property.
(Lake v. Bender, 18 Nev. 372; 4 Pac. 715.)
The statute contemplates that the division of property, upon the dissolution of marriage,
shall be graduated among other matters by the quality of the offense of the delinquent. (Wuest
v. Wuest, supra.) In making division of community property, when the decree of divorce is
rendered on the ground of extreme cruelty, the party found guilty thereof is only entitled to
such portion of the community property as the court granting the decree may, in its discretion,
deem just and allow. (Rev. Laws, 2166.)
No reason is suggested why a different rule should apply in a case where the adjustment of
separate property is involved upon the dissolution of the marriage if the court be satisfied
from the facts that the complaining party has established such an interest therein as authorizes
the exercise of the discretion conferred by the statute.
We conclude that the court erred in striking appellant's answer, and sustaining respondent's
demurrer thereto. But as the divorce does not depend upon the property, and the division of
property is but an incident to, or consequence of, the divorce, the judgment granting to
respondent a divorce from appellant is affirmed, and the cause is remanded for such further
proceedings as to the property involved as the parties may be advised.
McCarran, C. J.: I concur.
Coleman, J.: I concur in the order.
41 Nev. 4, 12 (1917) Walker v. Walker
On Petition for Rehearing
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
The application of respondent for a rehearing in the above-entitled cause is denied. On
motion of the appellant it is ordered that the concluding paragraph of the opinion of the court,
indicating the order of reversal to be made herein, be amended so as to read as follows:
We conclude that the court erred in striking appellant's answer and sustaining respondent's
demurrer thereto, and such order, and so much of the judgment as depends thereon, is hereby
reversed.
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41 Nev. 12, 12 (1917) Green v. Hooper
[No. 2246]
GEORGE S. GREEN, Appellant, v. E. U. HOOPER, JOSEPHINE S. HOOPER, C. G.
PIERSON, A. A. BURKE, as Sheriff of the County of Washoe, State of Nevada, and W.
E. PRUETT, as Trustee of E. U. Hooper, Bankrupt, Respondents.
[167 Pac 23]
1. AttachmentNature of Remedy.
The remedy by attachment is dependent upon statute.
2. AttachmentPersonal PropertyCustody.
To effect an attachment of personal property it must be taken into the custody of the officer serving the
writ, and unless that is done there is no existing attachment.
3. AttachmentNature of CustodyStatute.
Under Rev. Laws, 5152, providing that personal property capable of manual delivery shall be attached by
taking it into custody, the custody required of the attaching officer is such as to enable him to retain and
assert his power over the property so that it cannot be withdrawn or taken by another without his
knowledge.
4. AttachmentLienPossession of Attaching Officer.
It is the duty of the attaching officer to take the property attached into his possession, and the lien of the
attachment, as to subsequent purchasers and other creditors, is ineffective if the officer abandons his
possession.
5. AttachmentPersonal PropertyCustody of Attaching Officer.
When the personal property on which a levy of attachment has been made is left by the attaching officer
in the possession of the debtor, it ceases to be in custodia legis and may be taken by other creditors.
41 Nev. 12, 13 (1917) Green v. Hooper
6. Appeal and ErrorDissolutionStayEffect.
Where the court dissolved an attachment of personal property and the attaching officer immediately
delivered it over to the debtor and took his receipt therefor, the court's order was executed, and the
subsequent appeal and bond staying the execution of the order were ineffective, and the debtor might
thereafter dispose of the property as he saw fit.
7. AttachmentChattel MortgagesEffect of Release from Attachment.
Where an attachment of personal property was dissolved by the court's order and was at once delivered to
the debtor upon his receipt therefor, a chattel mortgage, previously filed, covering the property so released
from attachment, became immediately effective.
8. BankruptcyDissolution of AttachmentRight of Subrogation.
An attaching officer, who after the court's order dissolving an attachment of personal property delivered it
to the debtor on his receipt therefor, had no right or special property therein, so that there were no rights to
which the debtor's referee in bankruptcy could be subrogated.
9. New TrialTime for MotionWaiver.
Where respondents became a party to an order of the trial court extending the time in which plaintiff
might file his notice of intention to move for a new trial, they thereby waived any objection on the ground
that such notice was not served within the time prescribed by law.
10. New TrialMotion for New TrialWaiver of Objections.
A party may waive his right to object to any of the proceedings preliminary to a motion for a new trial, or
that they have not been taken, filed, or served within the time prescribed by rule or statute.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; Thomas F. Moran, Judge.
Action by George S. Green against E. U. Hooper and others. Judgment for defendants,
motion for new trial denied, and plaintiff appeals. Judgment and order reversed, with
instructions.
Mack & Green and H. D. Danforth, for Appellant:
The trial court held that the mortgage, in so far as the personal property herein described
is concerned as against the creditors of E. U. Hooper, is invalid for any purpose, void, and of
no effect; that plaintiff, George S. Green, has no right, title, or interest in or to, or lien upon
said property.
41 Nev. 12, 14 (1917) Green v. Hooper
Appellant contends that the mortgage created a valid and subsisting lien upon the
mortgaged personal property; that the depositing of the mortgage with the county recorder
with instructions to record it and its recordation was a full compliance with the law, and that,
even if the county recorder failed in the performance of any part of his duty, the mortgagee is
not responsible for or chargeable with such dereliction; that the chattel mortgage was made
for a then present and actual cash advance and did not create any preference of creditors
within the meaning of the federal bankruptcy act; that not being a fraudulent preference of
creditors, it could be recorded at any time before Hooper was adjudicated a bankrupt, and the
lien would date back to the time of the execution of the mortgage, and that therefore its
rerecordation created a valid lien relating back to the date of the execution of the instrument,
and is superior to any right of the trustee in bankruptcy; that C. G. Pierson has no claim at all
upon the mortgaged property, and no lien to which the trustee in bankruptcy could be
subrogated; and that the order of the court of July 14, 1914, dissolving Pierson's attachment,
and the action of the sheriff in surrendering the property into the possession of Hooper
destroyed any and every claim which Pierson could have, or to which Pruett could be
subrogated as trustee in bankruptcy.
The statutes plainly require the mortgagee under a chattel mortgage to record his mortgage
in the office of the county recorder, and the duty of properly recording it is imposed upon that
official. There is no provision in the law fixing the method of recording a mixed mortgage of
chattels and personal property. (Craig v. Dimmock, 47 Ill. 319; Fairbanks v. Davis, 50 Vt. 81;
Cleveland v. Empire Mills Co., 25 S. W. 1056; Parker v. Panhandle Nat. Bank, 34 S. W.
197; Heflin v. Phillips, 78 Ala. 92; Case & Co. v. Margine, 43 Ark. 147; Meherin v. Oaks, 67
Cal. 58; 6 Cyc. 1087-1090.)
The mortgage was given for an actual present advance of cash, and not for an antecedent
debt. Liens given or accepted in good faith and not in contemplation of or in fraud upon this
act, and for a present consideration, which have been recorded according to law, if record
thereof was necessary in order to import notice, shall, to the extent of such present
consideration only, not be affected by this act."
41 Nev. 12, 15 (1917) Green v. Hooper
fraud upon this act, and for a present consideration, which have been recorded according to
law, if record thereof was necessary in order to import notice, shall, to the extent of such
present consideration only, not be affected by this act. (Federal Bankruptcy Act, sec. 67d.)
The bankrupt act expressly recognizes as valid mortgages given or accepted in good faith
and not in contemplation of or in fraud upon this act, and for a present consideration, which
have been recorded according to law, if record thereof was necessary in order to impart
notice. (Loveland on Bankruptcy, vol.1, sec. 470, p. 949.)
All the authorities hold that where a chattel mortgage is taken in good faith for a present
cash advance, and while the mortgagor is solvent, it may be recorded at any time prior to the
adjudication in bankruptcy. (In Re Klein, 197 Fed. 241; In Re Sturtevant, 188 Fed. 196; Davis
v. Hanover, 210 Fed. 768; Debus v. Yates, 193 Fed. 427; Carey v. Donahue, 240 U. S. 430.)
The burden of proof was upon the respondents in their effort to set aside a preference or
fraudulent conveyance, to plead, prove, and establish the facts constituting such preference or
fraudulent transfer within the meaning of the bankruptcy act. There was neither allegation nor
proof of a preferential or fraudulent transfer. (Loveland on Bankruptcy, secs. 544, 545.)
The judgment of the district court discharging and dissolving the attachment in the action
of C. G. Pierson v. E. U. Hooper was a final and conclusive adjudication that the personal
property was exempt from attachment and execution until reversed on appeal. This court has
repeatedly held that a judgment of the district court is final and res adjudicata until reversed
on appeal. (Young v. Brehe, 19 Nev. 379; Cain v. Williams, 16 Nev. 426; Rogers v. Hatch, 8
Nev. 35; 23 Cyc. 1233.)
Cheney, Downer, Price & Hawkins, for Respondents:
Appellant does not appear from the record to have been injured by reason of the judgment
or decree entered; the judgment was in favor of appellant, from which he cannot appeal, and
the judgment and decree were right and proper, and should be affirmed.
41 Nev. 12, 16 (1917) Green v. Hooper
cannot appeal, and the judgment and decree were right and proper, and should be affirmed.
Our statute (Rev. Laws, 1080) states: No mortgage of personal property shall be valid for
any purpose against any other person than the parties thereto, unless possession of the
mortgaged property be delivered to, and retained by the mortgagee; and it provides further
for the securing and keeping of books for the recording of all chattel mortgages, and also
declares that all chattel mortgages shall be recorded therein. The chattel mortgage in this
case, in so far as it is called in question, never was, and is not now, valid for any purpose,
because as a part of its execution and as a condition precedent to its validity it was not
recorded as required by statute. (Simpson v. Harris, 21 Nev. 353, 370; Knickerbocker Trust
Co. v. Penn. Cordage Co., 55 Atl. 231.)
The fact that the mortgage was of real estate and of personal property, and was filed for
record and recorded as a real estate mortgage, did not satisfy the mandatory requirements of
the statute, or the construction thereof in Simpson v. Harris, supra, where it is said that a
mortgage not recorded in strict compliance with the statute is absolutely void. The statute
in express words requires that there shall be an actual recording in books specially provided
for the purpose. We cannot agree with counsel for the appellant that the record of a mortgage
of real estate in the office of the register of deeds is notice to the world of the mortgage of
chattels included in the same instrument, and it is not the place provided by law for obtaining
such notice, and it cannot be supposed that interested parties will look there for such
mortgages. A public record is not notice for any purpose not declared by statute.' (Burton v.
Martz, 38 Mich. 762.) (Ramsdell v. Citizens E. L. & P. Co., 61 N. W. 275.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
As security for a lien of $1,200, appellant took a promissory note signed by E. U. Hooper
and Josephine S.
41 Nev. 12, 17 (1917) Green v. Hooper
S. Hooper, his wife; and to secure the payment of said promissory note, the Hoopers made
and delivered a real estate and chattel mortgage covering certain real property in the city of
Reno, and also the machinery and implements used by Hooper in his vocation. This mortgage
was made on March 17, 1913, and on the following day, March 18, the instrument was filed
with the county recorder of Washoe County and by him recorded in a book containing the
records of realty mortgages. On June 4, 1914, C. G. Pierson commenced an action against the
respondent E. U. Hooper, and caused a writ of attachment to issue. On June 11, 1914, the
mortgage given by the Hoopers to Green, the appellant here, was again filed for record with
the county recorder, and was recorded as a chattel mortgage. On the same day, to wit, June
11, Green, the appellant here, commenced suit to foreclose the mortgage. On June 14, 1914,
pursuant to motion, the district court set aside and discharged the attachment as to certain
mentioned articles of machinery and equipment used by Hooper in his regular vocation,
which said articles were included in the mortgage given by the Hoopers to Green. On the
same day on which the order discharging and dissolving the judgment was entered, to wit,
June 14, 1914, the property was delivered to Hooper by the sheriff of Washoe County, the
attaching officer. The sheriff demanded and received a receipt for the property from Hooper,
and never again attempted to take control or possession of the property or to exercise any
control over it. From that time until the property was taken in charge by the referee in
bankruptcy it remained in the possession, custody, and control of Hooper. On July 25, 1914,
Hooper filed a petition in voluntary bankruptcy, and on the same day he was adjudged a
bankrupt. On July 18, 1914, C. G. Pierson perfected his appeal from the latter order of the
district court dissolving and discharging the writ of attachment, and at the same time secured
an order of the district court, made by the same judge who had made the order dissolving the
attachment, staying the operation of said order dissolving the said attachment and fixing
the amount of a stay bond in the sum of $3,000, which bond was given and approved.
41 Nev. 12, 18 (1917) Green v. Hooper
staying the operation of said order dissolving the said attachment and fixing the amount of a
stay bond in the sum of $3,000, which bond was given and approved.
Section 405 of our code of civil procedure, as amended by the legislature of 1915,
provides:
If the appeal be from a judgment or order directing the payment of money, or from an
order dissolving or refusing to dissolve an attachment, it shall not stay the execution of the
judgment or order unless a written undertaking be executed on the part of the appellant, by
two or more sufficient sureties, stating their place of residence and occupation, to the effect
that they are bound in double the amount named in the judgment or order, or double the sum
of the value of the property attached, as the case may be; that if the judgment or order
appealed from, or any part thereof, be affirmed, or such appeal be dismissed, the appellant
shall pay the amount directed to be paid by the judgment or order, or the part of such amount
as to which the judgment or order shall be affirmed, if affirmed only in part, and all damages
and costs which shall be awarded against the appellant upon the appeal, and that if the
appellant does not make such payment within thirty days after the filing of the remittitur from
the supreme court, in the court in which the appeal is taken, judgment may be entered on
motion of the respondent, in his favor against the sureties for such amount, together with the
interest that may be due thereon and the damages and costs which may be awarded against the
appellant upon the appeal. When the judgment or order appealed from is made payable in a
specified kind of money or currency, the undertaking required by this section shall be drawn
and made payable in the same kind of money or currency specified in said judgment or order,
and in case of any appeal from an order dissolving or refusing to dissolve an attachment, such
undertaking shall be conditioned that if the order appealed from or any part thereof be
affirmed, the appellant shall pay to the opposing party, on such appeal, all damages and
costs caused by him by reason of said appeal and the stay of execution thereon."
41 Nev. 12, 19 (1917) Green v. Hooper
on such appeal, all damages and costs caused by him by reason of said appeal and the stay of
execution thereon. (Stats. 1915, p. 219.)
The trial court held that the mortgage, in so far as the personal property therein described
is concerned, as against the creditors of E. U. Hooper, is invalid for any purpose, void, and of
no effect; that plaintiff George S. Green, appellant here, has no right, title or interest in or to
or lien upon said property.
Of the several contentions relied upon by appellant for a reversal of this judgment, we
shall confine ourselves to but one.
The trial court took the position, and by reason of such position the judgment followed,
that notwithstanding the order of the district court made June 14, 1914, dissolving the
attachment and discharging the property from the lien, and notwithstanding the delivery of the
property by the attaching officer to the defendant in that case, nevertheless the property was at
all times, after the levy of the attachment by the sheriff, in custodia legis and at all times
subject to the attachment lien; that the later took precedence over the mortgage and that the
referee in bankruptcy was subrogated to the rights of the attaching officer.
It is the contention of appellant here that on the making of the order dissolving the
attachment and on the delivery of the property by the sheriff to the respondent Hooper, the
chattel mortgage made by Hooper and his wife to appellant, having been recorded in the
interim, became immediately effective. On the other hand, it is the contention of respondents
that the referee in bankruptcy became subrogated to the rights of the attaching officer, and the
property should be retained in the estate of the bankrupt and disposed of for the benefit of his
creditors.
1. While the remedy by attachment as it now exists in many of the jurisdictions of the
United States was not of common-law origin, a somewhat similar process, whereby a creditor
under some circumstances might attach his debtor's property as security for the obligation,
was of ancient usage in the English law.
41 Nev. 12, 20 (1917) Green v. Hooper
debtor's property as security for the obligation, was of ancient usage in the English law.
(Barber v. Morgan, Ann. Cas. 1912d, 951; Franklin Bank v. Bachelder, 39 Am. Dec. 606.)
The remedy as now recognized in the states of the union is of comparatively recent origin
and is dependent upon statute.
2. In the first place, it may be observed that in order to effect an attachment of personal
property, it must be taken into the custody of the officer serving the writ. Until this is done,
no attachment can be said to exist. (Freeman on Executions, sec. 262; Wade on Attachment,
vol. 1, sec. 129; Drake on Attachment, sec. 292.)
3. The statute of Nevada (Rev. Laws, 5152), as to how an attachment may be executed,
prescribes:
2. Personal property capable of manual delivery shall be attached by taking it into
custody.
As to the nature of the custody required of an attaching officer in order to continue the lien
in effect, the rule has been variously stated, but we think it may be asserted as a general rule
that the custody required of the attaching officer should be such as to enable the officer to
retain and assert his power and control over the property so that it cannot probably be
withdrawn or taken by another without his knowing it.
4. It has been stated as a proposition of law, and such is well supported by authority, that
it is the duty of the attaching officer to take the property attached into his possession; and the
lien of such attachment, so far as subsequent purchasers and other creditors are concerned, is
dependent upon the continuance of such possession. If, therefore, the officer abandons his
possession, the lien will be ineffective as against such. (Chadburne v. Sumner, 16 N. H. 129;
Sanford v. Boring, 12 Cal. 539; Taintor v. Williams, 7 Conn. 271; Nichols v. Patten, 18 Me.
231; Baldwin v. Jackson, 12 Mass. 131; Sanderson v. Edwards, 16 Pick. 144.)
In the case of Gower v. Stevens, 19 Me. 92, the rule is stated that: "To constitute and
preserve an attachment of personal property, by process of law, the officer serving such
process must take the property and continue in possession of it either by himself, or by a
keeper by him appointed for this purpose.
41 Nev. 12, 21 (1917) Green v. Hooper
To constitute and preserve an attachment of personal property, by process of law, the
officer serving such process must take the property and continue in possession of it either by
himself, or by a keeper by him appointed for this purpose. It has never been understood that
he could, consistently with the preservation of the lien, constitute the debtor his agent to keep
the chattels attached. Except so far as authorized by special statute provision, he cannot leave
such property with the debtor, without dissolving the attachment.
To the same effect are the cases of Becker v. Steele, 41 Kan. 173, and Loveland v. Alvord
Con. Quartz M. Co., 76 Cal. 562.
5. On the question of abandonment or discharge of the attachment, the courts are not
altogether uniform in the interpretation of the law as to the effect of such an act. But the rule
supported by the greater weight of authority, and which we will assert here, is that when the
personal property on which a levy of attachment has been made is left by the attaching officer
in possession of the debtor, the property ceases to be in custodia legis and may be taken by
other creditors. (Root v. Railroad Company, 45 Ohio St. 228; Jones Lumber Co. v. Faris, 55
Am. St. Rep. 814.)
In Root v. Railroad Company, supra, the court says:
A different holding would be lacking in principle, as all the authorities agree that the
property must be seized in attachment or the court acquires no jurisdiction over it; and that no
seizure can be effected unless the officer takes it into his custody; and if he voluntarily
abandons its custody to the debtor or his agent, the attachment ceases to exist.
See, also, Ruling Case Law, vol. 17, p. 235, et seq., and Ruling Case Law, vol. 2, p. 866, et
seq.
6. The entire question here turns upon the act of the attaching officer in delivering the
property to Hooper the day following the entry of the order of the district court dissolving the
attachment. It will be observed that not only did the officer deliver the property over to
Hooper, but required that the latter give him a receipt for the same.
41 Nev. 12, 22 (1917) Green v. Hooper
but required that the latter give him a receipt for the same. The court had set the property free
from the attachment; the attaching officer, pursuant to the order of the court, had delivered
the property to the defendant in that action. It was not until some days later that the plaintiff
Pierson filed his notice of appeal and bond staying the execution of the order. But the order
had already been executed.
It will be noted that the statute prescribes no time at which such stay of execution may be
effected. Presumedly the execution may be stayed at any time within which the appeal might
be taken; but what is the condition of the property attached in the meantime? Who is in
custody of that property? Who is in control? The attaching officer had been ordered by the
district court to release the same, and when that order was filed it became immediately
effective. By what authority would the attaching officer refuse to obey the mandate of the
district court whereby the writ of attachment was dissolved? And when that officer, in
obedience to the order of the district court, released the property from his custody and control,
turned the same over to the defendant, there was then nothing effective to prevent the
defendant from disposing of the property as he might see fit. (Ranft v. Young, 21 Nev. 401;
Hackett v. Manlove, 14 Cal. 85.)
7. On the delivery of the property to the defendant Hooper by the attaching officer, the
chattel mortgage theretofore filed, and which covered the property released from the writ of
attachment, must in the very nature of things have become immediately effective, and in fact
the mortgagee might have taken possession of the same.
Drake on Attachments, 7th ed., sec. 426, resolves the question thus:
When an attachment has been dissolved, by reason of a judgment in favor of the
defendant, or otherwise, the special property of the officer in the attached effects is at an end,
and he is bound to restore them to the defendant, if he is still the owner of them, or if not, to
the owner.
41 Nev. 12, 23 (1917) Green v. Hooper
* * * If he fail to make such return, he is liable for the property. His informing the defendant
that he has relinquished the attachment, while he keeps the property locked up in the house in
which it was attached, is no return of the property. And he cannot screen himself from this
liability by delivering the property to the plaintiff. It is not his dutyindeed it would be
contrary to his dutyto make such a delivery to the creditor, even after his demand is
ascertained and sanctioned by a judgment. Goods attached are in the legal custody of the
officer, and he is accountable for them, no less to the defendant than to the plaintiff in the
attachment; and the general property in the goods is not changed, until a levy and sale under
execution.
The Supreme Court of Minnesota had presented to it the identical question under
consideration here and under circumstances and conditions most analagous to those presented
in this record, and in view of the similarity of the facts, as well as of the statutes and
inasmuch as the reasoning there is in our judgment correct, we quote from the opinion in that
case which, after adopting the foregoing excerpt from Drake on Attachments, proceeds as
follows:
This is certainly the logical rule, for, the writ being his only authority for keeping the
property from the owner, such authority is gone when the writ is dissolved. It is true that
under our practice the plaintiff may, by appealing from the order dissolving the writ and
giving the bond for a stay, suspend the operation of the order, and that such suspension will
relate back to the date of the order, so that, if the officer still has the property, his right to hold
it is restored; and it may also be, as between the parties to the writ, that if between the date of
the order and the appeal with a stay, the sheriff has returned the property to the defendant, the
appeal and stay reinstates the lien so that the plaintiff may require the sheriff to retake the
property. Neither of these, however, is this case. Here the question is, Is it the duty of the
sheriff to retain the property after the dissolution of the writ, which is his only warrant for
holding it, to enable the plaintiff to determine whether he will appeal, and to perfect the
appeal and stay, if he decides to take that course?
41 Nev. 12, 24 (1917) Green v. Hooper
the writ, which is his only warrant for holding it, to enable the plaintiff to determine whether
he will appeal, and to perfect the appeal and stay, if he decides to take that course? The
statute is silent on the point. If it be his duty to still hold the property, for how long must he
hold it? Some authorities suggest that he should hold it for a reasonable time. But who is to
determine what is a reasonable time? If that be the rule, the officer will be liable to the
plaintiff in case he return the property to the defendant before the end of a reasonable time,
and to the defendant in case he refuse to return it on demand after such reasonable time. The
position of the officer would be a hard one if he must take the risk of the court or jury trying
the action against him, agreeing with him as to what is a reasonable time. We think it is for
the plaintiff, and not the sheriff, to do what may be necessary to preserve the interest of the
former in case of a dissolution of the writ. (Ryan Drug Co. v. Peacock, 40 Minn. 470, 42 N.
W. 298.)
Following the rule of law that we have attempted to set forth, it appears to us conclusive
that upon the delivery of the property by the sheriff to the defendant Hooper it was no longer
in custodia legis, nor was the writ of attachment in any wise effective as a levy on that
particular property, nor did the stay of execution either revive the writ or retake the property.
The chattel mortgage given by the defendant in that action to the appellant here having been
recorded and the action in foreclosure having been instituted, the property thus released from
the effect of the writ of attachment was immediately subject to the mortgage and subject to
the foreclosure proceedings.
8. After releasing the property subject to the order of the district court, the attaching
officer had no right or special property therein. This being true, there were no rights to which
the referee in bankruptcy could be subrogated.
9. Respondents here contend that the notice of motion of intention to move for a new
trial was not filed or served within the time prescribed by law, and hence contend that the
trial court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the motion for a new trial.
41 Nev. 12, 25 (1917) Green v. Hooper
of intention to move for a new trial was not filed or served within the time prescribed by law,
and hence contend that the trial court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the
motion for a new trial. Whatever merit there might be in the contention of respondents, it
appears to us that they became a party to the order of the trial court extending time in which
for appellant to file his notice of intention to move for a new trial. The record of the
proceedings in open court on the day on which the judgement was rendered discloses the
following:
Mr. GreenIf the court please, we desire at this time to apply to the court for thirty-days'
stay of any execution of the judgment. Of course, we cannot accept any part of the judgment,
as we intend to appeal from the judgment, the entire judgment, and we would like to have
thirty-days' stay of execution in which to prepare our record and serve.
The CourtYou mean
Mr. GreenExpect to make a motion for a new trial.
The CourtYou mean time to make a motion for a new trial?
Mr. GreenWell, we will have to have thirty days to get the record.
Mr. HawkinsYou don't have to have any record for a motion for a new trial.
Mr. GreenWe want thirty days, because I will be busy with other matters, in that other
proceeding, and let that thirty days cover the period for us to give notice of intention to move
for a new trial.
The CourtLet me seeit is ordered that the plaintiff have up to and including the 17th
day of April in which to serve notice of intention to move for a new trial. Now what else do
you want?
Mr. GreenAnd a stay of execution of the judgment during that time.
The CourtCan I grant that without a bond?
Mr. GreenWell, it can be granted, but we can give a bond if it is necessary.
41 Nev. 12, 26 (1917) Green v. Hooper
bond if it is necessary. The execution of this judgment can be stayed without bond.
The CourtMaybe it will not be necessary to do that, if counsel will stipulate with you
that there will be no execution issued for that period.
Mr. HawkinsI don't object to that.
The CourtIt is stipulated that no execution shall issue for thirty daysnow, you want
also included in this order that youwhat other papers do you want filed? This only stays the
suit as to the notice of intention to move for a new trial. Now what else
Mr. GreenDon't want anything. File a notice of intention to move for a new trial.
The CourtYou want thirty days in which to do that?
Mr. GreenYes, thirty days' stay of execution.
The CourtWell, he has stipulated there will be no execution for thirty days.
While we might with propriety regard the conduct and utterance of counsel for
respondents in open court at the time at which the order extending time was entered as
tantamount to a stipulation, it will in this instance be unnecessary, inasmuch as counsel's
conduct and action in that instance and on that occasion, in our judgment, constituted a
waiver of any objection that he might have to the trial court entertaining the motion for a new
trial at or within the time embraced within the order.
10. It will not, in our judgment, be seriously denied that a party may waive his right to
object to any or all of the proceedings preliminary to a motion for a new trial, or that the same
have not been taken, filed, or served within the time prescribed by rule or statute. If these
statutory times and conditions may be waived by silence, much more so may they be waived
by stipulation or affirmative acquiescence.
Other matters set up in respondents' motion to dismiss appear to us to be without merit.
The judgment and order appealed from is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to
reframe to decree and judgment so as to make the same effective as to the personal
property here in question.
41 Nev. 12, 27 (1917) Green v. Hooper
and judgment so as to make the same effective as to the personal property here in question.
It is so ordered.
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
____________
41 Nev. 27, 27 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
[No. 2256]
J. SHEEHAN and JOHN G. TAYLOR, Copartners, Doing Business Under the Name and
Style of TAYLOR & SHEEHAN, Respondents, v. S. B. KASPER, Appellant.
[165 Pac. 632]
1. Waters and WatercoursesCanalRestraining of Destruction.
To entitle plaintiffs to judgment restraining defendant from destroying a canal, ditch, and power line, the
canal must have had a valid existence, must have been owned by plaintiffs, who must have acquired a
license to construct, maintain, and operate the branch ditch and power line irrevocable at defendant's will,
and defendant must have been threatening to fill in and destroy the ditch and power line.
2. Waters and WatercoursesConveyance of Right of Way.
The federal government, having passed title to plaintiff to a right of way for a canal by statute, could
convey no title thereto when it conveyed title to a mill site; and the patentee of the land embraced in the
mill site took title subject to the right of way for the canal, and the purchaser of the mill site acquired no
greater right.
3. CorporationsRatification of Acts of Agent.
The unauthorized act of the managing director of a company in granting a license became effectual when
ratified by the company.
4. Waters and WatercoursesLicensesPresumption of Existence.
In suit to restrain defendant from destroying a canal, ditch, and power line, where the superintendent of
the exploration company from which plaintiffs claimed a license to construct the ditch and power line knew
of the construction from the beginning of operations, and no protest was made, the court will presume that
plaintiffs had a license from the exploration company.
41 Nev. 27, 28 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
5. LicensesPatrol License Without ConsiderationIrrevocable Character.
An executed parol license, though without consideration, is irrevocable.
6. Waters and WatercoursesMill SiteBona Fide PurchaserNotice.
Where a firm was in open and notorious possession and enjoyment of a ditch and power line for three or
four years before defendant, who had lived in the vicinity of the property off and on for ten years, and
continuously for one year, bought a mill site through which the right of way for the ditch passed, the firm's
possession was sufficient to put defendant on notice.
Appeal from Sixth Judicial District Court, Humboldt County; E. A. Ducker, Judge.
Action by J. Sheehan and John G. Taylor, copartners, doing business under the name and
style of Taylor & Sheehan, against S. B. Kasper. From judgment for plaintiffs, and an order
denying his motion for a new trial, defendant appeals. Affirmed.
Salter & Robins, for Appellant:
In this case, there having been no express oral consent nor written consent given to the
respondents or their grantors for the building of the ditch in the first instance, their right to
maintain the ditch was merely a license, and not an irrevocable license or easement. Being
such a license, it was personal, and not an irrevocable right in and to the freehold, and could
not pass from the licensees, to whom the license was originally given, to their successors.
(Ewing v. Rhea, 62 Pac. 790; Levery v. Arnold, 36 Or. 84, 57 Pac. 906; Hallock v. Suitor, 60
Pac. 384.)
It may be conceded that a mere naked license, by acquiescence, may be created in favor of
a person, or the public, by his or its use of real property, or an easement therein without the
owner's objection; but a license of that character, unless enjoyed for such a time as to bar the
statute of limitations, may be revoked at any time by the licensor. (Carskaddon v. Mills, 5
Ind. App. 22, 31 N. E. 559; Parrish v. Kaspare, 109 Ind. 22; Simpson v. Wright, 21 Ill. App.
67; Pitzman v. Boyce, 111 Mo. 387, 19 S. W. 1104.)
41 Nev. 27, 29 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
The license is revocable, regardless of whether it might be called a license by acquiescence
or not, and at the will of the licensor, regardless of whatever expenditure the licensee may
have made, provided the licensee has reasonable notice and opportunity to remove his fixture;
nor does the case involve in any way an estoppel in pais against the licensor, or render him
liable in an action for damages. (House v. Barman, 81 Pac. 48; Great Falls W. W. Co. v.
Great Northern Ry. Co., 21 Mont. 487, 54 Pac. 963; Yeager v. Woodruff, 17 Utah, 361, 53
Pac. 1045.)
A mere license is nothing more than a personal privilege and is revocable at the pleasure
of the licensor. A license is founded in personal confidence, a mere personal privilege,
extending only to the person to whom it is given, and is therefore not assignable. An
attempted assignment terminates the privilege. (25 Cyc. 644-646, notes 39-44.)
The assumed consent supposed to have been given by the Glasgow and Western
Exploration Company, through its general manager, was ultra vires, and did not bind the
corporation. The managing agent of a corporation has no incidental or implied power, by
virtue of his office, to transfer the real estate of the corporation by deed. (Stow v. Wise, 7
Conn. 214, 18 Am. Dec. 99.) A general agent of a corporation, even though his authority in
this respect is not limited either by common usage or the by-laws of the company, has no
power as such to convey the real estate of the company, but special power is necessary.
(Leggett v. New Jersey Mfg. Co., 1 N. J. Eq. 541, 23 Am. Dec. 728.) The general agent of a
corporation cannot make a lease of its lands without special authority. (Gillis v. Bailey, 17 N.
H. 18.)
The owner of a dominant estate in an easement cannot in any way enlarge his easement or
put it to uses for which it was not originally intended, and thus impose additional burdens
upon the owner of the servient estate. Any action on the part of the owner of the dominant
estate which increased the burdens upon the servient estate will operate as a discharge of the
servient estate from the burdens of the easement.
41 Nev. 27, 30 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
from the burdens of the easement. (Blanchard v. Burgess, 2 A. & E. 258; Bullen v. Runnells,
2 N. H. 255; Jackway v. Johnson, 27 N. J. Eq. 552.)
If the condition and character of the dominant estate are substantially altered, the right of
way cannot be used for a new purposes required by the altered condition of the property, and
imposing a greater burden upon the servient estate. (Parks v. Bishop, 120 Mass. 340, 21 Am.
Rep. 519.) The owner of a right of way over the land of another is limited in its use to the
terms of the grant from which the way is derived. (Chandler v. Goodridge, 23 Me. 78; Abbott
v. Butler, 59 N. H. 317; Wells v. Tollman, 156 N. Y. 636, 51 N. E. 271.) If the owner of an
easement exceeds his rights, either in the manner or the extent of its use, or if he enters upon
or uses the land of the servient estate for any unauthorized purpose, he is guilty of a trespass,
although no actual damage has been sustained. (Kaler v. Beaman, 49 Me. 207; Bryn Mawr
Hotel Co. v. Baldwin, 12 Mont. 145; Dixien v. Clough, 24 Wend. 188; Appleton v. Fullerton,
1 Gray, 186; Ganly v. Looney, 14 Allen, 40.)
Callahan & Brandon, for Respondents:
The principal contention made by appellant is to the effect that there is no such a thing
known to the principles of the law as a parol irrevocable license, arguing that on a proper
construction of the law the lower court was in error in finding that the license in the case at
bar was irrevocable, because a mere parol license cannot become irrevocable, even regardless
of improvements made by the licensee in reliance thereon. The courts are about equally
divided on this point. In 25 Cyc. p. 646, note 46, and cases cited thereunder, it is held that an
executed oral license with expenditure of money or labor in reliance thereon makes the oral
license irrevocable. On page 646 of the same authority, note 48, there are a large number of
cases cited which hold a contrary doctrine. (See, also, 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d ed. p.
1145, note 8, and p. 1146, same authority, note 7, to the same effect.)
41 Nev. 27, 31 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
It will be noted, however, from these authorities that the great majority of the western states
have decided the issue in favor of the oral irrevocable license, particularly the State of
Nevada, in the case of Lee v. McLeod, 12 Nev. 280, in which it is said: A parol license to
erect a dam upon another's land for the purpose of running a flouring mill is irrevocable, if the
party to whom the license is given has executed it by erecting the mill or otherwise expending
money upon the faith of the license. The decision in the case of Lee v. McLeod has become
the settled policy in this state in so far as the principles therein laid down are concerned.
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Plaintiffs brought suit to restrain the defendant from destroying a certain canal, ditch, and
power line. From a judgment and decree as prayed, and from an order denying a motion for a
new trial, an appeal is taken.
Plaintiffs contend that they were, and at the time the suit was instituted, and for about fifty
years prior thereto they and their predecessors in interest had been, the owners of land in
possession of a large tract of land known as the Taylor & Sheehan Ranch, and a certain canal
commonly known and called the Humboldt Canal, together with a strip of land 100 feet in
width, extending 50 feet on each side of the center line of said canal, all situated in Humboldt
County, Nevada, during which time they had paid all taxes assessed thereon; that the
Glasgow Exploration Company was, in the year 1910, the owner of a tract of land consisting
of about 179 acres, which it acquired as a mill site, and through which the Humboldt Canal
flowed, and that plaintiffs acquired from said exploration company an irrevocable license to
construct, maintain, and operate a certain branch ditch and power line over, upon, and across
said mill site, which they constructed at a cost of about $45,000. That said Humboldt Canal,
ditch, and power line were being used to divert certain waters of the Humboldt River that had
been appropriated by plaintiffs with which to irrigate the growing crops on the land so
owned by them, of the alleged value of $30,000; that thereafter, and in 1915, and while
plaintiffs were in the possession of all the property mentioned, the defendant purchased
said mill site and took a quitclaim deed thereto; that defendant threatened to fill in and
destroy said canal and ditch and tear down and destroy said power line, and if not
restrained would fill in and destroy the same, to the damage of plaintiffs; that defendant
is insolvent and unable to respond to plaintiffs in damages.
41 Nev. 27, 32 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
with which to irrigate the growing crops on the land so owned by them, of the alleged value
of $30,000; that thereafter, and in 1915, and while plaintiffs were in the possession of all the
property mentioned, the defendant purchased said mill site and took a quitclaim deed thereto;
that defendant threatened to fill in and destroy said canal and ditch and tear down and destroy
said power line, and if not restrained would fill in and destroy the same, to the damage of
plaintiffs; that defendant is insolvent and unable to respond to plaintiffs in damages. They
also contend that they had the right to use the Humboldt Canal through which to divert the
waters of the Humboldt River for irrigation purposes.
Defendant contests every contention of the plaintiffs, except the existence of their
partnership, their ownership of the Taylor & Sheehan ranch, and their right to a portion of the
waters of the Humboldt River for the irrigation of their lands.
1. To enable the trial court to render judgment in favor of plaintiffs as prayed, it was
necessary that it find, in addition to the admitted allegations of the complaint, that the
Humboldt Canal had a valid existence, and that it was owned by the plaintiffs; that the
plaintiffs acquired a license to construct, maintain, and operate the branch ditch and power
line; that the same was not revocable at the will of defendant; and that the defendant was
threatening to fill in and destroy said ditch and power line.
The learned judge before whom the case was tried in the district court filed a written
opinion in the case, in which he says that evidence was received to the effect that the
Humboldt Canal was started somewhere about the year 1862; that a right of way, as claimed
by plaintiffs, was granted by the government to the Humboldt Canal Company for irrigation,
and possibly other purposes, and makes his finding accordingly. As we read the record, the
witness who testified concerning the grant intended to convey the idea that there was a
special act of Congress granting the canal company a right of way, but no such act was
offered in evidence or called to the attention of this or the trial court.
41 Nev. 27, 33 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
special act of Congress granting the canal company a right of way, but no such act was
offered in evidence or called to the attention of this or the trial court.
The evidence clearly sustains the findings and conclusions of the court; in fact, we do not
think this finding is seriously questioned. However, the probability is that there never was a
special act of Congress granting to any one the canal in question. It is more likely that the
right of way over the public domain for the canal was confirmed in the owners thereof under
the act of Congress approved July 26, 1866, which provides that:
Whenever, by priority of possession, rights to the use of water for mining, agriculture,
manufacturing, or other purposes, have vested and accrued, and the same are recognized and
acknowledged by the local customs, laws, and the decision of courts, the possessors and
owners of such vested rights shall be maintained and protected in the same. (U. S. Rev.
Stats. 2339; U. S. Comp. Stats. 1916, sec. 4647.)
2. But no matter whether the right of way for the canal became vested under a specific
grant or was confirmed under that portion of the act of Congress quoted, we are clearly of the
opinion that the contention of appellant that he acquired title to that portion of the canal
which lies within the mill site under his deed from the exploration company is unfounded.
The government, having clearly passed title to the right of way for the canal, could convey no
title thereto when it conveyed title to the mill site. The patentee to the land embraced in the
mill site took title subject to the right of way for the canal, and the defendant could and did
acquire no better or greater right. (Broder v. Water Co., 101 U. S. 274, 25 L. Ed. 790; Coffin
v. Left Hand Ditch Co., 6 Colo. 443; Carson v. Gentner, 33 Or. 512, 52 Pac. 506, 43 L. R. A.
130; Osgood v. El Dorado Water Co., 56 Cal. 571-581.)
We come now to the question of the license from the exploration company for the right of
way for the branch ditch and power line. Mr. Taylor, one of the plaintiffs, testified
concerning a conversation which he had with the managing director of the company, who
was in actual charge of all of the company's affairs in 1910, when his firm was Taylor &
Edson, at which time that official granted permission to his firm for the construction of
certain works across the mill site, to be used in conducting the water for irrigation
purposes.
41 Nev. 27, 34 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
ditch and power line. Mr. Taylor, one of the plaintiffs, testified concerning a conversation
which he had with the managing director of the company, who was in actual charge of all of
the company's affairs in 1910, when his firm was Taylor & Edson, at which time that official
granted permission to his firm for the construction of certain works across the mill site, to be
used in conducting the water for irrigation purposes. No particular line was contemplated or
designated in the conversation between Taylor and the manager of the company for the
construction of the works; the only restriction which was imposed being that the then existing
plant and railroad should in no way be impaired or interfered with. Thereafter Sheehan
purchased the interest of Edson in the then partnership of Taylor & Edson, and the firm
became Taylor & Sheehan, the plaintiffs. After Sheehan entered the firm, the plan of
irrigating the land which is now in existance was adopted.
3. It is contended by appellant that there never was a license granted to either the firm of
Taylor & Edson or Taylor & Sheehan, and that if such a license was granted to Taylor &
Edson it was forfeited by Edson's sale to Sheehan; and that if, in any event, a license was
granted, it was revocable, and that he had exercised the right of revocation. Appellant urges
that the managing director of the exploration company had no power to grant a license. We do
not deem it necessary that this question be determined, for the reason that, conceding that his
action in that connection was in excess of his authority, we are of the view that the company
ratified his action.
4. As to the point that the sale by Edson of his interest in the partnership to Sheehan
operated to cancel the license, we need only to say that under the facts and circumstances of
this case the court will presume that that firm had a license from the exploration company.
The record shows that the superintendent of the exploration company knew of the
construction by Taylor & Sheehan, at a cost of about $45,000, of their branch ditch and
power line and system, from the very beginning of the operations, and that the managing
director was upon the premises several times and was told of and saw what was being
done, and no protest was made.
41 Nev. 27, 35 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
Taylor & Sheehan, at a cost of about $45,000, of their branch ditch and power line and
system, from the very beginning of the operations, and that the managing director was upon
the premises several times and was told of and saw what was being done, and no protest was
made. Subsequent to the construction by the respondent of the works, succeeding
representatives of the company went upon the premises, knew of and saw the branch ditch
and power line, and no protest was made. Finally, in 1913, one Joseph Ralph appeared upon
the scene with a power of attorney, so comprehensive in its terms as to authorize him to do
anything that could be done by the company. One of the provisions of that instrument reads as
follows:
To complete or carry out or vary any contracts or engagements which the company has
already approved of or agreed to or entered into, either verbally or in writing, without any
person or body for the time being concerned being in any way obliged or permitted to require
any evidence whatever that the company has either approved of or agreed to or entered into
any such contract or agreement; and also to put an end to any contract into which the
company may have entered, and if thought proper to enter into a new contract in lieu thereof.
While acting under this power of attorney, Mr. Ralph was upon the property at least six
times, in company with the superintendent of the exploration company, and saw and talked
with the superintendent of the company about the branch ditch and other works of the
respondents. He made no objection to what had been done by the respondents,
notwithstanding the fact that they were in possession of and operating the plant. The
uncontradicted evidence is that the managing director of the exploration company, at some
time after respondents had completed their branch ditch and power line, said their
constructing of the same was all right. The authorities hold that a license may result from
approval of acts of the licensee after they are done, as well as from an express permission
granted before they are done.
41 Nev. 27, 36 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
well as from an express permission granted before they are done. (Metcalf v. Hart, 3 Wyo.
513, 27 Pac. 900, 905, 31 Pac. 407, 31 Am. St. Rep. 122; Cumberland Valley Railroad Co. v.
McLanahan, 59 Pa. 23-31; Walter v. Post, 13 N. Y. Super. Ct. 371.)
See, also, Occum Co. v. Sprague, 35 Conn. 496; Hickox v. Parmelee, 21 Conn. 99;
Hansen v. Farmers' Coop. Cr., 106 Iowa, 167, 76 N. W. 652.
5. But appellant contends that, conceding that a parol license was granted to plaintiffs,
there was no consideration therefor, and hence it is revocable at his pleasure. In considering
this contention, there must be kept in mind the difference between an executed and an
executory license. As to the latter class, so far as we know, the authorities are practically
unanimous in holding that they may be revoked, but as to an executed parol license the
authorities are divided. See 25 Cyc. pp. 646, 647; 17 R. C. L. p. 578; note to Rerick v. Kern,
16 Am. Dec. 497.
Persuasive arguments can be urged to sustain both views, but the question was settled in
this state in the case of Lee v. McLeod, 12 Nev. 284, contrary to appellant's contention, and
no reason has been advanced which inclines us to overrule that case.
It is contended by appellant that he knew nothing of respondents' claim of a license at the
time he purchased the mill site, and that consequently he ought to be treated as an innocent
purchaser without notice. Appellant had lived in the vicinity of the property off and on for ten
years, and continuously for one year. Respondents were in open and notorious possession and
enjoyment of the ditch and power line at and for three or four years prior to the time appellant
bought the mill site. This court, in Patchen v. Keeley, 19 Nev. on page 413, 14 Pac. 352,
quoting from Judge Story's opinion in Richard v. Williams, 7 Wheat. 105, 3 L. Ed. 398, says:
The law will never construe a possession tortious unless from necessity. On the other
hand, it will consider every possession lawful, the commencement and continuance of which
is not proved to be wrongful.
41 Nev. 27, 37 (1917) Sheehan v. Kasper
See, also, Bank of Italy v. Burns, 39 Nev. 326, 156 Pac. 932, 159 Pac. 863.
6. The possession of plaintiffs was sufficient to put the defendant on notice.
Perceiving no error in the judgment, it is ordered that it be affirmed.
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
____________
41 Nev. 37, 37 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
[No. 2258]
L. PINCOLINI, A. PINCOLINI, E. PINCOLINI, and D. PINCOLINI, Respondents, v.
STEAMBOAT CANAL COMPANY (a Corporation), Appellant.
[167 Pac. 314]
1. Water and WatercoursesIrrigationAction for Damages.
In a suit for partial loss of growing crops alleged to have been occasioned by defendant's refusal to
deliver to plaintiffs the amount of water for irrigation which they claimed, and to establish their rights,
evidence held not to establish plaintiffs' contentions as to the amount of water claimed, and to necessitate a
reversal of judgment in their favor which awarded damages and provided for an injunction.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; R. C. Stoddard, Judge.
Action by L. Pincolini, and others, against the Steamboat Canal Company, a corporation.
There was a judgment for plaintiff, and a motion for a new trial being denied, defendant
appeals. Reversed. Rehearing denied.
Summerfield & Richards, for Appellant:
There is no evidence warranting the court in finding that plaintiffs ever were entitled to,
had used upon or demanded of plaintiff, or that there was ever appurtenant to plaintiffs' land,
145 inches of water from Steamboat Canal for the irrigation of the land in question, or for any
other purpose whatsoever. The judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial should
be reversed. The evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict, findings or decision and
judgment, and the verdict, findings or decision and judgment are against law.
41 Nev. 37, 38 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
The alleged conversations between plaintiffs and the representative of the defendant
company must be regarded as speculative and depending on future contingencies, and make it
plain that the findings of the lower court in relation to the 145 inches of water are predicated
upon uncertain testimony and the mere expectations of the plaintiffs. Before a right can be
initiated upon the conduct of a party induced or being induced by mere statements on account
of which it is sought to charge or obligate another party, as in this case, the evidence must be
clear, not open to question or doubt, convincing and satisfactory; and such statements, if
made at all, and the surrounding circumstances cannot be construed or analyzed with the
clearness and certainty of a definite understanding for additional water. The expectations
alleged and sought to be construed as a contract are speculative, and such that no prudent man
would make under the circumstances of the testimony in the record on appeal.
The settled rules of evidence will not be gainsaid or disturbed by testimony so indefinite,
uncertain, unsatisfactory, and purely speculative. The authorities are numerous and uniform
supporting the proposition of law herein announced. The rule is well stated in the case of
Davis v. Davis, 26 Cal. 23, as follows:
We may say in respect to parol evidence of the declarations and admissions of persons
made long anterior to the trial, upon which an estoppel in pais may be sought to be founded,
that it cannot be too carefully scrutinized by courts and juries. In all cases it is the most
dangerous species of evidence that can be admitted in a court of justice, and most liable to
abuse. In most cases it is impossible, however honest the witness may be, for him to give the
exact words in which the declaration or admission was made. Sometimes even the
transposition of the words of a party may give a meaning entirely different from that which
was intended to be conveyed. The slightest mistake or failure of recollection may totally alter
the effect of the declaration or admission.
41 Nev. 37, 39 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
admission. And more than this, it is most unsatisfactory evidence, on account of the facility
with which it may be fabricated, and the impossibility, generally, of contradicting it when
false.
This rule is supported by Law v. Merrille, 6 Wend. 277; Jackson v. Sherman, 6 John. 21;
Lench v. Lench, 10 Ves. Jr. 517; Cleavland v. Burton, 11 Vt. 139; Snelling v. Utterbach, 1
Bidd. 611; Morris v. Morris, 2 Bidd. 311; Bernard v. Flournoy, 4 J. J. Marsh. 102; Ferry v.
Gerbeau, 5 Mart. N. S. 19.
Mack & Green and A. A. Heer, for Respondents:
None of the assignments of error discussed by appellant in its brief constitutes any ground
for the reversal of the judgment. Primarily this is a direct action for damages for injury to
growing crops. As such, it is an action at law, and the fact that an injunction against the
continuance of the wrong complained of was prayed for and granted, does not change the
nature of the action. A portion of the remedies sought is equitable in its nature, but the action
does not for that reason become one in equity. It is not, therefore, an action in which the
verdict of the jury was advisory, and in which findings were required by the court. Every
issue of fact was submitted to the jury, and the presumption of law is that every material issue
was passed upon by the jury and determined in harmony with the verdict. The verdict alone is
all that is necessary to sustain the judgment, and any finding of fact by the court, beyond the
adoption of the verdict, was entirely superfluous. (8 Stand. Proc. 999; Morrison v. Stone, 103
Cal. 94; Reiner v. Acroder, 146 Cal. 411; Hoyt v. Hart, 149 Cal. 722; Cushing-Wetmore Co.
v. Gray, 152 Cal. 118; Jenkins v. Commercial Nat. Bank, 113 Pac. 463; Jones v. Edwards,
152 S. W. 727.)
The question of abandonment went to the jury under instruction from the court. The jury
found against the defendant, the record showing that the question of abandonment was the
main question, aside from damages, passed upon by the jury. Therefore, the matter having
been fully dealt with, we believe the verdict of the jury ought not to be disturbed.
41 Nev. 37, 40 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
been fully dealt with, we believe the verdict of the jury ought not to be disturbed.
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Defendant, being dissatisfied with the judgment of the trial court and the order denying its
motion for a new trial, has appealed.
This was a suit for damages for partial loss of growing crops in the years 1909 to 1912,
inclusive, alleged to have been occasioned to respondents by appellant because of its refusal
to deliver to respondents the amount of water to which they alleged they were entitled with
which to irrigate their lands. Damages were alleged in the sum of $5,870, and awarded in the
sum of $4,500.
It is alleged in the complaint that the amount of water which plaintiffs received from the
ditch of appellant each year in the complaint mentioned, except as hereinafter stated, was a
flow of 145 inches. The complaint further alleges that for many years prior to the year 1909
defendant, appellant herein, had conveyed to and upon the land of respondents and their
grantors, and there delivered for a valuable consideration, a flow of 145 inches of water. This
case was apparently tried upon the theory that the plaintiffs had the same rights to water
transported in the ditch owned by appellant, by reason of prior appropriation in themselves
and their predecessors in interest, as would be the case were they appropriators direct from a
natural stream. Assuming for the purposes of the case, hereinafter discussed, that this theory
is applicable, the question of the time and the amount of appropriation becomes of prime
importance. The respondents are the owners of a tract of land which formerly comprised two
ranches, one known as the Sturges ranch and the other as the Barney ranch. It is their
contention that they are entitled to receive from the appellant company 45 inches of water for
the Sturges ranch and 100 inches of water for the Barney ranch.
It appears from the evidence that the ditch known as the Steamboat Canal was first
constructed by a number of farmers who desired to take water therefrom, among whom
was one Ephraim Barney, the original proprietor of the Barney ranch.
41 Nev. 37, 41 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
of farmers who desired to take water therefrom, among whom was one Ephraim Barney, the
original proprietor of the Barney ranch. The witness A. M. Lamb testified that the ditch in its
original form was completed in the year 1881, and that for two years thereafter he had charge
of it; that during the first year he was in charge thereof the Barney ranch took 40 inches and
the next year 60 inches of water; that he did not know the amount of water thereafter taken by
this ranch. It appears that about this time litigation was instituted on account of the ditch and
the ownership passed to one Hampton, and that from that time up to the present the water
users were not owners of the ditch itself, but paid to the ditch owner a certain sum annually
for each inch of water used.
L. Prosole, a witness for the respondents, testified that Barney was at one time using 100
inches of water from the ditch in question. How long a time this continued does not appear. In
the year 1890 the ranch was acquired by one Nick Sorgi, who thereafter held it until the year
1904. He testified that he took 80 inches of water for the period that he held the ranch,
excepting the last year, when he took no water. He also testified that he secured the ranch
from Mrs. Barney, and that she informed him at that time that she was taking 80 inches of
water. This witness further testified that he had paid $400 a year for the use of the water, at
the rate of $5 per inch. S. H. Wheeler, manager of the appellant company, testified that this
was the amount of water taken by Sorgi, excepting the year that he took no water for the
ranch, and the books of the company show that $400 was the amount annually paid by Sorgi
for 80 inches of water. There is also testimony to the effect that Sorgi's measuring box was
fixed so as to apportion 80 inches to the ranch.
The witness A. G. Pincolini, who purchased the Barney ranch for $2,750, in the year 1904,
testified that before purchasing the ranch he had heard that it was short of water, and that he
went to see S. H. Wheeler relative to the matter of water, and that he [Wheeler] said at first
the Barney ranch used to have the right to 100 inches.
41 Nev. 37, 42 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
And then he says when Mr. Sorgi came, he said he got 80 inches all the time. He says now it
went down to about 40, I think 40, that year. The witness Sorgi testified that in the year 1903
he told Mr. Wheeler to give the water to anybody who wanted it; I don't want any more
water for that ranch, and that the following year he took no water for the ranch. Sorgi further
testified that the next year he sold the ranch to Mrs. Chandler, and that at the time he sold the
same to her he told her, Don't have no more water; they have to go see Mr. Sam Wheeler if
he wants to get any more water or not.
The Sturges ranch first received 15 inches of water. That was about the year 1894 or 1895.
It was not until the year 1905 or 1906 that the Sturges ranch was receiving a total of 45 inches
of water. There is no definite finding as to when the water rights for the Sturges and Barney
ranches, respectively, were initiated, but it is clear that 30 of the 45 inches claimed to belong
to the Sturges ranch did not date back more than about ten years prior to the trial of the case.
1. The undisputed evidence shows that if the Barney ranch was ever entitled to more than
80 inches of water, the right to such excess was abandoned prior to the acquisition of the
ranch by Sorgi, and continued so abandoned up to the time of the purchase by respondents. It
is also urged by respondents that conceding that abandonment is shown, appellant is estopped
from urging it. As to this contention we may say: (1) Estoppel is not pleaded; (2) that issue
was not determined by the trial court; and (3) we do not think the evidence is clear and strong
enough to sustain the contention.
Upon the issue of damages, the questions were propounded to the witnesses based upon
the theory that plaintiffs were entitled, as a matter of right, superior to certain others receiving
water from the ditch, to water in the amount of 145 inches. The witness Pincolini was asked
the question: Now, how much would you have raised if you had water amounting to 145
inches? All of the testimony relative to the amount of damages is based upon the theory
that plaintiffs were entitled to 145 inches of water, and that the rights of plaintiffs to this
water were prior in time to certain other later water users.
41 Nev. 37, 43 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
is based upon the theory that plaintiffs were entitled to 145 inches of water, and that the rights
of plaintiffs to this water were prior in time to certain other later water users. The instructions
given to the jury apparently allowed no discretion to determine the amount of water, if any,
that plaintiffs were entitled to over other prior appropriators. For example, the following
excerpt is taken from instruction No. 2:
If the jury find * * * that the plaintiffs had for many years prior to the year 1909 received
from said Steamboat Canal 145 inches of water for the irrigation of their said land and had
applied the same to that purpose, * * * the jury will find the issues in favor of the plaintiffs.
A number of other instructions embodied this same feature. There is not in the entire
record any proof whatever that this land in any one year had received from said ditch the
amount of 145 inches of water. The Sturges ranch did not receive 45 inches until about the
year 1905 or 1906. If 100 inches of water was ever used upon the Barney ranch, it must have
been for a short time some twenty years earlier than the time when the Sturges ranch had
increased the amount of its use to 45 inches. Under no theory of the case can it be said that
the Barney ranch, as a matter of right, is entitled to more than 80 inches of water. While it is
conceded that the Sturges ranch received 45 inches of water one year, the use of such amount
is of comparatively recent date with reference to other water users. While an attempt was
made to prove that the appellant company had diverted water to later water users, so as to
affect the rights with reference to the Barney ranch, little, if any, attempt was made to
establish the fact that these later water users were subsequent in time when compared with the
Sturges ranch.
Assuming that the evidence shows that the Barney ranch is entitled to 80 inches of water
and the Sturges ranch to 45 inches, the way the questions relative to damages were
propounded, it is impossible for this court to say what the amount of damages would have
been unless we should resort to a matter of pure speculation or attempt to exercise the
functions of the jury.
41 Nev. 37, 44 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
to say what the amount of damages would have been unless we should resort to a matter of
pure speculation or attempt to exercise the functions of the jury. There is no proof whatever
that the Barney ranch ever took 100 inches of water, except that given by a witness who was a
stranger to the title and who did not fix the time of use. In order to recover damages for the
deprivation of water, and to obtain an injunction against further interference therewith, there
must be established an appropriation prior in time to other water users, and a right to the
continuous use thereof.
It is ordered that the judgment and order appealed from be reversed, and that a new trial be
granted.
Sanders, J., concurring:
I concur in the conclusions announced by my associate, but upon grounds different from
those stated. Because of the opposite views expressed by counsel as to the character of this
action it is made necessary to determine, in the first instance, the respondents' right under the
pleadings, and what were the issues to be determined upon the trial. It is the contention of
appellant that the action was in equity, and the contention of the respondents that it was an
action at law for damages, and for an injunction to prevent further injuries.
This action was a mixed action, appealing to both the equity and law side of the court. The
primary object and purpose of the suit was to establish and protect respondents' right to the
use and enjoyment of 145 inches of water for the irrigation of their land, flowing in the
Steamboat Canal, a water ditch used and operated for many years by the appellant company,
and its predecessors in interest, for conveying waters appropriated from the Truckee River to
lands situate under its system, and delivering the same for a valuable consideration. In
addition to the equitable relief sought, the respondents, in substance, allege that their crops
had been greatly damaged during the years 1909, 1910, 1911, and 1912, by reason of the
appellant's failure or refusal to deliver to respondents the specified amount of water; that
the appellant threatens to and, unless restrained, will divert, and continue to divert, the
water flowing in said canal to other users subsequent in right to that of respondents, to
their irreparable injury and damage.
41 Nev. 37, 45 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
deliver to respondents the specified amount of water; that the appellant threatens to and,
unless restrained, will divert, and continue to divert, the water flowing in said canal to other
users subsequent in right to that of respondents, to their irreparable injury and damage. They
allege damages in the sum of $5,870; and pray judgment for said sum, and for an injunction.
Appellant denies the averments of the complaint, and for an affirmative defense alleges,
that the land of respondents, being situate at the extreme end of the canal, approximately
thirty-two miles from its source, has never been supplied with any specified amount of water,
for the reason that it was impossible so to do because of the situation of the land, and that by
reason of its situation it was always understood that respondents should receive such amount
of water as appellant could furnish, and should pay therefor irrespective of any particular or
specified amount; that such had been the entire course of dealing, and that at no time was
there any understanding, contract or agreement otherwise or different.
Upon this averment the respondents joined issue, and by way of defense alleged:
But in this behalf plaintiffs allege, that defendant promised and agreed to supply plaintiffs
with 145 inches of water through its ditch.
The manner in which the case was tried is not to be commended. (Simpson v. Harris, 21
Nev. 375.) the whole case was submitted to a jury without request for special findings. Where
legal and equitable issues are raised by the pleadings the latter can be tried with or without a
jury (Treadway v. Wilder, 12 Nev. 108), but it is conceded to be proper in such cases to in
some manner keep the issues separate. (Low v. Crown Point M. Co., 2 Nev. 75.) The jury
returned a general verdict in favor of respondents and assessed their damage at $4,500. The
court made full findings of fact, and established and sanctioned the verdict by making it a
part of its findings (Duffy v. Moran, 12 Nev. 94), and decreed that the appellant be
enjoined from diverting, or permitting to be diverted, the specified amount of water, or
any part thereof, so that the same shall not flow to and upon respondents' land for the
irrigation thereof.
41 Nev. 37, 46 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
decreed that the appellant be enjoined from diverting, or permitting to be diverted, the
specified amount of water, or any part thereof, so that the same shall not flow to and upon
respondents' land for the irrigation thereof.
It is the contention of the appellant that the cause being one in equity the case should be
reversed for want of findings, or for the failure of the court to find upon the evidence adduced
in support of its affirmative defense, be it true or false. (Warren v. Quill, 9 Nev. 259.) I am
impressed that this defense was framed and directed to meet the issue of damages. It was
certainly no defense to respondents' right to an injunction. If the understanding between the
parties, at the time of the purchase of the Barney tract in 1904, be considered as a contract
binding respondents for all time because of the situation of the land to receive such amount of
water as appellant could furnish, it was without consideration. The verdict of the jury and the
court's adoption thereof was a sufficient finding against the appellant upon this issue, and it
was not prejudiced by the court's failure or refusal to make a special finding. Furthermore, the
case was tried by a jury.(Rev. Laws, 5345.)
I concur in the view taken by my associate that the record fails to show a clear, legal right
in the respondents to the use of the full quantity of 145 inches of water flowing in the canal at
the periods named in the complaint, but I am satisfied that the record does show the
respondents to be entitled to the flow of 125 inches of water. But being entitled to an
injunction establishing a right to the use of 125 inches of water, it does not necessarily follow
that they are entitled, as a matter of law, to damages for past injuries. It is obvious from the
testimony of A. G. Pincolini, a witness for respondents, and from the testimony of A.
Pincolini, one of the respondents, that the origin or source of their damage was attributed to
the breach or nonperformance of the appellant's agreement or promise to supply respondents
with 145 inches of water, and not the breach of a duty imposed by law.
41 Nev. 37, 47 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
respondents with 145 inches of water, and not the breach of a duty imposed by law. The cause
of action being for breach of contract, and the trial being in form tort for appellant's failure to
perform a duty imposed by law, such error, though unasigned, requires reversal of the
judgment. (Galveston H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Hennigan, 76 S. W. 452.) But I do not reverse the
judgment upon this ground, for the reason that it appears from the instructions given the jury
at the request of respondents, that the trial court took the view that the action was a breach of
a public duty, a duty imposed by law, though involving in this breach a breach of contract
also. (Central R. & B. Co. v. Roberts, 18 S. E. 315.) But it appears that the court was called
upon to deal with another state of facts before it could instruct that the appellant was liable
for such damages as were the natural consequence of appellant's failure or denial to deliver
the water. There was much evidence adduced which clearly tended to show that respondents,
by their acts and conduct, waived the duty imposed by law upon the appellant to supply the
specified amount of water. This court in the case of Prosole against the appellant company
(37 Nev. 154) declared that it was the duty of the diverting corporation in cases of this kind,
where a consumer has established his right to the use of water, to continue the service,
provided the consumer has never waived his rights nor forfeited the same. It is a maxim of
jurisprudence that he who consents to an act is not wronged by it, and certainly one cannot
waive a tort and sue for it in the same action.
Judge Cooley says:
Consent is generally a full and perfect shield when that is complained of as a civil injury
which was consented to * * *. A man may not even complain of the adultery of his wife,
which he connived at or assented to. If he concurs in the dishonor of his bed, the law will not
give him redress, because he is not wronged. (Cooley on Torts, 3d ed. p. 282.)
41 Nev. 37, 48 (1917) Pincolini v. Steamboat Canal Co.
When an action is tried as an action at law, and so treated by the courts and parties, it
should at least be fairly submitted to the jury and the law correctly stated to them. This was
not done, taking into consideration the evidence tending to show that the respondents by their
acts and conduct waived the duty imposed by law upon the appellant to supply respondents
with a specified amount of water during the periods named in the complaint.
McCarran, C. J.:
I have not participated in the foregoing opinion, nor in the consideration of the case as it
stood before this tribunal, for the reason that the respondents here were at one time parties to
a suit involving a subject somewhat related to the matter at bar and in which I appeared as
attorney for the parties. This matter being brought to my attention by the learned counsel for
the appellant, I deemed it proper to refrain from participation.
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
____________
41 Nev. 49, 49 (1917) McCracken v. State
[No. 2288]
GEORGE E. McCRACKEN, Respondent, v. THE
STATE OF NEVADA, Appellant.
[167 Pac. 1001]
1. Schools and School DistrictsOfficersCompensation.
Stats. 1911, c. 133, sec. 13, provides that claims for traveling expenses of deputy superintendent of public
instruction, etc., shall be paid from the general fund. Stats. 1915, c. 177, sec. 28, provides for the actual
traveling and office expenses of deputy superintendent of public instruction, district No. 3, $1,750. Held,
that the deputy superintendent of public instruction for such district could not recover under the first act
cited for traveling expenses incurred during the year 1916; such act being superseded or suspended by the
appropriation of the act of 1915.
2. Schools and School
DistrictsOfficersCompensationAppropriationStatutesSufficiency.
Const. art. 4, sec. 19, provides: No money shall be drawn from the treasury but in consequence of
appropriations made by law. Stats. 1915, c. 76, provides: No warrant shall be drawn on the treasury,
except there be an unexhausted specific appropriation, by law, to meet the same. Held, that Stats. 1911, c.
133, sec. 13, was sufficient to make appropriation for claims arising under it, and that, as the legislature
made no appropriation in 1917, respondent's deputy superintendent of public instruction could recover
under section 13 for expenses for the year 1917.
3. StatesAppropriationsSufficiency of Statute.
No particular form of words is necessary for the purpose of an appropriation, and an appropriation may
be made in one year of the revenues to accrue in another or future year.
Appeal from the First Judicial District Court, Ormsby County; Frank P. Langan, Judge.
Suit by George E. McCracken against the State. From an order overruling its demurrer,
and from a judgment for plaintiff for the amount sued for, the State appeals. Judgment
modified and affirmed.
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, and Wm. McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General, for
Appellant:
The demurrer should have been sustained, because there is no allegation of an unexhausted
specific appropriation, and section 13 of the school law does not make an appropriation for
the traveling and office expenses of deputy superintendents. The state controller is forbidden
to draw any warrant on the treasury except there be an unexhausted specific
appropriation by law to meet the same.
41 Nev. 49, 50 (1917) McCracken v. State
draw any warrant on the treasury except there be an unexhausted specific appropriation by
law to meet the same. (Stats. 1915, 94; State ex rel. Pyne v. LaGrave, 23 Nev. 27; State ex
rel. Davis v. Eggers, 29 Nev. 469, 486.)
There is a vast difference between having money in the general fund, or in any other fund,
and having an unexhausted specific appropriation. Fund and appropriation are not
synonymous terms; a distinction is of necessity made between them in the statutes. (Stats.
1915, 95; Marshall v. Dunn, 69 Cal. 223.)
However, it seems unnecessary to rely entirely upon this point, or upon the fact that no
allegation is made, to indicate that the claims for the 1916 traveling expenses were allowed
by the board of examiners during the year 1916 and previous to the time any unexpended
balance in the appropriation had reverted. (Stats. 1915, 95; State ex rel. Wilkins v. Halleck, 20
Nev. 73, 74; State ex rel. Cutting v. LaGrave, 23 Nev. 120, 126; State ex rel. Fowler v.
Eggers, 33 Nev. 535, 539); nor upon the fact that no allegation is made to indicate that the
claims in question were presented to the state controller for his allowance (State v. Doron, 5
Nev. 399); nor upon any of the many other objections which might be raised, because of the
fact that we believe section 13 does not make an appropriation for the payment of the
traveling and office expenses of the deputy superintendents.
The main question now before the court is whether the language used in section 3251,
Revised laws, applicable to the present case, is sufficient, in and by itself, to constitute an
appropriation for the payment of the traveling and office expenses of the deputy
superintendents. In every case where an appropriation is concerned it is a question of
legislative intent, to be ascertained under settled rules of construction from the language used,
the context, the necessities and purposes to be accomplished, in the light of contemporaneous
circumstances. (Menefee v. Askew, 107 Pac. 159, 27 L. R. A. n. s. 537, 540; Shattuck v.
Kincaid, 49 pac. 758, 760.) The leading rule for the construction of statutes is to ascertain the
intention of the legislature in enacting the statute; and the intent, when ascertained, will
prevail over the literal sense.
41 Nev. 49, 51 (1917) McCracken v. State
the legislature in enacting the statute; and the intent, when ascertained, will prevail over the
literal sense. (State v. Ross, 20 Nev. 61.) It is always the first great object of the courts in
interpreting statutes to place such construction upon them as will carry out the manifest
purpose of the legislature, and this has been done in opposition to the very words of an act.
(Gibson v. Mason, 5 Nev. 283, 311; Abel v. Eggers, 36 Nev. 372, 381.)
A. L. Haight and Mack & Green, for Respondent:
The general demurrer was properly overruled by the lower court, and its judgment should
be affirmed. The only question involved is whether or not section 13 of An act concerning
public schools, and repealing certain acts in relation thereto, approved March 20, 1911
(Stats. 1911, 189, Rev. Laws, 3251), made an appropriation of moneys to be used as traveling
expenses of deputy state superintendents. There are two assignments or specifications of error
to the overruling of the demurrer, the first being that the court erred in finding that section 13
provided an appropriation for traveling expenses, cost of transportation, and cost of living;
and, second, it is claimed that there is no allegation in the complaint that there was an
unexhausted balance in the general fund of the state.
Inasmuch as the salary and expenses of the deputy school superintendents are payable
from the general fund, a specific appropriation would be a fruitless and abortive
proceeding, unless intended to increase or decrease the amounts provided for these purposes
by section 13; and, again, section 13 specifically provides that traveling and other expenses of
deputy superintendents shall be payable out of the general fund, but, if no fund were
designated, the section would be deemed and construed as making an appropriation from the
general fund. (State v. Eggers, 29 Nev. 475.)
The claim that the complaint does not allege an unexhausted fund out of which the claim may
be paid is without merit. The court will presume that there were moneys in the "general
fund" of the state, that being the fund out of which most all, if not all, appropriations are
made.
41 Nev. 49, 52 (1917) McCracken v. State
were moneys in the general fund of the state, that being the fund out of which most all, if
not all, appropriations are made. If there were no moneys in the general fund at the time the
claim was presented to the state controller for his warrant, which was not a fact, it constituted
a special and affirmative defense, which has not been pleaded. Moreover, the amended
complaint expressly alleges that there are sufficient moneys in the general fund of the
treasury of the State of Nevada, not otherwise appropriated, to pay the same. This is a clear
and concise allegation of the existence in the general fund of sufficient moneys to pay the
claim, and must be held sufficient, at least on general demurrer. The complaint also clearly
alleges that the claim was presented to the state controller.
The real question to be determined, and which the court is here asked by respondent to
decide, is whether or not section 13 of the act of 1911 provides an appropriation for the
payment of traveling expenses, cost of transportation and cost of living of deputy
superintendents. It is unnecessary to go to the decisions of the courts of other states, as we
find that this court has rendered the clearest exposition of the law involved in the case at bar
that we are able to find in the books. Every question required to be determined in this case is
decided in the case of State ex rel. Davis v. Eggers, 29 Nev. 469. This case is certainly the
law of the state, having been decided by a unanimous court, and having been cited with
approval. (State ex rel. Fowler v. Eggers, 33 Nev. 535; State ex rel. Norcross v. Eggers, 35
Nev. 250; State ex rel. Birdzell v. Jorgensen, 142 N. W. 457.)
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
George E. McCracken brought his suit in the district court of the First judicial district of
the State of Nevada, in and for the county of Ormsby, to recover from the defendant the sum
of $417.78. His complaint, in substance, avers that the plaintiff was, and ever since
September 15, 1915, has been, a duly appointed, qualified, and acting deputy
superintendent of public instruction, in and for supervision district No.
41 Nev. 49, 53 (1917) McCracken v. State
ever since September 15, 1915, has been, a duly appointed, qualified, and acting deputy
superintendent of public instruction, in and for supervision district No. 3 of the State of
Nevada; that during the year 1916, in his capacity as said official, it became necessary that he
advance, for and on account of the defendant, certain sums as traveling expenses; that the
total amount of money so advanced during said year was the sum of $658.85; that claims for
advances so made during the said year on account of said expenses, amounting in all to the
sum of $373.23, have been audited and paid; that claims for advances so made during the said
year on account of said expenses, amounting to the sum of $285.62, were presented to the
board of examiners, audited and allowed by said board, but the state controller refused, and
still refuses, to draw warrants therefor on the treasurer; that plaintiff has not received payment
of said claims, or any part thereof. For a second cause of action the complaint alleges that
during the year 1917 the plaintiff advanced for and on account of the defendant, for his
traveling expenses, the sum of $76.07. For a third cause of action the complaint alleges that
the plaintiff advanced for and on account of defendant, for his office expenses during the year
1917, the sum of $56.09.
Each cause of action was amended, as stipulated, by the insertion of this clause:
That an appropriation for the payment of the expenses above mentioned was made by the
legislature of the State of Nevada under and by virtue of section 13 of an act entitled An act
concerning public schools and repealing certain acts relating thereto,' approved March 20,
1911, and that there are sufficient moneys in the general fund of the treasury of the State of
Nevada, not otherwise appropriated, to pay the same.
The defendant interposed a general demurrer to the amended complaint, and for demurrer
alleged that the said amended complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause
of action against this defendant, which was overruled by the district court.
41 Nev. 49, 54 (1917) McCracken v. State
to constitute a cause of action against this defendant, which was overruled by the district
court. The defendant declined to plead further, whereupon a default was entered, and
judgment rendered for the amount sued for. From the order overruling the demurrer, and from
the judgment, defendant has appealed.
In 1911 the legislature enacted a complete revision of the school laws. (Stats. 1911, p.
189.)
Section 13 of the act (Rev. Laws, 3251) in part provides:
All claims for the traveling expenses, including the cost of transportation and the cost of
living, of each deputy superintendent of public instruction while absent from their places of
residence, together with necessary office expenses, shall be paid from the general fund of the
state, whenever such claims shall be allowed by the state board of examiners; provided, that
not more than eight hundred dollars shall be paid from the general fund of the state in
settlement of claims for such traveling expenses of any deputy superintendent of public
instruction during any one year, and not more than three hundred and fifty dollars shall be
paid from the general fund of the state in settlement of claims for such office expenses of any
deputy superintendent of public instruction for any one year.
Article 4, section 19, of the constitution provides:
No money shall be drawn from the treasury but in consequence of appropriations made by
law.
This inhibition is supplemented by section 3 of an act defining the duties of the state
controller (Stats. 1866, p. 96; Stats. 1915, p. 94), which reads in part as follows:
He shall draw all warrants upon the treasury for money, and each warrant shall express, in
the body thereof, the particular fund out of which the same is to be paid, the appropriation
under which the same is drawn, and the nature of the service to be paid, and no warrant shall
be drawn on the treasury, except there be an unexhausted specific appropriation, by law, to
meet the same.
41 Nev. 49, 55 (1917) McCracken v. State
It appears that the legislature, at its session in 1911 (Stats. 1911, p. 78), and at each
subsequent session up to the session of 1917 (Stats. 1913, p. 183; Stats. 1915, p. 227), by
what is styled general appropriation acts, reduced the maximum sum as stated in section 13
of the school law for the payment of the traveling and office expenses of deputy
superintendents of public instruction to $1,000 for traveling expenses, and to $650 for office
expenses, for the period of two yearsthe life of each act. The act of 1915 was an act
entitled:
An act making appropriations for the support of the civil government of the State of
Nevada for the years 1915-1916.
Section 1 of the act provided that:
The following sums [of money] are hereby appropriated for the purpose hereinafter
expressed, and for the support of the government of the State of Nevada for the years
1915-1916.
Section 28 of said act provided:
For actual traveling expenses of deputy superintendent of public instruction, district No.
3, $1,000.00
For office expenses of deputy superintendent of public instruction, district No. 3,
$650.00.
We have thus endeavored to point out the statute law bearing upon and involved in the
proper solution of the issues of law raised by the demurrer.
1. Before discussing the principal objection made to the complaint, we shall, in limine,
advert to the first cause of action, whereby the respondent demands judgment for his traveling
expenses incurred and advanced during the year 1916 in the performance of his official
duties. In the case at hand we concede that the facts studiously alleged in the first cause of
action show a statutory right to recover under section 13 of the general school law of 1911;
but in view of the general appropriation act of 1915, which specifically appropriated the
maximum sum of $1,000 of the general fund for the express purpose of paying the
respondent's traveling expenses for the years 1915-1916, we are impelled to take judicial
notice that the facts stated in the first cause of action are not true.
41 Nev. 49, 56 (1917) McCracken v. State
impelled to take judicial notice that the facts stated in the first cause of action are not true.
The act of 1915 was binding upon the parties for the period of its lifetwo years. The
expenses for the year 1916 were incurred under it, limited by it, and the obligation of the state
to pay was imposed by it. Just why respondent sought to recover under section 13 of the
school law, which was manifestly superseded or suspended by the appropriation act of 1915,
does not appear upon the face of the complaint. With nothing before us to support the facts
alleged, other than the construction placed upon the statute by the pleader, we are impelled to
hold that the first cause of action does not state facts sufficient to entitle the respondent to the
relief demanded.
2. An entirely different question is presented by the respondent's second and third causes
of action. This leads to a discussion of appellant's principal objection to the insufficiency of
the facts stated in the complaint to constitute a cause of action. It is the contention of
appellant that section 13 of the general school law of 1911 makes no appropriation for the
payment of claims arising under it. We are not without judicial definition by our own court of
what constitutes an appropriation in the sense of our constitution. The cases of State ex rel.
Abel v. Eggers, 36 Nev. 372, 136 Pac. 100, State ex rel. Davis v. Eggers, 29 Nev. 469, 91
Pac. 819, 16 L. R. A. n. s. 630, and State v. La Grave, 23 Nev. 25, 41 Pac. 1075, 62 Am. St.
Rep. 764, embrace a full and close discussion of the meaning of such an appropriation. We
are impressed that the section in question was so framed as to conform to the definition of an
appropriation, as declared by these cases. It specifically fixes the maximum amount set apart
from the general fund for the payment of claims arising under it; it names the person; it
designates the time; it specifies the fund, and prescribes the condition upon which warrants
shall be drawn for the payment of said claims. We are of the opinion that the section, ex
proprio vigore, makes an appropriation, and no further legislative act was required to give it
force.
41 Nev. 49, 57 (1917) McCracken v. State
required to give it force. The fact that the legislature, at the same session and at subsequent
sessions, by general appropriation acts, fixed and set apart a lesser maximum sum from which
to pay the traveling and office expenses of respondent, does not show or indicate that the
legislature construed section 13 of the school law to be merely a limitation upon it and
succeeding legislatures above which an appropriation could not be made for the purposes
named. Such would be to construe the act as being an organic law, not subject to repeal,
amendment, or suspension by the same or any other legislature. The appropriation made by
the general law is no more indefinite and uncertain than the appropriation made by general
appropriation acts, which are conceded to be valid. The amount appropriated in one is no
more specific than in the other. The exact amount of the expenses could not be ascertained or
fixed by the legislature under either before they were incurred.
3. No particular form of words is necessary for the purpose of an appropriation, if the
intention to appropriate is manifest (State v. La Grave, supra.) This case quotes with
approval this language:
And such an appropriation may be prospective; that is, it may be made in one year, of the
revenues to accrue in another or future years, the law being so framed as to address itself to
such future revenues. (Ristine v. State, 20 Ind. 339.)
And in the case of State ex rel. Davis v. Eggers, supra, the court quotes with approval this
language:
It may also be a continuing or fixed appropriation, as well as one for a temporary
purpose, or a limited period. The use of technical words in a statute making an appropriation
is not necessary. There may be an appropriation of public moneys to a given purpose without
in any manner designating the act as an appropriation. (Campbell v. Board, 115 Ind. 594, 18
N. E. 33.)
It is true the legislative branch of our state government has adopted the policy of making
specific appropriations for carrying on the civil government by what is known as a general
appropriation bill.
41 Nev. 49, 58 (1917) McCracken v. State
priations for carrying on the civil government by what is known as a general appropriation
bill. These bills have by long usage come to be regarded by fiscal officers as speaking the will
of the legislature, and therefore controlling upon them in the performance of their duties. But
it appears the legislature of 1917 made no appropriation for the payment of respondent's
traveling and office expenses during the years 1917-1918. From this failure or omission it is
contended by the appellant that it was the intention of the legislature to repeal or suspend the
appropriation made for these purposes by the general school law of 1911. This court has rules
adversely to this contention in the case of State ex rel. Abel v. Eggers, supra. The constitution
does not provide that the public funds shall be annually applied under the direction of the
legislature through general appropriation acts. Nor is it necessary that all expenditures for the
carrying on of the civil government be authorized by such acts. (State ex rel. Davis v. Eggers,
supra.) Section 13 of the general school law now stands alone, unaffected by any
appropriation bill or act, and as we are of the opinion that it constitutes an appropriation in
the sense of our constitution for the payment of the traveling and office expenses of the
respondent, we conclude that the respondent is entitled to judgment for the amount of said
expenses sued for in his second and third causes of action. But as we are of the opinion, as
hereinabove stated, that the facts alleged in respondent's first cause of action are not true, the
judgment appealed from will be modified, by reducing the same to the sum of $132.16, and,
as so modified, the judgment is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
McCarran, C. J., dissenting:
I dissent.
Respondent in this case, plaintiff in the court below, instituted the action for the recovery
of $417.87, alleging the same to have been advanced by him pursuant to his office as deputy
superintendent of public instruction for the Third supervision district and in the course of
his duties.
41 Nev. 49, 59 (1917) McCracken v. State
to his office as deputy superintendent of public instruction for the Third supervision district
and in the course of his duties.
Respondent sets up three causes of action, the first of which involves money alleged to
have been advanced during the year 1916, and the second and third involve money advanced
during the year 1917. Each cause of action rests upon the claim of an appropriation made by
section 13 of the school law (Rev. Laws, 3251), which is as follows:
The compensation of each deputy superintendent of public instruction is hereby fixed at
two thousand dollars per annum, and shall be paid out of the general fund of the state as the
salaries of other state officers are paid. All claims for the traveling expenses, including the
cost of transportation and cost of living, of each deputy superintendent of public instruction
while absent from their places of residence, together with necessary office expenses, shall be
paid from the general fund of the state, whenever such claim shall be allowed by the state
board of examiners; provided, that not more than eight hundred dollars shall be paid from the
general fund of the state in settlement of claims for such traveling expenses of any deputy
superintendent of public instruction during any one year, and not more than three hundred and
fifty dollars shall be paid from the general fund of the state in settlement of claims for such
office expenses of any deputy superintendent of public instruction for any one year.
I shall deal with these causes of action separately, inasmuch as that which in my judgment
may apply to the first cause of action is somewhat different to the application of law which
may be made to the second and third. The amended complaint establishing the first cause of
action alleges:
That an appropriation for the payment of the expenses above mentioned was made by the
legislature of the State of Nevada under and by virtue of section 13 of an act entitled An act
concerning public schools, and repealing certain acts relating thereto,' approved March 20,
1911, and that there are sufficient moneys in the general fund of the treasury of the State
of Nevada, not otherwise appropriated, to pay the same."
41 Nev. 49, 60 (1917) McCracken v. State
and repealing certain acts relating thereto,' approved March 20, 1911, and that there are
sufficient moneys in the general fund of the treasury of the State of Nevada, not otherwise
appropriated, to pay the same.
The contention of respondent here, as in the court below, is that the proviso found in
section 13 in itself constitutes an appropriation. It will be noted that the proviso is as follows:
Provided, that not more than eight hundred dollars shall be paid from the general fund of
the state in settlement of claims for such traveling expenses of any deputy superintendent of
public instruction during any one year, and not more than three hundred and fifty dollars shall
be paid from the general fund of the state in settlement of claims for such office expenses of
any deputy superintendent of public instruction for any one year.
Respondent here relies upon the former decisions of this court to support his position, and
claims that the language of this proviso in itself constitutes an appropriation. (State v. La
Grave, 23 Nev. 25, 41 Pac. 1075, 62 Am. St. Rep. 764; State ex rel. Davis v. Eggers, 29 Nev.
469, 91 Pac. 819, 16 L. R. A., n. s. 630.) I may say here, parenthetically, that the position
which I shall take as to the second and third causes of action might be taken with reference to
the first cause of action, and thereby settle the entire question; but, as I have already stated, a
somewhat different consideration may be given to the first cause of action, in view of
legislation to which I shall refer.
Appellant, having challenged the complaint on the ground of insufficiency of the facts to
constitute a cause of action, appealed from the order overruling the demurrer. It is contended
that the demurrer constituted an admission of the truth of the facts set forth in the complaint,
and that the court cannot go beyond the complaint to determine as to whether or not the facts
alleged constitute a cause of action. As a general rule, the submission of a case on general
demurrer means that the facts stated in the pleadings are taken as true.
41 Nev. 49, 61 (1917) McCracken v. State
means that the facts stated in the pleadings are taken as true. In other words, a general
demurrer as such admits the truth of the facts alleged in the pleadings. This general rule has
its well-established exceptions, two of which are directly applicable to the matter here
presented:
FirstThose facts stated in the pleading which are necessary to allege are admitted by
demurrer; hence, facts of which the court will take judicial notice, not being necessary
allegations in a pleading, are not admitted by demurrer. An allegation in a pleading is not
admitted by demurrer, if it is contrary to the facts of which judicial notice is taken. (French v.
Senate, 146 Cal. 604, 80 Pac. 1031, 69 L. R. A. 556, 2 Ann. Cas. 756; Goelet v. Cowdrey, 1
Duer, N. Y. 132; People v. Mahaney, 13 Mich. 481.)
SecondThe truth of an allegation setting forth a legal conclusion is not admitted by
demurrer. (First Nat. Bank of Albuquerque v. Lewinson, 12 N. M. 147, 76 Pac. 288;
Sutherland on Code Pleading, vol. 1, c. 10, et seq.)
Here in the averments of this amended complaint is an allegation of a legal conclusion. If,
as is contended, this court were bound to accept this as a fact admitted, it would mean that the
court was precluded from the investigation of other statutes bearing upon the same subject or
the observation of other acts of coordinate branches of our state government directly affecting
the legislative act here asserted as a fact. I deem it scarcely necessary to add citation to a rule
of almost universal acceptation, that the courts of a state will take judicial notice of the statute
of that jurisdiction. (Schwerdtle v. Placer County, 108 Cl. 589, 41 Pac. 448; Bowen v.
Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., 118 Mo. 541, 24 S. W. 436; Holdridge v. Farmers & Mechanics
Bank, 16 Mich. 66; In Re Division of Howard County, 15 Kan. 194; Madison Co. Comm. v.
Burford, 93 Ind. 383; Lackey v. Richmond & L. Turnpike Road Co., 17 B. Mon. 43; Pritchard
v. Woodruff, 36 Ark. 196; Williams v. State, 37 Ark. 463.)
41 Nev. 49, 62 (1917) McCracken v. State
Courts are charged with knowledge of whatever is established by law. (Mullan v. State,
114 Cal. 581, 46 Pac. 670, 34 L. R. A. 262.) In many states statutes are found expressly
designating the subjects of which courts will take judicial notice. However this may be, the
principle had its inception in the very early stages of the common law, and indeed is traceable
in the civil law. The principle had its inception in the idea that the administration of justice
was carried on by the sovereign, and that which was within the knowledge of the sovereign
should be and was presumed to be within the knowledge of the court. The more modern idea
is expressed in the language of Mr. Greenleaf when he says:
Courts will generally take notice of whatever ought to be generally known within the
limits of their jurisdiction. (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 6.)
Again, that author says:
Courts will also judicially recognize the political constitution or frame of their own
government; its essential political agents or public officers, sharing in its regular
administration; and its essential and regular political operations, powers, and action.
Judicial notice may be taken by courts of the accession of the chief executive of the nation
or state; under what authority he acts; also, the convening and sitting of the legislative body
(Mills v. Green, 159 U. S. 651, 16 Sup. Ct. 132, 40 L. Ed. 293) and its established and usual
course of proceeding (Greenleaf on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 6). The doings of the executive and
legislative branches of our government are matters of which judicial knowledge is presumed.
(Prince v. Skillin, 71 Me. 361, 36 Am. Rep. 325; United States v. Turner, 11 How. 663, 13 L.
Ed. 857.) Legislative acts and official proceedings are matters of which the courts may and
should take judicial cognizance. (City of Topeka v. Tuttle, 5 Kan. 311; Southern Cotton Press
& Mfg. Co. v. Bradley, 52 Tex. 587; French v. Senate, 146 Cal. 604, 80 Pac. 1031, 69 L. R.
A. 556, 2 Ann. Cas. 756.)
41 Nev. 49, 63 (1917) McCracken v. State
Under the rule generally accepted as governing matters of which courts will take judicial
notice under the rules of pleading applicable thereto, I hold that it is our duty to take
cognizance of other statutes and legislative acts bearing directly upon the statute (section 13,
School Law; Rev. laws, 3251), and the subject-matter thereof, upon which respondent here
relies. Hence we may and should refer to the specific appropriation acts of the legislature of
1911 of subsequent legislatures, and also to the action of the legislature of 1917, as officially
recorded in the legislative journals. The power to create offices other than those created by
our constitution is in the legislature. That body has the power to fix and regulate the
emoluments or compensation of each office so created, as well as to prescribe a limitation to
the expense of such office chargeable to the state.
Referring, now specifically to the first cause of action here alleged, and which looks to the
expenditures of the office of the deputy superintendent of the Third supervision district for
the years 1915 and 1916, let us concede for the time that section 13 of the school law (Rev.
laws, 3251) was, as contended, an appropriation sufficient for the purposes of this case. The
very language of the proviso incorporated in the section conveys a sense of uncertainty; the
phrase not more than is a comparative, which, when used as here, conveys the sense of an
aggregate undefined, but within the limits fixed by the maximum named. The legislature of
1911 enacted the general school law, of which section 13 is a part. In the general
appropriation act of 1911 the legislature appropriated for the traveling expenses of the Third
supervision district for the years 1911 and 1912 the sum of $1,000. (Stats. 1911, p. 80.) The
legislature of 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 186) made a similar specific appropriation for the
traveling expenses connected with that office; and the legislature of 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 234)
did the same.
The legislative body, having created in 1911 the office of deputy superintendent of public
instruction for the several supervision districts, had the right to limit the expense of such
office chargeable to the state.
41 Nev. 49, 64 (1917) McCracken v. State
of deputy superintendent of public instruction for the several supervision districts, had the
right to limit the expense of such office chargeable to the state. Being an appointive office, it
was within the power of the legislature to limit, fix, or prohibit the expenses chargeable to the
state. If the aggregate of the expenses chargeable to the state were by the act which created
the office left uncertain, it was within the power of the legislature to define this, thus to make
it certain. To accomplish this certainty, to make the amount definite, no more direct way
could have been pursued by the legislative branch than to specifically appropriate a given and
definite sum equal to or less than the maximum named in the original act. If the proviso of
section 13 of the school law stood alone, unaffected by subsequent legislation, some support
might be found for the assumption that it was the legislative intent that it should constitute an
appropriation to the extent of the maximum named; but when the very legislature that created
the office of deputy superintendent and enacted the provisions of section 13 later by specific
appropriation fixed the amount that should be paid by the state for expenses for the years
1911 and 1912, this was final, positive, definite; and the same applies to the specific
appropriation of 1913 and 1915. This was the appropriation intended by the legislative body
to be the full amount of the traveling expenses of the office chargeable to the state.
Was this appropriation of $1,000, made by the legislature of 1915 for the traveling
expenses of the deputy superintendent of the Third supervision district for the years 1915 and
1916, exhausted when the claims of the respondent constituting the first cause of action were
presented to the state controller? Our law requires that the state controller shall publish an
annual report (Rev. Laws, 4156), and specifically prescribes what shall be set out in that
report (Stats. 1915, p. 94). The annual report of the state controller for the year 1915 (page
25) shows that out of the $1,000 appropriated by the legislature of that year for the traveling
expenses of the deputy for the Third supervision district, $625.77 had been expended, and
there remained $373.23 in the appropriation.
41 Nev. 49, 65 (1917) McCracken v. State
deputy for the Third supervision district, $625.77 had been expended, and there remained
$373.23 in the appropriation. The controller's report for the year 1916 shows that the entire
appropriation had been expended. (Annual Report of State Controller for 1916, page 25.)
This, too, is admitted by respondent's pleadings. The appropriation was exhausted when the
claims which constitute the basis for respondent's first cause of action were presented to the
state controller. My view of the law as to the traveling expenses sued for applies also to the
items claimed for office expenses. The state has discharged its obligation to respondent. The
specific appropriation having been exhausted, the state controller could not honor the claims
of respondent.
The second and third causes of action in this case are based on claims for traveling
expenses and office expenses for the year 1917. The legislature made no appropriation in the
general appropriation act of the year 1917 for the traveling or office expenses of the deputy
superintendents of public instruction. The contention of respondent as to his second and third
causes of action rests on his position that the proviso in section 13 of the school law of 1911
was of itself an appropriation to the extent of $800 per annum for traveling expenses and
$350 per annum for office expenses.
Did the legislature of 1911 intend this section of the school law to be an appropriation?
The most that can be said as to the specific language of the section is that it named the fund
out of which the traveling expenses and office expenses should be diverted, and named the
maximum of that expense chargeable against the state for any one year. As I have already
stated in my consideration of the first cause of action, the legislature, having created this
office, had the power to limit the traveling expenses of the officer which might be chargeable
against the state. Having the power to limitand in my judgment the language of section 13
conveys no other idea than that the legislative intent was that that body alone should specify
the amountit follows as a matter of course, and will, I apprehend, not be gainsaid, that
it had the power to eliminate.
41 Nev. 49, 66 (1917) McCracken v. State
as a matter of course, and will, I apprehend, not be gainsaid, that it had the power to
eliminate.
In determining as to whether this was an appropriation, we must look to the legislative
intent, if such intent can be ascertained. The legislature that enacted section 13 of the general
school law did not itself regard this section as constituting an appropriation, because in that
very session (Stats. 1911, p. 80) it made a specific appropriation of a sum different from that
named in section 13. Each succeeding legislature has made a specific appropriation for this
purpose. (Stats. 1913, p. 186; Stats. 1915, p. 234.)
Courts in construing statutes may take into consideration the construction placed upon a
particular statute by the legislature that enacted the same, if such be ascertainable; and in
cases of this character the general appropriation act may be considered in connection with the
section in question (Converse v. United States, 21 How. [62 U. S.] 463, 16 L. Ed. 192), and
continued construction and application by those in authority or by those officially affected
should not be overlooked. The respondent here, as well as those other officers of our school
system, have made manifest their construction of this section of the school law. In each
instance the specific appropriation made by the legislature in the general appropriation bill,
and not section 13 of the school law, was relied upon.
The legislature of 1915 specifically appropriated $1,000 for traveling expenses for the
deputy for the Third supervision district. This sum had been exhausted. (Annual Reports of
the State Controller, supra.) We observe that a relief bill (Senate Bill No. 50) was introduced
(Senate Journal 1917, page 83), by which it was proposed to have the legislature appropriate
by way of relief to respondent the exact sum which constitutes the basis of respondent's first
cause of action here. This the legislature refused to do. (Senate Journal 1917, page 153.) The
courts are here asked by this proceeding to do that which the legislature refused.
41 Nev. 49, 67 (1917) McCracken v. State
refused. Moreover, we are asked to now construe the provision of section 13 of the school
law to be an appropriation in itself, when for years, and in each succeeding session of our
legislature since the passage of the act, that body has made specific appropriation. Moreover,
the respondent here in his official capacity has been governed by the specific appropriation
rather than by section 13 of the school law.
Legislative construction, or the application or construction placed upon a statute by
administrative officers, is not binding upon a court. The power is vested in the judicial branch
of the government to finally construe statutes; but in construing and interpreting statutes the
motive of the lawmaking body may be looked for and ascertained in contemporaneous history
and in contemporaneous and subsequent legislation upon cogent matters. (Steamboat Co. v.
Farmers Co., 18 N. J. Eq. 13; State ex rel. New Orleans Pacific R. Co. v. Nicholls et al., 30
La. Ann. 980; Edger v. Randolph Co. Comm., 70 Ind. 331.)
Consideration has always been given by courts to the construction given to a statute by the
officers appointed to execute it, where such officers have acted under the law for a
considerable length of time. (Union Ins. Co. v. Hoge, 21 How. [62 U. S.] 35, 16 L. Ed. 61;
Scanlan v. Childs, 33 Wis. 662; Westbrook v. Miller, 56 Mich. 148, 22 N. W. 256.)
Basing my conclusion upon the foregoing reasoning, it is my judgment that the demurrer
should have been sustained as to all causes of action. The prevailing opinion seems to be in
accord with my views as to the respondent's first cause of action, and, if I understand it
correctly, would reverse the lower court on its decision in overruling the demurrer as to this.
The order of the prevailing opinion in effect sustains the general demurrer as to the first cause
of action, and overrules the same as to the second and third causes. Following this, the
prevailing opinion and order assumes to modify the judgment on the appeal brought to this
court from an order overruling a general demurrer.
41 Nev. 49, 68 (1917) McCracken v. State
an order overruling a general demurrer. I am at a loss to know how, in view of the nature of
this demurrer, this court can reconcile its action in this respect, in face of the universal rule of
pleading which holds that, when a complaint sets up more than one cause of action, a general
demurrer will not lie, if any one of the causes is well pleaded, and in such case the demurrer,
although good as to one of the causes, must be overruled. (Palmer v. Breed, 5 Ariz. 16, 43
Pac. 219; Blakeney v. Ferguson, 18 Ark. 347; Fleming v. Albeck, 67 Cal. 226, 7 Pac. 659;
Stacey v. Baker, 1 Scam. [2 Ill.] 417; Bayless v. Glenn, 72 Ind. 5; Jarvis v. Worick, 10 Iowa,
29; Missouri Pac. Ry. Co. v. McLiney, 32 Mo. App. 166; Alexander v. Thacker, 30 Neb. 614,
46 N W. 825; Hudson v. Winslow, 35 N. J. Law, 445; Martin v. Williams, 13 Johns. N. Y.
264; Kent v. Bierce, 6 Ohio, 336; Spicer v. Giselman, 15 Ohio, 338; Shroyer v. Richmond, 16
Ohio St. 465; Ketchum v. State, 2 Or. 103; Simpson v. Prather, 5 Or. 86; Carson v. Cock, 50
Tex. 325; Standiford v. Goudy, 6 W. Va. 364; Lockwood v. Rogers, 2 Pin. [Wis.] 90; U. S. v.
Girault, 11 How. 22, 13 L. Ed. 587; Brown v. Duchesne, 2 Curt. 97, Fed. Cas. No. 2003;
Vermont v. Society, 2 Paine, 545, Fed. Cas. No. 16,920; Bliss on code Pleading; Maxwell on
Code Pleading, 375; Phillips on Code Pleading, sec. 294; Sutherland on Code Pleading.)
The question to be passed upon here is the action of the lower court in overruling a general
demurrer to a complaint setting up several causes of action. Was the general demurrer good
as to all of these causes of action? If it was, then we should reverse the ruling of the lower
court. Was any one of the causes of action good as against the general demurrer? If we
determine this question in the affirmative, then we must sustain the ruling made below. But to
hold, as does the prevailing opinion, that the first cause of action was defective as against the
general demurrer and the second was not, and then to sustain the lower court as to its order
overruling the general demurrer, and yet declare the demurrer good as to the first cause of
action, and then to sustain the lower court as to its order overruling the general demurrer
and at the same time modify the money judgment entered by that court, by striking out
the amount of the first cause of action, because the same was subject to the general
demurrerwell, if precedent is the parent of law, surely this is the whole family.
41 Nev. 49, 69 (1917) McCracken v. State
demurrer good as to the first cause of action, and then to sustain the lower court as to its order
overruling the general demurrer and at the same time modify the money judgment entered by
that court, by striking out the amount of the first cause of action, because the same was
subject to the general demurrerwell, if precedent is the parent of law, surely this is the
whole family.
____________
41 Nev. 69, 69 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
[No. 2244]
THOMAS NELSON, Appellant, v. EDWARD
REINHART, Respondent.
[167 Pac. 690]
1. Arbitration and AwardEffect of Stipulation for Arbitration.
The mere fact that the parties agree to submit to arbitration did not work discontinuance and dismissal of
the case in the absence of manifest intention of the parties to accomplish such result.
2. Arbitration and AwardFraudRight to Relief.
In an action for money loaned, where the parties agreed and did submit to arbitration stipulating for
judgment entry according to the result of the arbitration, the court had jurisdiction to entertain a motion to
set aside the award upon allegations that the arbitration was fraudulent and wrongful.
3. Appeal and ErrorScope of ReviewDiscretionary orders.
If the trial court passes on a motion to vacate an alleged fraudulent award of arbitrators, the court of
review will rarely disturb such a discretionary order.
Appeal from Sixth Judicial District Court, Humboldt County; Edward A. Ducker, Judge.
Action by Thomas Nelson against Edward Reinhart. From judgment rendered, plaintiff
appeals. Reversed, with directions.
Statement of Facts
Thomas Nelson, the appellant here, commenced the action in the lower court for the
collection of money loaned. Respondent answered by admitting the allegations of plaintiff's
complaint and by setting up a counterclaim by way of defense. The basis of the counterclaim
was that in June, 1913, the defendant, respondent here, at the special instance and request
of plaintiff, performed services as a broker for the plaintiff in procuring a purchaser for
certain ranches in Humboldt and adjoining counties in the State of Nevada, together with
the live stock, implements, buildings, and other property in connection with such ranches;
that by and through the efforts and services of the defendant a purchaser was procured
for such property; that the price paid by the purchaser for the Nelson ranches was
approximately $215,000; that a reasonable commission for the services of defendant was
the sum of $21,500; that no part of such sum has been paid excepting $1,000, which was
paid to defendant by plaintiff on or about the 1st day of September, 1913, as a part
payment of his commission as broker.
41 Nev. 69, 70 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
respondent here, at the special instance and request of plaintiff, performed services as a
broker for the plaintiff in procuring a purchaser for certain ranches in Humboldt and
adjoining counties in the State of Nevada, together with the live stock, implements, buildings,
and other property in connection with such ranches; that by and through the efforts and
services of the defendant a purchaser was procured for such property; that the price paid by
the purchaser for the Nelson ranches was approximately $215,000; that a reasonable
commission for the services of defendant was the sum of $21,500; that no part of such sum
has been paid excepting $1,000, which was paid to defendant by plaintiff on or about the 1st
day of September, 1913, as a part payment of his commission as broker. The prayer of the
counterclaim was for $18,977.50. The material matter of the counterclaim was denied in the
replication of plaintiff. The case, being at issue, was continued from time to time, as appears
from the several minute orders of the district court, the last of which orders was made on
March 2, 1916.
Without the knowledge of the court, and without recourse to statutory proceedings, the
parties entered into a written agreement to submit the controversy to arbitration. By the
agreement each of the parties was to select an arbitrator; the two arbitrators thus selected were
to choose a third. This board of arbitration voluntarily constituted were to meet and hear the
testimony as offered by the several parties, and when they arrived at an award they were to fill
in blank spaces in the stipulation which had already been signed by the attorneys for the
respective parties, and the stipulation as thus completed was to be filed with the clerk of the
court, pursuant to which judgment was to be entered. This was carried out. On March 14,
1916, there was filed with the clerk of the court the following instrument, designated as a
stipulation:
It is hereby stipulated and agreed by and between plaintiff and defendant in the
above-entitled action that the said Edward Reinhart do have and recover from the said
Thomas Nelson judgment in the sum of $S,10S.50, together with costs and disbursements
in the sum of $193, making total judgment, including both damages, costs, and
disbursements, in the sum of $S,301.50; it is further stipulated and agreed between the
said parties that judgment be entered in accordance herewith by the court upon
application of either party without notice to the other party.
41 Nev. 69, 71 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
that the said Edward Reinhart do have and recover from the said Thomas Nelson judgment in
the sum of $8,108.50, together with costs and disbursements in the sum of $193, making total
judgment, including both damages, costs, and disbursements, in the sum of $8,301.50; it is
further stipulated and agreed between the said parties that judgment be entered in accordance
herewith by the court upon application of either party without notice to the other party.
Dated this 14th day of March, A. D. 1916. Callahan & Brandon, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Salter & Robins and L. G. Campbell, Attorneys for Defendant.
On March 15, the following day, counsel for defendant, respondent here, requested in open
court that judgment be entered according to the stipulation, counsel for appellant requesting
time in which to present certain facts for the purpose of opposing the application for
judgment. In resisting respondent's motion for judgment on the stipulation, appellant
assigned: First, that the alleged and pretended stipulation for judgment upon which the said
motion for judgment is alleged and pretended to be based is not in fact or in truth a stipulation
for judgment in any respect; second, that the court had no jurisdiction to order judgment
entered upon said alleged pretended stipulation, for the reason that the submission to
arbitration mentioned in the exhibits was and is not a statutory submission to arbitration by
the statutes of this state, inasmuch as there was no attempt to comply with the requisites as set
forth in the statute for arbitration; third, that the stipulation for judgment and the amount set
forth therein is false, fraudulent, wrongful, and illegal, being arrived at by an award made by
certain arbitrators, which award was obtained by false, fraudulent, wrongful, and illegal acts
of the said arbitrators; fourth, that the arbitrators by whose award the sums set forth in the
stipulation for judgment were made were prejudiced against plaintiff, appellant here; fifth,
that said arbitrators exceeded their power as such; sixth, that the authority and power of the
arbitrators to act as such had been revoked by plaintiff prior to the making of the award;
seventh, that the arbitrators who made the award acted with partiality throughout the
entire course of the proceedings; eighth, that the arbitrators had agreed to disagree;
ninth, that at the time of making the award only two of the arbitrators were present, and
that the meeting of said two arbitrators was secret, without notice to or the consent of
the third arbitrator, and in this was fraudulent and illegal; tenth, that at the time of the
making of the award and prior thereto two of the arbitrators were in gross error as to the
facts proved at the hearing.
41 Nev. 69, 72 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
power of the arbitrators to act as such had been revoked by plaintiff prior to the making of the
award; seventh, that the arbitrators who made the award acted with partiality throughout the
entire course of the proceedings; eighth, that the arbitrators had agreed to disagree; ninth, that
at the time of making the award only two of the arbitrators were present, and that the meeting
of said two arbitrators was secret, without notice to or the consent of the third arbitrator, and
in this was fraudulent and illegal; tenth, that at the time of the making of the award and prior
thereto two of the arbitrators were in gross error as to the facts proved at the hearing.
In addition, counsel for plaintiff in the court below objected to the making of any order or
judgment in the proceedings for the reason that the court was without jurisdiction to make
such order inasmuch as the agreement to submit to arbitration constituted in itself a
discontinuance and dismissal of the case. At a later date, and during the course of the
proceedings with reference to the entry of judgment, appellant appears to have filed an
instrument entitled Notice of Motion to Set Aside and Vacate Pretended Award. This
instrument sets forth ten different grounds for the setting aside of the award as made by the
arbitrators pursuant to which the stipulation for judgment was filed.
There are a number of affidavits in the record filed in support of the several charges of
fraud and misconduct as set up by appellant in furtherance of his objection to the entry of
judgment. An offer to prove the several charges of fraud and misconduct, as well as the
charge of bias and prejudice with reference to the arbitrators, was refused by the trial court.
The court took the position that inasmuch as the action was one at law, and a stipulation had
been filed providing for the entry of judgment, appellant ought not to be permitted to raise the
question as to the arbitration or as to the award or its illegality or as to fraud surrounding the
award or the lack of authority on the part of counsel for plaintiff to sign the stipulation, all
of which the court held to be properly belonging to a separate action in equity which
might be instituted by the appellant to accomplish the end sought, namely, the setting
aside of the stipulation.
41 Nev. 69, 73 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
ing the award or the lack of authority on the part of counsel for plaintiff to sign the
stipulation, all of which the court held to be properly belonging to a separate action in equity
which might be instituted by the appellant to accomplish the end sought, namely, the setting
aside of the stipulation.
Callahan & Brandon, for Appellant:
The lower court erred in entertaining respondent's motion for judgment, for the reason that
the court had no jurisdiction to entertain the motion or enter judgment pursuant thereto; in
overruling appellant's objections to the motion for judgment, and in sustaining respondent's
objections to appellant's offers of proof in support of his objections to said motion; in
overruling and denying appellant's motion to vacate and set aside the award and stipulation
based thereon, and in sustaining respondent's objections to appellant's offers of proof in
support of said motion, and in refusing to hear or entertain any testimony or proof of any kind
in support of objections to the motion for judgment and the motion to vacate and set aside.
The lower court was without jurisdiction to entertain, hear or determine the motion for
judgment for the reason that the action pending had been discontinued by the submission of
the issues to arbitration, and for the further reason that said submission to arbitration was not
a statutory one. (Gunter v. Sanchez, 1 Cal. 45; Draghicevich v. Vulicevich, 18 Pac 406; Rev.
Laws, 5255-5264; Steele v. Steele, 1 Nev. 27; Kreiss v. Hotaling, 41 Pac. 740; Ryan v.
Dougherty, 30 Cal. 218; 2 R. C. L. 352.)
A stipulation, oral or written, apparently valid on its face, may be attacked by motion.
(Richardson v. Musser, 54 Cal. 196; Welsh v. Noyes, 14 Pac. 317; Gerdtzen v. Cockrell, 55
N. W. 58; Keens v. Robertson, 65 N. W. 897.) The arbitrators exceeded their powers by
acting as such after they had finally failed to agree. (3 Cyc. 630.) The award having been
made in the absence of one of the arbitrators, it was not valid. (2 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d
ed. pp.
41 Nev. 69, 74 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
2d ed. pp. 641-645; 3 Cyc. 651-654; 2 R. C. L. 383.) The authority of the arbitrators had been
revoked. (2 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d ed. pp. 594-596.)
L. G. Campbell and Salter & Robins, for Respondent:
The arbitration was a common-law arbitration. There is provision for arbitration under the
statute. The fact that the statute provides a method of arbitration does not preclude the parties
from entering into an agreement out of court to submit the controversy to arbitration, purely
as a common-law arbitration. (Lillie v. Tuttle, 117 Pac. 896; Ann. Cas. 1913d, 196.)
Arbitration proceedings, even in jurisdictions where the matter is governed by statute, may
still be conducted under common-law rules, the only penalty for failure to comply with the
statute being the forfeiture of added benefits thereby extended. (2 R. C. L. 353.)
The action was not discontinued by the agreement to arbitrate. A submission to
arbitration will not operate as a discontinuance if it is stipulated therein that an award shall be
entered as a judgment of the court. (3 Cyc. 605.) Wherever the agreement to arbitrate is that
judgment shall be entered in a pending suit, neither the submission nor the award operates as
a discontinuance thereof. (2 R. C. L. 360.)
The court had no jurisdiction to set aside the stipulation. The agreement of arbitration was
an agreement out of court, and the court could take knowledge of the stipulation for judgment
only. Fraud and misconduct, even if it existed, could not be proven under a motion to set
aside the stipulation. (2 R. C. L. 390; Keys v. Warner, 45 Cal. 60; Guild v. A. T. & S. F. R.
Co., 45 Pac. 82.) A party injured by the misconduct of arbitrators may, in a suit instituted for
that purpose, procure a decree setting aside the award. (Cohn v. Wemme, 81 Pac. 981;
Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Bonner Merc. Co., 44 Fed. 151; Craft v. Thompson, 51 N. H. 536;
Bumpass v. Webb, 29 Am. Dec. 274; Muldro v. Norris, 2 Cal. 74.)
A compromise of the action or a final consent order, if entered, can be set aside only in
a fresh action."
41 Nev. 69, 75 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
if entered, can be set aside only in a fresh action. (36 Cyc. 1296.)
When the stipulation was called to the attention of the court, there remained nothing to do
except the mere ministerial act of the court to enter judgment. It was a mere step from the
filing of the stipulation to the judgment, and rights to set aside the stipulation could, if proper,
be taken against the judgment. (People v. Davis, 77 Pac. 651; People v. Temple, 37 Pac. 414.)
The stipulation filed in the lower court was a contract between the parties, and could not
be set aside on any less grounds or for any less potent reason than that necessary to relieve a
party from any other contract made for a valuable consideration. (36 Cyc. 1295.) Rules
applicable to construction of contracts generally govern courts in construing stipulations. (36
Cyc. 1291.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J. (after stating the facts):
1. As to the contention of appellant that by entering into the agreement to submit the
controversy to arbitration the case was thereby discontinued and dismissed, such is untenable
in our judgment. It is not to say that the contention of appellant in this respect is without
support in the way of authority, but it would appear to us that the better rule is that the
intention of the parties as made manifest by their acts and conduct, together with their
intention as set forth in their agreement, must govern in determining the question as to
whether or not the case was to be discontinued or dismissed. Where, as here, the submission
provides that judgment may be entered on the report or award, such has been regarded as
keeping the suit alive for such purpose. (Ryan v. Dougherty, 30 Cal. 218.) Where, from the
agreement for submission or from the acts or conduct of the parties, it appears that they did
not intend that the cause should be discontinued, no discontinuance or dismissal will be
presumed. (Jacoby v. Johnston, 1 Hun, 242.) See, also, Lawson's Rights and Remedies, sec.
3322.
In the case of Wilkinson v. Prichard, 145 Iowa, 65, 123 N. W. 964, Ann.
41 Nev. 69, 76 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
N. W. 964, Ann. Cas. 1912a, 1259, this very question was considered. There, as here, the
court had before it a stipulation providing for the submission of the cause to arbitration while
the case was pending at issue in the trial court.
The Supreme Court of Iowa said:
Where such an agreement has been entered into, and also that judgment shall be entered
by the court in which the action is pending, the only fair inference is that the parties intended
that the action be continued for the filing of the award and the entry of judgment thereon.
True, there was no order or reference, nor was there any entry of dismissal. For all that
appeared of record in the case, it was pending up to the entry of the judgment on the award,
and both parties so treated it until the final hearing.
Holding to the effect that where an agreement is entered by the parties to a pending suit
directing that judgment may be entered pursuant to arbitration and award, neither the
submission nor the award operates as a discontinuance of the suit. (Callanan v. Port Huron
Ry. Co., 61 Mich. 15, 27 N. W. 718; Wilson v. Williams, 66 Barb. 209.)
In the case of Hearne v. Brown, 67 Me. 156, it was held that submission to arbitration
would not be treated as a discontinuance of a pending suit where by necessary implication the
case is to be retained on the docket until the arbitration is perfected by the award.
The courts generally have held that where a stipulation contains a provision by way of
agreement that judgment may be entered on the award, it will be inferred that the parties to
the agreement intended thereby to prevent a discontinuance. (Hearne v. Brown, supra;
Wilkinson v. Prichard, supra; Monroe Bank v. Widner, 11 Paige, 529, 43 Am. Dec. 768;
Wilson v. Williams, supra; Rogers v. Nall, 6 Humph. 29; McCarthy v. Swan, 145 Mass. 471,
14 N. E. 635.)
A mere unexecuted agreement to submit to arbitration, made during the pendency of a suit,
has been held as in no wise operating against the further progress of the pending litigation.
41 Nev. 69, 77 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
the pending litigation. (Wright v. Evans, 53 Ala. 108.) In a jurisdiction having a statute
relating to arbitration, and in an instance where the parties entered into an agreement to
arbitrate, which agreement did not conform to the statute, it was held that the agreement to
arbitrate did not operate as a discontinuance, nor did it divest the court of jurisdiction. (Cox v.
Giddings, 9 Tex. 44.)
To the same effect will be found the cases of Nettleton v. Gridley, 21 Conn. 531, 56 Am.
Dec. 378, and Dinsmore v. Hanson, 48 N. H. 413. The reasoning in the case of Dinsmore v.
Hanson, supra, is especially applicable to the question here presented under the
circumstances of the case.
Commentators in viewing the question here dwelt upon have declared that the majority
rule, that is, the rule supported by the majority of the decisions, is to the effect that a ground
for the discontinuance of a pending suit is furnished by an agreement whereby the
subject-matter of the action is submitted to arbitration. The rule in English courts, whatever it
may have been under the very early practice, was reframed at a later date, and we find it
expressed by a text-writer on the subject as follows:
It was formerly holden that a reference to arbitration was an implied stay of proceedings.
But, in the beginning of Queen Anne's time, a rule was made that no reference whatsoever, of
any cause depending in the King's Bench, should stay the proceedings, unless it was
expressed in the rule of reference, to be agreed, and all proceedings in this court should be
stayed; and it has been frequently decided that the agreement to refer all matters in difference
to arbitration is not sufficient to oust the courts of law or equity of their jurisdiction. When a
reference is pending, and it has been agreed that it shall operate as a stay of proceedings, it
may be made the subject of an application to the court for staying the proceedings until an
award be made. (Tidd on Practice of the Courts of King's Bench and Common Pleas, 821.)
As will be seen by reference to the authorities we have cited, a strong line of decisions,
and indeed, as we view it, the better reason, supports the rule that where it is expressly
declared in or may be inferred from the agreement to refer that the parties did not intend,
by referring their differences to arbitration, to effect a discontinuance or dismissal of the
pending suit, such reference will not be construed by the court to effect a discontinuance
or ouster of jurisdiction.
41 Nev. 69, 78 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
cited, a strong line of decisions, and indeed, as we view it, the better reason, supports the rule
that where it is expressly declared in or may be inferred from the agreement to refer that the
parties did not intend, by referring their differences to arbitration, to effect a discontinuance
or dismissal of the pending suit, such reference will not be construed by the court to effect a
discontinuance or ouster of jurisdiction. Whatever diversity of opinion there may be as to the
proper rule applicable to cases where the agreement to refer makes no mention as to the entry
of judgment, the great trend of opinion will be found to support the rule that where the
agreement to refer contains a provision to the effect that judgment shall be entered in the
pending suit pursuant to the arbitration, neither the submission nor the award operates as a
discontinuance. (2 R. C. L. 360.)
2. The one central question here involved, and the most important, inasmuch as it entails a
reversal of the order and judgment of the lower court, is the right and duty of that court to
entertain a motion to relieve one of the parties of the effect of a stipulation duly entered into.
The stipulation was one which provided for the entry of judgment following submission to
arbitration. The suit being one at law, the court held that nothing less than an independent
proceeding in equity could relieve the appellant of the effect of his stipulation. In this we
must conclude the court erred.
In the case of Adams v. Hartzell, 18 N. D. 221, 119 N. W. 635, it appears that a stipulation
was entered by the parties establishing an agreed statement of facts. The case being submitted
upon this speculation, subsequently one of the parties gave notice of motion for an order
permitting him to present further testimony in his objection. His motion was supported by
affidavit. The court overruled objection and granted the motion. There the court held that
while the action of the lower court was erroneous in relieving one party of the force and effect
of the stipulation while the other remained bound, it declared, nevertheless, that under
some circumstances such stipulation might be effected in the exercise of a wise discretion
and additional evidence be received.
41 Nev. 69, 79 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
declared, nevertheless, that under some circumstances such stipulation might be effected in
the exercise of a wise discretion and additional evidence be received.
In the case of Gerdtzen v. Cockrell, 52 Minn. 501, 55 N. W. 58, it appears that the parties
had stipulated the terms of a compromise and settlement of their mutual claims as involved in
the action and authorized judgment to be entered in pursuance of such stipulation. The court
held that it was within the power of the trial court to set aside such agreement and upon a
proper showing place the parties in statu quo upon motion. Replying to the contention that
the agreement and stipulation constituted a contract and therefore could not be set aside
summarily upon motion, but could only be determined by a proceeding in equity, the court
said:
The mere form of the instrument sought to be set aside is not, however, controlling. It
was a step or proceeding in the cause, and determined the form and amount of the judgment
and the final disposition of the case. The effect of the order in question here, as finally made,
was to put the parties in statu quo, with leave to serve the amended answer. It left the parties
free to proceed to a trial upon the merits of the controversy between them, but the
proceedings was not a trial of the merits upon motion. It was in principle no different from
the vacating or setting aside of any order or stipulation in the action on the ground of mistake
or other equitable ground.
In the case of Butler v. Chamberlain, 66 Neb. 174, 92 N. W. 154, the Supreme Court of
Nebraska had this same question before it. In that instance it involved the right of the trial
court to relieve a party of a stipulation of fact claimed to have been made improvidently. The
court, after a most lucid reasoning, said:
Therefore it seems to us that the sole question is whether there was an abuse of discretion
on the part of the trial court. We think there was. If plaintiff's affidavit be trueand it stands
uncontradictedthe stipulation stands in the way of a recovery by her of a substantial
sum, justly due her, in her representative capacity.
41 Nev. 69, 80 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
stands in the way of a recovery by her of a substantial sum, justly due her, in her
representative capacity. In the light of that affidavit, the stipulation was improvidently made,
and should be set aside, since it does not appear that to do so would work any injustice to the
defendant.
In the case of Keens v. Robertson, 46 Neb. 837, 65 N. W. 897, we find the Supreme Court
of Nebraska again passing upon this question under conditions where the parties to a suit
pending entered into a stipulation, and placed the same of record, that the decision in the case
should be the same as that which might be rendered in another case then pending for trial in
the same court. On motion of one of the parties, supported by affidavit, to vacate the
agreement, the stipulation was set aside by the trial court. The court in determining the
question referred approvingly to the cases of McClure v. Heirs of Sheek, 68 Tex. 426, 4 S. W.
552; Porter v. Holt, 73 Tex. 447, 11 S. W. 494, and Ward v. Clay, 82 Cal. 502, 23 Pac. 50.
In the case of Barry v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of N. Y., 53 N. W. 536, the court of appeals
had before it the question of the right of the trial court in an action at law to relieve parties of
the effect of a stipulation, made during the course of a trial, as to the entry of an order vital to
the issue. The court said:
It is not an unusual thing to relieve parties from stipulations made in the progress of the
action; and courts have always regarded this as within their power, and the exercise of it is
frequently necessary to promote justice and prevent wrong.
In support of this conclusion, the court quoted the remark of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall
(The Hiram, 1 Wheat. 440, 4 L. Ed. 131) as follows:
If a judgment be confessed under a clear mistake, a court of law will set that judgment
aside, if application be made * * * while the judgment is in its power.
Continuing, the court said:
Whether the causes assigned were sufficient to justify the court in the exercise of the
power was exclusively for that court to determine; there certainly was not an entire
absence of a foundation for the application.
41 Nev. 69, 81 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
for that court to determine; there certainly was not an entire absence of a foundation for the
application. It is true, as urged by the appellants, that the stipulation was in the nature of a
compact or agreement of the parties, and valid per se; but, like other compacts and
agreements made in the progress of an action and affecting proceedings in it, it was liable to
be dealt with summarily by the court, so long as the parties could be restored to the same
condition in which they would have been if no agreement had been made.
In the case of McClure et al. v. Heirs of Sheek, 68 Tex. 426, 4 S. W. 552, the Supreme
Court of Texas held to the effect that agreements of counsel in regard to the trial of a cause
are not absolute and are not to be treated as contracts to be enforced under all circumstances.
They may be set aside by the courts in the exercise of a sound discretion when their
enforcement would result in serious injury to one of the parties and the other would not be
prejudiced by such setting aside. In the case of Porter v. Holt, 73 Tex. 447, 11 S. W. 494, the
same court, having before it a case involving a stipulation entered into by attorney yielding up
by mistake a substantial defense to the action, held:
The setting aside of such agreements is ordinarily in the discretion of the courts, and their
action will not, as a general rule, be revised. But where the agreement involves something
more than a mere matter of practice, and affects the substance of the cause of action or the
character of the defense, and it appears that it has been entered into by counsel without a
knowledge of the facts, and that its withdrawal will not operate to the prejudice of either
party, the motion to set aside ceases to be a matter of mere discretion, and should be granted
by the court.
To the same effect was the ruling in the case of Hancock v. Winans, 20 Tex. 320. In the
case of Meldrum v. Kenefick, 15 S. D. 370, 89 N. W. 522, the court held to the effect that
relieving parties from a stipulation is within the discretion of the court, and would not be
reviewed unless such discretion were abused.
41 Nev. 69, 82 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
within the discretion of the court, and would not be reviewed unless such discretion were
abused.
In the case of Vail v. Stone et al., 13 Iowa, 284, the Supreme Court of Iowa had before it a
case involving a stipulation filed by attorney wherein the defendant in a suit for foreclosure of
mortgage consented to the rendition of a decree for the amount due on the note and mortgage
including interest and costs to be ascertained by the clerk of the district court. Subsequent to
the filing of the agreement the defendant filed an answer setting up the payment to the
plaintiff of the sum of $400, and that the contract sued on was usurious. The answer was
stricken from the files upon the motion of the plaintiff and decree entered upon the judgment.
While affirming the action of the lower court in this respect, the supreme court said:
It is not questioned but that the parties may have such agreement withdrawn or stricken
from the files, if it is made apparent to the court that it was obtained in an improper manner.
How applicable this assertion of law may be to the matter here at bar can be learned only
from a consideration of the evidence in support of fraud and misconduct of the arbitrators as
asserted in the motion.
In the case of Northern Pacific Co. v. Barlow, 20 N. D. 197, Ann. Cas. 1912c, 763, the
Supreme Court of North Dakota, in dealing with the question of a stipulation of fact entered
by the parties during the course of a suit instituted for the purpose of quieting title to certain
lands, held to the effect that it was proper for the trial court, in the exercise of sound judicial
discretion and upon good cause shown and in furtherance of justice, to relieve the parties
from the stipulation entered into in the course of a judicial proceeding where the application
was seasonably made.
We find all of these cases holding in effect that such agreements are not to be regarded as
contracts; and may be dealt with by the court upon a proper showing made within seasonable
time; and where the showing is sufficient, the court, in the exercise of sound discretion,
may relieve the parties of the effect.
41 Nev. 69, 83 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
sufficient, the court, in the exercise of sound discretion, may relieve the parties of the effect.
The case of Ward v. Clay, 82 Cal. 502, 23 Pac. 50, referred to by the Supreme Court of
Nebraska in the Keens-Robertson case, supra, is especially illuminative of the subject. In that
case Mr. Justice Vanclief, speaking for the Supreme Court of California, quoted approvingly
from the decision of that court in the case of Richardson v. Musser, 54 Cal. 198, saying:
There can be no doubt of the power of the trial court to relieve a party from the effects of
a stipulation which admits as a fact that which is not true, if the application is made in proper
time.
Continuing on the subject, the court said: The principal purpose of vesting the court with
this discretionary power is to enable it to mold and direct its proceedings so as to dispose of
cases upon their substantial merits,' when it can be done without injustice to either party,
whether the obstruction to such a disposition of cases be a mistake of fact or a mistake as to
the law, although it may be that the court should require a stronger showing to justify relief
from the effect of a mistake in law than in case of a mistake as to matter of fact.
The case of Ward v. Clay, supra, is again referred to approvingly by the Supreme Court of
California in the case of Robinson v. Exempt Fire Co. of San Francisco, 103 Cal. 1, 36 Pac.
955, 24 L. R. A. 715, 42 Am. St. Rep. 93.
Mr. Black, in his work on Judgments, secs. 297, 303, 321, and 322, sanctions the
proposition that it is within the power of the court to vacate a judgment unjustly, improperly,
or fraudulently entered; that this power is a common-law power, inherent in the court and
possessed by it as a part of its necessary machinery, and can be exercised by it without
statutory authority. See, also, Freeman on Judgments, sec. 99.
In the case of Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. O'Donnell, 146 N. Y. 275, 40 N. E. 787, 48 Am. St.
Rep. 796, the Court of Appeals of New York, having before it the question of an order of the
lower court bearing upon a stipulation entered during the course of a proceeding in
foreclosure, held that the party entering such stipulation may obtain relief from the
judgment upon a motion in the court wherein it was entered.
41 Nev. 69, 84 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
entered during the course of a proceeding in foreclosure, held that the party entering such
stipulation may obtain relief from the judgment upon a motion in the court wherein it was
entered.
The case of Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. O'Donnell, supra, was cited approvingly by the
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York in the case of Potter et al. v. Rossiter
et al., 109 App. Div. 737, 96 N. Y. Supp. 177.
In Ruling Case Law we find an assertion to the effect that the violation of a stipulation is
regarded as a breach of contract for which a separate action will lie, but the court always has
power to grant relief in a summary manner upon motion. This statement of the rule is amply
supported by authority.
3. The motion against the entry of judgment filed by appellant in the lower court was
supported to some extent by affidavits. It is made manifest that the court neither considered
these nor entertained other evidence offered by the appellant. This being true, we do not now
assume to determine as to the propriety of relieving appellant of the effect of the stipulation.
Had the court received and considered the evidence in support of the motion, and after such
consideration refused to set aside the stipulation, another and a different question would be
presented here. There can, we think, be no doubt as to the right and power, in fact the duty of
a trial court to entertain, and in the exercise of sound discretion to determine, a motion to
vacate such a stipulation as that involved in the case at bar. On occasion when a trial court
does entertain such a motion and after investigation renders its order or decision on the
matter, a court of review, recognizing that the matter is one involving the discretionary
powers of the lower court, would rarely disturb such an order or decision except when abuse
of discretion is manifest. Without attempting to look into the evidence offered on the motion
here, we deem it proper to observe that in matters of this character a granting of such motion
where the court in furtherance of justice saw fit so to do would at most only place the parties
in statu quo, so that the entire matter might be presented to the tribunal of their first
choosing.
41 Nev. 69, 85 (1917) Nelson v. Reinhart
so that the entire matter might be presented to the tribunal of their first choosing. We do not
assume to determine that relief might not have been sought by the appellant through an
independent action in equity, but that the motion could be entertained and determined, being
one arising out of an action in course of progress, all phases of which, and especially the entry
of judgment, were before the trial court, there can be no doubt. The stipulation, its validity,
force, and effect were matters properly questionable by the court in which it was of record. If
through the avenue of fraud this instrument became a nullity, it had no place in the suit
pending, and a judgment entered pursuant thereto would have no more sanctity than the
stipulation itself. To say that a trial court could not in furtherance of justice protect itself from
entering such a judgment would be to shear the court of a most valuable and effective power.
The order appealed from is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to set aside the
judgment and entertain the motion of the plaintiff.
Let the order issue accordingly.
____________
41 Nev. 86, 86 (1917) Ex Parte Nagel
[No. 2306]
In the Matter of the Application of W. A. NAGEL
for a Writ of Habeas Corpus.
[167 Pac. 689]
1. Habeas CorpusEvidenceBailable Offense.
The voluntary statement of petitioner standing in the record uncontradicted, together with other evidence
tending to connect him with the death of deceased, held sufficient to warrant the court in denying bail,
within Const. Art. 1, sec. 7, denying bail in capital cases when the proof is evident or the presumption
great.
2. BailBailable OffensesDiscretion of Court.
In capital cases, the court may grant bail where peculiar circumstances appear, or where the court in the
exercise of sound judicial discretion determines that the proof is not evident and the presumption is not
sufficiently great.
Application of W. A. Nagel for a writ of habeas corpus. Denied.
Mack & Green, for Petitioner.
J. H. White, District Attorney, and Leonard B. Fowler, for Respondent.
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This is an original proceeding in habeas corpus.
The petitioner, W. A. Nagel, is held on commitment issuing out of the justice's court of
Rawhide township, Mineral County, State of Nevada, by F. B. Balzar, sheriff of said county.
Said commitment is as follows:
To the Sheriff of the County of Mineral: An order having been made this day by me that
W. A. Nagel be held to answer on the charge of murder, committed in said township and
county, on or about the 26th day of August, 1917, you are commanded to receive him in your
custody and detain him until he is legally discharged, and to be committed to the custody of
the sheriff of said county. Dated this 14th day of September. Alexander Proskey, Justice of
the Peace of Said Township.
By these proceedings petitioner seeks to be admitted to bail. Article 1, section 7, of the
constitution provides: "All persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, unless for capital
offenses when the proof is evident or the presumption great."
41 Nev. 86, 87 (1917) Ex Parte Nagel
All persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, unless for capital offenses when the
proof is evident or the presumption great.
In furtherance of his application for release on bail, petitioner filed in this court a transcript
of the proceedings before the committing magistrate in Rawhide township. Petitioner relies
entirely upon this transcript, and contends that this transcript discloses a lack of evident proof
and the absence of great presumption. In view of the fact that defendant must appear for trial
before a jury in the district court, it might be improper for this tribunal to pass in detail upon
the weight or conclusiveness of the evidence as set forth in the record of the committing
magistrate. Any comment which we may deem necessary to make here is not to be regarded
as passing upon the conclusiveness of the evidence as it is before us in the record.
The party deceased, whose death petitioner is accused of producing, appears to have made
a number of statements immediately prior to her death as to the cause of her injuries and as to
the parties who produced them. Several witnesses testified that the deceased stated that her
injuries had been received at the hands of a Mrs. Rose. In the testimony of the witness Mabel
Rollins we find the following:
Q. Will you state, as near as you can remember, the exact words used by Mrs. Kelly, in
answer to Mrs. Flynn's inquiry? A. She said Mrs. Byrdwho, every time after she named her,
she called her Mrs. Roseshe said that Mrs. Byrd hit her with a cleaver, and Mr. Nagel said,
Go to it.'
From the testimony of the witness H. W. Guinan it appears that, in a conversation had with
the witness the day following that on which the deceased received the injuries that caused her
death, petitioner made the following voluntary statement:
Q. Have you had more than one conversation with Mr. Nagel after this affair? A. I did.
Q. You can state when and where, and what was said. A. The next conversation I had
with Mr. Nagel was in front of what is called Nagel's store on Tuesday morning.
41 Nev. 86, 88 (1917) Ex Parte Nagel
was in front of what is called Nagel's store on Tuesday morning. That would be August 28th.
I was sitting on a box in front of Kelly's store. Mr. Nagel, who was at the Yellowstone, came
across to where I was sitting, and I told him I wanted to send a telegram to Fallon about a
business in which we were both concerned. He told me Mrs. Kelly was sick in bed, and that I
would not be able to send my message that day. Then in the course of the conversation that
followed he told me Mrs. Kelly (the deceased) was blaming those women, mentioning Mrs.
Haynes and Mrs. Byrd, for the injury she had received. But, he said I want you to understand,
and everybody to understand, that I alone am responsible for what happened to Mrs. Kelly. I
wanted to show that God damn bitch that she could not come into my store and throw things
around as she threw them around in Joe Kelly's store.' That is the size and substance of the
conversation.
The record discloses that the deceased, Mrs. Kelly, received injuries in or about the store
or on the premises owned and conducted by petitioner in the town of Rawhide. The injuries,
as testified to by the autopsy surgeon, consisted of wounds and lacerations on the head. The
deceased was found by one of the witnesses, who testified for the state, in a dazed and
bleeding condition, on the sidewalk or street immediately in front of the premises of
petitioner.
As to whether or not there is evident proof or great presumption of a capital offense having
been committed by petitioner, it will suffice, we think, to apply the rule laid down in this
court by Mr. Chief Justice Leonard in the case of Ex Parte Finlen, 20 Nev. 141, at page 151,
18 Pac. 827, at page 832. There the learned justice quoted approvingly from the review of
Judge Cowen's opinion in the case of People v. McLeod, 1 Hill, N. Y. 377, 37 Am. Dec. 328,
as follows:
The true rule upon the subject of bail or discharge after indictment for murder
undoubtedly is for the judge to refuse to bail or discharge upon any affidavit or proof that is
susceptible of being controverted on the other side."
41 Nev. 86, 89 (1917) Ex Parte Nagel
that is susceptible of being controverted on the other side.
Later in the opinion, Mr. Chief Justice Leonard stated the rule which we deem most
applicable here as follows:
If the question of a defendant's guilt of a capital offense hinges upon a fact involved in
doubt, as if the existence of a fact on which his guilt or innocence of the offense charged in
the indictment depends may from the evidence be found one way or the other, then bail
should be refused.
The voluntary statement of petitioner, made to a third party after the occurrences at which
deceased received the mortal injuries, stands here in the record, as it stood before the
committing magistrate, undenied.
1. Counsel for petitioner contends that this testimony is unbelievable, and that no jury
would give credence to the statements. Of this we are not presumed to judge in proceedings
of this character. This statement, standing in the record uncontradicted, together with other
evidence tending to connect petitioner with the death of the deceased, is, in our judgment,
sufficient to warrant this court in saying that the proof is sufficiently evident and the
presumption is sufficiently great to bring the case within the inhibition of section 7 of article
1 of the constitution, denying bail in capital offenses. The mere fact that a crime punishable
by death may also be punishable by imprisonment does not entitle the defendant as a matter
of right to be admitted to bail. (Ex Parte Dusenberry, 97 Mo. 504, 11 S. W. 217.) Where it
cannot be known until after conviction whether death will be the punishment, the question in
legal contemplation, on the application for bail, is whether the offense is of a character that
may be punished capitally. (Ex Parte McAnally, 53 Ala. 495, 25 Am. Rep. 646.)
2. In capital cases, it is generally held that constitutional exceptions, such as ours, merely
deprive the prisoner of his right to demand bail guaranteed under all cases, and leave with the
court the discretionary power vested in it at common law; therefore the court may grant
bail where peculiar circumstances appear, or where the court, in the exercise of sound
judicial discretion, determines that the proof is not evident and the presumption is not
sufficiently great.
41 Nev. 86, 90 (1917) Ex Parte Nagel
power vested in it at common law; therefore the court may grant bail where peculiar
circumstances appear, or where the court, in the exercise of sound judicial discretion,
determines that the proof is not evident and the presumption is not sufficiently great. (3 R. C.
L. sec. 5.)
The writ as prayed for will be denied. Petitioner is remanded to the custody of the sheriff
of Mineral County.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 90, 90 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
[No. 2276]
STEVE O'BRIEN, FRANK TESSIER, W. R. STOPER, C. CECCARELLI, H. LOOSE,
ALVIN HENDRICKSEN; JOHN GALLAGHER and GEORGE BROWN, Trading as
GALLAGHER & BROWN; C. and L. AROBIO, Trading as C. & L. AROBIO;
BETERLRIDE and BILBOA, Trading as BETERLRIDE & BILBOA; GEORGE
BODINE and CHARLES PEFFERLING, Trading as BODINE & PEFFERLING; and
JOHN RAE and C. STACY, Trading as RAE & STACY, Petitioners, v. A. F.
TROUSDALE, W. L. BRACKETT, and W. H. COOPER, Comprising the Board of
County Commissioners, in and for the County of Humboldt, State of Nevada, and S. G.
LAMB, Sheriff of Said County, Respondents.
[167 Pac. 1007]
1. ProhibitionOrdinance Not in Effect.
Prohibition will not issue to restrain the enforcement of an ordinance not in effect, since there must be a
cause pending before the writ will issue.
2. ProhibitionDiscretion of Court.
The writ of prohibition is not a writ of right, but one of sound judicial discretion, to be issued or refused
according to the facts of each particular case.
3. ProhibitionMinisterial Acts.
Rev. Laws, 5708, providing that the writ of prohibition arrests the proceedings of any tribunal, etc.,
whether exercising functions judicial or ministerial, when such proceedings are without or in excess of
jurisdiction, does not enlarge the writ so as to reach proceedings not of a judicial
character, and it will not issue to prohibit county commissioners and county sheriff
from enforcing an ordinance requiring licenses for selling, etc., liquors in restaurant,
etc.
41 Nev. 90, 91 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
or in excess of jurisdiction, does not enlarge the writ so as to reach proceedings not of a judicial character,
and it will not issue to prohibit county commissioners and county sheriff from enforcing an ordinance
requiring licenses for selling, etc., liquors in restaurant, etc.
4. CourtsJurisdictionWrits.
By Const. art. 6, sec. 4. conferring jurisdiction upon the supreme court to issue writs of prohibition,
the intention of the framers was undoubtedly to confer the right to issue the writ as it had been recognized
at common law.
5. StatutesConstructionAdoption from Other State.
Where the legislature of one state adopts the statute of another, the act of adoption raises the presumption
that the legislature of the adopting state enacted the statute in the light of the construction that had been
placed upon it in the parent state.
Original proceeding in prohibition by Steve O'Brien and others against A. F. Trousdale
and others, comprising the Board of County Commissioners of Humboldt County, and S. G.
Lamb, Sheriff. Alternative writ vacated, and application for a peremptory writ denied.
Young & Brown, for Petitioners:
The state constitution gives the supreme court jurisdiction to issue writs of prohibition to
inferior tribunals. In regulating this power, the legislature has granted the court jurisdiction
over inferior tribunals, and specifically names ministerial boards. (Rev. Laws, 5708, 5709;
Eddy v. Board of Embalmers, 40 Nev. 329.)
Petitioners are not attempting to restrain the board of county commissioners from passing the
ordinance, for that has been already done; but they are attempting to restrain the
commissioners and the sheriff of Humboldt County from enforcing the terms of the
ordinance, on the grounds that it is unconstitutional and the license excessive. It is
unconstitutional because it deprives petitioners of their liberty. (14th Amend. Const. U. S.;
Const. Nev., art. 1, sec. 8; Marymont v. Banking Board, 33 Nev. 333.)
The ordinance is unconstitutional as a police regulation, in that it imposes an unreasonable
and excessive license. It is a special law designed to carry into effect police regulations
regarding the sale of liquors to children and women already on the statute books.
41 Nev. 90, 92 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
regulations regarding the sale of liquors to children and women already on the statute books.
(Rev. Laws, 6842, 6843, 6506.) Where a general law applies, no special legislation can be
enacted. (Const. Nev., art. 4, sec. 1.)
Thos. E. Powell, District Attorney, for Respondents:
Have the petitioners such an interest in the enforcement of the ordinance as to entitle them
to question its validity? The enforcement of the ordinance would in no way affect the rights
of petitioners, and they therefore have no interest in defeating it and cannot in this court
question its legality or constitutionality. This issue has not been met by counsel for
petitioners. (State v. Beck, 25 Nev. 68; Estate of Stocknoth, 7 Nev. 881; Riter v. Douglas, 32
Nev. 400, 6 R. C. L. 91.)
Prohibition is not the proper remedy for the alleged injury. The function here sought to be
restrained is a ministerial and not a judicial function. Prohibition issues to prevent the
exercise by a tribunal possessing judicial powers of jurisdiction in matters of which it has
cognizance. (Thompson v. Tracy, 60 N. Y. 31; Ex Parte Broadlaght, 2 Hill, 367, 39 Am. Dec.
593; People v. Supervisors, 1 Hill, 195.) It is a proper remedy when the inferior court either
entertains a proceeding in which it has no jurisdiction, or, having jurisdiction, it assumes to
exercise an unauthorized power. (Appo v. People, 20 N. Y. 531; Thompson v. Tracy, supra;
Hindman v. Colom, 46 Wash. 317.) The object of the writ of prohibition is to prevent a court
of peculiar, limited, or inferior jurisdiction from assuming jurisdiction of a matter beyond its
legal cognizance. It can be issued only to restrain the exercise of judicial functions. (2 Bailey
on Habeas Corpus, 1378.)
The Supreme Court of California has many times decided that the legislature cannot
enlarge or extend the common-law office of the writ of prohibition so as to include
ministerial functions; and while the statutes of both California and Nevada (the Nevada
statute being copied literally from that of California) provide that the writ of prohibition may
be invoked to arrest proceedings either judicial or ministerial, all of the California decisions
are to the effect that the attempt to enlarge the common-law office of the writ to include
ministerial functions is unconstitutional and void.
41 Nev. 90, 93 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
either judicial or ministerial, all of the California decisions are to the effect that the attempt
to enlarge the common-law office of the writ to include ministerial functions is
unconstitutional and void. The writ of prohibition named in the constitution is the
common-law writ, and it cannot be changed. (Spring Valley W. Co. v. San Francisco, 52 Cal.
111; Maurer v. Mitchell, 53 Cal. 289; People v. Board, 54 Cal. 404; Camron v. Kenfield, 57
Cal. 550; Farmers' Coop. Union v. Thresher, 62 Cal. 407; Hobart v. Tillotson, 66 Cal. 210;
Havemeyer v. Superior Court, 84 Cal. 327; Harris v. Recorder's Court, 15 Cal. App. 104; 2
Bailey on Habeas Corpus, 1378; High, Ext. Leg. Rem. 3d ed. sec. 763; Low v. Crown Point
M. Co., 2 Nev. 75.)
Even though there were for the petitioners no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law, the
proper remedy, under our law and practice would be by injunction. (2 High on Injunction, 4th
ed. sec. 1244; 25 Cyc. 632; Strouse v. Police Court, 84 Cal. 49; Agassiz v. Superior Court, 90
Cal. 101; Cross v. Superior Court, 83 Pac. 815; Lindley v. Superior Court, 141 Cal. 220.)
The passage of the ordinance in question is a proper exercise of police power. (6 R. C. L.
211; 8 Cyc. 1110.) The mere statement by petitioners that the ordinance is an illegal law and
regulation is a conclusion of law and not a statement of fact. (5 Standard Proc. 216; Knapp,
Stout & Co. v. City of St. Louis, 156 Mo. 343.)
The board of county commissioners has the power to pass the ordinance in question. (Rev.
Laws, 877.) This authority has been confirmed by decision of this court. (Board v. Schmidt,
39 Nev. 456.)
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
This is a petition addressed to this court by certain persons engaged in the saloon and
restaurant business in the town of Lovelock, Humboldt County, Nevada, praying that this
court will, in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, issue its writ of prohibition, restraining
and prohibiting the county commissioners of Humboldt County, acting as a town board with
reference to the affairs and business of the town of Lovelock, and S. G. Lamb, sheriff of
said county, from enforcing an ordinance passed by said board requiring licenses for the
selling, serving, furnishing, or disposing of spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors, or any
admixture thereof, in restaurants, dining-rooms, lunch-rooms, or other places of business
where meals are sold, served, or furnished to the public in the said town of Lovelock.
41 Nev. 90, 94 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
affairs and business of the town of Lovelock, and S. G. Lamb, sheriff of said county, from
enforcing an ordinance passed by said board requiring licenses for the selling, serving,
furnishing, or disposing of spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors, or any admixture thereof, in
restaurants, dining-rooms, lunch-rooms, or other places of business where meals are sold,
served, or furnished to the public in the said town of Lovelock. The petitioners aver that the
ordinance in question is an illegal law and regulation affecting their business; that a failure to
comply with its terms and conditions would subject them to an illegal arrest and
imprisonment, and they would be deprived of their liberty without due process of law; that
the petitioners have no plain, speedy, or adequate remedy at law or in equity, and unless relief
be granted as prayed for, an irreparable hardship and injury will be done petitioners by the
enforcement of said ordinance.
1. We issued the alternative writ in this cause upon the assumption that the ordinance
complained of was in effect, but it affirmatively appears that it was not. The jurisdiction of
the respondent board over the subject-matter of the ordinance is not questioned, but the
petitioners, through fear or anticipation of its enforcement, now invoke the remedy of
prohibition to test its validity.
An application for a writ of prohibition before the actual commencement of an action or
proceeding is premature, since there must be a cause pending before the writ will issue.
(State v. Ryan, 180 Mo. 32, 79 S. W. 429; Darnell v. Vandine, 64 W. Va. 53, 60 S. E. 996;
Haldeman v. Davis, 28 W. Va. 327; Mealing et al. v. City Council of Augusta, Dudley's Reps.
221; State v. Judge, 33 La. Ann. 1284; Sherlock v. Jacksonville, 17 Fla. 93; Wood on
Mandamus and Prohibition, p. 145; 32 Cyc. 628; 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 206.)
2. The writ of prohibition is not a writ of right, but one of sound judicial discretion, to be
issued or refused according to the facts of each particular case. This practice may be treated
as stare decisis in this state.
41 Nev. 90, 95 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
practice may be treated as stare decisis in this state. (Walcott v. Wells, 21 Nev. 50, 24 Pac.
367, 9 L. R. A. 59, 37 Am. St. Rep. 478.) It is justified only by extreme necessity, and not
then, unless the other remedies provided by law are inadequate to afford full relief.
We are adverse to establishing the practice of encouraging applications for extraordinary
remedies by anticipating that a cause will be pending, and issue the process in advance of the
actual pendency of the proceeding which the writ is used to arrest. (State v. Ryan, supra.)
The alternative writ heretofore issued is vacated, and the application for a peremptory writ
is denied.
It is so ordered.
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur in the order and in the opinion of Mr. Justice Sanders, but I deem it proper to
express my views on another phase of the question.
Petitioner by these proceedings seeks to prohibit the respondents A. F. Trousdale, W. L.
Brackett, and W. H. Cooper, comprising the board of county commissioners of Humboldt
County, and S. G. Lamb, sheriff of said county, from enforcing a certain ordinance providing
for the licensing of certain lines of business, and from collecting the license provided for in
the ordinance.
3, 4. From the view that I take in this matter, not only is the application here premature,
but by these proceedings petitioner seeks to accomplish by the writ of prohibition a
something for which the writ was never intended. Section 4 of article 6 of our constitution, in
conferring jurisdiction upon the supreme court, among other things provides:
The court shall also have power to issue writs of mandamus, certiorari, prohibition, quo
warranto, and habeas corpus and also all writs necessary or proper to the complete exercise
of its appellate jurisdiction.
Section 5708, Revised Laws 1912, provides as follows:
The writ of prohibition is the counterpart of the writ of mandate.
41 Nev. 90, 96 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
writ of mandate. It arrests the proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board, or person,
whether exercising functions judicial or ministerial, when such proceedings are without or in
excess of the jurisdiction of such tribunal, corporation, board, or person.
It was undoubtedly the intention of the framers of the organic law to confer upon this court
the right to issue the writ of prohibition as the same had been and was recognized at common
law. At common law this writ issued, with but rare exception, only from the courts having
common-law jurisdiction. The scope and function of the writ or prohibition at common law
was to prohibit a peculiar and inferior court from assuming an unauthorized jurisdiction. The
issuance of the writ was authorized only to restrain the exercise of judicial functions. (Smith
v. Whitney, 116 U. S. 167, 6 Sup. Ct. 570, 29 L. Ed. 601.) In the common-law courts of
England, as well as in those courts of the United States having common-law jurisdiction, it is
emphatically held that the writ of prohibition will not issue to restrain or prevent the acts of
an executive or ministerial officer. The function of the writ of prohibition is to prevent acts in
excess of jurisdiction by a tribunal having judicial powers. The scope of the writ at common
law never included the restraining of ministerial acts. (Thompson v. Tracy et al., 60 N. Y. 31.)
It is to officers exercising judicial functions and to tribunals where such functions are
administered that the writ of prohibition could properly be addressed. (Ex Parte Braudlacht, 2
Hill, 367, 38 Am. Dec. 593.)
It is unnecessary, in view of the position taken by Mr. Justice Sanders in his opinion, for
me to dwell at length in this concurring opinion on the force or validity of section 5708 of our
Revised Laws.
The Supreme Court of California, in the case of Maurer v. Mitchell, 53 Cal. 289, having
before it the exact question with which I assume to deal, held, as do many other courts, that at
common law the writ of prohibition was a remedial writ provided to check encroachments of
jurisdiction; that its office was to restrain subordinate courts and inferior tribunals from
exceeding their jurisdiction; that the writ of prohibition mentioned in the constitution {the
constitution of California as to the power of the supreme court to issue writs is identical
to ours) was the writ as known to the common law; and that the language of the statute
did not require the court to hold that the office of the writ of prohibition had been
extended.
41 Nev. 90, 97 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
encroachments of jurisdiction; that its office was to restrain subordinate courts and inferior
tribunals from exceeding their jurisdiction; that the writ of prohibition mentioned in the
constitution (the constitution of California as to the power of the supreme court to issue writs
is identical to ours) was the writ as known to the common law; and that the language of the
statute did not require the court to hold that the office of the writ of prohibition had been
extended. The statute of California to which the supreme court of that state referred was as
follows:
The writ of prohibition is the counterpart of the writ of mandate. It arrests the
proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board, or person, * * * when such proceedings are
without or in excess of the jurisdiction of such tribunal, corporation, board or person. (Code
Civ. Proc. sec. 1102.)
The Supreme Court of California, viewing the provisions of the statute as it then existed,
held in effect that the writ should not issue in cases in which it could not have been resorted
to prior to the enactment of this section. Following the decision of the supreme court in the
Maurer-Mitchell case, supra, the legislature of California amended the statute and attempted
to provide that the writ of prohibition could be resorted to for the purpose of arresting
proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board, or person * * * whether exercising functions
judicial or ministerial, * * * without or in excess of the jurisdiction.
In the case of Camron v. Kenfield, 57 Cal. 550, the supreme court again asserted the
principle announced in the Maurer-Mitchell case, and held that the writ of prohibition
mentioned in the constitution was the writ as known as common law, and further held that the
legislature was without power to enact the statute which purported to extend the function of
the writ of prohibition and declared the enactment void, in so far as it sought to affect
ministerial acts or officers. To the same effect were the following cases: Farmers' Union v.
Thresher, 62 Cal.
41 Nev. 90, 98 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
Thresher, 62 Cal. 407; Hobart v. Tillson, 66 Cal. 210, 5 Pac. 83.
The cases of Camron v. Kenfield, Farmers' Union v. Thresher, and Hobart v. Tillson were
again referred to approvingly in the case of McGinnis v. Mayor and Common Council, 153
Cal. 711, 96 Pac. 367.
The Supreme Court of Utah, having before it the question of the office of the writ of
prohibition under constitutional and statutory provisions very similar to ours, cited with
approval the decisions of the Supreme Court of California in the case of Camron v. Kenfield,
Farmers' Union v. Thresher, and Hobart v. Tillson, supra, and held that the writ of
prohibition would only lie to restrain acts which were in some degree judicial. (State ex rel.
Robinson v. Durand, 36 Utah, 93, 104 Pac. 760.) The opinion in this case is a lucid review of
the whole matter.
In the case of State ex rel. Kennedy v. Martin, 24 Mont. 379, 62 Pac. 493, 51 L. R. A. 958,
the Supreme Court of Montana, being called upon to determine this question under
constitutional and statutory provisions quite like those of California, cited with approval the
California cases to which I have referred; and there the court held that, notwithstanding the
statute (identical to our section 5708, Rev. Laws), the common-law office of the writ of
prohibition was not enlarged so as to reach proceedings not of a judicial character.
The Supreme Court of Idaho, in the case of Williams v. Lewis, 6 Idaho, 184, 54 Pac. 620,
held that the writ of prohibition under the statute of that state would lie to restrain the action
of a ministerial officer when it appeared that such action was illegal and beyond his
jurisdiction.
The Supreme Court of Montana, in the case of State ex rel. Kennedy v. Martin, supra,
after comparing the decision of the Supreme Court of California in the case of Maurer v.
Mitchell, supra, with that of the Supreme Court of Idaho in the case of Williams v. Lewis,
supra, sanctioned the former, but refused to follow the latter and declined to approve it.
41 Nev. 90, 99 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
sanctioned the former, but refused to follow the latter and declined to approve it.
In the case of State v. Clark Co. Ct., 41 Mo. 44, the supreme court of that state, having
before it the question of the function of the writ of prohibition to prohibit the collection of
taxes, etc., held that the writ was not available to restrain the performance of ministerial acts,
however erroneous such ministerial acts might be. To the same effect we note the decision of
the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in the case of State v. Gary, 33 Wis. 93, and also Atkins v.
Siddons, 66 Ala. 453.
The question upon which I would here dwell has never been squarely interpreted or passed
upon by this court, save and except in so far as expressions of the court have intimated the
true and correct rule.
In Low v. Crown Point M. Co., 2 Nev. 75, this court said:
Properly speaking, the office of the writ of prohibition is not to correct errors, but to
prevent courts from transcending the limits of their jurisdiction in the exercise of judicial but
not ministerial power.
In the case of Walcott v. Wells, 21 Nev. 51, 24 Pac. 368, 9 L. R. A. 59, 37 Am. St. Rep.
478, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Hawley, said:
The object of the writ is to restrain inferior courts from acting without authority of law in
cases where wrong, damage and injustice are likely to follow such actions.
To the same effect will be found the expression of this court in the case of State ex rel.
Thatcher v. District Court, 38 Nev. 323, 149 Pac. 178.
Mr. High, in his treatise on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, says:
The writ of prohibition may be defined as an extraordinary judicial writ, issuing out of a
court of superior jurisdiction and directed to an inferior court, for the purpose of preventing
the inferior tribunal from usurping a jurisdiction with which it is not legally vested.
41 Nev. 90, 100 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
It is an original remedial writ, and is the remedy afforded by the common law to correct
encroachments of jurisdiction by inferior courts, and is used to keep such courts within the
limits and bounds prescribed for them by law. * * *
Again the author says:
Nor should it be granted except in a clear case of want of jurisdiction in the court whose
action it is sought to prohibit. And to warrant the relief the petition must clearly show that an
inferior court is about to proceed in a matter over which it has no jurisdiction, and, unless this
is distinctly and affirmatively shown, the relief will not be granted.
And, again, he says:
A distinction is taken, in the exercise of the jurisdiction, between cases where the
proceedings of the court which it is sought to prohibit are of a judicial nature and cases where
they are merely administrative or ministerial. And while the writ will lie in proper cases as to
matters of a purely judicial nature, it will not go if the proceedings which it is sought to
prevent are only ministerial. (High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, sec. 762, et seq.)
The case of Winsor v. Bridges, 24 Wash. 540, 64 Pac. 780, was an original proceeding in
prohibition wherein the board of regents of the University of Washington sought to prohibit
the land commissioners of that state from selling or attempting to sell, or leasing or
attempting to lease, a certain tract of land in the city of Seattle. There the Supreme Court of
Washington, in a most comprehensive review of the function of the writ of prohibition, and
after dwelling at some length on the interpretations rendered by the Supreme Court of
California (Camron v. Kenfield, supra) and of Montana (State ex rel. Scharnikow v. Hogan,
24 Mont. 379, 62 Pac. 493, 51 L. R. A. 958) and Idaho (Williams v. Lewis, supra) as well as
Utah (People v. House, 4 Utah, 369, 10 Pac. 838), held in effect that the writ of prohibition as
provided for by the constitution of Washington was practically the common-law writ, and
its purpose was to restrain the exercise of unauthorized judicial or quasi judicial power.
41 Nev. 90, 101 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
was practically the common-law writ, and its purpose was to restrain the exercise of
unauthorized judicial or quasi judicial power. The court in that case reaffirmed its decision in
the case of State ex rel. (White v. Board of State Land Commissioners, 23 Wash. 700, 63 Pac.
532, to the effect that to warrant the writ to any organized body other than a court it is
necessary that the acts sought to be prohibited be purely judicial and and not executive,
administrative, or legislative.
I make special comment on the cases of State v. Clark Co. Ct., supra, Farmers' Union v.
Thresher, supra, and Hobart v. Tillson, supra, because in each of those cases the courts of
Missouri and California were dealing with a question analogous to that at bar, namely, acts of
ministerial officers in relation to assessment and collection of taxes upon personal property.
Although many decisions may be found in our reports dealing with the question of
prohibition, its scope, and applicability, it may be well to note that all of the decisions prior to
1912 were dealing with the writ of prohibition as authorized by the constitution (section 4,
art. 6), and hence as comprehended at common law. The section of our constitution referred
to is one dealing with the jurisdiction of the supreme court, and was taken in substance from
article 6, section 4, of the constitution of the State of California as amended September 3,
1862. It was not until 1911 that our legislative department here sought to enact a specific
statute (Rev. Laws, 5708) dealing with and defining the writ of prohibition. Section 5708 of
our Revised Laws, being section 766 of our code of civil practice, as enacted March 17, 1911,
is taken verbatim from the code of California as enacted March 11, 1872, as amended March
3, 1881 (Kerr's Cyc. Codes of Cal. C. C. P. sec. 1102).
All of the decisions of the Supreme Court of California to which I have referred as bearing
upon the function and office of the writ of prohibition were rendered prior to 1911, the date
on which our legislature adopted the code of California applicable to prohibition and made
it a part of the civil practice code of this state.
41 Nev. 90, 102 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
the code of California applicable to prohibition and made it a part of the civil practice code of
this state.
5. Where the legislature of one state adopts the statute of another, the act of adoption
raises the presumption that the legislature of the adopting state enacted the statute in the light
of the construction that had been placed upon it in the parent state. (Williams v. Glasgow, 1
Nev. 533; McLane v. Abrams, 2 Nev. 199; State v. Robey, 8 Nev. 312; Ormsby County v.
Kerney, 37 Nev. 371, 142 Pac. 803.)
I know of nothing prevailing as to conditions or circumstances in this state that would
cause an exception to exist whereby this rule of statutory adoption should not be applicable to
the matter at bar. (First National Bank of Butte v. Bell Co., 8 Mont. 46, 19 Pac. 403.) Our
organic law relative to the jurisdiction of the supreme court, as I have already set out, is
substantially the same as that relative to the same subject in the State of California. This is
especially to be considered in applying the rule of adoption of construction to which I have
referred. (Swofford v. Mills, 86 Fed. 556; Kirman v. Powning, 25 Nev. 378, 60 Pac. 834, 61
Pac. 1090.)
I am convinced that section 5708 of our Revised Laws does not in effect extend the office
or function of the writ of prohibition from that recognized at common law, and that by the
scope of the writ only acts of a judicial nature are affected, while acts purely ministerial,
legislative, or executive are not to be interfered with. It may be that boards or officers having
quasi judicial functions would, under statutes such as ours, be subject to the force and effect
of a writ of prohibition, but this question is not involved here.
Neither the acts of the board of county commissioners in enacting or publishing the
proposed ordinance, nor the acts of the sheriff of Humboldt County in collecting the licenses
under such ordinance, could be regarded as in any sense judicial, or even quasi judicial, in
nature.
41 Nev. 90, 103 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
It is not legislative or executive or ministerial acts that are subject to the force or effect of the
writ of prohibition.
I do not accede to the conclusion in the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Coleman as to
petitioners having an adequate remedy at law. This would signify the absence of other
remedy. The case of Wells Fargo Co. v. Dayton, 11 Nev. 161, cited in support of the
assertion, is in my judgment in no wise applicable. That was a suit against the assessor of
Lincoln County to prevent the collection of what was alleged to be an illegal tax imposed for
revenue. Such a tax was enforcible and collectible by the avenues provided by the statute. The
ordinance, the validity of which petitioner here sought to avoid and test by the writ of
prohibition, is one enacted for police regulation as well as for revenue. The ordinance in
question provides in its concluding section that:
Any person, persons, firm, company, corporation, or association, keeping, conducting,
managing, or maintaining any restaurant * * * where meals or lunches are sold * * * who or
which shall sell, serve or furnish, or permit to be sold, served, or furnished, or otherwise
disposed of, any spirituous, vinous, malt, or brewed liquors * * * in violation of the
provisions of this ordinance, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and on conviction thereof shall
be punished by a fine of not less than fifty dollars and not more than two hundred and fifty
dollars, or by imprisonment in the county jail for a period of not less than twenty-five days
and not more than one hundred and twenty-five days, or by both such fine and
imprisonment.
There is a vast difference, in my judgment, between a tax imposed for revenue, collectible
through the civil processes of the law, and a license for police regulation, failure to acquire
which constitutes a crime punishable by imprisonment. Equally so, there is a vast difference
between the remedy that may be resorted to by the party seeking either to test the validity of
the same or avoid the consequences.
41 Nev. 90, 104 (1917) O'Brien v. Commissioners
party seeking either to test the validity of the same or avoid the consequences. However, this
matter is not properly before us in this proceeding.
Coleman, J., concurring:
I concur in the opinion of Sanders, J., and in the order. I also concur in the opinion of
McCarran, C. J.
Aside from the fact that the courts are unanimous in the view taken by the Supreme Court
of California, as set forth in the concurring opinion of the learned chief justice (except in
Idaho, where reasons exist for a different rule), it would seem that an additional reason exists
for this court to adopt the view of the California court, and that is, that both our constitutional
and statutory provisions relative to the writ of prohibition were taken from California, and our
statutory provision was enacted some time after the decisions in the California cases were
rendered. In the light of this fact, I think we must assume that our legislature intended to
adopt the California statute as construed by the highest court of that state.
While the point has not been urged upon us, I am inclined to the view that petitioners have
an adequate remedy at law, in that they may pay the license tax under protest and bring a suit
at law to recover the same. (Wells Fargo & Co. v. Dayton, 11 Nev. 161; 37 Cyc. 1260.)
____________
41 Nev. 105, 105 (1917) State v. McFarlin
[No. 2291]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. GEORGE
B. McFARLIN, Petitioner.
[167 Pac. 1011]
1. BailAfter ConvictionChange of Rule.
Const. art. 1, sec. 7, providing that all persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, unless for
capital offenses when the proof is evident, or the presumption great, was only designed to alter the
common-law rule as to criminal cases before conviction, leaving the matter of bail after conviction
discretionary.
2. BailAfter ConvictionProbable Cause.
Under Rev. Laws, 7294, providing that an appeal from a conviction shall stay the execution upon filing
with the clerk of the court, in which the conviction shall have been had, a certificate of the judge of such
court, or a justice of the supreme court, that there is probable cause for the appeal, and section 7314,
providing that, after conviction of an offense not punishable with death, a defendant on appeal may be
admitted to bail (1) as a matter of right, where the appeal is from a judgment imposing a fine, and (2) as a
matter of discretion in all other cases, the element of probable cause for the appeal from a conviction and
judgment of imprisonment is essential, and over which judicial discretion may be exercised on the question
of bail.
3. BailAfter ConvictionStatute.
Rev. Laws, 7294, is in the nature of a supersedeas, whereby the execution of the judgment of conviction
is stayed pending appeal, and standing alone, has nothing to do with the question of admission to bail,
which is governed by section 7314.
4. BailAfter ConvictionProceedings.
Under Rev. Laws, 7294, 7314, where petitioner's appeal from a conviction for embezzlement sentencing
him to imprisonment was properly taken in good faith, and it appears that newly discovered evidence,
which was not available at or during the trial, is now available, and is of such a nature as might reasonably
be expected to raise a reasonable doubt of guilt, petitioner will be admitted to bail by the supreme court.
Petition for certificate of probable cause.
George B. McFarlin was convicted of embezzlement, and, pending his appeal, petitions for
a certificate of probable cause, and to be admitted to bail. Heard at chambers by the Chief
Justice, and petitioner admitted to bail.
James M. Frame and Howard Browne, for Petitioner.
George J. Kenney, District Attorney of Churchill County, Geo. B. Thatcher,
Attorney-General, and E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, for Respondent.
41 Nev. 105, 106 (1917) State v. McFarlin
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, and E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, for
Respondent.
McCarran, C. J. (in chambers):
Petitioner was convicted of the crime of embezzlement by a jury in the Eighth judicial
district court, and thereafter made his motion in that court for a new trial upon the several
statutory grounds, including that of newly discovered evidence. The trial court overruled the
latter motion, and pronounced judgment and imposed sentence on petitioner, fixing the
penalty at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a period of one to fourteen years. The
defendant's notice of appeal to the supreme court was duly filed within time as prescribed by
our criminal practice act. The petition here recites the essential facts, and further presents that
the record has already been transcribed, and that defendant will proceed with all expedition to
make his bill of exceptions and have the same settled and signed. Petitioner prays for a
certificate of probable cause, and my attention was directed to the statute in this respect.
Section 7294, Revised Laws 1912, the same being section 444 of our criminal practice act,
is as follows:
An appeal to the supreme court from a judgment of conviction shall stay the execution of
the judgment upon filing with the clerk of the court in which the conviction shall have been
had a certificate of the judge of such court, or of a justice of the supreme court, that in his
opinion there is probable cause for the appeal, but not otherwise.
In the case of State v. Murphy, 23 Nev. 391, 48 Pac. 628, this court held that the appeal
from a judgment of imprisonment does not operate as a stay of execution, and the defendant,
if in custody, must so continue, unless admitted to bail.
Section 7314, Revised Laws (section 464, Criminal Practice Act), is as follows:
After conviction of an offense not punishable with death, a defendant who has appealed
may be admitted to bail: {1) As a matter of right, where the appeal is from a judgment
imposing a fine only; {2) as a matter of discretion in all other cases."
41 Nev. 105, 107 (1917) State v. McFarlin
to bail: (1) As a matter of right, where the appeal is from a judgment imposing a fine only; (2)
as a matter of discretion in all other cases.
Section 7326, Revised Laws (section 476, Criminal Practice Act), is as follows:
In the cases in which the defendant may be admitted to bail, upon an appeal, the order
admitting him to bail may be made by the court or judge who tried the case or by the court to
which the appeal is taken or the judge or a justice thereof.
I find that on a number of occasions the California courts and the judges thereof have
considered and determined this question, and in some instances their opinions meet with my
view as to the proper application of the statute; the code there being the same as ours. (Kerr's
Cyc. Codes, Penal Code, 1272.) In the case of Ex Parte Voll, 41 Cal. 29, the supreme court
considered the matter at length under proceedings in habeas corpus. Petitioner there urged the
contention that the provision of the constitution (art. 1, sec. 7) intended that bail should be
granted as a matter of right, even after conviction. It will be interesting to note here that the
provision of the constitution of California in this respect is identical with that found in our
constitution (art. 1, sec. 7) as follows:
All persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, unless for capital offenses when the
proof is evident, or the presumption great.
1. It was asserted by the court there, and we think correctly, that the clause of the
constitution cited is only designated to alter the rule of common law as to certain criminal
cases before conviction, and that the matter of bail after conviction is still left discretionary,
as it was at common law, with the modifications wrought by the statutes of the state. The
court said:
We are of the opinion that the constitution, in declaring bail to be a matter of right,
contemplated only those cases in which the guilt of the party had not been already judicially
ascertained; cases in which the prisoner as yet stood upon his plea of not guilty, supported
with all the presumptions of innocence with which the law delights to surround him.
41 Nev. 105, 108 (1917) State v. McFarlin
prisoner as yet stood upon his plea of not guilty, supported with all the presumptions of
innocence with which the law delights to surround him. But when his trial has been had, and
his plea proven false, the law will not stultify itself by presuming him other than that it has
itself adjudged him to be. If the constitution, indeed, intended to introduce the rule of
absolute right to bail, as well after as before conviction of such felonies, it would result that
no convict could be punished for his ascertained crime if he had either wealth or friends; for
no mere pecuniary considerations could weigh against the alternative of a degrading
imprisonment, at hard labor, for a crime involving moral turpitude. It would operate in
practice as a mere money commutation for the infamous corporeal punishment which the law
has denounced against the perpetration of crime.
In this decision we find the announcement of the principle so oft referred to by courts and
judges, to the effect that under statutes such as ours admission to bail after conviction is a
matter of sound judicial discretion, and that, too, only when the showing made presents
something unusual or extraordinary from which or out of which it may appear: First, that the
appeal is taken in good faith, and is perfected according to the statutory rule; and, second, that
there is some element or condition, properly questionable by the court of review, from which,
or out of which, the conviction theretofore had may be set aside, or that matters intervening
between the conviction and the application justify the exercise of discretion in favor of bail.
In the case of Ex Parte Hoge, 48 Cal. 3, it appears that petitioner had been convicted in a
municipal criminal court of the crime of assault made with a deadly weapon with the intent to
do bodily injury. The punishment provided by the California statute for the offense was fine
or imprisonment, or both. The municipal court had imposed sentence of imprisonment in the
state prison for the term of eighteen months, and from the judgment petitioner had appealed
to the supreme court.
41 Nev. 105, 109 (1917) State v. McFarlin
After taking his appeal, petitioner had appealed to the judge of the municipal court to be
admitted to bail pending appeal, and his application had been refused. In that case Mr. Justice
Wallace held that it was within the discretion of the court to impose a fine or to adjudge the
imprisonment. He says:
Either would have satisfied the statute which the prisoner had broken. Had the fine alone
been imposed, the positive rule of the statute would have permitted him to go upon bail
pending an appeal. * * * Yet his offense is the same, whether he be fined or be imprisoned. In
case the mere fine had been imposed, the statute itself set him at liberty pending an appeal.
Now that the imprisonment, however, has been adjudged, the statute leaves it to my
discretion to admit him to bail or not, as justice may seem to require.
Referring to his decision in the case of Ex Parte Voll, supra, the learned justice continued.:
If my discretion is to be interpreted by the rule of the statute in the other case, and I think
it ought, I am unable to see why the prisoner prosecuting an appeal should absolutely go at
large in the meantime in the one case, and absolutely go to the state prison in the meantime in
the other.
2. The conclusion reached in that case was that a refusal to admit to bail would be a
misapplication of the discretion conferred by the statute. It must be noted that in the case of
Ex Parte Hoge, supra, nothing, so far as the reported decision discloses, appears bearing upon
the phase of probable cause. I make special comment on the absence of this element as
disclosed by this case, because in my judgment the element of probable cause is one of the
very things on account of which the court may exercise its discretion. If nothing appears from
the application of the party convicted from which it may be reasonably inferred that there is a
probable cause for the appeal, one of the essential elements, if, indeed, not the most essential
element of the application, is wanting. It is this very thing that calls for the exercise of
judicial inquiry, and sets in motion, so to speak, the process through which judicial
discretion may be exercised on the question of bail.
41 Nev. 105, 110 (1917) State v. McFarlin
exercise of judicial inquiry, and sets in motion, so to speak, the process through which
judicial discretion may be exercised on the question of bail.
The case of Ex Parte Marks, 49 Cal. 680, was an application made by one convicted of
embezzlement and adjudged by a municipal criminal court to suffer imprisonment in the state
prison for a term of seven years. Mr. Justice Wallace, then chief justice of the Supreme Court
of California, after referring to the section of the statute of that state identical to our section
7314, Revised Laws, referred again to his opinion in the case of Ex Parte Hoge, supra, and
after a somewhat extended discussion of the principles involved, and of the statute applicable,
concluded that bail upon appeal should not be allowed except by a judge authorized to grant a
certificate, and then only in a case where circumstances of an extraordinary nature had
intervened. In arriving at the conclusion in this case, it is evident that the justice took into
consideration a change in the penal code of California prescribing as follows:
An appeal to the supreme court from a judgment of conviction stays the execution of the
judgment in all capital cases, and in all other cases, upon filing with the clerk of the court in
which the conviction was had, a certificate of the judge of such court, or of a justice of the
supreme court, that, in his opinion, there is probable cause for the appeal, but not otherwise.
(Section 1243.)
It will be noted that this is identical to our section 7294, Revised Laws. It will be noted
that in the last-mentioned case the rule was asserted that the discretion in cases in which
applications of this character are to be determined is not an arbitrary discretion, but one
measured by legal rules and by references to the analogies of the law. To the same effect we
find the case of Ex Parte Smallman et al., 54 Cal. 35, where Mr. Chief Justice Wallace again
passed upon the question.
In the case of Ex Parte Brown et al., 68 Cal. 176, 8 Pac.
41 Nev. 105, 111 (1917) State v. McFarlin
Pac. 829, the supreme court in bank referred approvingly to the cases of Ex Parte Voll, Ex
Parte Marks, and Ex Parte Smallman, and held that under the authority of these cases the
court ought not to admit to bail after a verdict of guilty unless when circumstances of
extraordinary character had intervened since conviction. To the same effect are the cases of
Ex Parte Smith, 89 Cal. 79, 26 Pac. 638, and Ex Parte Turner, 112 Cal. 627, 45 Pac. 571.
I am at a loss to know how the language of the court in that case can be taken literally. If,
indeed, the rule were to be taken as there asserted, that bail should not be allowed unless
when circumstances of extraordinary character had intervened since conviction, then the
question of probable cause for appeal as asserted in the statute would be entirely
eliminated, or at least would be limited to causes for appeal which might have intervened
since conviction. This in my judgment cannot be the intendment of our statute. One of the
reasons for a statute such as this, and indeed the primary object, is to afford opportunity to the
party convicted of a bailable offense to have his case reviewed by an appellate tribunal before
the sentence imposed shall go into execution. Hence the law declares that it is only when
probable cause for the appeal is made to appear from matters presented to the court that stay
of execution is permitted. This question of probable cause for appeal must necessarily
involve, not only matters intervening since conviction, or existing independently, but also
matters pertaining to the trial which in the opinion of the court or judge to whom the petition
is presented impress the appeal with the force of merit and good faith.
3, 4. As I view the several sections of our statute, section 7294, Revised Laws, is in the
nature of a supersedeas, whereby the execution of the judgment of the trial court is stayed
pending the appeal, when appeal is properly taken. (State v. Murphy, supra.) The statute,
standing alone, has nothing to do with the question of admitting to bail.
41 Nev. 105, 112 (1917) State v. McFarlin
standing alone, has nothing to do with the question of admitting to bail. If the appellant
petitions for a stay, and also petitions to be admitted to bail, his petition for the latter must
come under section 7314, Revised Laws, in which case the statute makes the matter of
admitting to bail one of right where the appeal is from a judgment imposing a fine only,
and one of discretion in all other cases.
As I have already stated, the discretion to be exercised is not arbitrary. Reason for the
exercise of discretion in favor of bail may find basis in flagrant or manifest misconduct in
trial; in palpable errors, made apparent, from which, or by reason of which, conviction
resulted; or where, as in the case at bar, it is made to appear that newly discovered admissible
evidence, such as was not available to the appellant petitioner at or during the trial, is now
available, and is of such a nature as might reasonably be expected to raise a reasonable doubt
of guilt. Then, again, there may be the intervening matters arising from the health or physical
condition of the appellant petitioner. These are some of the elements which, when properly
presented, may induce the court or judge to whom the petition is addressed to exercise
discretion in favor of admitting to bail. But with any and all of these there must appear an
appeal actually and properly taken, the good faith of the appellant, and the probable cause or
probable merit in the appeal, together with the phases of which I have already made mention.
The court or judge to whom the petition of this character is addressed may properly take into
consideration the length of time during which the applicant has resided in the community, and
the probability of his surrendering himself for the execution of the sentence, should the
judgment eventually be affirmed by the appellate court. All of these things may properly be
taken into consideration in the exercise of discretion in admitting to bail after conviction.
The petition here presented what to my mind appeared to be an appeal prosecuted in
good faith.
41 Nev. 105, 113 (1917) State v. McFarlin
to be an appeal prosecuted in good faith. The act of the trial court in refusing a new trial,
where the application for such was based upon newly discovered evidence, is such as, to my
mind, impresses the appeal of petitioner with sufficient merit to warrant exercise of discretion
in admitting him to bail.
It is ordered that petitioner be admitted to bail.
____________
41 Nev. 113, 113 (1917) State v. Sella
[No. 2225]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. ADOLFO
SELLA, Appellant.
[168 Pac. 278]
1. WitnessesCharacter of DeceasedCross-Examination.
In prosecution for homicide, where defendant introduced evidence of deceased's bad character, and the
state introduced witnesses in rebuttal thereof, defendant should have been allowed to cross-examine the
witnesses as to the particular facts upon which they based their statement of reputation, and even to inquire
whether they had heard of specific brawls in which deceased had engaged.
2. WitnessesCharacter of DeceasedCross-Examination.
The rule that an interrogation assuming the existence of a fact not in evidence is not admissible does not
prevent the answering of questions testing the knowledge of general reputation of a character witness by
inquiry as to his having heard of specific acts.
3. Criminal LawObjections to Questions to Witness.
Where one accused of homicide was permitted without objection to introduce evidence attacking
deceased's reputation for peace and quiet before he had testified to an overt act of deceased looking toward
his claim of justifiable homicide, it was too late for the state to object to questions on cross-examination of
character witnesses as to whether they had heard of deceased's acts in testing whether they knew his
reputation.
4. Homicidecharacter of DeceasedEvidenceAdmissibility.
The character or reputation of the deceased in homicide cases is to be proven rather by evidence of
general reputation of the deceased in the community in which he lived than by particular acts or instances
which were not a part of the res gestae, nor connected therewith.
41 Nev. 113, 114 (1917) State v. Sella
5. Criminal LawAppealPrejudice.
Refusing to permit one accused of homicide to cross-examine witnesses as to whether they knew of
certain acts of deceased showing that he was of turbulent spirit was harmful and substantial error.
6. WitnessesCharacter of DeceasedCross-Examination.
In prosecution for murder, wherein accused claimed self-defense, witnesses as to character of deceased
for peace and quiet were properly cross-examined by questions asking whether they knew certain persons
and remembered whether deceased had assaulted them; the form of the questions being unobjectionable.
Appeal from Sixth Judicial District Court, Humboldt County; Edward A. Ducker, Judge.
Adolfo Sella was convicted of murder in the second degree, and he appeals. Reversed.
J. H. Langwith, James M. Frame, and Howard Browne, for Appellant:
The evidence in this case is not sufficient to support a conviction of murder. From all the
circumstances, it is apparent that there was not the element of murder in the case. For that
reason, any error committed upon the trial must be presumed to be prejudicial. The highest
offense of which the appellant could have been legally convicted was manslaughter, and
therefore the judgment should be reversed.
Upon the trial of a defendant who relies upon self-defense, the previous bad reputation of
the deceased may be shown, as tending to throw light upon who probably was the aggressor.
(23 Nev. 103.) Where the state offers witnesses to bolster up the reputation of the deceased,
the defendant may, upon cross-examination, show by such witnesses specific acts of bad
conduct on the part of the deceased. (21 Cyc. 910.) the issue in this case was self-defense.
When the issue of self-defense is made in a trial for homicide, and thus a controversy arises
as to whether the deceased was the aggressor, one's persuasion will be more or less affected
by the character of the deceased. (Wigmore on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 63; Underhill on
Criminal Evidence, 2d ed. sec. 324.)
41 Nev. 113, 115 (1917) State v. Sella
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General; E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, and Wm.
McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General, for Respondent:
The trial court did not err in overruling objection to questions propounded by counsel for
the state to certain witnesses. Objection was not made until after answers had been given. At
no time did counsel for appellant move to strike out the evidence. One cannot speculate on
what the answer to a question will be and then object to the question and move to exclude the
answer, if the answer is responsive to the question. (Rutledge v. Rowland, 161 Ala. 114.)
Objection to evidence must always be at the earliest opportunity after the objection becomes
apparent. If apparent when offered, the objection should be made then. If apparently
objectionable when offered, but subsequent developments show otherwise, a motion to strike
should be made. (Sharon v. Minnock, 6 Nev. 377, 385.)
Courts do not permit cross-examination of a character witness, either as to what the
witness has heard or as to his knowledge about particular facts or specific matters. (Gifford v.
People, 87 Ill. 210, 214; Aiken v. People, 183 Ill. 215; Henrickson v. Commonwealth, 23 Ky.
L. Rep. 1191; State v. Dickerson, 77 Ohio St. 34; Carthans v. State, 78 Wis. 560.) However,
a witness who has testified to the good character of a person may, for the purpose of testing
his information and credibility, but not to establish the truth of such facts, be asked on
cross-examination if he has not heard of the commission of particular acts by the party under
investigation, or reports or rumors to that effect, inconsistent with the reputation attributed to
him by the witness. (Ingram v. State, 67 Ala. 67; Jackson v. State, 78 Ala. 471; People v. Ah
Lee Doon, 97 Cal. 171; People v. Weber, 149 Cal. 325; Randall v. State, 132 Ind. 539;
Commonwealth v. O'Brien, 119 Mass. 342, 346; State v. McLaughlin, 149 Mo. 281; State v.
Knapp, 45 N. H. 148; People v. Laudiero, 192 N. Y. 304; State v. Merriam, 34 S. C. 16;
Bearden v. State, 44 Tex. Cr. 758.) It is improper, even on cross-examination, to ask
questions tending to elicit the knowledge of the witness as to the conduct or particular
acts of the person whose reputation is in issue.
41 Nev. 113, 116 (1917) State v. Sella
elicit the knowledge of the witness as to the conduct or particular acts of the person whose
reputation is in issue. (Moulton v. State, 88 Ala. 116; Cook v. State, 46 Fla. 20; State v.
McGee, 81 Iowa, 17; Kearney v. State, 68 Miss. 233; State v. Osborne, 54 Or. 289; Green v.
Dodge, 79 Vt. 73.) The credibility of a witness may be tested in various ways. (3 Enc. Ev.
47.)
A question which assumes the existence of a fact not in evidence should not be asked. (Davis
v. Cook, 14 Nev. 265, 287; State v. Fronhofer, 38 Nev. 448, 466; Henley v. State, 158 S. W.
197.) An error of the trial court in excluding evidence relative to the character of deceased, if
not prejudicial to defendant, will not constitute reversible error. (Amos v. Commonwealth, 16
Ky. L. Rep. 358.) Even if prejudice be presumed, if the court is satisfied that no harmful
result of any substantial right was produced by the errors, the judgment of the lower court
should be affirmed. (Rev. Laws, 7302, 7469; State v. Mircovich, 35 Nev. 485.) The extent of
the cross-examination of a character witness must be left to the discretion of the court.
(Oliver v. Pate, 43 Ind. 132; Basye v. State, 45 Neb. 261; State v. Doris, 51 Or. 136; State v.
McLaughlin, 149 Mo. 33; City of Greenville v. Spencer, 77 S. C. 50, 57 S. E. 638.) The court
could not have erred in excluding the evidence of specific acts touching upon the character of
the deceased, the same being clearly incompetent and inadmissible. (State v. Pearce, 15 Nev.
191.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
The appellant was convicted in the District Court of Humboldt County of murder in the
second degree. The charge grew out of the killing of one Marcel Edmund Ramella in a saloon
in the town of Winnemucca in that county. The killing was by shooting with a pistol. The
record discloses that both the appellant and deceased had been drinking during the day and up
to the time of the incident out of which deceased lost his life. It appears that prior to the day
on which the shooting occurred, and indeed almost up to the time at which the fatal shot
was fired, appellant and the deceased were friends.
41 Nev. 113, 117 (1917) State v. Sella
occurred, and indeed almost up to the time at which the fatal shot was fired, appellant and the
deceased were friends. It is disclosed from the record that the deceased took dinner at the
Roman Tavern some time about 11:30 a.m. on the day on which he lost his life. After dinner
appellant and the deceased became engaged in a scuffle or wrestle in the bar-room
immediately adjoining the dining-room. Both men were seen grappling upon the floor of the
bar-room. Appellant, after disengaging himself from the deceased, went behind the bar, and
there followed some considerable discussion relative to the merits of the respective parties in
the wrestling game, an offer being made by appellant to wrestle the deceased for $100 at a
public place. There is testimony in the record of violent, threatening utterances having been
made by deceased toward appellant immediately following the discussion relative to the
wrestling bout. The deceased had left the bar-room in which appellant was tending bar and
was standing on the outside somewhere close to the edge of the sidewalk in front of the door.
Appellant, having armed himself with a revolver, went out through the front door, and it is
there that he contends and testifies that the deceased came toward him in a threatening
manner, holding his hands, or at least one of his hands, somewhat behind him, and said,
Here is where you get your last.
The plea of self-defense was interposed. In the statement of counsel for appellant made to
the jury when the prosecution had closed its case in chief, he declared to the jury that the
defense would attempt to prove:
That he [the deceased] was making an effort to strike the defendant with a knife, and that
the defendant, for the purpose of protecting himself, drew the pistol which has been offered in
evidence, and in that struggle * * * we will show that there was a struggle which was
commenced by the deceased, the deceased trying to use a knife and at the same time
grappling with the defendant; and in that struggle the defendant attempted to protect himself
from the onslaught of the deceased and received this shot from the pistol which he held in
his hand.
41 Nev. 113, 118 (1917) State v. Sella
attempted to protect himself from the onslaught of the deceased and received this shot from
the pistol which he held in his hand. The testimony will show that the hand in which the
pistol was held was being grappled by the deceased. * * * We shall attempt to show you that
the killing of the deceased was under such circumstances as made the acts of the defendant
justifiable under all circumstances of the case.
The appellant having taken the stand in his own behalf, and after having related at length
the incidents immediately preceding the shooting, stated:
I walked out the door. Say this is the door and there is a little space before you get out on
the sidewalk. The first step on the sidewalk I turned myself to the right where he was
standing, and he says, Now, here you are,' and he came in a rush, walking pretty fast. He was
some four or five or maybe six steps away from me, and I says, Edmund, why not come in
and have a drink together and call this all off?' And he came all at once and said, Here is
where you get your last,' and I thought for sure he had a knife, and at the same time I drew my
body back this way and he ran into my body, but didn't have chance to strike me very hard;
and I put my arm up somewhere around his body and at the same time I pulled out the gun
and says, Ramella, look out,' and at the same time pulled out the gun. The gun was pointed
toward the ground, and with his left hand he held and grabbed my right hand and my right
hand made this kind of a motion [up] and the shot went off.
Q. Did you believe yourself to be in danger at the time you drew this pistol? A. Yes, sir;
because he came towards me, and his actions, and at the same time he said, Here is where
you get your last.'
The defendant in his case in chief was permitted to introduce evidence tending to establish
that the reputation of the deceased was that of a violent and dangerous man, or at least that
when intoxicated his reputation for peace and quiet was bad in the community in which he
lived. This evidence was permitted to be introduced before the defendant had taken the
stand in his own behalf or had attempted to establish the element of self-defense.
41 Nev. 113, 119 (1917) State v. Sella
to be introduced before the defendant had taken the stand in his own behalf or had attempted
to establish the element of self-defense. It went before the jury without objection.
The state in rebuttal produced a number of witnesses to testify to the good reputation borne
by the deceased in his lifetime in the community in which he resided, and it is with reference
to the cross-examination of these witnesses that one of the principal errors assigned to the
trial court is brought here for review.
The state's witness, F. M. Buckingham, after having testified to his being acquainted with
the deceased during his lifetime, and to his having known him for a period of approximately
three years spent in Paradise Valley, Humboldt County, was asked the general question in
direct examination:
Are you acquainted with his [deceased's] reputation in that community for peace and
quite? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Do you know whether that was good or bad? A. I consider it good.
Q. He bore a good reputation for peace and quiet in that community, did he? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did he or did he not have a bad reputation in that community for peace and quiet while
drinking? A. Well, that I couldn't say.
This last question was strenuously objected to by counsel for the defendant, and upon the
court overruling the objection the witness made the further answer:
Why, I don't know as I could say what his reputation was when he was drinking because I
never saw him in that state or condition.
Q. (By the prosecuting attorney.) Do you know anything against his reputation? A. No, I
do not.
Q. Are you acquainted with what the people of the community say of him? A. Generally
so.
On cross-examination, counsel for the defendant propounded the following questions:
Q. Do you know Johnnie Forgnone? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Do you remember about the deceased assaulting him? This question was objected to
by the prosecuting attorney "as not proper cross-examination," and the objection was
sustained by the court for that reason.
41 Nev. 113, 120 (1917) State v. Sella
This question was objected to by the prosecuting attorney as not proper
cross-examination, and the objection was sustained by the court for that reason. The
exception was taken by counsel for the defendant upon the ground that the same is proper
cross-examination for the purpose of testing the knowledge of this witness as to the general
reputation of the deceased. Counsel for defendant then made the following offer:
Defendant now at this time by the cross-examination of this witness offers to show that
the witness had heard of deceased making an assault upon Johnnie Forgnone, and that
Andrew Mosci took a knife away from the deceased and ended the difficulties; and we offer
to show that this witness has heard of numerous difficulties in which the deceased was
engaged while intoxicated and in which he committed assaults upon other people.
The offer being denied by the court, counsel for defendant reserved an exception upon the
ground that the same is proper examination for the purpose of testing the knowledge of this
witness as to the general reputation of the deceased.
The witness Steve Ferraro, being called by the prosecution in rebuttal, was asked the
question:
Q. Did you know what his [deceased] reputation was in that community for peace and
quiet during the time he lived there? A. Yes, sir.
Q. You know, do you? A. Yes, sir.
Q. What was his reputation for peace and quietness? A. Quiet.
Q. Was it good or bad? A. Good.
Q. Did he have a reputation in that community for being quarrelsome and dangerous
when intoxicated? A. I have seen him
Q. Can you say whether he had or had not such a reputation. A. No, sir.
Q. Well, was his reputation there that he was dangerous when drinking? A. No, sir.
On cross-examination, the following question was propounded: "Did you hear the
circumstances of his [deceased] having a fight with Johnnie Forgnone?"
41 Nev. 113, 121 (1917) State v. Sella
Did you hear the circumstances of his [deceased] having a fight with Johnnie Forgnone?
Objection to this question on the ground that it was not proper cross-examination was
sustained by the trial court, and an exception reserved by the defendant on the ground that the
same was proper cross-examination to test the knowledge of the witness as to general
reputation. The witness was further interrogated on cross-examination:
Q. I will ask you to state if you have heard of the circumstance, having a fight with Mr.
Achrato.
Objection to this question was sustained on the ground that it was not proper
cross-examination, and an exception to the ruling was reserved by the defendant for the
reason that the same is proper cross-examination for the purpose of showing the extent of the
knowledge of the witness as to the general reputation of the deceased.
The further question was propounded on cross-examination:
Q. I will ask you also if you have heard of the circumstances of the constable of Paradise
requesting Mr. Recanzone to keep this young man [the deceased] out of town, because of his
quarrelsome disposition?
Objection to this question, on the ground that is was not proper cross-examination, was
sustained by the trial court and an exception reserved by the defendant for the reason that the
same is proper cross-examination for the purpose of testing this witness as to his knowledge
of the general reputation of the deceased when intoxicated.
To the witness Abel the prosecution put the question:
State whether he did or did not have a bad reputation for peace and quiet while drinking.
A. I never heard of him having a bad one.
On cross-examination, objection was sustained to the question:
Did you ever hear of the circumstances of him having a fight with Johnnie Forgnone at
Paradise?
1. The record discloses that to all of the character witnesses produced in rebuttal by the
prosecution the defendant's counsel propounded interrogatories assuming to elicit the
witnesses' knowledge of particular events.
41 Nev. 113, 122 (1917) State v. Sella
witnesses produced in rebuttal by the prosecution the defendant's counsel propounded
interrogatories assuming to elicit the witnesses' knowledge of particular events. The refusal of
the court to permit counsel to cross-examine in this manner constitutes the basis of an
assignment of error, the seriousness of which we cannot overlook. If the question here
presented was one arising out of an examination of a witness in chief, then an entirely
different view as to the rule applicable might be taken; but it is, we think, established by an
overwhelming line of authority that in testing the credibility of a character witness the same
means may be resorted to as may be employed to determine how far a witness who testifies to
any other fact relative to the issue is to be believed; and into this comes the question of the
sincerity of the witness, his trustworthiness or his bias, the extent of his knowledge or
information, his acquaintance with the expressions of people generally in the community in
which the person whose character is in question resides or resided, his opportunity for
acquiring information on the subjectall these elements constitute proper avenues for
inquiry by cross-examination.
The plea of self-defense having been interposed and contended for, and the hostile
demonstration by the deceased having been testified to, it was permissible, as tending to
establish who was the aggressor in the fatal affray, for the defendant to show, if he could, the
general reputation of the deceased as that of a violent or dangerous person. When the
prosecution sought on rebuttal to establish the good reputation of the deceased, it was proper,
under the rules of cross-examination, for the defendant to test these character witnesses by
every means legitimate, by every avenue through which the credibility of such witnesses,
their sincerity, their disinterestedness, their knowledge or information or their acquaintance
with the general expressions of the people in the community might be ascertained.
Mr. Greenleaf, in his work on Evidence, speaking of the question of testing a witness
who speaks to good character, says:
41 Nev. 113, 123 (1917) State v. Sella
the question of testing a witness who speaks to good character, says:
It will expose the untrustworthiness of his testimony if he admits that rumors of
misconduct are known to him; for the knowledge of such rumors may well be inconsistent
with his assertion that the person's reputation is good. Accordingly, the propriety of inquiring
whether he has not heard that the person whose reputation he has supported has been charged
with this or that misdeed has usually been conceded. A few courts, however, usually through
a misunderstanding of the real purpose of the inquiry and supposing it to be in violation of the
rule against proving particular acts of misconduct, have forbidden it. On a similar principle, a
witness impeaching reputation may be tested on cross-examination by requiring him to
specify the sources of his information, and in particular the persons whose remarks have
served to give rise to his assertion that the reputation is bad, because there is practically no
other effective way of exposing a false or unfounded assertion of a bad reputation. This
practice seems to be generally conceded to be proper. The preceding two principles apply in
the proof of a defendant's or other person's reputation as well as of a witness's reputation. (1
Greenleaf on Evidence, 16th ed. 588.)
In the noted case of Annis v. People, 13 Mich. 511, this question being before the Supreme
Court of Michigan, Judge Cooley, after citing approvingly the section of Greenleaf just
referred to, said:
The real purpose of this cross-examination is to enable the court and jury to determine
whether the impeaching witness in fact knows the general reputation of the other, and, if so,
whether he testifies truly in regard to it.
Continuing, the learned jurist says:
It was suggested, on the argument, that the witness might, with propriety, be asked
whether the unfavorable reports which prevailed had reference to the question of truth, so as
to test his accuracy in assuming to speak to a general reputation for veracity; but if the
examination must stop here, its purpose would very generally be defeated.
41 Nev. 113, 124 (1917) State v. Sella
of truth, so as to test his accuracy in assuming to speak to a general reputation for veracity;
but if the examination must stop here, its purpose would very generally be defeated. There is
no case where a thorough cross-examination is more important to an elucidation of the truth
than where a witness in giving an answer to a general question which calls both for matter of
fact and matter of opinion. If a witness can shield himself behind an answer so general that,
even if false, the person who knows that fact cannot testify with definiteness on the subject,
we may well believe that bad men will frequently resort to this species of evidence where the
truth will not warrant it. * * * Nothing is more common in principle than to see a witness
placed upon the stand to impeach the general reputation of another for veracity, when a
cross-examination demonstrates that the reports only relate to a failureprobably an honest
oneto meet obligations, while the party's real reputation for truth is above suspicion.
Nothing short of a cross-examination, which compels the impeaching witness to state both
the source of the reports and their nature, will enable the party either to test the correctness of
the impeaching evidence, or to protect the witness who is assailed, if he is assailed, unjustly.
We find the English courts dealing with the question here under consideration. In Reg. v.
Wood and Parker, a witness was called to speak of the character of the prisoner who deposed
to his having known the prisoner for some years and gave him good character. On
cross-examination by the prosecution, the witness stated that he never heard anything against
him. He was then questioned as to whether he ever heard of a robbery which had taken place
in the neighborhood some years previous, and on his answer in the affirmative was then
asked, Did you ever hear that W. was suspected of having done it? The court, in dealing
with the question, said: "A man's character is made up of a number of small circumstances,
of which his being suspected of misconduct is one.
41 Nev. 113, 125 (1917) State v. Sella
A man's character is made up of a number of small circumstances, of which his being
suspected of misconduct is one. The question may be put. (Reg. v. Wood and Parker, The
Jurist, vol. 5, 1841, p. 225.)
To the same effect we find the case of Rex v. Martin, 25 Eng. C. L. Rep. 575, 6 Car. & P.
562.
In the case of Steele v. State, 83 Ala. 20, 3 South. 547, this question was considered, and
we find the Supreme Court of Alabama expressing itself thus:
While one's character or reputation may be assailed by showing a general bad repute in
the neighborhood of his residence, or where he is know, particular acts of bad conduct, or
special circumstances of disgrace, are not admissible for such purpose on direct examination,
although they often may be on cross-examination by the opposite party. (Jones v. State, 76
Ala. 9; Jackson v. State, 78 Ala. 471; 1 Greenl. on Ev. 14th ed. sec. 55.)
In the case of State v. Crow, 107 Mo. 341, 17 S. W. 745, the Supreme Court of Missouri
expresses our views on the question of the right of the defendant in this case to cross-examine
the several witnesses for the purpose of testing their credibility and knowledge of the general
subject. There a witness in behalf of the defendant testified to his good reputation. On
cross-examination he was asked, and permitted to answer over defendant's objection, if he
had not heard of defendant being indicted for stealing other cattle previous to this (defendant
was on trial for the larceny of a cow), and if he had not heard that the defendant had been
charged with violating the revenue laws and selling whisky without license. The court, after
commenting on the right of the accused to introduce evidence of his previous good character,
and the right of the prosecution to meet such by proof or by evidence of bad reputation, said:
The evidence thus allowed, whether given in support or impeachment of the character of
the accused, must, as a rule, be confined to general reputation, and cannot be extended to
particular facts.
41 Nev. 113, 126 (1917) State v. Sella
as a rule, be confined to general reputation, and cannot be extended to particular facts. (State
v. Reed, 85 Mo. 194; State v. Reavis, 71 Mo. 420.) If the testimony of this witness had been
offered by the state as original evidence for the purpose of rebutting the evidence of good
character previously introduced by the state, it would have been clearly inadmissible.
Defendant was presumed, when he put his general character in issue, to be prepared to defend
it; but he could not be held ready to defend other independent acts with which he was not
charged. (State v. Tabor, 95 Mo. 590, 8 S. W. 744; State v. Goetz, 34 Mo. 85.) The ruling of
the court cannot be defended upon the ground that the evidence was admissible for the
purpose of rebutting defendant's evidence of good character; but, after careful consideration,
we are satisfied that it was properly admitted in cross-examination of the witness to
determine his credibility and the sources of the information upon which the knowledge of
defendant's character was obtained. * * * When defendant put this witness forward to support
his character he subjected him to legitimate cross-examination upon the subject of inquiry,
and himself to such disaster as might result therefrom. Character is made up of acts and
conduct, and evidence in respect to it is, by the rule of law, confined to the testimony of
neighbors, who, by association, know the general estimate placed upon it. Inquiry as to
information of important facts and conduct of a defendant's life would certainly be relevant to
show the grounds upon which the witness had made his estimate of character. (1 Best, Ev.
sec. 261; Ingram v. State, 67 Ala. 71; Commonwealth v. O'Brien, 119 Mass. 346, 20 Am.
Rep. 325.)
The court there cited approvingly the assertion of the rule as made by Judge Cooley in the
case of People v. Annis, supra, and as laid down by Mr. Greenleaf in his work on Evidence.
The rule of cross-examination as to witnesses offered by the defendant to establish his own
good reputation is no less applicable to witnesses offered by the prosecution in an affirmative
attempt to establish the good reputation of the deceased in the community in which he
resided.
41 Nev. 113, 127 (1917) State v. Sella
attempt to establish the good reputation of the deceased in the community in which he
resided. In the case of State v. McLaughlin, 149 Mo. 19, 50 S. W. 315, we find the Supreme
Court of Missouri again dealing with the question here under consideration in a case of
murder where self-defense was interposed. The prosecution sought to impeach the character
of a witness offered by the defendant. The witness, having testified to the good reputation of
the one sought to be impeached, stated on cross-examination that he had never heard anything
against the party. He was asked if he had heard that the party kept an unlawful dive in a given
place. He answered that he had, and that he had heard that he was selling liquor illegally. He
was asked if he had not heard that the party kept an unlawful dive in a given place. He
answered that he had, and that he had heard that he was selling liquor illegally. He was asked
if he had no heard of various other disreputable transactions of the party, and answered that
he had heard of some and not of others. The objection to the cross-examination was that it
was incompetent and irrelevant. The court said:
It is settled law that, when a witness is called to sustain or attack the reputation of another
witness, the opposite party may cross-examine him liberally as to his means of knowledge,
and test his own truthfulness, and it is largely a matter of discretion with the court how far
such an examination shall be allowed.
In the case of De Arman v. State, 71 Ala. 351, the court had before it the identical question
presented in the case at bar. There, as here, rebutting witnesses for the state testified to the
good character of the deceased. They were then asked on cross-examination whether they had
not heard of several enumerated acts of violence done by the deceased. The court refused to
allow the witnesses to answer these questions. This was declared to be error, the supreme
court saying:
Character, in this connection, is the estimate which the public places on the person, the
subject of the inquiry; his reputation. When a witness is called to testify in regard to it, he
must not speak of or from his individual knowledge of the acts or conduct of the person
inquired about. His reputation or standing, whether good or bad, is the matter to be
deposed to.
41 Nev. 113, 128 (1917) State v. Sella
whether good or bad, is the matter to be deposed to. Character is the estimation in which one
is held by the public who know his standing. Thus one may have the reputation of being
peaceable or quarrelsome, harmless or dangerous, and bloodthirsty, truthful, or the contrary,
honest or dishonest. A witness, having knowledge of this estimate in which such person is
held by the public, may testify as to his reputation or character, although he may have no
personal knowledge that he is peaceable, truthful, honest, or the contrary. On
cross-examination a witness as to character may be interrogated as to the foundation of his
opinion. And, as character manifests itself by the manner in which one is esteemed, spoken
of, or received in society, it is always permissible, on cross-examination, to ascertain the
extent of the witness's information, and the data from which he draws his conclusion. The
weight of such testimony must depend largely on the reasonableness of the conclusion the
witness draws from the premises as he may depose to them.
To the same effect was the case of Ingram v. State, 67 Ala. 67. In the case of Moulton v.
State, 88 Ala. 116, 6 South. 758, 6 L. R. A. 301, the Supreme Court of Alabama, being again
called upon to deal with the question, gave a lucid expression of the true rule, saying:
In several cases we have said, in general terms, that, while particular acts of bad conduct
are not admissible to assail character on the direct examination, a witness deposing to general
character may be cross-examined as to particular facts, in order to test the soundness of his
opinion, and elicit the data on which it was founded. * * * By this is meant, not the truth of
such particular facts, but circulating rumors of them, which form a part of the general repute,
and help to make up one's good or bad character.
This rule applicable to cross-examination of character witnesses was again emphasized by
the Supreme Court of Alabama in the case of Tesney v. State, 77 Ala. 33. In the latter case the
witness was asked on cross-examination if he had not heard of the deceased going over into
an adjoining county and having several rows and shooting scrapes over there.
41 Nev. 113, 129 (1917) State v. Sella
over into an adjoining county and having several rows and shooting scrapes over there. The
trial court sustained the objection of the prosecution, and the supreme court, reaffirming its
conclusion in the De Arman case, held that the act of the trial court in this respect was error.
The Supreme Court of Oregon had occasion to deal with the question in the case of State
v. Ogden, 39 Or. 195, 65 Pac. 449. In that case the defendant, on trial for rape, introduced
testimony tending to show that the general reputation of the prosecutrix for chastity and virtue
in the community in which she resided was bad. The state called a witness in rebuttal, who
testified to her good reputation. On cross-examination by the defendant, the witness was
interrogated:
Did you ever hear of her being discharged from A. Dickson's, the liveryman there (at
Lagrande), on account of immoral conduct? Did you know of her being discharged by J. A.
Darrin from the Eagle restaurant on account of her immoral character? Did you ever hear of
her being discharged by Mrs. Richard Kelly on account of her immoral habits?
Objection having been sustained to these interrogatories, the defendant's counsel offered to
prove by the witness the facts implied in the questions so objected to, but the proffer was
rejected by the trial court. The supreme court said that, the witness having testified that the
reputation of the prosecutrix for chastity and virtue was good, as far as he had heard,' the
questions propounded to him on cross-examination were calculated to call his attention to the
alleged rumors derogatory of her character in these respects, and to test his veracity in
attributing to her such general reputation. In that case the court referred to a section of the
statute bearing upon the subject of cross-examination (Hill's Ann. Laws Or. sec. 837), but in
announcing its conclusion on the subject, the court based the same on the broad general
principle that inasmuch as the questions were propounded to the witness on
cross-examination and related to and were connected with the matter stated by him in his
direct examination, the court's refusal to permit the witness to answer such questions
was not a matter within the exercise of judicial discretion, but was the denial of an
absolute right granted to the defendant, and hence reversible error.
41 Nev. 113, 130 (1917) State v. Sella
stated by him in his direct examination, the court's refusal to permit the witness to answer
such questions was not a matter within the exercise of judicial discretion, but was the denial
of an absolute right granted to the defendant, and hence reversible error. The court in that
case referred approvingly and based its conclusion upon the doctrine as laid down in Ingram
v. State, supra, and further referred to the following cases, all applicable to the subject:
Thompson v. State, 100 Ala. 70, 14 South. 878; State v. Pain, 48 La. Ann. 311, 19 South.
138; People v. Ah Lee Doon, 97 Cal. 171, 31 Pac. 933; McDonel v. State, 90 Ind. 320; Basye
v. State, 45 Neb. 261, 63 N. W. 811; People v. Pyckett, 99 Mich. 613, 58 N. W. 621; State v.
Crow, supra; People v. McKane, 143 N. Y. 455, 38 N. E. 950; State v. Jerome, 33 Conn.
265. The case of State v. Ogden, supra, was again referred to approvingly and the doctrine
applicable to the subject at bar reenunciated by the Supreme Court of Oregon in the case of
State v. Doris, 51 Or. 136, 94 Pac. 44, 16 L. R. A. n. s. 660.
The question here under consideration was dealt with by the Supreme Court of Illinois in
the case of Nordgren v. People, 211 Ill. 425, 71 N. E. 1042. The application of the rule there
was under most peculiar circumstances, and yet not unlike those presented by the record in
the case at bar. There the defendant was accused of the murder of his wife by giving her
whisky which contained strychnine or some other kind of poison. Testifying in his own
behalf, he stated that his wife was not only addicted to the drinking of intoxicating liquors,
but that she had been untrue and unfaithful to him, and he stated that certain persons, naming
them, including one Curtis, had told him about his wife's conduct and infidelity. Subsequently
the state put Curtis upon the stand and propounded the following question:
Mr. Curtis, I want to ask you to state to the jury as to whether or not you at any time, of
your own knowledge, saw Mrs. Nordgren do anything that was wrong. A. No, sir.
41 Nev. 113, 131 (1917) State v. Sella
In cross-examination, counsel for the defendant asked him what he knew of the deceased,
but the court refused to allow the question. This refusal was held to be error, the supreme
court reasoning thus:
The witness had stated that he had not at any time of his own knowledge seen Mrs.
Nordgren do anything that was wrong. But he may have had some knowledge of her
wrongdoing, which he did not see with his own eyes. At any rate, the defense had a right to
cross-examine him as to the character or extent of his knowledge of the deceased. This right
of cross-examination was denied, and we think improperly.
In the case of Young v. State, 41 Tex. Cr. R. 442, 55 S. W. 331, the Court of Criminal
Appeals of Texas had before it an appeal from a conviction of murder in the second degree.
There the defendant and his brother were implicated in the homicide. The brother of the
deceased was killed in the affray. Defendant produced witnesses to testify that his brother was
a man of good, peaceable, orderly disposition and reputation. In cross-examination of
appellant's witness, the state inquired as to the brother of appellant having had a difficulty
about a year preceding his death. The court held that the testimony was admissible on
cross-examination of appellant's own witness. In Bearden v. State, 44 Tex. Cr. R. 578, 73 S.
W. 17, the court held it proper to interrogate on cross-examination if the character witness
had not heard of certain altercations between the deceased and third persons. In the case of
People v. Ah Lee Doon, 97 Cal. 171, 1 Pac. 933, that curt held that on cross-examination of
witnesses who testified to the good disposition of a defendant it was proper to interrogate as
to their having heard of his prior conviction of murder, and to his having drawn a pistol on
different persons.
A most significant application of the rule which we deem in point is found in the
California case of People v. Lamar, 148 Cal. 564, 83 Pac. 993. There the character witnesses
had testified that the general reputation of the deceased for peace and quiet was good. He was
then asked if this was true of deceased under all circumstances, and replied that it was
not.
41 Nev. 113, 132 (1917) State v. Sella
then asked if this was true of deceased under all circumstances, and replied that it was not. He
was asked to explain what he meant by that answer. Objection to this interrogatory was
sustained by the trial court, and on motion the answer of the witness that under all
circumstances his reputation for such traits was not good was stricken out. The supreme
court, speaking through Mr. Justice Lorigan, held that the defendant was not precluded by the
answer of the witness from showing, if he could, that the favorable reputation testified to was
not the same under all circumstances and conditions. The doctrine laid down by the Supreme
Court of California in that case, holding as it does that it might be shown, even on direct
examination, that the deceased possessed different characters or different traits adapted to
different localities or different conditions of mind, or that he may have had one reputation for
peace and quiet when sober and another for these same traits when drunk, emphasizes the rule
which we deem applicable to the matter at bar, that where good reputation as to the deceased
for peace and quiet is sought to be established by the prosecution, the defendant on
cross-examination may seek to test the character witnesses by all or any of the avenues by
which such may be accomplished within the scope of legitimate cross-examination. In two
other significant cases the Supreme Court of California has emphasized the rule that is
directly applicable to the matter at bar: People v. Gordon, 103 Cal. 573, 37 Pac. 534; People
v. Mayes, 113 Cal. 624, 45 Pac. 860.
In passing upon this question the Supreme Court of Nebraska brought out that keen line of
distinction which differentiates evidence offered as to particular acts or specific conduct for
the purpose of establishing general reputation from such acts or conduct sought to be elicited
from a character witness on cross-examination for the purpose of testing his veracity, fairness,
or knowledge of the subject. In the case of Patterson v. State, 41 Neb. 538, 59 N. W. 917, the
Nebraska court referred to its former opinion and decision in the case of Olive v. State, 11
Neb. 1, 7 N. W. 444, wherein it held that where a person accused of crime adduces
evidence of good character or reputation, it is not competent for the prosecution to put in
evidence particular facts tending to prove it to be bad.
41 Nev. 113, 133 (1917) State v. Sella
of Olive v. State, 11 Neb. 1, 7 N. W. 444, wherein it held that where a person accused of
crime adduces evidence of good character or reputation, it is not competent for the
prosecution to put in evidence particular facts tending to prove it to be bad. In the case of
Basye v. State, 45 Neb. 261, 63 N. W. 811, the question was again presented to that court.
There the error complained of grew out of the testimony of witnesses who were offered by the
defense as to his general reputation for peace and quiet. On cross-examination each of the
witnesses, over the objection of the defendant, stated that he had heard of the defendant
having a quarrel with and striking a man several years before while he resided at a different
place. The appellant there contended that under the rule laid down in Olive v. State and
Patterson v. State, supra, the eliciting of such testimony by the prosecution on
cross-examination was error. The court in dealing with the question said that the principle
was not correctly applied to the facts in the two former Nebraska cases, and held in substance
that while particular facts are inadmissible in evidence upon direct examination for the
purpose of sustaining or overthrowing character, yet this doctrine does not extend to
cross-examination. It is firmly settled, says the court, by the adjudications in this country
that, upon cross-examination of a witness who has testified to general reputation, questions
may be propounded for the purpose of eliciting the source of the witness's information, and
particular facts may be called to his attention, and he be asked whether he ever heard them.
Then follows the reasoning of the court setting forth the true principle upon which questions
of this nature are permissible in cross-examination as distinguished from direct, saying:
This is permissible, not for the purpose of establishing the truth of such facts, but to test
the witness's credibility, and to enable the jury to ascertain the weight to be given to his
testimony. The extent of the cross-examination of a witness must be left to the discretion of
the trial court. The questions put to the several witnesses were within the scope of a
legitimate cross-examination, and there was no abuse of discretion in permitting them to
be answered."
41 Nev. 113, 134 (1917) State v. Sella
several witnesses were within the scope of a legitimate cross-examination, and there was no
abuse of discretion in permitting them to be answered.
Supporting this principle we find the court citing the cases of People v. Annis, supra;
Ingram v. State, supra; De Arman v. State, supra.
In the case of State v. Arnold, 12 Iowa, 481, a. defendant on trial produced a witness for
the purpose of establishing his good character, and on the examination in chief the witness
stated, His character was divided. The attorney for the prosecution then asked the witness
what particular acts of his life he had heard spoken of. The witness proceeded to relate
various acts of petit larceny that he had been accused of by report. The supreme court in
dealing with the matter, after referring to its former decision in Gordon v. State, 3 Iowa, 410,
said, in view of the latitude which the court may legitimately allow on cross-examination,
there was no error in refusing to reject such testimony. The Supreme Court of the State of
New York, in the case of Carpenter v. Blake, 10 Hun. 358, when called upon to deal with the
question at bar, expressed itself thus:
The general rule is, that where general reputation is relied upon, it is not competent to
give in evidence specific acts, either to sustain or to overthrow such general reputation.
(Bakeman v. Rose, 14 Wend. 110; Corning v. Corning, 6 N. Y. 104.) * * * The defendant
cannot be supposed to be prepared to prove the facts in regard to all cases which had
theretofore occurred in his practice, and the inevitable effect of allowing such evidence would
be to introduce before the jury a multitude of collateral issues, and thus tend to obscure and
distract attention from the real issue in the case on trial. But when testimony as to general
reputation is given by a witness, it seems to be agreed that on his cross-examination, and with
a view to lessen the effect of his testimony as to general repute, or to show a bias in favor of
the party who has called him, but not for the purpose of establishing the fact to be proved,
the witness may be asked whether he has not heard reports which tend to contradict the
purport and effect of his testimony.
41 Nev. 113, 135 (1917) State v. Sella
proved, the witness may be asked whether he has not heard reports which tend to contradict
the purport and effect of his testimony. (Leonard v. Allen, 11 Cush. [Mass.] 241.)
This court, in the case of State v. Campbell, 20 Nev. 122 17 Pac. 620, has intimated that in
a case where the defendant was accused of rape it was proper on cross-examination of a
witness testifying to the good character for chastity of the victim to interrogate as to particular
acts of inchastity on her part. In respondent's brief we find a most painstaking and thorough
consideration of the question, and we note as significant and directly applicable to the view
we have taken in this case that respondent there asserts:
The majority of courts, however, hold that a witness who has testified to the good
character of the person may, for the purpose of testing his information and credibility, but not
to establish the truth of such facts, be asked on cross-examination if he has not heard of the
commission of particular acts by the party under investigation, or reports or rumors to that
effect, inconsistent with the reputation attributed to him by the witness.
The decisions to which we have referred, supporting this very proposition, which we have
attempted to analyze as applicable to the matter at bar, might be supplemented by many
others: Randall v. State, 132 Ind. 539, 32 N. E. 305; State v. Kimes, 152 Iowa, 240, 132 N.
W. 180; State v. Killion, 95 Kan. 371, 148 Pac. 643; State v. Knapp, 45 N. H. 148; People v.
Laudiero, 192 N. Y. 304, 85 N. E. 132; State v. Merriman, 34 S. C. 16, 12 S. E. 619.
2. We are referred by respondent to the cases of Davis v. Cook, 14 Nev. 265, and State v.
Fronhofer, 38 Nev. 448, 150 Pac. 846, as being applicable to the question under
consideration. Those cases are cited to support the proposition that an interrogation
propounded to a witness, which assumes the existence of a fact not in evidence, is not
admissible. This rule is fundamental, but has no application here, inasmuch as the fact in
evidence by the character witnesses was the general reputation of the deceased, and the
questions propounded by counsel for appellant were to test their knowledge of general
reputation by inquiry as to their having heard of specific acts.
41 Nev. 113, 136 (1917) State v. Sella
fundamental, but has no application here, inasmuch as the fact in evidence by the character
witnesses was the general reputation of the deceased, and the questions propounded by
counsel for appellant were to test their knowledge of general reputation by inquiry as to their
having heard of specific acts.
3. Respondent contends that under the rule laid down by this court in the case of State v.
Pearce, 15 Nev. 191, the evidence sought to be elicited on cross-examination was not
permissible. The cases in our judgment are not analogous. In the Pearce case the defendant,
testifying in his own behalf, expressly declared that he fired the shots unintentionally. Here by
the plea interposed by counsel for the defendant at the very opening of his case, as well as by
the testimony of the defendant himself, justifiable homicide was expressly declared and relied
upon. Moreover, the contention of respondent is interposed too late, inasmuch as the
defendant was permitted by the trial court, and that without objection, to introduce evidence
attacking the reputation of the deceased for peace and quiet even before defendant had
testified to an overt act on the part of deceased or to his claim of justifiable homicide.
It is manifest that the trial court in this instance lost sight of that rule which, as supported
by the authorities heretofore cited, distinguishes cases in homicide, where the character or
reputation of the deceased is sought to be established by particular acts or instances, from
cases like that at bar, where under the right of cross-examination the defendant, being
confronted by witnesses who testified to the good reputation of the deceased for peace and
quiet, seeks to test the knowledge and credibility of the witnesses by interrogating as to
particular instances or particular acts from which such credibility or knowledge of general
reputation may be weighed and considered.
4. We adhere to the rule, which we believe is fully supported by the great weight of
authority, that the character or reputation of the deceased in homicide cases is to be proven
rather by evidence of general reputation of the deceased in the community in which he
lived than by particular acts or instances which were not a part of the res gestae nor
connected therewith.
41 Nev. 113, 137 (1917) State v. Sella
cases is to be proven rather by evidence of general reputation of the deceased in the
community in which he lived than by particular acts or instances which were not a part of the
res gestae nor connected therewith. (Dupree v. State, 33 Ala. 380, 73 Am. Dec. 422; Andrews
v. State, 152 Ala. 16, 44 South. 696; Campbell v. State, 38 Ark. 498; Croom v. State, 90 Ga.
430, 17 S. E. 1003; Thornton v. State, 107 Ga. 683, 33 S E. 673; Andrews v State, 118 Ga. 1,
43 S. E. 852; Pratt v. State, 56 Ind. 179; State v. Fontenot, 50 La. Ann. 537, 23 South. 634,
69 Am. St. Rep. 455; State v. Thompson, 109 La. 296, 33 South. 320; Jenkins v. State, 80
Md. 72, 30 Atl. 566; State v. Ronk, 91 Minn. 419, 98 N. W. 334; King v. State, 65 Miss. 576,
5 South. 97, 7 Am. St. Rep. 681; State v. Jones, 134 Mo. 254, 35 S. W. 607; People v.
Rodawald, 177 N. Y. 408, 70 N. E. 1; Alexander v. Commonwealth, 105 Pa. 1; State v. Dill,
48 S. C. 249, 26 S. E. 567; State v. Andrews, 73 S. C. 257, 53 S. E. 423; Powers v. State, 117
Tenn. 363, 97 S. W. 815; Skaggs v. State, 31 Tex. Cr. R. 563, 21 S. W. 257; Darter v. State,
39 Tex. Cr. R. 40, 44 S. W. 850; Bybee v. State, 47 S. W. 367; Heffington v. State, 41 Tex.
Cr. R. 315, 54 S. W. 755; Spangler v. State 41 Tex. Cr. R. 424, 55 S. W. 326.)
If there be an exception to this rule, and in isolated cases under peculiar circumstances we
find courts holding in favor of an exception, it does not apply to the case at bar. But the
general rule itself, as supported by the numerous authorities just cited, does not apply to the
question under consideration. The right of the defendant to cross-examine the witnesses
offered by the state to prove the good reputation of the deceased could not be maintained for
the purpose of establishing the deceased's general reputation as being bad in the community
in which he had resided. The interrogatories were proper and admissible solely for the
purpose of testing the witnesses as to their veracity, trustworthiness and competency, and as
to their knowledge of or acquaintance with the general reputation of the deceased.
41 Nev. 113, 138 (1917) State v. Sella
deceased. Neither does the principle to which we adhere come under the general rule that
when self-defense is an issue and it is necessary to show the state of mind of the slayer at the
time of the commission of the offense, specific acts of violence of the deceased, which are
then known to the slayer or have been communicated to him, which tend to show that the
deceased was a violent and dangerous man, may be shown for the purpose of establishing
self-defense.
The whole question here presented turns on the right of a party to interrogate on
cross-examination as to matters properly within the scope of the examination in chief.
5. Was the error complained of one by reason of which the appellant was deprived of a
substantial right? It is difficult to conceive of a right more substantial or important to one
accused, where his life or his liberty may be the forfeit, than that of cross-examining
witnesses whose testimony is adduced either to prove his guilt or to break down or destroy his
defense. If we assert, as we are bound to do in conformity with the great line of authorities,
that it was error for the trial court to deprive the appellant of the right to cross-examine
character witnesses for the purpose of testing their veracity, their credibility, their fairness, or
the scope of their knowledge as to such a vital matter as the reputation of the deceased for
peace and quietif we say that though this was error yet it is not of such a serious nature as
would require a reversal of the case, where shall we set the rule? Where shall we draw the
line?
6. Respondent argues that the form of the questions propounded on cross-examination to
the witnesses was not proper, and hence he cannot contend for the error assigned, but this was
not embraced within the scope of the objection interposed by the prosecuting attorney in the
trial court. Neither was this element considered by the trial court when ruling upon the
question. The only ground upon which the objection was based and upon which the court
ruled was that such question was improper on cross-examination.
41 Nev. 113, 139 (1917) State v. Sella
upon which the court ruled was that such question was improper on cross-examination. We
deem it proper to say in reply to the suggestion of respondent that in view of the matters to
which the character witnesses for the state were permitted to testify, in view of the form of
the answers permitted to stand in the record, the questions as propounded by counsel for
defendant were not subject to an objection as to form.
The general reputation of the deceased was, by reason of the nature of the defense, an
important element in the case, especially so after it had been assailed by the defendant. It was
with a view to establish in the minds of the jury the belief that the deceased was the aggressor
in the fatal affray that evidence assailing his reputation was permissible in the first instance.
To destroy this belief and establish that the defendant was the aggressor, the state was
permitted to produce witnesses as to the good reputation borne by the deceased. On this very
phasethe justifiableness or unjustifiableness of the fatal blowthe guilt or innocence of the
accused might turn. The testimony of the character witnesses going before the jury untested
and unchallenged by legitimate cross-examination must be presumed to have had the effect of
picturing to the jury the reputation of the deceased as being one noted for peace and quiet;
hence tending to establish the belief that the defendant must have been the aggressor. What
element in all the case was there more vital than this? If cross-interrogation of these character
witnesses would show that they had formed their conclusion of good general reputation upon
facts and general estimate which would not warrant such a conclusion, can it be said that the
denial of the privilege to cross-examine as to such matters was not a deprivation of a
substantial right?
Error is assigned in the giving of instruction No. 36, as follows:
The jury are instructed: That partial variances in the testimony of different witnesses on
minute and collateral points are of little importance, unless they be of too prominent and
striking a nature to be ascribed to mere inadvertence, inattention, or defect of memory.
41 Nev. 113, 140 (1917) State v. Sella
of too prominent and striking a nature to be ascribed to mere inadvertence, inattention, or
defect of memory. That it so rarely happens that witnesses of the same transaction perfectly
and strictly agree on all points connected with it that an entire and complete coincidence in
every particular so far from strengthening their credit not infrequently engenders suspicion of
practice and concert. And in determining upon the credence to be given to testimony by the
jury, the real question must always be whether the points of variance and discrepancy be of so
strong and decisive a nature as to render it impossible, or at least difficult to attribute them to
the ordinary sources of variance, namely, inattention or want of memory.
Even if the instruction contains a clause which might be considered as a comment by the
court on the weight to be given to witnesses whose testimony might agree on all points, in
view of the record we deem the matter of minor significance, and it is not to be presumed that
the instruction in this form will be given again.
The judgment and order appealed from must be reversed.
It is so ordered.
_____________
41 Nev. 141, 141 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
[No. 2316]
In the Matter of the Application of P. V.
ROVNIANEK for a Writ of Habeas Corpus.
[168 Pac. 327]
1. ExtraditionSufficiency of Indictment.
Extradition cannot be properly granted unless the indictment against the accused contains every
substantial element of the crime charged.
2. Banks and BankingInsolventProsecution of OfficerSufficiency of Indictment.
An indictment under Purdon's Dig. Pa. (13th ed.) p. 942, par. 195, making it a crime for an officer of an
insolvent bank to receive deposits, is fatally defective if the names of the owners of a private bank are not
given and there is no allegation that each is insolvent.
Habeas corpus by P. N. Rovnianek, held in custody by John T. Burke, as agent of the State
of Pennsylvania, under a warrant of the Governor of Nevada, upon the requisition of the
Governor of Pennsylvania. Discharged from custody.
Ayres & Gardiner, W. W. Griffin, and Augustus Tilden, for Petitioner:
There is no showing that the petitioner was a fugitive from justice in such a sense as to
estop the statute of limitations from running. (2 Purdon's Digest Pa., secs. 55, 56, pp. 2297,
2298.) During petitioner's absence from Pennsylvania, if he was absent, the statute of
limitations was running against him, and he was in no sense a fugitive from justice.
(Appleyard v. Mass., 203 U. S. 227.)
The indictment states no offense against the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The
indictment does not charge the petitioner with having received money from any one who is
alleged to have been a depositor. This of itself renders the indictment fatally defective.
(Commonwealth v. Schall, 5 York Legal Record, 137, 138; Commonwealth v. Delamater, 2
Pa. Dist. Ct. 118, 119; Commonwealth v. Junkin, 170 Pa. St. Rep. 199.) These decisions have
laid down a positive rule as to the elements necessary to constitute the crime with which the
petitioner is charged, and nowhere is it charged that the petitioner took and received the
money as a deposit from a depositor"; neither is there any record, as required by the
authorities stated, "that at the time the deposit was received the institution of which he
was an officer was insolvent."
41 Nev. 141, 142 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
received the money as a deposit from a depositor; neither is there any record, as required by
the authorities stated, that at the time the deposit was received the institution of which he
was an officer was insolvent. In the absence of allegations setting forth these two missing
elements, no offense is charged against the Pennsylvania statutes.
Edward T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General; Wm. McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General,
and R. M. Gibson, for Respondent:
Two prerequisites must appear before the governor of the refuge state may lawfully issue
his rendition warrant: (1) That the demanded person is substantially charged with a crime
against the laws of the demanding state by an indictment or affidavit made before a
magistrate, certified as authentic by the governor of the demanding state. (2) That the person
demanded is a fugitive from justice of the demanding state, as defined by the courts of the
United States. The first of these prerequisites is a question of law and open upon the face of
the record to judicial inquiry on habeas corpus. (Roberts v. Reilly, 116 U. S. 80, 94;
Appleyard v. Mass., 203 U. S. 222, 229.) The second is a question of fact which the
governor of the state upon whom the demand is made must decide upon such evidence as he
may deem satisfactory. (Roberts v. Reilly, supra; Munsey v. Clough, 196 U. S. 364, 372;
Appleyard v. Mass., supra; McNichols v. Pease, 207 U. S. 100, 108.)
The guilt or innocence of the relator, or the motive of the prosecutor, is not a relevant
subject of inquiry in extradition habeas corpus proceedings. (Drew v. Thaw, 235 U. S. 432,
439.) There is no discretion allowed, no inquiry into motives. (Kentucky v. Dennison, 24
How. 66; Pettibone v. Nichols, 203 U. S. 192, 203; Matter of Strauss, 197 U. S. 324, 333;
People ex rel. Jourdan v. Donahue, 84 N. Y. 438, 443.)
In passing upon an indictment forming the basis of an extradition warrant and demand, the
indictment will be examined only to the extent of ascertaining whether it substantially
charges a crime; whether its allegations are good in substance.
41 Nev. 141, 143 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
substantially charges a crime; whether its allegations are good in substance. Its technical
accuracy as a pleading will be left to the tribunal of the demanding state in which it is
pending. (Munsey v. Clough, supra; Drew v. Thaw, supra; Pierce v. Creecy, 210 U. S. 387.)
A charge of crime is good, from the standpoint of extradition, even though the indictment
shows on its face that the period fixed by the statute of limitations expired while the relator
was in the state. (Pierce v. Creecy, supra; Munsey v. Clough, supra; Reed v. United States,
224 Fed. 378, 381.)
The burden of showing the invalidity of the warrant rests upon the prisoner. (Bassing v.
Cady, 308 U. S. 386, 392; McNichols v. Pease, supra; Appleyard v. Mass., supra; Roberts v.
Reilly, supra; Hyatt v. Corkran, 188 U. S. 691.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
This is an original proceeding in habeas corpus.
The return to the writ shows that the petitioner is held in custody by John T. Burke, as the
duly appointed and constituted agent of the State of Pennsylvania, by reason of a certain
executive warrant issued by the governor of this state, upon the requisition of the governor of
the State of Pennsylvania, based upon three indictments returned against the petitioner by the
grand inquest of Allegheny County, Pa.
The point which is urged in behalf of respondent is that each of the indictments charges a
crime within the meaning of article 4, section 2, subdivision 2, of the constitution of the
United States. Since the three indictments are, in legal effect, substantially the same, we will,
in considering the matter, confine ourselves to one of them. Omitting the formal parts it
reads:
* * * P. V. Rovnianek, * * * being then and there an officer of a certain private bank
known as P. V. Rovnianek & Company Bank, unlawfully did then and there take and receive
the sum of $55, lawful money of the government of the United States from one John
Dzurniak as a deposit in said bank, he, the said P. V. Rovnianek then and there knowing that
the said P. V.
41 Nev. 141, 144 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
Rovnianek & Company Bank was at the time insolvent, with the intent in him, the said P. V.
Rovnianek, to fraudulently embezzle the said sum of $55 lawful money as aforesaid.
Great reliance is placed by counsel for respondent upon the case of Pierce v. Creecy, 210
U. S. 387, 28 Sup. Ct. 714, 52 L. Ed. 1113, and our attention is especially called to certain
language used by the court in that case, which we quote:
There must be objections which reach deeper into the indictment than those which would
be good against it in the court where it is pending. We are unable to adopt the test suggested
by counsel, that an objection, good if taken on arrest of judgment, would be sufficient to
show that the indictment is not a charge of crime. Not to speak of the uncertainty of such a
test, in view of the varying practice in the different states, there is nothing in principle or
authority which supports it. Of course, such a test would be utterly inapplicable to cases of a
charge of crime by affidavit, which was held to be within the constitution. (In the Matter of
Strauss, 197 U. S. 324, 25 Sup. Ct. 535, 49 L. Ed. 774.) The only safe rule is to abandon
entirely the standard to which the indictment must conform, judged as a criminal pleading,
and consider only whether it shows satisfactorily that the fugitive has been in fact, however
inartificially, charged with crime in the state from which he has fled.
As we interpret that decision, the court held that the indictment or other paper setting forth
the charge would be deemed insufficient in habeas corpus unless every element of the crime
sought to be charged were alleged, for the court says:
The indictment, whether good or bad, as a pleading, unmistakably describes every
element of the crime of false swearing. * * *
1. This is our understanding of the law; that is, if the indictment does not allege every
substantial element of the crime in question, no crime is in fact charged, and hence the
petitioner should be discharged from the custody of the agent of the State of Pennsylvania. In
the matter of Hyatt v. Corkran, 1SS U. S. 691, 23 Sup. Ct. 456, 47 L. Ed. 657, the court
said:
41 Nev. 141, 145 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
the matter of Hyatt v. Corkran, 188 U. S. 691, 23 Sup. Ct. 456, 47 L. Ed. 657, the court said:
As was said in Roberts v. Reilly, 116 U. S. 80, 95, 6 Sup. Ct. 291, 29 L. Ed. 544, it must
appear to the governor, before he can lawfully comply with the demand for extradition, that
the person demanded is substantially charged with a crime against the laws of the state from
whose justice he is alleged to have fled, by an indictment or an affidavit, etc. * * *
See, also, In Re Waterman, 29 Nev. 288, 89 Pac. 291, 11 L. R. A. n. s. 424, 13 Ann. Cas.
926.
Certainly no one can be substantially charged with a crime unless every element of the
crime is stated. If one element of a crime can be omitted from the indictment, then why not
every element? If this is done, can a paper indorsed Indictment be said to be such in the
sense contemplated? It is clear, we think, that no matter how inartistically an indictment may
be drawn, it may be good in a habeas corpus proceeding if it charges every element of the
offense in question. On the other hand, no matter how artistically it may be drawn, if it omits
a single essential element of the offense sought to be stated, it is not such a charge of a crime
as will justify the remanding of the person sought to be extradited to the custody of the
officer. Taking this view, we must inquire if every element of the crime sought to be charged
is contained in the indictments against the petitioner. The statute under which the crime is
sought to be charged reads:
Any banker, broker or officer of any trust or savings institution, national, state or private
bank, who shall take and receive money from a depositor with the knowledge that he, they or
the bank is at the time insolvent, shall be guilty of embezzlement, and shall be punished by a
fine in double the amount so received, and imprisoned from one to three years in the
penitentiary. (Purdon's Digest, 13th ed. p. 492, par. 195.)
2. Several reasons are urged as a basis for the contention that the indictments in question
do not contain essential elements under the statute; but, as we view the case, we deem it
necessary to consider only one of them, and that is, Does the indictment charge that the
deposit was accepted by one contemplated by the statute, and acting in the capacity
contemplated?
41 Nev. 141, 146 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
the case, we deem it necessary to consider only one of them, and that is, Does the indictment
charge that the deposit was accepted by one contemplated by the statute, and acting in the
capacity contemplated? It is clear that before one can be guilty of a crime under the statute
quoted he must receive a deposit while acting in some capacity designated by the statute. For
instance, no one would be guilty of a crime under this statute if, whole acting as the president
of an insolvent corporation engaged solely in mercantile pursuits, he should accept for the
corporation a deposit of money for safe-keeping; nor could an insolvent individual, engaged
solely in the grocery business, who might accept a deposit of money for safe-keeping, be
guilty of a crime under the statute quoted. The indictment in question negatives the idea that
petitioner accepted a deposit while acting as an officer of a banking corporation; hence we are
left to determine if the indictment alleges facts sufficient to charge a crime for receiving
money as an officer of a private bank. A case which we think is squarely in point is that of
Roby v. State, 41 Tex. Cr. R. 152, 51 S. W. 1114. In that case it was said:
In order to constitute a good indictment * * * it should have alleged that the Tyler
Banking Company * * * was a private bank or banking institution, and, if a private bank or
partnership, the names of the owners or persons composing the partnership must be alleged. *
* * The fact that the statute in question uses the expression private bank or banking
institution' does not change this rule; nor does the fact that the Tyler Banking Company' did
its business under the name of the Tyler Banking Company' make that mere name a legal
entity; nor does it endow it with a personal existence distinct from or independent of the
individuals who compose that banking company. In fact, it was simply a firm name, under
which the individuals composing it did their banking business. If the individuals were
solvent, the Tyler Banking Company was solvent; if they were insolvent, the Tyler Banking
Company was insolvent; and, in order to have a good indictment under the peculiar
wording of this statute, it was necessary to allege the names of the persons composing
the Tyler Banking Company."
41 Nev. 141, 147 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
Banking Company was insolvent; and, in order to have a good indictment under the peculiar
wording of this statute, it was necessary to allege the names of the persons composing the
Tyler Banking Company.
The rule laid down by the language quoted is recognized as the correct one in the case of
Commonwealth v. Smith, 11 Lanc. Law Rev. Pa. 350. That was a case in which Smith and
one Graybille were charged as copartners engaged in carrying on a private bank under a firm
name. The court said:
The averment in the indictment follows the language of the act, and is in substantial
compliance with the rules of criminal pleading.
See, also, People v. Doty, 80 N. Y. 225; Boyenton v. Commonwealth, 114 Va. 841, 76 S.
E. 945.
It goes without saying that individuals must compose a private banking institution, and the
name under which the private bank is operated is no indication as to the identity of the
individuals who compose the institution; hence it will be readily seen that it is essential that
the names of the persons comprising the private bank should be alleged in the indictment, or
there is an utter failure to allege the existence of a private bank. It is also essential that it
should be alleged that the individuals comprising the private bank are insolvent. (Roby v.
State, supra; Boyenton v. Commonwealth, supra.)
If some of the very wealthy men of Pittsburg were conducting a private bank under the
firm name of Penn Banking Company, and kept the assets of the copartnership separate and
distinct from their individual assets, and the copartnership owed $1,000,000, and held assets
of the value of $900,000, which they knew, and while the copartnership was in that financial
condition one or all the partners should receive a deposit of money, and thereafter the
copartnership should close its doors, if the theory of the respondent is sound, each of the
copartners would be a criminal, even though he were able, ready, and willing to make good
any deficiency. We are unable to accede to any such doctrine. This illustration shows the
necessity of alleging the names of the individuals who compose the bank, and their
insolvency.
41 Nev. 141, 148 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
individuals who compose the bank, and their insolvency. Because of the failure of
indictments in question to do this, no crime is charged.
It is ordered that P. V. Rovnianek be discharged from custody.
Sanders, J., absent on account of sickness.
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur in the opinion and order.
I deem it proper to express my views on a principle of law applicable to and concurrent
with that expressed by Mr. Justice Coleman.
The statute of Pennsylvania, defining the crime with which it is sought to charge petitioner
in the indictment here in question, is as follows:
Any banker, broker, or officer of any trust or savings institution, national, state or private
bank, who shall take and receive money from a depositor with the knowledge that he, they or
the bank is at the time insolvent, shall be guilty of embezzlement, and shall be punished by a
fine in double the amount so received, and imprisoned from one to three years in the
penitentiary.
(Purdon's Digest, 13th ed. p. 942, par. 195.)
The term officer, as used in the statute of Pennsylvania under which the indictment here
in question was found, is a generic term, one embracing a general class. The specific capacity
of the party sought to be charged as an officer should be alleged.
We were reminded by counsel for the State of Pennsylvania in his argument that our action
in this matter might be reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United States, and it may not be
amiss to look to the expression of that august tribunal for guidance. Moreover, we may with
confident propriety turn to the decisions upon the subject and take light from the assertions of
the courts of the demanding state.
In the case of United States v. Hess, 124 U. S. 483, 8 Sup. Ct. 571, 31 L. Ed. 516, the
Supreme Court of the United States was called upon to consider the averments of an
indictment by which it was sought to charge a person with the violation of section 54S0 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States {U. S. Comp. St. 1916, sec.
41 Nev. 141, 149 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
a person with the violation of section 5480 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (U. S.
Comp. St. 1916, sec. 10,385). The court, speaking through Mr. Justice Field, said:
The statute upon which the indictment is founded only describes the general nature of the
offense prohibited; and the indictment, in repeating its language without averments disclosing
the particulars of the alleged offense, states no matters upon which issue could be performed
for submission to a jury. The general, and, with few exceptions, of which the present is not
one, the universal, rule on this subject is, that all the material facts and circumstances
embraced in the definition of the offense must be stated, or the indictment will be defective.
No essential element of the crime can be omitted without destroying the whole pleading. The
omission cannot be supplied by intendment, or implication, and the charge must be made
directly, and not inferentially, or by way of recital.
In this case the court referred to its former decision (United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U. S.
542, 23 L. Ed. 588), and approvingly quoted the language:
It is an elementary principle of criminal pleading that where the definition of an offense,
whether it be at common law or by statute, includes generic terms, it is not sufficient that the
indictment shall charge the offense in the same generic terms as in the definition, but it must
state the species; it must descend to particulars.'
Supporting this same general rule we find the cases of United States v. Carll, 105 U. S.
611, 26 L. Ed. 1135, and United States v. Simmons, 96 U. S. 360, 24 L. Ed. 819.
In the indictment here in question the expression is used: P. V. Rovnianek, * * * being
then and there an officer of a certain private bank, etc. This, it is contended, is in the
language of the statute. Under the cases cited and under the rule of criminal pleading there
referred to it is not sufficient to charge the commission of a crime by using the language of
the statute, where such language, as in the statute of Pennsylvania under consideration, uses
only the generic or general terms, within which may be embraced any number of specific
designations.
41 Nev. 141, 150 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
consideration, uses only the generic or general terms, within which may be embraced any
number of specific designations.
The indictment here in question, and by reason of which the executive warrant of the
governor of this state issued, fails, in my judgment, to set forth the essential elements of a
crime under the statute of Pennsylvania for reasons other than that heretofore considered. In
this respect we need look no further than to the expression of the courts of the demanding
state made with reference to the identical statute.
In the case of Commonwealth v. Delamater et al., 2 Pa. Dist. R. 118, the court had before
it the sufficiency of an indictment drawn under this code. There the court said:
In order to sustain a conviction on an indictment under this statute it must be shown: (1)
That the defendant was, at the time of the commission of the offense, a banker,' broker,' or
officer of a trust or savings institution, national, state, or private bank.' (2) That he took and
received the money as a deposit from a depositor. [We italicize.] (3) That at the time the
deposit was received the banker' or broker,' or in case of an officer, the institution of which
he was an officer, was insolvent. (4) That the defendant knew at the time he received the
deposit that he or, in case of an officer, the institution was insolvent. (5) That the money so
received was embezzled, that is, unlawfully appropriated to the use of the defendant, or of the
institution of which he was an officer. These are material elements in the crime. The
indictment must charge that they existed in the particular case.
There is no attempt in the indictment here under consideration to charge the receipt of
money as a deposit from a depositor. Moreover, the indictment fails to assert that other
essential element, declared so by the courts of the demanding state, actual insolvency. While
this was but the decision of an inferior court, yet it appears to have remained undisturbed by
the courts of last resort.
41 Nev. 141, 151 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
last resort. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the case of Commonwealth v. Junkin, 170
Pa. 194, 32 Atl. 617, 31 L. R. A. 124, referring to the statute under which this indictment is
found, said:
There are three essential elements, which the commonwealth must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt, before the jury can find the guilt which the act makes punishable: (1)
Actual insolvency at the time the money is received: (2) knowledge of the insolvency; (3) the
receipt of money as a bank deposit.
By this declaration the courts of the demanding state have fixed at least three of the
essential elements which it declared to be indispensable to establish the crime of
embezzlement under this statute. The indictment here in question, and pursuant to which the
executive warrant in this case issued, fails to measure up to the standard of requirements as
thus asserted by the court of Pennsylvania.
Counsel for respondent appears to contend that it is not within the province of this court to
investigate as to whether a crime is sufficiently alleged under the statute of Pennsylvania.
They contend in this respect that that is a matter wholly within the province of the courts of
Pennsylvania. This contention is, in my judgment, untenable. The right to take an individual
from one state into another for the purpose of putting him on trial for a crime alleged is one
which takes its authority from the constitution and statutes of the United States. The
authoritative accusation of a crime against the laws of the demanding state is the principle
underlying the right of extradition, the principle underlying the right and power of the
governor of the asylum state to issue his executive warrant. The authoritative declaration of a
crime against the laws of a demanding state must, of necessity, take the form of a pleading,
regardless of the name or designation by which that pleading may be known. It is by this
pleading that the crime itself is declared and designated. (Roberts v. Reilly, 116 U. S. 80, 6
Sup. Ct. 291, 29 L. Ed. 544.) To every crime there are the essential elements.
41 Nev. 141, 152 (1917) Ex Parte Rovnianek
every crime there are the essential elements. These are usually embraced within the general
terms act and intention or criminal negligence. In charging an offense against the laws of the
state, no essential element of the crime can be omitted without destroying the pleading. If the
pleading is thus destroyed by reason of the omission of some essential element, then a crime
is not alleged; and if a crime is not alleged, no extradition is authorized, and the requisition of
the demanding state, as well as the executive warrant of the asylum state, is a nullity. In an
instance such as this, where an individual may be taken from one state to another, or indeed
may be taken across the continent under extradition proceedings based upon an indictment
which the courts of the state to which he is to be taken have already declared to be
insufficient to constitute a crime against the laws of that state, it appears to me to be not only
inconsistent with the very fundamental elements of justice, but carrying argument to absurdity
to say that the courts of the state from which he is to be taken may not, upon habeas corpus
proceedings, inquire fully into the indictment or accusation or other pleading by which the
crime is set forth, to determine indeed whether or not any crime is really alleged, and, if such
is found wanting, may not restore the party to liberty.
____________
41 Nev. 153, 153 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
[No. 2020]
WASHOE COUNTY BANK (a Corporation), Appellant, v. W. C. CAMPBELL, N. L.
WATTON, and T. A. BECHTOL, Respondents.
[168 Pac. 643]
1. Landlord and TenantNoticeAssignment of RentsInterest in RealtyEffectEstate
or Interest in Land.
The lessor's assignment of all rents due and to become due under a certain lease was not an assignment
in itself of the lease, and did not create an estate or interest in the lands within Rev. Laws, 1038, 1039,
1069, stating the requisites of an instrument affecting the estates or interests in lands and of recordation in
order to constitute notice.
2. Landlord and TenantInterest in LandsAssignment of RentsNotice.
Such an assignment does not, when recorded, constitute notice to the lessees of the assignment.
3. AssignmentsNecessity of Notice.
Until the debtor receives notice of an assignment, or until he has knowledge of such facts concerning the
same as are sufficient to put him on inquiry, he may deal with the assignor as though no assignment had
been made.
4. Landlord and TenantAssignment of RentsRights of Lessee.
In the absence of actual or constructive notice to the lessees of an assignment of the rent due or to
become due, they could interpose against the assignee any defenses maintainable against the lessor.
5. Landlord and TenantLiability for RentEvidenceSufficiency.
Where the landlord and his assignee of rents after lessees failed to pay the rents negotiated with other
parties who subsequently went on the premises and paid the rent after the assignee was told by the lessees
that a third person would assume the lease and made no objection, the landlord and the assignee were
estopped to sue the lessees for the rent.
6. Landlord and TenantSurrender of LeaseOperation of law.
Where a landlord grants a new lease to a stranger with the assent of the tenant during the existence of an
outstanding lease, and the tenant gives up his own possession to the stranger, who thereafter pays rent, or
where in any other way a new tenant is by agreement of the tenant and the landlord substituted and
accepted in place of the old, there is a surrender by operation of law.
7. Landlord and TenantActions for RentEvidenceAdmissibility.
In action of the landlord's assignee for rent, it is proper for the trial court to consider the occupancy of the
premises and payment of the rentals by other parties than the original lessee when such
facts were known and acknowledged by the lessor.
41 Nev. 153, 154 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
payment of the rentals by other parties than the original lessee when such facts were known and
acknowledged by the lessor.
8. Landlord and TenantActions for RentEvidenceAdmissibility.
Where the lessees in an action by the landlord's assignee for rent claimed a release by operation of law, it
was proper for the trial court to consider occupation of premises and payment of rentals by third persons
with the knowledge of the landlord.
9. Landlord and TenantSurrender of PremisesAcquiescenceEvidenceSufficiency.
Evidence held to sustain finding that the lessees delivered up possession of the premises to a third person,
notifying the person to whom they have been accustomed to pay rentals, and that the third person continued
in possession and made at least one rent payment to such agent.
10. Appeal and ErrorScope of ReviewConflicting Evidence.
Where the evidence was conflicting, but the judgment of the trial court was supported by substantial
evidence, its conclusion should not be disturbed.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; John S. Orr, Judge.
Action by the Washoe County Bank, a corporation, against W. C. Campbell and others.
From the judgment rendered, plaintiff appeals. Affirmed, Coleman, J., dissenting.
Cheney, Downer, Price & Hawkins, for Appellant:
An oral lease of lands for more than one year is void; likewise an oral surrender of a lease,
covering a period of more than one year, is equally void. (Cutting's Compiled Laws, sec.
2694.) The acceptance of rent from another tenant, even with knowledge that a substitution
was claimed, will not amount to a surrender by operation of law. A leasehold interest in land
for more than one year can no more be surrendered than it can be created by parol. (Rees v.
Lowy, 59 N. W. 310; Chicago Attachment Co. v. Davis Sewing Machine Co., 15 L. R. A.
754; Johnson v. Reading, 36 Mo. App. 306; Welch v. Schuyler, 6 Daly, 412.)
The assignment was recorded. It is contended that the assignment was not such an
instrument as could properly be recorded, because it did not affect real estate. Our statute
provides that among the documents that may be recorded is any instrument of writing
"whereby any real estate may be affected."
41 Nev. 153, 155 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
be recorded is any instrument of writing whereby any real estate may be affected. (Cutting's
Compiled Laws, sec. 2663.)
Unless a contract of lease is distinctly to be held to be a unilateral contract, the obligations
assumed by the tenant are just as binding as those assumed by the landlord, and each should
receive the protection of the law.
Boyd & Salisbury, for Respondents:
The law is well settled that unless an instrument which comes fairly within the scope of
the recording acts, the recordation of the same is a futile and unnecessary act, and has no
effect whatsoever upon the rights of the parties. (Cutting's Compiled laws, secs. 2663, 2664.)
Constructive notice is entirely a creature of statute. Its effect is to be gathered from the
construction of the statute. (Grellet v. Heilshorn, 4 Nev. 526.) Where the statute does not
authorize the registry of assignments of choses in action, the filing and recording of them
imparts no notice to any one. (4 Cyc. 60; Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 77, 78.)
Until the debtor receives notice of an assignment, or until he has knowledge of such facts
concerning the same as are sufficient to put him on inquiry, he may deal with the assignor as
though no assignment has been made, and the assignment makes the chose subject to
arrangements made between the debtor and the assignor prior to the time when the debtor
receives notice of the assignment. (4 Cyc. 88; 2 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 1077, 1099.) A
leasehold interest is merely a chattel real, and the rules which govern conveyances of real
property do not apply to assignments of estates for years, but they are governed generally by
the rules applicable to sales of personal property. (Jeffries v. Easton, Eldridge & Co., 113
Cal. 345.) A leasehold interest is not real estate. (People v. Bennett, 14 Hun, 63.)
A surrender is created by operation of law when the parties to a lease do some act so
inconsistent with the subsisting relation of landlord and tenant as to imply that they have
both agreed to consider the surrender as made."
41 Nev. 153, 156 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
that they have both agreed to consider the surrender as made. (24 Cyc. 1367.)
The grounds of accident and surprise, as a motion for a new trial, will not avail the moving
party unless the party has, during the trial of the action and when taken by surprise, moved for
a continuance for a sufficient length of time to enable such party to meet the evidence by
which he claims to have been surprised. (Heath v. Scott, 65 Cal. 548; Schellhouse v. Bell, 29
Cal. 605; Delmas v. Martin, 39 Cal. 555; Perrer v. Mutual Ins. Co., 47 Cal. 416.) A motion
for a new trial will not be granted upon the ground of newly discovered evidence unless it be
shown that a different result would probably be obtained upon a new trial. (Oberlander v.
Fixen, 129 Cal. 690.) It must be further shown that diligence has been exercised in attempting
to procure the testimony at the time of the trial. (Tibbet v. Sue, 125 Cal. 544.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
The respondents were the lessees of Mrs. L. E. Alexander Shannon. The premises leased
were known as the Alexander Ranch, situated in Washoe County. Some time after the making
of the lease, the lessor made an assignment to the Washoe County Bank, appellant here,
which assignment is as follows:
Know all men by these presents, that I, L. E. A. Shannon, the party of the first part in that
certain lease hereinafter described, for and in consideration of the sum of ten dollars to me in
hand paid by Washoe County Bank, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and for
other valuable considerations moving to me from said Washoe County Bank, do by these
presents assign, set over and transfer to said Washoe County Bank all rents due and to
become due under that lease made on the 3d day of March, 1908, between me, the party of
the first part therein, and W. C. Campbell, N. L. Watton, and T. A. Bechtol, the parties of the
second part therein, wherein I leased to the parties of the second part the Alexander Ranch for
the term of five years next ensuing the date thereof at a monthly rental of $66.75, payable
in advance on the first day of each and every month.
41 Nev. 153, 157 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
five years next ensuing the date thereof at a monthly rental of $66.75, payable in advance on
the first day of each and every month. And I hereby authorize and direct said Washoe County
Bank to collect said rentals and to take such action, legal or otherwise, as may be necessary
for the collection thereof; and I further direct that upon the collection of said rents, or any
portion thereof, the same shall be applied by said Washoe County Bank upon the
indebtedness due from me to said bank.
It is alleged in appellant's complaint that the defendants here, the lessees of Mrs. Shannon,
were notified of the assignment of the rentals, and in this respect it is averred that pursuant to
said notice the respondents paid the rental to plaintiff to and including the month of August,
1909. This action was commenced by the appellant bank to recover from the respondents the
rental of the premises from the 1st day of September, 1909, to the 1st day of September,
1910, and in their complaint they allege:
That on or about the 24th day of June, 1909, said L. E. Alexander Shannon, for a valuable
consideration, and by an instrument in writing, assigned and set over to Washoe County
Bank, the plaintiff herein, all the rents due and to thereafter become due under and by virtue
of said lease, and by the terms of said instrument in writing authorized and directed the said
Washoe County Bank to collect said rentals and to take such action, legal or otherwise, as
might be necessary for the collection thereof. That said instrument in writing was filed for
record in the office of the county recorder in Washoe County, Nevada, on the 25th day of
June, 1909, where the same is of record in Book C. of Leases at page 409.
By their answer the respondents deny ever having received notice, either actual or
constructive, of the execution of this assignment. It appears from the record that the
assignment, being acknowledged before a notary public, was recorded in the office of the
county recorder of Washoe County. In the court below appellant sought to establish notice to
respondents, both actual and constructive.
41 Nev. 153, 158 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
to establish notice to respondents, both actual and constructive. They sought to support their
claim of actual notice by the testimony of the witness, Fred Stadtmuller, assistant cashier of
the appellant corporation; and they contend here, as in the court below, that the recorded
assignment constituted constructive notice to respondents. It will suffice to say here with
reference to the testimony of the witness Fred Stadtmuller that the same was most
unsatisfactory. The most that could be maintained for the testimony of this witness is that he
believed that notice had been mailed to respondents, basing his belief upon the custom of the
bank in such matters. he was unable to produce a copy of the notice, and refused to positively
state that he had sent the same through the mails, or that the same had been in any wise
delivered to respondents or either of them.
The trial court found, and in our judgment properly so, that the respondents had never
received notice, either actual or constructive, of the execution of the assignment. In support of
their contention that respondents were chargeable with constructive notice as to the
assignment, appellants refer us to the sections of our code, as follows:
No estate, or interest in lands, other than for leases for a term not exceeding one year, nor
any trust or power over or concerning lands, or in any manner relating thereto, shall hereafter
be created, granted, assigned, surrendered, or declared, unless by act or operation of law, or
by deed or conveyance, in writing, subscribed by the party creating, granting, assigning,
surrendering, or declaring the same, or by his lawful agent thereunto authorized in writing.
(Section 1069, Revised Laws, 1912.)
Section 1038, Revised Laws, provides:
Every conveyance of real estate, and every instrument of writing setting forth an
agreement to convey any real estate, or whereby any real estate may be affected, proved,
acknowledged, and certified in the manner prescribed in this act, to operate as notice to third
persons, shall be recorded in the office of the recorder of the county in which such real
estate is situated, but shall be valid and binding between the parties thereto without such
record."
41 Nev. 153, 159 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
third persons, shall be recorded in the office of the recorder of the county in which such real
estate is situated, but shall be valid and binding between the parties thereto without such
record.
Section 1039, Revised Laws, provides:
Every such conveyance or instrument of writing, acknowledged or proved and certified,
and recorded in the manner prescribed in this act, shall, from the time of filing the same with
the recorder for record, impart notice to all persons of the contents thereof; and subsequent
purchasers and mortgagees shall be deemed to purchase and take with notice.
It is contended that by this statute is prescribed a rule governing the creation and
surrendering of all interests in lands; that by this statute is prescribed a character of evidence
which is exclusive when proof is required that a lease of lands for more than one year has
been created or extinguished. The facts presented in the case bearing upon the acts and
conduct of the parties, and the significant language of the assignment, removes the matter
from the operation of this statute.
1. It will be observed from the language of the assignment that it was not one which could
be construed as assigning the lease itself. The language of the assignment is plain and
unambiguous. It assigns all rents due and to become due under that lease made on the 3d day
of March, 1908. The assignment of rents due and to become due does not constitute an
assignment of the instrument itself. (Ramsey v. Johnson, 8 Wyo. 476, 58 Pac. 755, 80 Am. St.
Rep. 948.) The authorities are quite uniform in holding that a mere assignment of moneys due
or to become due under a contract is not an assignment of the contract itself. (National Surety
Co. v. Maag, 43 Ind. App. 16, 86 N. E. 862; In Re Wright, 157 Fed. 544, 85 C. C. A. 206, 18
L. R. A. n. s. 193; Dickson v. City of St. Paul, 97 Minn. 258, 106 N. W. 1053; Fortunato v.
Patten, 147 N. Y. 277, 41 N. E. 572; Butler v. San Francisco Gas & Electric Co., 168 Cal.
32, 141 Pac. 818.)
2. An assignment of the rents due and to become due, affecting only the rentals to be
collected and not the lease under which such rentals are collected, does not create an
estate or interest in lands such as is contemplated by the section of our statute above
quoted.
41 Nev. 153, 160 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
affecting only the rentals to be collected and not the lease under which such rentals are
collected, does not create an estate or interest in lands such as is contemplated by the section
of our statute above quoted. Its recordation, therefore, not being contemplated by the statute,
constituted no notice to respondents of the assignment made by Mrs. Shannon to the appellant
bank. In our judgment the trial court properly concluded that the assignment in question was
merely an assignment of a right to collect moneys, and as such did not affect or concern the
real estate. Appellants in their brief refer us to the case of Rees v. Lowy, 57 Minn. 381, 59 N.
W. 310, wherein the Supreme Court of Minnesota held, among other things, that a leasehold
interest in land for more than one year cannot be surrendered any more than it can be created
by parol. If this question were before us, the doctrine asserted by that court might be of
valuable assistance, but the question is not presented here; nor was the question presented to
the Minnesota court under the same conditions as those set forth in the record of this case.
3. As a general proposition of law it may be stated that until the debtor receives notice of
an assignment or until he has knowledge of such facts concerning the same as are sufficient to
put him on inquiry, he may deal with the assignor as though no assignment had been made.
(Hogan v. Black, 66 Cal. 41, 4 Pac. 943; Leahi v. Dugdale, 34 Mo. 99; Deach v. Perry, 53
Hun, 638, 6 N. Y. Supp. 940; Com. v. Sides, 176 Pa. 616, 35 Atl. 136; Merrick v. Hulbert, 15
Ill. App. 606; Laughlin v. District of Columbia, 116 U. S. 485, 6 Sup. Ct. 472, 29 L. Ed. 701;
De Baun v. Davis, 1 Ky. Op. 281.)
4. Concluding, therefore, that the record fails to establish notice, either actual or
constructive, to respondents, it follows that respondents here were entitled to interpose and
establish such defense or defenses as would have been maintainable had the action been
brought by the lessor, Mrs. Shannon.
5. In our judgment, the record discloses acts and conduct on the part of Mrs.
41 Nev. 153, 161 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
conduct on the part of Mrs. Shannon, the lessor and assignor, as to amply support the finding
of the trial court to the effect that she had consented to a release of respondents from their
obligations under the lease. The record here discloses many things which go to refute the idea
that either the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, or her assignee, the Washoe County Bank, continued to
regard respondents as her lessees after the date of the last payment of rent by respondents.
Sasselli, who testifies to having taken over the lease and premises from respondents, relates
in his testimony of his having gone to the private residence of G. H. Taylor, the cashier of the
bank, and there making payment on the rent. He says he complained to Taylor of the amount
of the rent and told him he could not pay it. He says he asked for a reduction of the rent and
that the cashier replied to the effect that he would take the matter up with Mrs. Shannon.
There was no mention made at that time by Taylor as to respondents, the original lessors, nor
do they appear to have been referred to or looked to by the cashier on the question of
reduction or change of terms.
In a letter addressed to one of the respondents, the lessor declared him as her agent to
negotiate with other parties to lease the premises. In another communication to the same
party, she spoke of letting the premises to others on terms different from those contained in
the original lease to respondents. The testimony of the witness Yori, which is uncontradicted,
establishes communication between himself and the lessor relative to his becoming a lessee
of the ranch independent of respondents. The testimony of Sasselli and Yori establishes that
the former left the premises in question and the latter, after communicating by letter with
Mrs. Shannon, went on the premises in May, 1910. During the interim between the departure
of Sasselli and the occupancy of Yori, the ranch appears to have been unoccupied. Yori
testifies to his having written to the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, asking if she would rent the
premises to him. He further testifies that in answer to this communication "she wrote
herself that I could go on there for so much money, and I was just going on from month
to month."
41 Nev. 153, 162 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
to this communication she wrote herself that I could go on there for so much money, and I
was just going on from month to month. The testimony of Sasselli and Yori establishes the
payment of rentals to the Washoe County Bank as the assignee of the lessor and to the lessor
herself. From the testimony of all of the parties it is established that Yori occupied the
premises and paid the rental for a number of months, all of which was with the knowledge
and assent of the lessor and pursuant to her authority as related in the testimony of Yori.
The acts and conduct of the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, running through all of these
transactions, as related in the record, were sufficient, in our judgment, to constitute an
estoppel sufficient to defeat an action by the lessor against her lessees, respondents here, for
the collection of the rentals claimed. That which would constitute an estoppel as to a lessor in
an action against his lessees for the collection of rent is of equal effect as to the assignee of a
lessor where the lessees are not chargeable with notice of the assignment.
The record as it is before us is, in our judgment, sufficient to warrant the trial court in
finding that the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, did not look to respondents for the rental, and did not
hold them responsible for the same after the 1st day of September, 1909. The acts of Shannon
as related in the record were to our minds so inconsistent with the subsisting relation of
landlord and tenant as to convey the idea that she recognized the surrender of the leasehold by
respondents. Indeed, there is much in the record that goes to establish acquiescence by the
assignee in the acts of the lessor in recognition of the surrender of the leasehold to third
parties.
6-8. It is asserted as a proposition of law that where a landlord grants a new lease to a
stranger with the assent of the tenant during the existence of an outstanding lease, and the
tenant gives up his own possession to the stranger who thereafter pays rent, or where in any
other way a new tenant is by agreement of the tenant and the landlord substituted and
accepted in place of the old, there is a surrender by operation of law.
41 Nev. 153, 163 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
other way a new tenant is by agreement of the tenant and the landlord substituted and
accepted in place of the old, there is a surrender by operation of law. (Commercial Hotel Co.
v. Brill, 123 Wis. 638, 101 N. W. 1101; Hawthorne v. Coursen, 18 Misc. Rep. 447, 41 N. Y.
Supp. 995; Bowen v. Haskell, 53 Minn. 480, 55 N. W. 629; Weiner v. Baldwin, 9 Kan. App.
772, 59 Pac. 40; In Re Clothing Co., 230 Fed. 681; Triest v. Goldstone, 173 Cal. 240, 159
Pac. 715; Realty Co. v. Cooke, 138 N. Y. Supp. 99.)
The record establishes beyond all doubt that the demised premises here known as the
Alexander Ranch was occupied and the rentals paid by parties other than respondents. The
occupancy of these third parties and the payment of the rental by them was known and
acknowledged by Mrs. Shannon, the lessor. It was proper for the trial court to consider these
facts, if for no other purpose than as circumstances tending to establish the acquiescence of
the lessor in the surrender of the premises by respondents. (Bedford v. Terhune, 30 N. Y. 453,
86 Am. Dec. 394; Mulvey v. Charter, 174 Ill. App. 417.) The release claimed being one by
operation of law rather than by express surrender, it was proper for the trial court to consider
such facts as would establish the intention of the parties. (Welcome v. Hess, 90 Cal. 507, 27
Pac. 369, 25 Am. St. Rep. 145; Triest v. Goldstone, supra.)
Finding No. 5 of the trial court is as follows:
FifthThat some time during the month of June, 1909, the defendants Campbell and
Watton delivered up the possession of the premises described in said lease to one Sasselli and
at said time notified one A. C. Frohlich, an employee of the plaintiff, and the person to whom
the said defendants had been accustomed to pay said rentals, that the said defendants had
turned over said premises to said Sasselli, and that the said Sasselli would thereafter pay the
rental to become due on the said lease; that said Sasselli continued for some time in the
possession of said premises and thereafter made at least one payment of rent to the
plaintiff as the agent for the said L. E. Alexander Shannon."
41 Nev. 153, 164 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
time in the possession of said premises and thereafter made at least one payment of rent to the
plaintiff as the agent for the said L. E. Alexander Shannon.
Error is assigned to the action of the trial court in making the foregoing finding. It is
contended that this finding is erroneous, for the reason that the same is unwarranted by the
evidence in the case; and for the reason that it is not shown that the defendant delivered up
the possession of the premises described in the complaint to one Sasselli; and for the reason
that the evidence does not show that the plaintiff or Mrs. Alexander Shannon was ever
notified or that either of them was ever notified of such delivery, or that A. C. Frohlich,
mentioned in this finding, was ever notified thereof. Error is further contended for as to this
finding for the reason that it is not shown that the said A. C. Frohlich had any authority to
accept said notification or ever did accept the same or was at any time the person to whom
defendant had been accustomed to pay the rentals; and for the further reason that it is not
shown in the evidence that the plaintiff or the said Mrs. Alexander Shannon, or either of
them, were ever notified that said defendants had turned over the premises to Sasselli, and
that he would pay the rental to become due on said lease.
9. In our judgment, the record supports the finding. The testimony of Watton and Sasselli
is to the effect that in the bank some time about June 15, 1909, the former, in the presence of
the receiving teller, A. C. Frohlich, and in the presence of Sasselli, made the statement:
Mr. Frohlich, Mr. Sasselli has taken the lease off of our hands and will hereafter pay the
rent on that property.
At that time Watton, the respondent, according to his statement, turned the lease over to
Sasselli. This is also testified to by the witness Sasselli. The record further supports this
finding to the effect that Frohlich, as receiving teller, had been accustomed to receive the rent
from Watton. The record also establishes that from and after this transaction in the bank
Sasselli occupied the leased premises and paid rent to both Mrs.
41 Nev. 153, 165 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
from and after this transaction in the bank Sasselli occupied the leased premises and paid rent
to both Mrs. Shannon, the lessor, and to Mr. Taylor, the cashier of the appellant bank.
We do not assume to say that the transaction in the bank, wherein Watton made the
declaration to the receiving teller that Sasselli was to take the lease off their (respondents')
hands, and would pay the rent, was sufficient to constitute notice to the appellant bank or to
the lessor. Nor do we assume to determine that the receiving teller of the bank could in any
wise bind the bank, even though he acquiesced in the transfer and surrender. But if
subsequent acts following in uninterrupted sequence indicated complete acquiescence by the
appellant in the surrender attempted to be made in the bank; if from the date of the colloquy
in the bank between Watton, Sasselli, and Frohlich, the lessor, as well as the appellant as her
agent, no longer looked upon the respondents as tenants under the lease; if from that date the
acts of the lessor and her assignee, the appellant, were so inconsistent with the subsisting
relation of landlord and tenant as to convey the idea that they and each of them recognized the
surrender of the leasehold on the occasion of the Watton-Frohlich-Sasselli transactionthen
the finding of the court in this respect is not error.
It might be said with propriety, we think, that this record presents a series of acts on the
part of the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, as well as on the part of her assignee, the appellant here,
continuing from the date of the transaction in the bank, as testified to by the respondent
Watton, no one of which, taken alone, would constitute acquiescence on the part of appellant
or on the part of its assignor, Mrs. Shannon, in the surrender of the leasehold, but the whole
of which, taken together, was sufficient to estop the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, from denying her
acquiescence in the surrender of the leasehold and her recognition of third parties as tenants
under a separate lease. If the respondents here had received actual notice of the assignment
of the rentals made by the lessor to the appellant bank, or if they had been chargeable
with notice under the law, then a different view might be taken of the acts and conduct of
the lessor.
41 Nev. 153, 166 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
notice of the assignment of the rentals made by the lessor to the appellant bank, or if they had
been chargeable with notice under the law, then a different view might be taken of the acts
and conduct of the lessor. As we view it, she, by reason of her acts and conduct, would have
been estopped from prosecuting a suit against the respondents for the unpaid rentals. But
where the lessees, respondents here, were not chargeable with notice as to the assignment,
then, as we have already stated, they had a right to prove and rely upon the acts and conduct
of their lessor; and that which constituted an estoppel as to her was of equal effect as to
appellant, her assignee.
10. The evidence produced before the trial court, as we find it in the record, was to no
slight extent conflicting. Every fact presented in the case was, as disclosed by the record, met
by some conflicting fact or circumstance; but out of this condition the trial court, having
heard the evidence and viewed the witnesses upon the stand, and having had opportunity to
observe their conduct and demeanor and all other things that properly go with the active trial
of a case, determined the matter, after careful consideration, by judgment in favor of
respondents. The determination and judgment of the trial court is supported by substantial
evidence; and, in view of the unvarying rule of this court, such determination and conclusion
should not be disturbed. The view that we have taken of the case under the law as we deem it
applicable disposes of the errors assigned as to the admission by the trial court of certain
testimony. No error was committed in this respect.
In view of the findings of the trial court and in view of the conclusion reached, the newly
discovered evidence asserted by appellant in furtherance of its motion for a new trial would
not have produced a different result. (Oberlander v. Fixen, 129 Cal. 690, 62 Pac. 254.)
The judgment and order appealed from are sustained.
It is so ordered.
41 Nev. 153, 167 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
Coleman, J., dissenting:
I dissent.
The complaint in this case alleges that Mrs. Shannon and the defendants entered into an
agreement of lease of the ranch in question for a period of five years, at a monthly rental of
$66.75, payable in advance on the first day of each month during the term of said lease, which
the defendants jointly and severally agreed to pay, and that there was due and unpaid on
account thereof the sum of $801, and that Mrs. Shannon assigned her interest in the lease to
plaintiff on June 24, 1909. The answer admitted the making of the agreement of lease, and
pleaded as affirmative defenses two transactions, one of which will be alluded to as the
Sasselli (Cassennelli) transaction, and the other as the Yori transaction. The Sasselli
transaction took place in the banking house of plaintiff on June 15, 1909, it being contended
by defendants that at that time and place an agreement was entered into by and between Mrs.
Shannon, the lessor, and the defendants, the lessees, whereby it was mutually understood and
agreed that the defendants might assign their interest in the lease to one Sasselli, and that
pursuant thereto the said Sasselli immediately took over the rights and assumed the liabilities
under said lease, by which transaction it is asserted defendants were released by operation of
law. I do not think the finding of fact which the court made as to this transaction can be
construed so as to sustain the contention; and, as I understand the prevailing opinion, it is not
contended that such an agreement was ever made, but on the other hand it is said that Mrs.
Shannon thereafter acquiesced in what was done, and must therefore be bound. The finding of
the court as to this transaction reads:
That some time during the month of June, 1909, the defendants Campbell and Watton
delivered up the possession of the premises described in said lease to one Sassanelli, and at
said time notified one A. C. Frohlich, an employee of the plaintiff, and the person to whom
the said defendants had been accustomed to pay said rentals, that said defendants had
turned over said premises to said Sassanelli, and that the said Sassanelli would thereafter
pay the rental to become due on the said lease; that said Sassanelli continued for some
time in the possession of said premises, and thereafter made at least one payment of rent
to the plaintiff as the agent for the said L. E. Alexander Shannon."
41 Nev. 153, 168 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
an employee of the plaintiff, and the person to whom the said defendants had been
accustomed to pay said rentals, that said defendants had turned over said premises to said
Sassanelli, and that the said Sassanelli would thereafter pay the rental to become due on the
said lease; that said Sassanelli continued for some time in the possession of said premises,
and thereafter made at least one payment of rent to the plaintiff as the agent for the said L. E.
Alexander Shannon.
Only two witnesses were called as to the Sasselli transaction, and they were Sasselli and
the defendant Watton. They were both called by defendants, and their evidence is
substantially the same; hence we quote from Watton's testimony only. After some preliminary
matters had been covered, the examination proceeded as follows:
Mr. SalisburyQ. Now, Mr. Watton, go ahead and state as nearly as you can just how
Mr. Cassennelli (meaning Sasselli) came to be in possession (of the ranch in question), what
was done in reference to it, and with reference to you turning possession over to him, and
how it was done? A. Well, Mr. Cassennelli came to us, and he wanted the ranch, and we took
him down to the Washoe County Bank and introduced him to Mr. Frohlich (the receiving
teller), and I believe that he consulted some lawyer before to get this lease of ours.
Mr. SalisburyQ. Just state what you know. A. He came down and wanted this lease,
and he would not take the place until he got this lease, so I handed him the lease, and took
him down and introduced, at least took him down and gave him the lease in front of Mr.
Frohlich, and I introduced him to Mr. Frohlich, and I says, This is Mr. Cassennelli,' and one
thing and another, and handed him this lease, and I says to Mr. Frohlich, that this gentleman
would now pay all rents from now on,' and that was understood right there at the window.
Q. Did Mr. Frohlich say anything? A. I can't remember.
Q. Did you make it clear to Mr. Frohlich that you had turned over the lease? * * *
41 Nev. 153, 169 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
Q. State as nearly as you can what was said in the presence of Mr. Frohlich, and what was
stated by you, Mr. Cassennelli, and Mr. Frohlich in the Washoe County Bank. A. Well, I
introduced Mr. Cassennelli to Mr. Frohlich, and I said, Mr. Frohlich, Mr. Cassennelli has
taken the lease off of our hands and will hereafter pay the rent on that property.' And now as
far as anything else, I don't remember of anything else coming up, and I don't know now at
the time just what else was said.
Q. When you speak of the lease being turned over, you refer to the lease which you had
from Mrs. Shannon? A. From Mrs. Shannon?
Q. Yes. A. Yes, sir.
Q. You just delivered that lease to him? A. Yes, sir; to Cassennelli.
Q. You just turned the lease over to him? A. Yes, sir.
Q. In the Washoe County Bank. A. Yes, sir.
Q. In the presence of Mr. Frohlich? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Do you know whether after that time Mr. Cassennelli continued to pay any rent, Mr.
Watton? A. Why, I had a statement from him.
Q. Well, of your own knowledge? A. Not of my own knowledge; no, sir.
Q. Up to that time had you had any talk with Mrs. L. E. Alexander Shannon with
reference to your turning the ranch over to another tenant? A. I don't remember.
This evidence is the basis for the contention that the defendants were released by operation
of law. The findings of the court upon which it is sought to sustain the contention that the
defendants were released by operation of law because of the Sasselli transaction, of which
defendant Watson testified, are as follows:
That some time during the month of June, 1909, the defendants Campbell and Watton
delivered up the possession of the premises described in said lease to one Sassanelli, and at
said time notified one A. C. Frohlich, an employee of the plaintiff, and the person to whom
the said defendants had been accustomed to pay said rentals, that the said defendants had
turned over said premises to said Sassanelli, and that the said Sassanelli would thereafter
pay the rental to become due on the said lease; that said Sassanelli continued for some
time in the possession of said premises, and thereafter made at least one payment of rent
to the plaintiff as the agent for the said L. E. Alexander Shannon."
41 Nev. 153, 170 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
said rentals, that the said defendants had turned over said premises to said Sassanelli, and that
the said Sassanelli would thereafter pay the rental to become due on the said lease; that said
Sassanelli continued for some time in the possession of said premises, and thereafter made at
least one payment of rent to the plaintiff as the agent for the said L. E. Alexander Shannon.
The defense interposed, being an affirmative defense, must be sustained by a
preponderance of the evidence. The evidence is not conflicting on this point. All the evidence
there is on the point relative to the Sasselli transaction is given in behalf of the defendants.
There is nothing in the evidence to show that Frohlich undertook to enter into an agreement
on behalf of Mrs. Shannon. In my opinion, Frohlich had a right to assume that Sasselli and
the defendants had made a deal between themselves whereby Sasselli became a sublessee,
and nothing more. But, in any event, the court made no attempt to make a finding to the effect
that an agreement had been entered into by and between Mrs. Shannon, the lessor, and the
defendants, the lessees, whereby it was mutually agreed that Sasselli should step into the
shoes of the defendants, as such lessees. It was not even claimed that the bank had authority
to make such an agreement on behalf of the lessor, the court having found simply that the
plaintiff [Washoe County Bank] acted as the agent for the said L. E. Alexander Shannon, in
the collection of said rents. Such was the extent of the bank's agency. The prevailing opinion
states:
* * * That this record presents a series of acts on the part of the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, as
well as on the part of her assignee, the appellant here, continuing from the date of the
transaction in the bank, as testified to by respondent Watton, no one of which, taken alone,
would constitute acquiescence on the part of appellant or on the part of the assignor, Mrs.
Shannon, in the surrender of the leasehold, but the whole of which, taken together, was
sufficient to estop the lessor, Mrs.
41 Nev. 153, 171 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
taken together, was sufficient to estop the lessor, Mrs. Shannon, from denying her
acquiescence in the surrender of the leasehold and her recognition of third parties as tenants
under a separate lease.
This statement, I take it, is in accord with the view that the transaction in the bank did not
amount to an agreement for the assignment by defendants of their lease to Sasselli, for
otherwise there is no occasion to consider ratification by Mrs. Shannon, or conduct on her
part amounting to acquiescence, or justifying an estoppel. It is upon the point concerning
which I have just quoted that I differ radically with the majority of the court. I have not been
able to find in the record one scintilla of evidence upon which to base such a conclusion, nor
was such evidence pointed out by counsel. Since, to my mind, the evidence on this point is
controlling, let us review the testimony from the time of the transaction in the bank, testified
to by defendant Watton, which was on June 15, 1909, up to January 19, 1910. The evidence
shows that the court found that, subsequent to the transaction of June 15, just mentioned, and
on the 24th day of said month, Mrs. Shannon assigned all her interests to the plaintiff bank.
The lower court found that the defendants received no notice of this assignment, and the
evidence sustains the finding on that point.
In determining this case it should be disposed of on the theory that while the plaintiff has
the legal right to whatever sum may be due under the lease, it cannot be held to be both the
owner thereof and at the same time be the agent of Mrs. Shannon relative thereto. In other
words, if they were the owners of the rents thus assigned, they were the principal, and
consequently could not be an agent.
Of course, we must not lose sight of the fact that any transactions had by defendants
directly with Mrs. Shannon while they had no knowledge of the assignment to the bank
would protect them. Now, the fact is that at all times the bank repudiated the alleged
assignment or substitution of Sasselli; hence it is impossible that the bank could have
ratified or acquiesced in the Sasselli transaction, and consequently we are driven to the
necessity of inquiring if Mrs.
41 Nev. 153, 172 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
at all times the bank repudiated the alleged assignment or substitution of Sasselli; hence it is
impossible that the bank could have ratified or acquiesced in the Sasselli transaction, and
consequently we are driven to the necessity of inquiring if Mrs. Shannon was ever informed
that Sasselli had been accepted by the bank, acting as her agent, in lieu of the defendants as a
tenant under the lease. If she was not so informed, it cannot be said that she ever acquiesced
in such alleged transaction. The witness Stadtmuller, assistant cashier of the bank, gave no
such testimony, and Mr. Taylor, the cashier of the bank, made no allusion to any notice
having been given to Mrs. Shannon of the incident. But Taylor did testify that Sasselli called
at his house on the evening of September 3, 1909, to pay one month's rent on the ranch. He
also testified that he then informed Sasselli that Mrs. Shannon had assigned the lease to the
bank, and that the bank don't recognize anybody but Campbell and Watton in the lease. On
cross-examination, the witness testified:
I did not consider anybody in depositing the money under the lease, or the assignment,
but Campbell and Watton.
The evidence shows that on September 4, 1909, a deposit slip was made for the deposit
made by Sasselli, and on that slip credit for the amount was given to Campbell and Watton,
the defendants, concerning which Mr. Taylor, cashier of the bank, testified:
Q. And so you put it [deposit] by Campbell and Watton regardless of who paid the
money? A. Regardless of who paid it, because I considered them, and nobody else.
This evidence shows conclusively that the bank never recognized Sasselli as assignee of
Campbell and Watton. Hence how can it be said that that institution ever acquiesced in the
Sasselli transaction?
Since the bank never recognized Sasselli as an assignee of defendants, we must ascertain
what Mrs. Shannon did in the way of recognizing such a transaction. Mrs.
41 Nev. 153, 173 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
Shannon was not called as a witness, and therefore it cannot be claimed that she gave any
evidence showing ratification. Only two witnesses were called who had ever had any
connection with the bankMr. Taylor, its cashier, and Mr. Stadtmuller, its assistant cashier.
Neither of these witnesses uttered one word upon which even a suspicion could be based that
the bank notified Mrs. Shannon of what had taken place in the bank on June 15, or of any
payment made by Sasselli, or of anything said or done by him. There were only three other
witnesses called in the case, viz, Sasselli, Watton, and Yori. The testimony of Yori was
confined to the Yori transaction, which took place in the spring of 1910, more than eight
months after the Sasselli transaction, and hence gave no evidence whatever relative to the
transaction of June 15. Sasselli said nothing whatever about giving notice to Mrs. Shannon of
the incident in the bank of June 15, nor did he give a particle of evidence tending to show that
that incident was brought to the knowledge of Mrs. Shannon by him.
There is left only one witness from whose testimony we must find that knowledge of the
bank incident was brought to the attention of Mrs. Shannon. That witness is Watton. If he
fails to furnish the evidence, then none can be found to sustain the contention that she had
such knowledge as would form the basis of acquiescence. He testified to the incident in the
bank and to his negotiations with Sasselli leading up to it, but nowhere does he say he ever
notified Mrs. Shannon of that incident. From his standpoint, he and his codefendant ceased to
be interested in the lease on June 15, 1909. Why, then, should he have done any act which
could have, in the least, brought him in touch with circumstances showing acquiescence on
the part of Mrs. Shannon? Most naturally no such circumstance came under his observation.
He does not testify that he wrote to Mrs. Shannon, or heard from her, directly or indirectly, or
saw her until January 19, 1910, more than seven months after the incident in the bank. On the
day mentioned, Mr.
41 Nev. 153, 174 (1917) Washoe County Bank v. Campbell
day mentioned, Mr. Watton went to see Mrs. Shannon, who was living in Oakland, Cal., and
at that time the subject of other tenants for the ranch was discussed; but, so far as appears,
nothing whatever was mentioned about the Sasselli transaction. On January 29, 1910, Mrs.
Shannon wrote to Mr. Watton about procuring another tenant for the ranch, and in that letter
she says: * * * The man on the ranch to remain until March. It is contended that this shows
knowledge on the part of Mrs. Shannon of the Sasselli transaction. I confess I cannot imagine
just what she meant by that phrase, but one thing is certainshe could not have been alluding
to Sasselli, for the reason that he had abandoned the ranch two or three months before, and no
one was on the ranch at the time she wrote the letter. Hence we cannot escape the conclusion
that whatever information Mrs. Shannon received from Watton on January 19 concerning the
Sasselli transaction, if she had any, was not accurate if she assumed that Sasselli was still on
the ranch, and therefore she cannot be held to have ratified the bank transaction.
I therefore conclude there was no release by operation of law because of what took place in
the bank on June 15, 1909; and assuming that defendants were released by the Yori
transaction, plaintiff is entitled to the unpaid rent from July 1, 1909, up to the consummation
thereof, less the amount paid by Sasselli.
____________
41 Nev. 175, 175 (1917) State v. Comisford
[No. 2277]
STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. CHARLES
COMISFORD, Appellant.
[168 Pac. 287]
1. HomicideJustifiable HomicideSelf-Defense.
Self-defense is the right to exercise judgment as a reasonable man in determining, at the time, whether,
from all the attendant circumstances, it was necessary to kill for the protection of one's own life, and it was
error to instruct, Necessity is not for the defendant, but for the jury to decide.
2. Criminal LawRemarks of Prosecuting AttorneyReversible Error.
Remarks of prosecuting attorney in argument alluding to rumors being prevalent that the jury, because of
personal association and friendships, would not have the courage to send accused to the penitentiary were
reversible error.
Appeal from the Fifth Judicial District Court, Nye County; Mark R. Averill, Judge.
Charles Comisford was convicted of murder in the second degree, and he appeals.
Reversed.
Thos. M. Fagan and Wm. Forman, for Appellant:
The court erred in its instruction as to self-defense in that the jury was instructed that the
question of necessity was not for the defendant, but for the jury, thus precluding the jury from
considering the effect on the mind of the defendant of the surrounding circumstances. The
rule is universal that to warrant the taking of life in self-defense there must have been
reasonable grounds for belief upon the part of the slayer that he was in imminent danger of
loss of life or of suffering serious bodily harm at the hands of the person killed; and the belief
need be no more than reasonable. (13 R. C. L. 817.) If the slayer act in good faith and with
reasonable discretion, he will be excused, even though he err. (In Re Nagle, 39 Fed. 833;
State v. Waterman, 1 Nev. 543; State v. McClure, 5 Nev. 132; State v. Skinner, 32 Nev. 70.)
Killing an assailant may be excusable, though it turn out afterward that there was no actual
danger, if it be done under a reasonable apprehension of loss of life or great bodily harm, and
danger appears so imminent at the moment of assault as to present no alternative of
escaping its consequence but by resistance.
41 Nev. 175, 176 (1917) State v. Comisford
the moment of assault as to present no alternative of escaping its consequence but by
resistance. (Logues v. Commonwealth, 80 Am. Dec. 481; Meuley v. State, 8 Am. St. Rp. 477.)
The court erred in refusing to reprimand the district attorney for certain remarks in the
course of his argument to the jury, in which he insinuated that some of them did not have the
courage to bring in a verdict of guilty because of personal associations, sentiments, and
friendships. (Bissette v. State, 101 Ind. 85; Weatherford v. State, 37 Am. St. Rep. 828; 2 R. C.
L. 416.) A prosecuting attorney is bound by more rigorous rules than an ordinary attorney;
and, while it is not improper for him to warn the jury to perform their duty, it is highly
prejudicial for him to demand that they bring in a verdict of a certain kind under penalty of
his scorn and contempt if they do otherwise. (2 R. C. L. 426; State v. Blackman, 32 South.
334; People v. Fielding, 70 Am. St. Rep. 495; State v. Petty, 32 Nev. 334; State v. Rodriguez,
31 Nev. 342; Grosee v. State, 11 Tex. Cr. App. 377.)
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General; E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, and Wm.
McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General, for Respondent:
It is well established that one who is the aggressor and provokes the difficulty in which he
kills his assailant cannot invoke the right of self-defense to justify or excuse the homicide.
There is certainly evidence in the case to show that appellant provoked the difficulty which
led to the tragedy. A careful review of the testimony will show clearly that appellant, without
any sufficient provocation whatsoever, inflicted a mortal wound upon the host whose
hospitality he had been enjoying for several hours. He claims that the killing was done in
self-defense, but the jury did not believe him. The killing being admitted, and no sufficient
provocation appearing therefor, and the jury having disbelieved the self-defense theory, the
conviction of appellant should be affirmed. (Burton v. State, 141 Ala. 32; Dabney v. State,
113 Ala.
41 Nev. 175, 177 (1917) State v. Comisford
113 Ala. 38; Blair v. State, 69 Ark. 558; People v. Conkling, 111 Cal. 616; People v. Piper,
112 Mich. 164; People v. McLeod, 1 Hill, 377; Lewis v. Commonwealth, 79 Va. 732.)
It is possible that immaterial errors have crept into the case; but in view of all the facts and
circumstances disclosed by the evidence, this court must reach the conclusion that appellant
had a fair and impartial trial, and we are compelled to invoke sections 7302 and 7469,
Revised Laws, provided for such cases. (State v. Smith, 33 Nev. 459; Brown v. Dunn, 35 Nev.
177; State v. Mircovich, 35 Nev. 489; State v. Scott, 37 Nev. 450; Ex Parte Booth, 154 Pac.
939.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of murder in the second degree. To the
indictment, which charged murder in the first degree, the defendant pleaded not guilty and
interposed the defense of justifiable homicide based upon self-defense.
The question as to who was the aggressor in the affray, as well as the question of the
necessity to strike the fatal blow, was a closely contested issue in the trial. The court
instructed the jury on the law of justifiable homicide as follows:
You are instructed that the right to take life in self-defense rests upon necessity, and no
one is justified in taking the life of another unless the necessity for so doing is apparent as the
only means of preventing his destruction, or of escaping grievous bodily harm. The question
of the existence of such necessity is not for the defendant, but for the jury; the jury must draw
from all the circumstances whether, from the situation of the parties at the time, the defendant
had reasonable ground to believe that it was necessary to take the life of the deceased as the
only means of saving his own life, or of avoiding grievous injury to his person. If you do not
so find, then you must bring in a verdict of guilty.
1. The expression in this instruction, The question of the existence of such necessity is
not for the defendant, but for the jury," is clearly erroneous and fails to measure up to the
law applicable to self-defense as laid down by leading decisions and text-writers upon the
subject.
41 Nev. 175, 178 (1917) State v. Comisford
but for the jury, is clearly erroneous and fails to measure up to the law applicable to
self-defense as laid down by leading decisions and text-writers upon the subject. The
expression swept from the defendant the benefits of the law, which confers upon him the
right to exercise his judgment as a reasonable man in determining, at the time, whether, from
all the attendant circumstances and conditions, it was necessary to strike the fatal blow for the
protection of his own life.
Where, in an affray, one strikes the blow that takes the life of another, necessity for the act
to insure self-preservation is the gage and measure. The exercise of reasonable judgment as to
the necessity is for him who strikes. Did the defendant, in striking the blow, exercise that
judgment as a reasonable man would under such circumstances? That is the question for the
jury. This court, in no uncertain terms, established the rule in the case of State v. Scott, 37
Nev. 412, 142 Pac. 1053, where, referring to the language of the Supreme Court of Iowa
(State v. Collins, 32 Iowa, 39), as quoted and approved by Mr. Justice Hawley in the case of
State v. Ferguson, 9 Nev. 114, and referring to the case of Hawkins v. United States, 3 Okl.
Cr. R. 651, 108 Pac. 561, we said:
The inquiry for the jury is: Did the defendant, acting as a reasonable man, upon the
appearances of the existing conditions at the time of the encounter, believe at that time that it
was necessary for him to commit that act in order to protect himself? An instruction upon the
rule of self-defense, which failed to set forth the above qualification, is clearly erroneous.
The rule of law asserted by this court in that case found approval and sanction in the case
of Owens v. United States, 130 Fed. 279, 64 C. C. A. 525. Moreover, it has received the
approval of ruling cases on the subject in the several jurisdictions. (13 R. C. L. 817, 818.)
The instructions given by the trial court in the case at bar struck from the defendant the
right to establish that in the fatal affray, and before he struck the blow that took the life of the
deceased, he exercised such judgment as would have been exercised by a reasonable man
under such circumstances.
41 Nev. 175, 179 (1917) State v. Comisford
under such circumstances. The rule is eminently established that reasonable ground for belief
of imminent danger upon the part of the slayer is the test that justifies the taking of human life
where self-defense is interposed. (People v. Lewis, 117 Cal. 186, 48 Pac. 1088, 59 Am. St.
Rep. 167; State v. Shippey, 10 Minn. 223, 88 Am. Dec. 70; State v. Beckner, 194 Mo. 281, 91
S. W. 892, 3 L. R. A. n. s. 535; Goodall v. State, 1 Or. 333, 80 Am. Dec. 396; Tillery v. State,
24 Tex. App. 251, 5 S. W. 842, 5 Am. St. Rep. 882.)
The belief in the slayer that the danger was apparently imminent is not to be viewed from
the standpoint of the jury, but from the facts established. (194 Mo. 281, 91 S. W. 892, 3 L. R.
A. n. s. 543.) The doctrine that would declare the jury to be the sole judges as to the existence
of danger to the defendant at the moment of the affray would place the defendant in the
unreasonable position of knowing, at the moment of the catastrophe, what the jury knows
after there has been presented to them all of the facts and attendant conditions. Such a
doctrine is not sanctioned by modern authority. (Wesley v. State, 37 Miss. 327, 75 Am. Dec.
62; State v. Shippey, supra; Patten v. People, 18 Mich. 314, 100 Am. Dec. 173.) See
extensive note, 3 L. R. A. n. s. 537; 74 Am. St. Rep. 720.
The question of the existence of such necessity as called for the act by which the life of the
deceased was taken was, at the time of the affray, a matter demanding that high degree of
judgment which would be exercised by a reasonable being under like circumstances of the
party by whose hand the blow was struck. It was his right to exercise this judgmenta right
which the law confers upon every individual, but one that must always be exercised at his
peril, subject to revision by a jury of his peers. The giving of this instruction by the court
was error, and such as affected, in no uncertain measure, the substantial rights of the
appellant, by reason of which the judgment and order appealed from must be reversed.
2. Error is assigned to the remarks of the prosecuting attorney in the closing argument
wherein he alluded to rumors being prevalent that: "Members of the jury, because of
personal associations, and sentiments and friendships,
* * * would not have the courage to send this man to the penitentiary."
41 Nev. 175, 180 (1917) State v. Comisford
Members of the jury, because of personal associations, and sentiments and friendships,
* * * would not have the courage to send this man to the penitentiary.
We have had occasion before to comment on remarks and conduct of prosecuting
attorneys. We deem it proper to say here, as we said in the case of State v. Scott, 37 Nev. 432,
142 Pac. 1060:
The office of district attorney is one of great power and responsibility. It may often
happen that he is called upon to protect the rights of an accused person from the possibility of
a conviction based upon public sentiment rather than the actual facts of the case. When a
prosecuting officer seeks to take advantage of public sentiment to gain an unjust conviction,
or seeks to take an unfair advantage in the introduction of evidence, or in any other respect,
he is failing in his duty as the state's representative.
There was no foundation or excuse for the remarks of the prosecuting attorney in the case
at bar so far as the record discloses. His utterance was misconduct such as should have called
for immediate reprimand from the trial court. Overabundant zeal, spiced with that
everimpelling element, personal ambition for success, is too often the shrine of excessive
devotion, where wild tongues are loosed that have not Thee in awe.
In view of the fact that this case must be reversed for other errors, and inasmuch as the
conduct complained of will not again be indulged in, we will pass the incident for this time
by merely saying that if this error was the only one presented in the record we would be
required to reverse the case. (Weatherford v. State, 31 Tex. Cr. R. 530, 21 S. W. 251, 37 Am.
St. Rep. 828.)
The case is reversed and remanded.
It is so ordered.
Coleman, J., concurring:
I concur in the order of reversal. However, I am of the opinion that the instruction
complained of, when read in connection with instruction No. 4, in no way prejudiced the
defendant.
41 Nev. 175, 181 (1917) State v. Comisford
prejudiced the defendant. There is no doubt but that the rule of law enunciated by the chief
justice is correct. All that the court meant to say by the sentence complained of was that the
jury did not have to accept the statement of the defendant as to the necessity of taking the life
of the deceased, but that they were the final judges as to whether or not the defendant had
reasonable grounds to believe, at the time of the homicide, that such necessity existed. This, I
think, is shown by the fact that the phrase complained of was separated from the rest of the
sentence by a semicolon, and that the rest of the sentence implied that the defendant had the
right, at the time of the homicide, to determine for himself whether or not it was necessary to
take the life of the deceased, a right which was clearly and fully set forth in instruction No. 4.
Sanders, J., having taken part in the trial of the case in the lower court, did not participate
here.
____________
41 Nev. 182, 182 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
[No. 2292]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. HECTOR
MacKINNON, Appellant.
[168 Pac. 330]
1. HomicideIndictmentRequisites and SufficiencyAssault.
Rev. Laws, 6412, defines an assault as an unlawful attempt, coupled with the present ability, to commit a
violent injury. Section 7050 provides that the indictment must contain a statement of the acts constituting
the offense, in ordinary language so that a person of common understanding would know what was
intended. Held, that an information, alleging that accused on a certain day, he having the ability then and
there so to do, did wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously assault another, sufficiently alleged present ability.
2. Criminal LawAppealScopePreservation of Exceptions.
Unless an attack upon the information shows a fatal defect it will be ignored when made for the first time
on appeal.
3. Criminal LawContinuanceGroundsSecuring CounselWaiver.
The privilege of accused under Const. art. 1, sec. 8, to appear in person or with counsel may be
waived, and, once waived a judgment will not be reversed because the court at a later date refused to grant
a continuance so that counsel might be employed unless the refusal was an abuse of discretion.
4. Criminal LawContinuanceGroundsSecuring CounselWaiver.
Where defendant when arraigned waived his right to counsel and was thereafter brought into court twice
before trial and did not signify his desire for counsel until the morning of the trial more than two weeks
after the order setting the case for trial, it was not an abuse of discretion to deny his motion for continuance
for the purpose of securing counsel.
5. HomicideInstructionPresumptionsIntention.
In prosecution for assault with a deadly weapon, instruction that the law presumes that accused intended
to do that which he voluntarily and wilfully did was erroneous.
Appeal from Seventh Judicial District Court, Mineral County; Emmett J. Walsh, Judge.
Hector MacKinnon was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon, and appeals.
Reversed, and new trial ordered.
Frame & Browne, for Appellant:
The information is fatally defective, in that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a
public offense, and particularly the offense with which the defendant was sought to be
charged, or the offense of which the appellant was convicted.
41 Nev. 182, 183 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
particularly the offense with which the defendant was sought to be charged, or the offense of
which the appellant was convicted. Under the law it is required that the allegations of an
information be direct and positive in regard to the facts constituting the alleged offense. The
facts cannot be supplied by inference, argument or intendment. (Rev. Laws, 7050-7052; State
v. Logan, 1 Nev. 110; People v. Gregg, 13 N. Y. Supp. 114; 22 cyc. 293, 295.) The manner in
which a weapon is used very often determines its character, and whether under the
circumstances it is a deadly weapon. (State v. Napper, 6 Nev. 113.) The information is
uncertain as to whether the particular act constituting the particular assault sought to be
charged was by striking or shooting. This is not permissible in criminal pleading. (22 Cyc.
296.) The charge in an indictment should be positively laid, and not inferentially. The want of
a direct allegation of anything material in the description of the substance, nature or manner
of the offense, cannot be supplied by intendment or implication. (Archibald, Cr. Pl. & Pr. 87.)
The information is defective in substance, in that it does not allege a present ability,
because the present ability to inflict the injury is the gist of an assault, either under the statute
or at common law. This contention may be raised for the first time in this court, and has not
been waived by failure to raise it in the court below. (State v. Trolson, 21 Nev. 419.)
It was fundamental error for the trial court to refuse the request of appellant for a
postponement of the trial in order that he might procure counsel at the time of the calling of
the case. (Const. Nev., art. 1, sec. 8; State ex rel. Huffaker v. Crosby, 24 Nev. 115; People v.
Van Allen, 55 N. Y. 33.) The denial of the request was an abuse of discretion. By the action of
the court every possibility of the defendant having that fair and impartial trial guaranteed by
law was swept away. (Cave v. United States, 100 Pac. 1118; Clay Peters v. United States, 33
Pac. 1031; Dempsey v. United States, 44 Pac. 382; Stansbury v. United States, 37 Pac. 1083.)
A legal discretion is one that is regulated and governed by well-established principles of
law.
41 Nev. 182, 184 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
is regulated and governed by well-established principles of law. (14 Cyc. 384.) An abuse of
discretion is merely a discretion exercised to an end or purpose not justified by, and clearly
against, reason and evidence. (1 Cyc. 219.)
It was reversible error for the court to instruct the jury that the law presumes an intent to
kill from the use of a deadly weapon in a manner likely to cause death. The instruction
entirely removed from the consideration of the jury the circumstances of the case, invading
their province as triers of the facts. (State v. Davis, 14 Nev. 407; State v. Newton, 4 Nev. 410;
Reed v. United States, 103 Pac. 371; Frazier v. United States, 103 Pac. 373.)
J. H. White, District Attorney, and Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, for Respondent:
Upon the record presented, the judgment of conviction should be in all matters affirmed. It
is not claimed that the information is deficient in any of the requirements of section 7052,
Revised Laws, except in the statement of the offense charged. The function of an
information or indictment is to apprise the defendant of the nature and character of the charge
made against him, and the time and place where the alleged offense was committed, so as to
enable him to defend against the particular charge alleged, protect him from a subsequent
prosecution on the same charge, and to enable the court to pronounce judgment upon a
conviction according to the right of the case. It is sufficient if the information contain a
statement of the acts constituting the offense, in ordinary and concise language, and in such a
manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended. (Rev.
Laws, 7050; 22 Cyc. 295; Peters v. United States, 94 Fed. 127.) The indictment need be only
substantially in the form provided by statute. (Rev. Laws, 7051; State v. Anderson, 3 Nev.
254.) All provisions of law applicable to prosecutions by indictment are equally applicable
to prosecutions by information. (Stats. 1913, p. 294; State v. Lovelace, 29 Nev. 43.)
There is no merit in the claim that the information does not allege the commission of a
public offense.
41 Nev. 182, 185 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
does not allege the commission of a public offense. It is positively alleged in the
information that the assault was made with a deadly weapon, to wit, a pistol loaded with
gunpowder and leaden bullets, and that it was used within striking as well as shooting
distance. The allegation that the defendant, having the ability then and there so to do, did
commit and assault with intent to kill, is exactly the equivalent of alleging present ability
to commit the act charged. (State v. O'Flaherty, 7 Nev. 153.)
It is not true that appellant was denied the right to be represented by counsel, nor is it any
more true that the state could be prevented from proceeding by his whims, vagaries, designs
or subterfuges. Every presumption is in favor of the regularity of the proceedings in the trial
court. (Rev. Laws, 7128; State v. O'Flaherty, 7 Nev. 153.)
There was no error in the instructions. (1 Bishop, Crim. Law, 5th ed. sec. 729; State v. Daly,
41 Or. 515; 1 McClain, Crim. Law, sec. 222; 12 Cyc. 148; State v. Zichfeld, 23 Nev. 304;
State v. Marks, 15 Nev. 33; People v. Devine, 59 Cal. 630; State v. Rodriguez, 31 Nev. 342;
State v. Thompson, 31 Nev. 209; State v. Clark, 32 Nev. 150; State v. O'Connor, 11 Nev.
416, 423.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
The defendant was convicted of an assault with a deadly weapon, and from the judgment
of the court he appeals.
1, 2. The first ground urged for a reversal of the judgment is that the information is fatally
defective, in that it fails to allege that the defendant had the present ability to make an assault
upon the person named in the information. Our statute defines an assault as:
An unlawful attempt, coupled with a present ability, to commit a violent injury on the
person of another. (Rev. Laws, 6412.)
Section 7050, Revised Laws, 1912, reads:
The indictment must contain the title of the action, specifying the name of the court to
which the indictment is presented and the names of the parties, and a statement of the acts
constituting the offense, in ordinary and concise language and in such manner as to
enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended."
41 Nev. 182, 186 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
statement of the acts constituting the offense, in ordinary and concise language and in such
manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended.
The information in the case at bar charges:
The said Hector MacKinnon, on the 7th day of December, 1916, or thereabouts, and
before the filing of this information, in the county of Mineral, State of Nevada, he having the
ability then and there so to do, did, wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously, and without
authority of law, with a deadly weapon, to wit, a pistol loaded with gunpowder and leaden
bullets, which he, the said Hector MacKinnon, in his hand there and then had and held,
assault one B. B. Shepherd, a human being, by shooting at and striking him, the said B. B.
Shepherd, with the intent him, the said B. B. Shepherd, then and there to kill.
We do not understand that it is necessary that the information should allege defendant's
present ability to make the assault in those words, but in words which convey the same
meaning. Section 7050, Revised Laws, states that an offense may be charged in ordinary and
concise language, and in such a manner as to enable a person of common understanding to
know what is intended. We are unable to see how any person, of the least understanding
could fail to grasp what was meant by the language of the information. It certainly shows that
the defendant had the present ability to make the assault. The draftsman of the information,
not being content with the language he having the ability then and there so to do, also
charged that the defendant, with a pistol loaded with gunpowder and leaden bullets, in his
hand there and then had and held, made the assault. We are unable to see just how a stronger
allegation of present ability could have been made. Furthermore, courts do not look upon
attacks of this character upon an information with the same favor when made for the first
time on appeal as when made before a plea is entered. (Ex Parte Breckenridge, 34 Nev. 275,
11S Pac.
41 Nev. 182, 187 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
Nev. 275, 118 Pac. 688, Ann. Cas. 1914a, 871), and when made for the first time on appeal,
they will be ignored unless the information is fatally defective.
3, 4. It is also urged that the court erred in denying defendant's application for a
continuance on the morning when the case was called for trial, to enable him to employ an
attorney. When defendant was arraigned he waived his right to counsel, and though he was
thereafter brought into court on two occasions before the day of trialonce when he entered
his plea of not guilty, and again when the case was set for trialhe did not signify his desire
for counsel until the morning of the trial, more than two weeks after the order setting the case
for trial had been made. At the time the case was called for trial, and when all of the
witnesses and jurors were in attendance for the trial, and after a preliminary order had been
entered in the case, but before any of the jurors had been called into the jury box, the
defendant asked that the case be continued until the following day to enable him to employ
counsel. The court denied the application and proceeded with the trial. It is insisted that by its
action the court denied defendant a constitutional right guaranteed him by section 8, article 1,
Constitution of Nevada, which provides that:
* * * The party accused shall be allowed to appear and defend in person, and with
counsel, as in civil actions.
The purpose of this provision in our constitution is simply to guarantee to one charged
with crime the privilege of being defended by counsel. It is a privilege which he may exercise
or waive. If he waives it at one stage of the proceeding, he must act with a reasonable degree
of diligence if he later desires to avail himself of it. In other words, having once waived this
privilege, a judgment will not be reversed because the court at a later date refused to grant a
continuance so that counsel might be employed, unless the court abused its discretion. In the
case of State v. Yoes, 67 W. Va. 546, 68 S. E. 181, 140 Am. St. Rep. 978, the court said: "The
provision of the constitution, relating to the right of a prisoner to have the assistance of
counsel, was inserted for the purpose of abrogating the common-law practice under
which prisoners, accused of felony, were denied such right, and to restrain the legislature
from denying it by statute.
41 Nev. 182, 188 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
The provision of the constitution, relating to the right of a prisoner to have the assistance
of counsel, was inserted for the purpose of abrogating the common-law practice under which
prisoners, accused of felony, were denied such right, and to restrain the legislature from
denying it by statute. It differs in nature as well as form from the guaranty of trial by jury. The
latter is prohibitory in form, while the other is permissive, and conditional upon the pleasure
of the accused.
Under the circumstances of this case, we are of the opinion that there was no abuse of
discretion on the part of the court in refusing to grant a continuance. To hold otherwise would
put it in the power of persons charged with crime to materially hamper courts. Public policy
will not justify such action. The defendant had ample opportunity to engage counsel, and his
failure to do so was due to his own neglect.
5. It is also urged that the court erred in giving the following instruction:
The court instructs the jury that a person must be presumed to intend to do that which he
voluntarily and wilfully does in fact do, and he must be presumed to intend all the necessary,
probable, and usual consequences of his own acts, and the jury are instructed that if they find
that the defendant, Hector MacKinnon, did assault the person named in the information, to
wit, B. B. Shepherd, with a deadly weapon, a loaded automatic pistol, in such a manner as
was calculated to produce the death of the said B. B. Shepherd, the law presumes that such
was the defendant's intention, and throws upon him the burden of showing facts in
justification or excuse.
It is the contention of counsel that that portion of the instruction which states that the law
presumes the intention of the defendant, is erroneous and prejudicial. This identical question
was before us in the case of State v. Pappas, 39 Nev. 40, 152 Pac. 571, where we held it was
reversible error to so instruct the jury. No suggestion has been made that the ruling in that
case is not sound, and we know of no reason for repudiating it.
41 Nev. 182, 189 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
is not sound, and we know of no reason for repudiating it. It controls in the case at bar. For
the error committed in giving this instruction, it is ordered that the judgment be reversed, and
that a new trial be granted the defendant.
McCarran, C. J.:
I concur in the order and so much of the opinion of Mr. Justice Coleman as reverses the
case by reason of the giving by the trial court of the instruction relative to the law as to
presumption of intent. I am not in accord, however, with the views taken by my learned
associate on that phase of the case which has to do with the action of the trial court in denying
the continuance asked for by the defendant for the purpose of securing counsel.
The record in this case, taken in its entirety, as disclosed by the minutes of the court made
on the several occasions when the defendant was before the court prior to the date of trial, as
well as the stenographic report of the trial itself, presents a history of acts and conduct on the
part of appellant which to my mind removes the case from the effect of the rule as announced
by courts following the same line of reasoning as that resorted to in the case of State v. Yoes,
67 W. Va. 546, 68 S. E. 181, 140 Am. St. Rep. 978, quoted from approvingly by Mr. Justice
Coleman. I will not dwell at length upon that phase of the case, nor will I venture to augment
the atmosphere which must have surrounded the trial of the cause in the lower court by any
assertion, intimation, or conclusion. Suffice it to say in this respect that the jury presented its
verdict of guilty of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to inflict bodily injury, and
added thereto:
We, the jury, recommend the defendant be examined as to his sanity.
On the occasion of the arraignment of appellant, it is disclosed by the minutes that the
appellant waived counsel. Later and on the date assigned for appellant to plead, it might be
understood from the minutes that he again waived counsel and entered his plea of not
guilty.
41 Nev. 182, 190 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
to plead, it might be understood from the minutes that he again waived counsel and entered
his plea of not guilty. Later, when the case was called for trial on April 16, 1917, the
transcript of the proceedings sets forth as follows:
The CourtIs the defendant ready?
The DefendantYes, sir; I am ready. (The roll of the venire was then called, and all
being present, twelve persons were called into the jury box and duly sworn to answer
questions as to their qualifications to serve as jurors in this case.)
The CourtCall the first name, Mr. Clerk.
The ClerkThomas T. Hickey.
The CourtYou may proceed with the examination.
Mr. MacKinnon (the defendant).
The DefendantYour honor, I have appeared before you five times now, haven't I? This
is my sixth time here to appear before you on this trial. Now that you have prepared to go
ahead with it, I ask for time to get counsel.
The CourtEvery time you have been in court, Mr. MacKinnon, you have been
clamoring for a trial, and I set the case for trial at this time.
The DefendantYes, sir; why didn't you go ahead with it? It is up to you.
The CourtWe are ready to proceed now.
The DefendantWell, I ask for time to get counsel. That will be tomorrow.
The CourtThe defendant was informed of his rights, and stated that he did not desire
counsel, and we are here now with the jury, so we will proceed.
The DefendantI was ready to proceed five times with my own case, but you wasn't
ready. Therefore I was detained here, kept in jail for four months waiting this trial. How was I
to know that you were going to bring on a trial?
The CourtThe motion for a continuance is denied. You may examine the jurors. If the
defendant has no questions to propound to the venireman Hickey, the state may proceed.
41 Nev. 182, 191 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
On several occasions during the course of the trial which followed, it appear that appellant
asked for the assistance of counsel.
Of all the rights secured to one accused of crime, it is, I think, quite safe to say that there is
none more important or vital than that of being represented by counsel. The evolution of the
law has developed no more important or sacred privilege than that which contemplates justice
meted out to one accused of crime, and in no phase of the law has there been an evolution
more important than that which, having its inception in the thought and reasoning of minds
grounded in principles of justice, culminated in the English statutes (St. 6 and 7, William III
and IV, cc. 3, 114), establishing the right for persons accused of crime to be represented at
their trial by counsel. How these early English statutes came into existence may well be
conjectured from the history of the times, as well as from the remarks of members of the
British House of Commons during the debates preceding the passage of the acts. We read of
one of the members expressing himself thus:
I have myself often seen persons I thought innocent convicted, and the guilty escape, for
want of some acute and intelligent counsel to show the bearings of the different
circumstances on the conduct and situation of the prisoner.
Another member of that great branch of the British parliament, in discussing the question
then before the house, said:
It has lately been my lot to try two prisoners who were deaf and dumb and who could
only be made to understand what was passing by the signs of their friends. The cases were
clear and simple; but if they had been circumstantial cases, in what a situation would the
judge and jury be placed, when the prisoner could have no counsel to plead for him.
To insure against those abuses in criminal prosecutions that had been manifest in the early
British courts and which were not remedied until 1836 and then only by the passage of the
statutes heretofore referred to, the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States was promulgated, and in that it is provided that:
41 Nev. 182, 192 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States was promulgated, and in that it
is provided that:
In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right * * * to have the assistance
of counsel for his defense.
The bill of rights of nearly every state in the union contains some similar provision, and by
section 8, article 1, of our organic law it is provided:
In any trial in any court whatever, the party accused shall be allowed to appear and defend
in person, and with counsel as in civil actions.
Mr. Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, says:
With us it is a universal principle of constitutional law that the prisoner shall be allowed a
defense by counsel. (Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed. p. 477.)
A provision in the constitution of the State of California of the same import as that found
in our constitution (art 1, sec. 13) was called in question before the supreme court of that state
in the case of People v. Napthaly, 105 Cal. 641, 39 Pac. 29. There a party brought before a
committing magistrate for preliminary examination had been denied the right to be
represented by counsel. In that case it appears that the defendant was himself an attorney, and
the court, commenting on this fact, said:
The very fact that the defendant asked for a continuance to procure counsel is evidence of
his knowledge of his right thereto, and obviated the necessity of his being informed thereof.
Thus far and no more. Under the constitution and law a lawyer who is accused of crime is
equally entitled in every stage of his trial to the presence and aid of counsel and (to appear
and defend, in person and with counsel') with other persons. The rights of individuals in this
respect are not to be gaged by their profession or occupation.
Continuing, the court said:
Whatever the rule may have been at common law, under our law every person accused of
a felony is entitled to the aid of counsel, whether imprisoned or admitted to bail, and a
refusal of an opportunity to procure such counsel amounts to a deprivation of an
important right essential to his safety."
41 Nev. 182, 193 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
to the aid of counsel, whether imprisoned or admitted to bail, and a refusal of an opportunity
to procure such counsel amounts to a deprivation of an important right essential to his safety.
The doctrine enunciated in this case was approved in the case of People v. Crowley, 13
Cal. App. 322, 109 Pac. 493.
The constitution of the State of New York (art. 1, sec. 6) contains the provision:
In any trial in any court whatever, the party accused shall be allowed to appear and defend
in person and with counsel as in civil actions.
This provision is in language identical to that contained in our own constitution. In the
case of People v. Abetti, 152 N. Y. Supp. 890, the Court of General Sessions had before it the
question of the right of a party on trial for a misdemeanor to be represented by counsel. There
the defendants, being without knowledge of the English language, were compelled to testify
through an interpreter. It appears that after witnesses for the prosecution had testified to facts
against the defendants, the latter, through the interpreter, said, We want to hire a lawyer, to
which the magistrate replied:
They must go on now; they are charged, not with a felony, but with disorderly conduct.
They are not entitled to a lawyer, but they are entitled to cross-examine these police officers,
if they choose, and that is all. I want you to ask them if they wish to cross-examine the
officers.
The court in reviewing the case held that the refusal of the magistrate to give the
defendants an opportunity to employ counsel under the circumstances was reversible error.
The court declared in effect that although the constitutional provision directing the magistrate
to immediately inform a defendant of his right to employ counsel does not apply to summary
proceedings such as a prosecution for misdemeanor, nevertheless the better practice is for
such magistrate to give such information in all cases.
This same question was considered by the Criminal Court of Appeals of Oklahoma in the
case of Stanley Baker v. State, 9 Okl. Cr. 62, 130 Pac.
41 Nev. 182, 194 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
Court of Appeals of Oklahoma in the case of Stanley Baker v. State, 9 Okl. Cr. 62, 130 Pac.
820. There the organic law provides (Bill of Rights, art. 2, sec. 20):
In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right * * * to be heard by himself
and counsel.
In that instance the request of the defendant for counsel had been complied with by the
trial court in the appointment of one who had not previously been admitted to the bar. The
court held that the term counsel as used in this respect means a person who has been
admitted as an attorney and counselor at law in the state, and it was the duty of the trial court
to assign counsel duly authorized under the law to act as such. In dwelling upon the general
principle underlying the right of one accused of crime to be represented by counsel, the court
said:
So deeply ingrafted in our criminal jurisprudence has this great right become that none
are so low or so poor but they may rely upon it.
In a very early case, the Supreme Court of Louisiana, taking cognizance of a state
constitutional provision similar to that of ours, and referring to the provision of the
constitution of the United States, reversed the case of State v. Cummings, 5 La. Ann. 330 for
the reason that when the jury were about to be sworn in the trial court, that court refused to
allow counsel for the accused to consult with him and aid him in the exercise of his right of
peremptory challenge. The court, after referring to the history of such constitutional
provisions and to the common law of England which such provisions were intended to
remedy, said:
This led to the guaranty of the right to counsel in our liberal constitutions, and the right
should be liberally construed.
To the same effect was the case of State v. Summers, 4 La. Ann. 26.
The cogency of the reasoning indulged in by the Supreme Court of California in the case
of People v. Goldenson, 76 Cal. 328, 19 Pac. 161, is most applicable to the question here.
41 Nev. 182, 195 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
to the question here. There it appears that the regularly retained counsel for the defendant,
because the court refused to continue the case to suit their convenience, withdrew from the
case, and the court appointed other counsel to represent the defendant. On appeal it was
contended that the court had no authority to appoint attorney to defend the party, because he
had already employed and had acting for him an attorney of his own choice, and because he
neither desired nor was he unable to employ another. The contention was asserted upon the
ground that it is only when the prisoner desires counsel and is unable to employ one that the
court is authorized to appoint. To this contention, Mr. Justice Patterson, speaking for the
court, replied:
But it was not a question whether he desired an attorney and had the means to employ
one. The question was, Who should represent him? He insisted upon having the case
continued to suit the convenience of the attorney he had employed. This could not be
doneat least, that was the ruling, and all were bound to respect it. It was then and still is
claimed in his defense, by his relatives and his retained attorneys, that he was insane.
Whatever may be the right of a defendant where there is no question of insanity, the court
acted, we think, in accordance with every principle of law, justice, and humanity in this case
in selecting attorneys to look after the interests of the prisoner, who at the time by all the
affidavits was represented as demented and unable to know right from wrong.
The court made this assertion as being in the spirit of the Sixth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States, to which I have referred, and as being in keeping with the
spirit of article 1, section 13, of the constitution of the State of California already quoted.
I would not be understood as denying the proposition asserted by so many courts, that the
constitutional right of being represented by counsel, granted to every one accused of crime,
may be waived by a competent person who may appear fully cognizant of his situation and
mentally capable of appreciating its seriousness.
41 Nev. 182, 196 (1917) State v. MacKinnon
mentally capable of appreciating its seriousness. The right of one to waive this constitutional
privilege is a right which not only affects the individual exercising it, but likewise the state.
The life and liberty of every individual is a part of the state itself, inasmuch as the latter holds
a protectorate over it. A just administration of the laws is a function for the state to perform,
and where one accused of a violation of some of the rules or ordinances of organized
government is brought before a bar of justice, the state, as the representative of that organized
government, is interested in the welfare of the individual, as well as in the upholding the
dignity and majesty of the law. If the party accused appears to be incapable of realizing his
position, the gravity of the charge against him, or the consequences, or if it appear, as in the
instance presented by the record in the case at bar, that the seriousness of his situation he is
incapable of appreciating, then his right to waive his constitutional privilege of counsel is to
my mind a most questionable one.
In the case at bar, whatever peculiarity of temperament or mental eccentricity was
observable by the jury, their verdict in this respect, together with the conduct of the appellant
and his utterances to the court, are most significant, to say the least. When the case was called
for trial, and at the first occasion on which it was necessary for the appellant to act in the way
of conducting such trial, the record discloses him as helpless and calling for counsel. I can
view the situation in no other light than that it was the duty of the court at that juncture of the
case to grant the continuance asked for and to see to it that at the resumption of the trial the
appellant was represented by counsel.
___________
41 Nev. 197, 197 (1917) State v. Bachman
[No. 2262]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. SAM
BACHMAN, Appellant.
[168 Pac. 733]
1. Grand JuryNumber to Select from.
That the grand jury was selected from twenty-three instead of twenty-four persons is not ground for
challenge.
2. Grand JuryRight to Challenge.
Accused's right to challenge the panel or any individual grand juror was a substantial right.
3. Grand JuryRight to challengeHeld to Answer.
On resubmission of an indictment to the grand jury, accused was held to answer within Rev. Laws,
7003, giving a person so held the right to challenge the panel or an individual grand juror, in view of
section 7093, providing for retention of custody of accused on resubmission.
4. Grand JuryObjections to JurorsWaiver.
Accused cannot complain of the court's refusal to consider the challenges before the grand jury was
sworn, where he failed to take advantage of the ruling of the court that all points that could be raised then
might be raised at the proper stage of the proceedings, in view of Rev. Laws, 7090, providing that
indictments may be set aside on motion for any of the grounds which would have been good as challenges
either to the panel or to any individual grand juror.
5. JurySelection of Trial PanelPresence of District Attorney.
In the absence of bad faith or corruption on the part of the board of county commissioners in selecting
jurors for the year, the presence of the district attorney and his offering suggestions as to qualifications
would not vitiate the panel.
6. JuryTrial PanelSelectionIrregularity.
That the names of the trial jurors were deposited by the commissioners in a jury box which contained
names of trial jurors selected for the previous year, which had not been withdrawn therefrom, did not
prejudice accused.
7. Criminal LawReviewImproper EvidenceCure by Other Testimony.
If there was error in the admission of the transcript of certain testimony in a habeas corpus proceeding in
which accused resisted extradition in another case, it was cured by his testimony relating to the same facts.
8. Criminal LawWitness against SelfVoluntary Testimony.
Where testimony was freely and voluntarily given, accused cannot complain that he was compelled to be
a witness against himself, in violation of his constitutional right.
9. Criminal LawProduction of Confession of Accomplice.
If the confession of an accomplice was in possession of the district attorney and was a matter of which,
under the rules of cross-examination, defendant could have made use for the purpose of
impeaching the accomplice, defendant was entitled to have the confession produced
for the purpose of cross-examination.
41 Nev. 197, 198 (1917) State v. Bachman
of cross-examination, defendant could have made use for the purpose of impeaching the accomplice,
defendant was entitled to have the confession produced for the purpose of cross-examination.
10. Criminal LawErrors Not Appearing Prejudicial from Record.
The refusal of the court to require the district attorney to produce the confession of the accomplice for
use by defendant on cross-examination of the accomplice is not ground for reversal; there being nothing in
the record showing that defendant was prejudiced by the refusal.
Appeal from the Fourth Judicial District Court, Elko County; E. J. L. Taber, Judge.
Sam Bachman was convicted of grand larceny, and appeals from the judgment and from an
order denying him motion for new trial. Affirmed.
J. M. McNamara and Carey Van Fleet, for Appellant:
The appellant, while in the custody of the sheriff, prior to and at the time of the impaneling
of the grand jury which returned the indictment, had the right to challenge individual
members of said grand jury. (Rev. Laws, 7005; State v. Larkin, 11 Nev. 314; People v.
Romero, 18 Cal. 93; People v. Phelan, 56 Pac. 424; State v. Warner, 88 Am. St. Rep. 422; 34
L. R. A. n. s. 255; Agnew v. United States, 41 L. Ed. 624; People ex rel. Bonfilis v. District
Court, 66 Pac. 1068; People v. Geiger, 49 Cal. 643; People v. Hidden, 32 Cal. 445; United
States v. Blodgett, 30 Fed. Cas. No. 18,312; 20 Cyc. 1329.)
Appellant moved to set aside the indictment at the proper time, which was denied, and has
taken every means under the statute to secure a fair and impartial trial; and as this was denied
him at the outset, he was deprived of a right guaranteed him under the 14th Amendment to
the Constitution. Such error was incurable, and sufficient in itself to warrant a reversal. (State
v. Warner, 88 Am. St. Rep. 422; People v. Jewett, 3 Wend. 314; State v. Corcoran, 61 Pac.
1037; Smith v. State, 77 S. W. 453.)
The right to interpose a challenge to the grand jury for any reason, either to the panel or to
the favor, for cause, should be exercised before the impanelment of the grand jury.
41 Nev. 197, 199 (1917) State v. Bachman
grand jury. The fundamental principle has been laid down that neither by statute nor by
judicial decision can an accused person be deprived of his right to be indicted by a regularly
constituted grand jury, unless charged by information, before being tried for a felony.
(McComb v. District Court, 36 Nev. 417; People v. Coffman, 24 Cal. 234.)
Grand jurors may be challenged for cause by any person liable to be affected by their
findings. It is a common-law right. (1 Chitty, Crim. Law, 307; People v. Jewett, 3 Wend. 314;
Clark, Crim. Proc. 119; Bishop, New Crim. Proc., vol. 1, secs. 876-878; Commonwealth v.
Green, 12 Am. St. Rep. 906; State v. Gillick, 7 Iowa, 287; 20 Cyc. 1329.)
The charge against an accused must be heard by a fair and impartial grand jury; a qualified
grand jury can consist only of members in whose minds there exists no bias or prejudice
against either of the parties to the case. (State v. Towers, 37 Nev. 94; Terrell v. Superior
Court, 60 Pac. 38; People v. Hanstead, 67 pac. 763.)
The court erred in denying appellant's motion to quash, set aside, and strike from the files
the indictment. If the prisoner was refused the privilege of challenging the grand jury, the
indictment is insufficient and worthless. (McComb v. District Court, supra; State v. Warner,
88 Am. St. Rep. 431.)
The court should have sustained appellant's challenge to the entire panel of grand jurors.
The district attorney had no more right to take part in the selection of the grand jury list than
had any other attorney in the county. (State v. Johnny, 29 Nev. 214.)
Testimony of defendant, given in the district court of Wapello County, Iowa, in which
defendant was a petitioner, should not have been admitted over his objection, the admission
of the transcript of said testimony resulting in a restriction of appellant's right of
cross-examination. (Wigmore on Evidence, vol. 2, sec. 1386.) The issues were not the same
in the habeas corpus proceeding as in the case at bar; the transcript of the testimony could not
have served as an accurate test for exposing any falsehoods or inaccuracies.
41 Nev. 197, 200 (1917) State v. Bachman
have served as an accurate test for exposing any falsehoods or inaccuracies. (People v. Bruno,
161 N. Y. Supp. 648.)
The court erred in refusing defendant's demand for the confession of an accomplice. This
was demanded for the purposes of cross-examination. The refusal of the district attorney to
produce said confession restricted the limits of defendant's cross-examination. Defendant was
entitled to an inspection of the confession. It was an abuse of discretion by the court to refuse
to order its delivery upon proper showing made. (Rev. Laws, 5416.)
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General; E. P. Carville, District Attorney, and Chas. A.
Cantwell, Deputy District Attorney, for Respondent:
Appellant, never having been held to answer to the grand jury, had no statutory right of
challenge. (Rev. Laws, 7003; State v. Simas, 25 Nev. 432; State v. Fitzgerald, 19 N. W. 202;
State v. Ames, 96 N. W. 330; State v. Davis, 22 Minn. 423; Yates v. State, 29 South. 965;
Kitts v. Superior Court, 90 Pac. 977; People v. Borrello, 96 Pac. 404.) The indictment was
found under the inquisitorial powers of the grand jury. The defendant had a statutory right to
move to set the same aside upon any ground that would have been good ground for challenge
had he been held to answer. He had not the right to challenge before indictment found. (Rev.
Laws, 7010, 7090.)
Challenge to the favor, as to grand jurors, is not a common-law right. Such challenges can
be taken only in accordance with the statute and by the persons named in the statute.
(Territory v. Hart, 14 Pac. 768; State v. Ames, supra; State v. Davis supra; Yates v. State,
supra; State v. Millain, 3 Nev. 424.) The distinction between a denial of right of challenge to
the favor and a denial of opportunity to object to the grand jury on account of race
discrimination and similar constitutional objections is to be fully borne in mind. (Thomas v.
State, 95 S. W. 1069; Eastling v. State, 62 S. W. 584; Hill v. State, 42 South. 380; People v.
Borgstrom, 70 N. E. 780.)
Refusal of the right of challenge, even if erroneous, did not affect the substantial rights
of the defendant.
41 Nev. 197, 201 (1917) State v. Bachman
did not affect the substantial rights of the defendant. (Rev. Laws, 7469, 7302; State v. Geiger,
49 Cal. 643; State v. Mircovich, 35 Nev. 485.) At common law a grand juror was not
disqualified by his previous knowledge or opinion; such disqualification is entirely statutory.
(27 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 1267.)
Full power rests in the state over remedies and procedure in its own courts, and any order
it pleases may be made in respect thereto, provided the substance of the right is secured
without unreasonable burden to the parties and litigants. Statutory limitation of the time and
manner of making objections to grand jurors is not against the fourteenth amendment to the
constitution under the due process of law clause. States may even do away entirely with the
grand jury, or the necessity of indictment thereby as a prerequisite to prosecution. (Hurtado v.
California, 110 U. S. 516; West v. Louisiana, 194 U. S. 263; York v. Texas, 137 U. S. 20;
Rowan v. State, 30 Wis. 149; In Re Krug, 79 Fed. 311; Kaloch v. Superior Court, 56 Cal.
229.)
The objection made to the grand jurors is not such a one as affects the jurisdiction of the
court; disqualification of grand jurors does not destroy the jurisdiction of the court; the
objection may be waived by not being made at the proper time. (Eureka County Bank Cases,
35 Nev. 80, 126 Pac. 678; McComb v. District Court, 36 Nev. 417, 136 Pac. 563; People v.
Stacey, 34 Cal. 307.)
Even if the admission of the testimony of appellant on the habeas corpus proceedings in a
sister state was erroneous, the error was positively cured when he took the stand in his own
behalf and testified substantially in accordance with the testimony in question. (State v.
O'Keefe, 23 Nev. 127; State v. Lewis, 20 Nev. 333; State v. Buster, 23 Nev. 346; State v.
Johnny, 29 Nev. 203, 219; State v. Williams, 31 Nev. 360; State v. Urie, 35 Nev. 274.)
However, the testimony was admissible in the first instance. (State v. Hopkins, 42 Pac. 627;
Miller v. People, 74 N. E. 743; Rafferty v. State, 16 S. W. 728, 730; Tiner v. State, 161 S. W.
195; Dickerson v. State, 4 N. W. 321; People v. Gallagher, 42 N. W. 1063; Commonwealth
v. Richardson, 79 Atl.
41 Nev. 197, 202 (1917) State v. Bachman
79 Atl. 657; Hall v. State, 32 South. 750; State v. Rover, 13 Nev. 17.)
There was no error in the refusal of the demand for the production of the alleged confession
of the accomplice. (People v. Emmons, 95 Pac. 1032; State v. Laird, 100 Pac. 639; State v.
Terry, 55 South 15; People v. Fitzsimmons, 149 N. W. 976; Ex Parte Clark, 58 Pac. 546;
Stole v. Fitzgerald, 32 S. W. 1117; People v. Jackson, 74 N. E. 565; Morrison v. State, 51 S.
W. 358; Dorris v. M. Coal Co., 64 Atl. 855; Goss v. A. Weiman & Co., 59 South. 364.)
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
Sam Bachman, the appellant, was indicted, tried, and convicted in the district court of the
Fourth judicial district of the State of Nevada, in and for the county of Elko, of the crime of
grand larceny. From an order denying his motion for a new trial, and from the judgment
pronounced against him, he appeals.
Prior to his indictment for the crime for which he was tried and convicted, the accused was
in the custody of the sheriff of Elko County, and in default of bail was confined in the county
jail to answer two indictments found against him by a prior grand jury. One of these
indictments, upon motion of the accused, was by the order of the court directed to be
resubmitted to another grand jury. The panel of the grand jury was then in attendance upon
the court, but had not yet been selected. The accused remained in custody in default of bail.
Before the grand jury was sworn to consider the case resubmitted, the accused interposed a
challenge to the panel, upon the ground that it had been selected from twenty-three instead of
twenty-four persons. The court overruled the challenge, the accused excepted, and then
interposed a challenge to each individual member of the grand jury, upon the ground that a
state of mind existed on the part of each juror with reference to the case and to the accused
which would prevent them from acting impartially and without prejudice to the substantial
right of the accused. (Rev. Laws, 7005, subd. 6.)
41 Nev. 197, 203 (1917) State v. Bachman
The court declined to consider the challenge, refused to try the same, and also refused to
permit the accused to inquire of each juror as to his state of mind with reference to the case
and to the accused. The court's ruling is as follows:
The court will at this time decline to consider the challenges. The record will show that
you made the challenges and that the court declined to consider them for the reason that the
defendant has not been held to answer, and the better practice is not to consider the
challenges at this time, and as you are advised, all the points that could be raised at this time
may be raised if necessary at the proper stage of the proceedings. I want you to have your
record full in the matter and save your exception to the action of the court in refusing to
consider the challenges at this time.
To this ruling the accused excepted. The grand jury returned three indictments against him,
covering other and independent offenses than that of the accusation resubmitted, involving,
however, the same subject-matter, to wit, grand larceny. Upon arrangement on one of said
indictments the accused made his motion to quash and set aside the same. The motion was
predicated upon the exceptions taken by the accused to the rulings of the court upon his
challenge both to the panel and to the individual grand jurors:
1. First, that the grand jury was not a legal body, in that it was selected from twenty-three
instead of twenty-four persons. This court has in several cases had occasion to rule upon this
point adversely to the contention of appellant. (State v. Casey, 34 Nev. 154, 117 Pac. 5; State
v. Williams, 31 Nev. 360, 102 Pac. 974; State v. Weber, 31 Nev. 390, 103 Pac. 411.)
2, 3. As to the second ground of the motion to quash and set aside the indictment, the
question presented is more novel than difficult. The accused complains bitterly that the
court's action in denying him the right to challenge the individual members of the jury before
they were sworn, not only prejudiced him, but that he was deprived of his statutory and
constitutional right.
41 Nev. 197, 204 (1917) State v. Bachman
It is argued that he was in custody and held to answer in the sense of our statute. (Rev. Laws,
7003.) There is no doubt but that the right of the accused to challenge the panel or any
individual juror was a substantial right, and we are of the opinion that he was included in that
class of persons who are held to answer. Where an indictment is set aside the statute provides:
If the court directs that the case be resubmitted, the defendant, if already in custody, must
so remain unless he is admitted to bail; or if already admitted to bail, or money has been
deposited instead thereof, the bail or money shall be answerable for the appearance of the
defendant to answer a new indictment; and, unless a new indictment is found before the next
grand jury of the district is discharged, the court must, on the discharge of such grand jury,
make the order prescribed by the preceding section. (Rev. Laws, 7093.)
4. We do not think, however, that the inquiry made by argument of the accused as to
whether or not he was held or not held to answer is material to the question presented for our
decision upon this point. The main question is, Was the accused, by the court's action in
refusing to consider his challenges before the jury was sworn, deprived of his statutory and
constitutional right, or did he, by the court's ruling, lose his substantial right of challenge? An
accused who has been indicted without an opportunity to challenge the grand jury is not
without a remedy. Under the ruling of the court, the accused was advised that all the points
that could be raised at that time might be raised if necessary at the proper stage of the
proceedings. We infer from this language that the court could have had in mind only
subdivision 4 of section 7090, Revised Laws, which provides:
The indictment must be set aside by the court in which the defendant is arraigned, upon
his motion, in any of the following cases. * * * 4. When the defendant had not been held to
answer before the finding of the indictment, on any ground which would have been good
ground for challenge either to the panel or to any individual grand juror."
41 Nev. 197, 205 (1917) State v. Bachman
good ground for challenge either to the panel or to any individual grand juror.
In the case of McComb v. District Court, 36 Nev. 417, 136 Pac. 563, this court declared
that where an accused was held to answer and failed to interpose a challenge to the individual
jurors before his indictment, he could not thereafter take advantage of his own neglect or
failure; but in the case at bar it appears that while the court was of the opinion that the
accused was not held to answer, he had the remedy provided by section 7090, Revised Laws,
upon a motion to set aside the indictment. It is obvious that the accused endeavored to take
advantage of this section of the statute upon his motion to quash and set aside the indictment,
but he apparently preferred to rest his motion upon the denial of his right to challenge the
individual members of the grand jury in the first instance, and offered no proof upon his
motion to set aside that there existed on the part of any member of the grand jury a state of
mind prejudicial to him or to his cause.
In the case of State v. Larkin, 11 Nev. 324, the accused was in custody at the time the
indictment was found against him, and neither he nor his counsel had an opportunity to
interpose a challenge to the panel or to any individual member of the jury, and he moved the
court to set aside the indictment upon the ground that he was in custody and held to answer
and had been deprived of his statutory and constitutional right to challenge the individual
members of the grand jury which had found the indictment against him. The court, after duly
considering the facts, stated to the defendant and his counsel that they could move to set aside
the indictment by taking any objection thereto that might have been taken advantage of to the
said grand jury or to any member thereof had the defendant appeared before said grand jury.
No desire being expressed by the defendant, the court overruled the motion. In the case at bar,
it appears that the accused was expressly granted the privilege, by the ruling of the court and
by the statute, to set aside the indictment upon any ground which would have been good
ground for challenge either to the panel or to any individual grand juror, but this he
declined.
41 Nev. 197, 206 (1917) State v. Bachman
the court and by the statute, to set aside the indictment upon any ground which would have
been good ground for challenge either to the panel or to any individual grand juror, but this he
declined. In the larkin case the court said:
From these facts it appears that at the time the grand jury was impaneled defendant was
not held to answer before it for any offense. He, however, had the privilege, under the ruling
of the court, as well as by virtue of the provisions of section 276 of the criminal practice act
(section 7090, Rev. Laws), to move to set aside the indictment on any ground which would
have been good ground of challenge either to the panel or any individual grand juror.' * * *
Having refused to exercise this privilege, he is not in a position to complain of the ruling of
the court.
We are of the opinion that the accused is in no position to complain of the ruling of the
court, and that his grievance in this particular is more technical than substantial. We do not,
however, commend the practice pursued by the court in this instance. Whatever may be its
individual opinion as to the question of the policy of the statute which gives the right to the
accused to interpose a challenge to the panel or to individual jurors, it is preeminently better
to adhere, if possible, to the practice established by its own jurisdiction, rather than incur the
risk of a mistrial by a departure therefrom and following a practice that might result in a
miscarriage of justice.
5. The accused next contends that the court erred in denying his challenge to the entire
panel of trial jurors. This alleged error is predicated upon the fact that the district attorney was
present with the board of county commissioners of Elko County, at its first session in
January, 1916, and took part in the selection of trial jurors for that particular year by making
suggestions to the commissioners as to who or who would not be qualified jurors as their
names were selected. The facts as disclosed by the bill of exceptions do not sustain this
contention.
41 Nev. 197, 207 (1917) State v. Bachman
this contention. (State v. Johnny, 29 Nev. 203, 87 Pac. 3.) The trial jurors were selected by
the board of county commissioners; and, in the absence of bad faith or corporation on their
part, the presence of the district attorney and his offering suggestions as to this or that
juryman's qualifications do not vitiate the panel. The true test is not whether the name of a
juror was properly or improperly placed on the jury list by the commissioners, but the
objection to him is when he serves. (State v. Perry, 122 N. C. 1018, 29 S. E. 384.)
6. It is also contended that the names of the trial jurors were deposited by the
commissioners in a jury box which contained names of trial jurors selected for the previous
year, which had not been drawn therefrom for service. Courts are forced to apprehend that
challenges are not always intended to subserve the ends of justice. Certainly the accused was
in no manner prejudiced by this irregularity of the board of county commissioners.
7, 8. The next assignment of error is based upon the reception in evidence of the transcript
of certain testimony given by appellant before a court in the State of Iowa upon a habeas
corpus proceeding instituted therein by the said appellant in resisting extradition proceedings
based upon an indictment for an offense distinct from that for which he was then being tried.
It cannot be ascertained from the record upon what theory the admission of this evidence was
material, unless we are left to infer from the argument of counsel that it was admitted for the
purpose of certain admissions contained therein relevant and material to the inquiry then
under consideration. It is the contention of the accused that by the admission of this evidence
he was compelled to be a witness against himself, in violation of his constitutional right.
There is no force to this contention, because it appears from the evidence that the testimony
was freely and voluntarily given. If there was an error in the admission of this testimony, it
was cured by the testimony of the accused when examined as a witness in his own behalf.
41 Nev. 197, 208 (1917) State v. Bachman
his own behalf. His testimony related to the same facts as appear to have been testified to in
the habeas corpus proceedings.
9, 10. The next assignment of error is based upon the refusal by the trial court to grant the
demand of the accused for an alleged confession of one Lou Duval, an accomplice of the
accused. When Duval was being examined as a witness on behalf of the state, the accused
demanded of the district attorney an alleged confession, reduced to writing, for the purposes
of cross-examination. It is our opinion that if such a confession was in writing and in the
possession of the district attorney, and was a matter of which, under the rules of
cross-examination, the defendant could have made use for the purpose of impeachment or to
bring to the attention of the witness statements by him at other times contrary to those made
on the witness stand, which matter would have gone to the question of the credibility of the
witness, his honesty, or sincerity, the defendant was entitled to have the confession or writing
containing such confession produced. There is nothing in the record from which we may gain
even an intimation that the appellant was prejudiced by the refusal of the court in this instance
to require the prosecuting attorney to present the confession. Hence we deem the error in this
respect not sufficient to warrant a reversal of the judgment. We are referred by respondent to
a number of cases by virtue of which they contend that appellant was not entitled to have the
confession produced. They refer especially to the case of People v. Emmons, 7 Cal. App. 685,
95 Pac. 1032. The question was there touched upon by the Supreme Court of California, and
under the authority of People v. Glaze, 139 Cal. 157, 72 Pac. 966, it was held that the trial
court committed no error in refusing to direct the district attorney to produce a certain writing
containing a statement made by a witness for the prosecution. In the case of People v. Glaze,
that court said:
The statement could not have been used in evidence, except for the purpose of
impeaching the witness, by showing thereby that he had made statements out of court
inconsistent with the testimony given by him on the trial.
41 Nev. 197, 209 (1917) State v. Bachman
except for the purpose of impeaching the witness, by showing thereby that he had made
statements out of court inconsistent with the testimony given by him on the trial. * * * The
only statements that can be used for that purpose, if in writing, are statements made by the
witness himself, either directly in his handwriting or over his signature, or indirectly by his
adoption of or admission of the correctness of a written report of his statements made by
some other person. He cannot be held responsible for a statement taken down by another
purporting to be a report of his oral declarations, unless he has been made acquainted with the
contents of such statement, and directly or indirectly admitted that it was correct. * * * Unless
it is shown that there is good reason to believe that the document when produced would be
admissible in evidence for some purpose in the case, the court need not compel its
production.
The record in the case at bar fails to disclose sufficient to warrant us in determining
whether the confession called for would have been admissible in evidence, either for the
purpose of impeachment or for any other purpose.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
McCarran, C. J.:
I concur in the order. My concurrence, however, is based upon that portion of the record
which discloses that the appellant, on his motion to quash the indictment, and at the time the
court offered to permit him to show whether any grand juror, prior to the consideration of the
appellant's case, was possessed of a state of mind in reference to the defendant which would
prevent such grand juror from acting impartially, rather stood upon his offer to challenge
prior to the impanelment. The appellant here had previously been indicted by the grand jury
of Elko County, and pursuant to such indictment had been extradited from the State of Iowa.
On motion of appellant's counsel the indictment had been quashed and set aside, and an
order had been made by the trial court, under section 7093, Revised Laws, resubmitting
the case to another grand jury.
41 Nev. 197, 210 (1917) State v. Bachman
been quashed and set aside, and an order had been made by the trial court, under section
7093, Revised Laws, resubmitting the case to another grand jury. The appellant was then in
custody, and remained in custody. On the impaneling of the new grand jury appellant and his
counsel were in court and attempted to challenge several individual members of the grand
jury under subdivision 6 of section 7005, Revised Laws, which is as follows:
* * * 6. That a state of mind exists on his part in reference to the case, or to either party,
which will prevent him from acting impartially and without prejudice to the substantial right
of the party challenging. * * *
It would be resorting to an unwarranted fiction to say that the appellant was not held to
answer at the time at which he, through his counsel, sought to interpose this challenge to the
grand jury, then about to be impaneled. The appellant was held to answer, he was in custody,
he was present in court with his attorney, and should have been permitted to challenge the
members of the grand jury. This right was denied by the trial court. These statutory provisions
relative to the impeachment of grand juries, their selection and formation, and the ground for
challenge to the panel and to the individual juror, are sacred, solemn provisions of the law,
enacted by the legislative body, specific in their prescription, and courts must either abide by
them and enforce them or else arrogate to themselves legislative functions.
In the case of McComb v. District Court, 36 Nev. 417, 136 Pac. 563, this court, by a
majority of its members, declared that where an accused was held to answer and failed to
interpose a challenge to the individual grand jurors before his indictment, he could not
thereafter take advantage of his own neglect or failure. If the strict letter of the law as laid
down by the interpretation rendered by a majority of this court in the McComb case were
applied here, there would be no alternative save to reverse the judgment.
41 Nev. 197, 211 (1917) State v. Bachman
save to reverse the judgment. I say this because the defendant, seeking to comply with the
rule as laid down in the McComb case, attempted to challenge the grand jurors before the
indictment was found. By the rule of the McComb case, this was the proper and only course.
The trial court denied appellant this privilege. By the rule in the McComb case, he could not
thereafter take advantage of the right to challenge. Hence he was cut off from a statutory right
vital to his interests.
It is manifest from the record that the trial court overlooked the rule in the McComb case
and sought to permit the appellant to interpose his challenge to the individual members of the
grand jury after the indictment had been filed against him, under subdivision 4, section 7090,
Revised Laws. The prevailing opinion here must close its eyes to the majority opinion in the
McComb case, otherwise the case must be reversed. Indeed, I look forward to the time when
this court will reverse the position taken by the majority of the court in that case. Trial courts
should not hazard reversal in matters of this character, when the letter and spirit of the statute
is so manifest. Had the appellant on the occasion of his motion to quash taken advantage of
the opportunity afforded by the trial court, and had he then established the fact that prior to
the finding of the indictment certain designated members of the grand jury were possessed of
a state of mind with reference to the defendant, or to the case, which prevented them from
acting impartially and without prejudice to the substantial rights of the defendant, the case
must necessarily have been reversed.
____________
41 Nev. 212, 212 (1917) Saval v. Blume
[No. 2170]
JOHN SAVAL, Appellant, v. PHIL BLUME,
Respondent.
[168 Pac. 909]
1. Appeal and ErrorOrders AppealableRefusing to Hear Motion for New Trial.
Under Rev. Laws, 5329, providing that appeal may be taken from any special order made after final
judgment, an order refusing to hear a motion for a new trial is appealable.
2. New TrialMotionsRequisites and Sufficiency.
Rev. Laws, 5323, provides the party intending to move for a new trial must, within five days after any
verdict, or within ten days after a decision of the court or referee, file with the clerk, and serve upon the
adverse party, a notice of his intention, designating the grounds upon which the motion will be made and
whether upon affidavits or upon the minutes. Section 5320 provides that the former verdict or other
decision may be vacated, and a new trial granted, for insufficiency of the evidence to justify a verdict or
other decision, or that it is against law. Section 5321 provides that in an application for a new trial it shall
be sufficient to state one or more grounds as specified in the preceding section, provided that, when the
application is made upon subdivisions 1, 2, 3, or 4 of the preceding section, it must be supported by
affidavit. In all other cases it must be made upon the minutes of the court. Held that, as motion for a new
trial for insufficiency of evidence can be made only on the minutes of the court, a motion for new trial on
the ground of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision, judgment, and findings of fact and
conclusions of law is sufficient, although it failed to state that the motion would be made on the minutes of
the court.
Appeal from Sixth Judicial District Court, Humboldt County; E. E. Winters, Judge.
Action by John Saval against Phil Blume. From order refusing to hear motion for new
trial, plaintiff appeals. Reversed and remanded.
Salter & Robins, for Appellant:
This is an appeal from an order of the district court refusing to hear plaintiff's motion for a
new trial for the reason that the notice of intention to move for a new trial was void. The
notice of intention was regular in all respects, except that it did not state that the motion
would be made upon the minutes of the court. Under our statutes, this defect is extremely
technical, and not in any way calculated to mislead the defendant.
41 Nev. 212, 213 (1917) Saval v. Blume
in any way calculated to mislead the defendant. If an appellant wishes to move for a new trial
upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence, his motion must be made upon the
minutes of the court, and not otherwise; there is no other way. Such an expression in a notice
of intention under the laws of the State of Nevada is mere surplusage. (Rev. Laws, 2321; 36
Cyc. 1158; 29 Cyc. 937.)
Opposing counsel admit that we are entitled to be heard, and suggest relief by way of writ of
mandate. Such would not be the proper remedy. (Rev. Laws, 5696; Floral Springs v. Rives,
14 Nev. 431; State v. Boerlin, 30 Nev. 474; State v. Board, 32 Nev. 263; State v. Langan, 91
Pac. 737; State v. Curler, 4 Nev. 445.)
T. A. Brandon, for Respondent:
Appellant has no remedy by appeal; his remedy is by mandamus. Even admitting the right
of appeal, the ruling of the lower court should be sustained. The fact that the lower court
refused to act for the reason that the notice of intention was fatally defective, the court
believed itself without jurisdiction in the matter. Under the circumstances, mandamus is the
proper remedy. (Floral Springs W. Co. v. Rives, 14 Nev. 431.)
The notice was fatally defective. The statute provides what the intention to move for a new
trial must contain, and the language is mandatory. (Rev. Laws, 5323.) This statute was
adopted from other states, which have declared its provisions to be mandatory, the
construction being adopted with the statute. (Hughes v. Alsip, 44 Pac. 1027.) When a statute
is passed authorizing a proceeding which was not allowed by the general law before, and
directing the mode in which an act shall be done, the mode pointed out must be strictly
construed. (Lewis, Sutherland, Stat. Const., vol. 2, 2d ed. p. 1135.)
Appellant must elect to stand on the original or the amended notice of motion. He
unquestionably elected to stand on the amended notice. The amended notice was filed long
after the waiver of written notice of the decision, which waiver was at the time appellant
attempted to file his first so-called notice of intention, and therefore the amended notice of
intention came too late.
41 Nev. 212, 214 (1917) Saval v. Blume
to file his first so-called notice of intention, and therefore the amended notice of intention
came too late. (Cooney v. Furlong, 6 Pac. 388; State v. Mason, 45 Pac. 557.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This is an appeal from an order refusing to hear a motion for a new trial. Respondent
contends that an appeal from such an order will not lie. Hence we are called upon primarily to
determine that question.
Section 5329, Revised Laws (section 387, C. P.), provides:
An appeal may be taken: * * * (2) * * * From any special order made after final
judgment, within sixty days after the order is made and entered in the minutes of the court.
Respondent contends that that is not an appeal from an order of any kind; that no order
was made by the lower court; that all that the lower court did was to refuse to act. The order
of the trial court was one sustaining respondent's objection on the ground that no notice
thereof was given as prescribed by law.
1. The motion for a new trial was a necessary step in the proceeding in order to have the
court of review pass upon the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the
judgment. Respondent objected to the hearing of appellant's motion for a new trial. The court,
pursuant to the objection of respondent, entered an order refusing to hear appellant's motion.
This was a special order made after final judgment (Central Telephone Co. v. Holmes, 30
Nev. 440, 97 Pac. 390); hence under the statute it was one from which an appeal to this court
will lie.
2. Did the trial court err in its order refusing to hear the appellant's motion for a new trial?
The notice of motion filed and served by appellant was in part as follows:
You and each of you will please take notice that the plaintiff in the above-entitled action
intends to and will move the above court to set aside and vacate the judgment, decision, and
finding hereinbefore made in said cause, and to grant a new trial herein, and on the ground
of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision, judgment, and findings of fact
and conclusions of law made, entered, and filed herein."
41 Nev. 212, 215 (1917) Saval v. Blume
cause, and to grant a new trial herein, and on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence
to justify the decision, judgment, and findings of fact and conclusions of law made, entered,
and filed herein.
An amendment to this notice was later filed. Respondent, through his attorneys, objected
to the hearing, argument, and submission of plaintiff's motion for a new trial, the principal
ground of objection being that inasmuch as the notice of motion for new trial failed to set
forth that the motion would be based upon the minutes of the court, it was therefore defective
and could not be considered by the court. We shall deal entirely with the motion for a new
trial as originally made, disregarding all of the matters pertaining to the amendment.
Section 5323, Revised Laws, provides:
The party intending to move for a new trial must, within five days after the verdict of the
jury, if the action was tried by jury, or within ten days after notice of the decision of the court,
or referee, if the action was tried without a jury, file with the clerk, and serve upon the
adverse party, a notice of his intention, designating the grounds upon which the motion will
be made and whether the same will be made upon affidavits or upon the minutes of the
court.
Appellant moved for a new trial on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to
justify the decision. The lower court held this notice insufficient, inasmuch as it failed to
state that the motion would be made upon the minutes of the court.
Section 5320, Revised Laws (sec. 378, C. P.), provides:
The former verdict or other decision may be vacated, and a new trial granted on the
application of the party aggrieved, for any of the following causes, materially affecting the
substantial rights of such party: * * * (6) Insufficiency of the evidence to justify a verdict or
other decision, or that it is against law.
The next succeeding section (section 5321, Rev. Laws; section 379, C. P.), provides:
In an application for a new trial, it shall be sufficient for the party applying for the same
to state, in the language of the statute only, or in language of similar import, one or more
grounds as specified in the preceding section; provided, that when the application is made
upon subdivisions 1, 2, 3, or 4 of the preceding section, it must be supported by affidavit.
41 Nev. 212, 216 (1917) Saval v. Blume
for the party applying for the same to state, in the language of the statute only, or in language
of similar import, one or more grounds as specified in the preceding section; provided, that
when the application is made upon subdivisions 1, 2, 3, or 4 of the preceding section, it must
be supported by affidavit. In all other cases it must be made on the minutes of the court
without statement or bill of exceptions. * * * On such hearing, reference may be had in all
cases to the pleadings and the orders of the court, and, when the motion is made on the
minutes, reference may also be had to the depositions, documentary evidence, and the
stenographic notes or report of the testimony, and the records of the court.
Under this statute a motion for a new trial, when based on subdivision 6 of the preceding
sectioninsufficiency of the evidence to justify a verdict or other decision, etc.can only
be made upon the minutes of the court. The statute by its language thus limits the scope of
inquiry, and a motion for a new trial based upon subdivision 6 gives notice by and through
the force of the statute that the applicant relies upon the minutes of the court only. Thus it
may be properly said that as the statute fixes without alternative the basis of the motion when
the same is made under subdivision 6 of the section 5320 and limits the scope of inquiry to
specific matters and things, a notice of motion for a new trial made under subdivision 6 which
declared that such motion would be made on the minutes of the court would only be
repeating the language of the statute. The object of statutes such as this is to apprise the
opposite party of the proceeding, its nature and scope of inquiry, and to afford opportunity for
the trial court to review its acts and conclusions in order to correct error. When the scope of
inquiry is definitely prescribed by the statute, there can be nothing accomplished, either by
way of giving notice or of fixing the scope of inquiry, by repeating the language which the
law itself sets forth.
The provisions of our civil practice act referred to in the matter at bar are the results of
amendments and changes in the earlier practice act of this state relative to new trials.
41 Nev. 212, 217 (1917) Saval v. Blume
the matter at bar are the results of amendments and changes in the earlier practice act of this
state relative to new trials. In article 2 of the practice act established by the legislature of 1869
(Stats. 1869, p. 226) we find section 195 of that act identical in its language and provisions to
section 378 of our present code relative to the same subject. Section 196 of the act of 1869
was repealed, and is replaced by section 379 of our present practice act. The former section
provided:
When the application is made for a cause mentioned in the first, second, third, and fourth
subdivisions of the last section, it shall be made upon affidavit; for any other cause it shall be
made upon a statement prepared, as provided in the next section.
Hence it follows that, under section 196 of the former practice act, the party moving for a
new trial, if he relied upon subdivision 6insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict
or other decision, or that it is against lawwas required to prepare a statement, and section
197 of that act provided that:
When the notice designates as the ground upon which the motion will be made the
insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict or other decision, the statement shall
specify the particulars in which such evidence is alleged to be insufficient.
This court in passing upon the identical question here presented, and viewing the same in
the light of the practice act of 1869, held that a notice of intention to move for a new trial
must be based upon one or more of the grounds mentioned in section 195, and the grounds
relied upon must be generally stated in the notice. In this respect the court held the statute to
be mandatory rather than directory. (Street v. Lemon Mill Co., 9 Nev. 251.) Were it not for
the change in the statutory provisions relative to motions for a new trial, the case last cited
would be controlling, but section 379 of our present practice act, evidently enacted for the
purpose of doing away with the provisions of sections 196 and 197 of the former act
providing for statement specifying the particulars in which such evidence is alleged to be
insufficient, expressly declares that the motion if based upon the insufficiency of the
evidence "must be made upon the minutes of the court without statement or bill of
exceptions."
41 Nev. 212, 218 (1917) Saval v. Blume
the particulars in which such evidence is alleged to be insufficient, expressly declares that the
motion if based upon the insufficiency of the evidence must be made upon the minutes of
the court without statement or bill of exceptions. Hence by our present statute no
particularity is required such as that contemplated by the former practice act.
In the case of Hughes v. Alsip, 112 Cal. 587, 44 Pac. 1027, the Supreme Court of
California determined the question here at bar in the light of a statutory provision somewhat
similar to those of our former practice act. The code there states:
When the application is made for a cause mentioned in the first, second, third, and fourth
subdivisions of the last section, it must be made upon affidavits; for any other cause it may be
made, at the option of the moving party, either upon the minutes of the court, or a bill of
exceptions, or a statement of the case, prepared as hereinafter provided. (Section 658, C. C.
P. Cal. 1899.)
Under this statute of California, when the motion for a new trial is based upon
insufficiency of the evidence, that being subdivision 6 of a preceding section, the movant may
exercise his option and may base his claim for new trial either upon the minutes of the court,
a bill of exceptions, or a statement of the case. The supreme court, in considering the
question, held that inasmuch as the motion for a new trial did not state upon what the motion
was based, that is, did not state whether it would be made upon affidavits, minutes of the
court, bill of exceptions or statement, as required by the section of the statute, therefore the
motion for a new trial could not be considered.
A code of Montana applicable to new trials, identical to that found in California, was
passed upon in the case of Gregg v. Garrett, 13 Mont. 10, 31 Pac. 721. There the court held
that a notice which did not set forth the basis upon which plaintiff proposed to present the
motion for a new trial was incomplete and defective. The court said: "The reason and
importance of this requirement are apparent.
41 Nev. 212, 219 (1917) Saval v. Blume
The reason and importance of this requirement are apparent. Both parties have a right to
know upon what papers the motion will be presented, and to participate in preparing the
record, if the same has not already been made up by way of bill of exceptions.
These decisions last cited are in line with the decision of this court in the case of Street v.
Lemon Mill Co., supra.
By reason of the change in our statutory provision relative to new trials, as found in
section 379 of our present civil practice act, a question is presented altogether different from
that considered by the courts in either of the decisions heretofore referred to. By the provision
of our present code, the movant in an application for a new trial, where he relies upon
insufficiency of the evidence, has no option; he is limited, as is the whole scope of the
inquiry, to the minutes of the court. These he must rely on without statement or bill of
exceptions. Where, under sections 5320 and 5321, a party moves for a new trial on the
ground of insufficiency of the evidence, the opposite party is at once notified by the express
language of the statute as to the specific grounds upon which the movant relies and as to the
scope and extent of the inquiry, and as to the basis upon which the movant proposes to
present his motion for a new trial. In contemplation of this the statute itself expressly names
upon what papers and things the motion will be based and presented. In other words, it is
made manifest to both parties by the plain, unequivocal language of the statute that inasmuch
as the moving party relies upon insufficiency of evidence alone on the hearing
reference may be had * * * to the pleadings and the orders of the court, * * * to the
depositions, documentary evidence, and the stenographic notes or report of the testimony and
the records of the court.
A notice that a movant will rely upon matters and things to which by express statutory
provision he is limited and to other than which he, by reason of the nature of his motion,
cannot refer, would avail nothing, nor would the absence of such matter in a notice put
the opposite party to any disadvantage or deprive him of any right.
41 Nev. 212, 220 (1917) Saval v. Blume
nature of his motion, cannot refer, would avail nothing, nor would the absence of such matter
in a notice put the opposite party to any disadvantage or deprive him of any right. The
emphatic, specific, limiting language of the statute is the best notice that could be given.
In view of the express language of the statute limiting and fixing the basis and scope of the
inquiry where the motion is on the ground of insufficient evidence, the provision of section
5323, if it refers at all to a motion made on such ground, is, as we have indicated, not
essential or necessary to the validity of the proceeding, hence we regard the language as
directory only. (36 Cyc. 1157.)
The motion for new trial made by appellant in the court below should have been
considered by that court.
The order appealed from is reversed. The cause is remanded.
____________
41 Nev. 220, 220 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
[No. 2236]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. THE NEVADA COPPER
BELT RAILROAD COMPANY (a Corporation), Appellant.
[168 Pac. 737]
1. Appeal and ErrorDisposition of CaseModification by Consent.
Under Rev. Laws, 4835, authorizing the supreme court to reverse, affirm, or modify the judgment or
order appealed from, the court has power to modify a judgment for delinquent taxes by reducing the
amount of the recovery, and will so modify the judgment where the attorney-general, the district attorney,
and the attorney for defendant stipulate for such modification, notwithstanding section 3660, imposing an
additional penalty in suits for the collection of delinquent taxes, and providing that the judgment shall not
be satisfied except by the payment of the tax, the original penalty, the costs, and the additional penalty
therein prescribed in full.
Appeal from Eighth Judicial District Court, Lyon County; T. C. Hart, Judge.
Suit by the State against the Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Company. From a judgment for
plaintiff, the defendant appeals. Modified and remanded, with instructions {Coleman, J.,
dissenting).
41 Nev. 220, 221 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
the defendant appeals. Modified and remanded, with instructions (Coleman, J., dissenting).
Moore, Mitchell & Maginnis, for Appellant.
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General; Clark J. Guild, District Attorney, and R. L.
Waggoner, for Defendant.
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
In a suit for delinquent taxes prosecuted by respondent against appellant in the Eighth
judicial district court in and for Lyon County, that court entered judgment for $12,583.70 and
costs amounting to $798.78. After perfecting the appeal to this court, the appellant, defendant
in the court below, and the State of Nevada as respondent here, each acting by and through its
duly authorized representatives, to wit, the attorney-general and the district attorney of Lyon
County, and Henry I. Moore, Esq., entered into the following stipulation:
Come the parties by their attorneys in the above entitled and numbered cause now
pending on appeal before this court, and stipulate and agree that the judgment heretofore
entered in the district court of the Eighth judicial district, in and for Lyon County, State of
Nevada, shall be amended, reformed, and modified, and that judgment shall be entered by the
supreme court in favor of the plaintiff and respondent and against the defendant and appellant
in the sum of $11,052.17, which judgment in said total sum shall be enforced by plaintiff and
respondent against defendant and appellant as in full and final payment, adjudication, and
settlement of the original taxes, penalty, attorney's fee, and costs accruing or accrued to date
in favor of the plaintiff and respondent in said action. It is further stipulated that said
judgment in the above-named sum shall draw interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from
the date of entry until paid. It is further stipulated that said reformed judgment may be entered
by the supreme court at any time without further notice or formal hearing, and shall be in all
things binding upon the parties as though after hearing upon the merits in said court.
41 Nev. 220, 222 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
though after hearing upon the merits in said court. It is further stipulated that the plaintiff and
respondent shall recover against defendant and appellant any and all costs which may
hereafter accrue in favor of plaintiff and respondent in this or any other court in the
enforcement of said judgment. [Signed] Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, Clark J. Guild,
District Attorney of Lyon County, Attorneys for Plaintiff and Respondent. Henry I. Moore,
Attorney for Defendant and Appellant.
By section 3660, Revised Laws, it is provided:
In all suits brought for the collection of delinquent taxes, as provided for in the preceding
section, the complaint and summons shall demand, and the judgment shall be entered for
twenty-five per centum in addition to the tax of ten per centum thereon and costs; and such
tax, penalty, and costs shall not be discharged, nor shall the judgment therefor be satisfied
except by the payment of the tax, original penalty, costs, and the additional penalty herein
prescribed in full.
Under section 4835, Revised Laws, this court
may reverse, affirm, or modify the judgment or order appealed from as to any or all of the
parties, and may, if necessary, order a new trial, or the place of trial to be changed. When the
judgment or order appealed from is reversed or modified, this court may make, or direct the
inferior court to make, complete restitution of all property and rights lost by the erroneous
judgment or order.
We are not unmindful of a former decision of this court (State v. C. P. R. R. Co., 10 Nev.
47), wherein it was held that under statutes then existing neither a district attorney nor a board
of commissioners had authority to make any compromise or composition with delinquent
taxpayers or to release them from their liability to pay any part of the taxes they were legally
bound to pay. We are not called upon here to disturb the rule as asserted in that instance, nor
are we called upon to say that under our recent and modern statutes pertaining to taxation,
assessment, and equalization, such a rule would be applicable.
41 Nev. 220, 223 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
Suffice it to say that under the stipulation entered into by all of the parties the judgment of the
lower court in its entirety is brought before us for modification. What may have induced this
stipulation is not a matter with which we are concerned. If the matter came before us by way
of a confession of error by respondent, it goes without saying that this court, under the
provision of the statute cited, would have the power to modify the judgment. Coming here by
stipulation, we view the matter in the same light.
It must be noted that in this matter we are not called upon, nor do we assume, to deal with
a compromise such as that commented upon by this court in the case of State v. C. P. R. R.
Co., supra. This matter, as has already been related, was litigated in a court of competent
jurisdiction, and judgment was therein rendered. After appeal from that judgment to this
tribunal, the stipulation set forth was formally entered into by the legally constituted
authorities, the force of which stipulation bore expressly on the judgement as rendered by the
trial court. We are dealing here, not with the acts of ministerial officers, nor are we called
upon to regard such acts in any way whatever; neither are we dealing with resolutions or acts
looking to expediency in the way of avoiding prolonged litigation; nor are we called upon to
conjecture how the appeal could have been dismissed had motion been made for that purpose.
We are dealing with a stipulation, in which duly constituted representatives of the state and
county bring to our attention a judgment rendered by a subordinate tribunal and ask that we
modify that judgement. The matter being here on appeal, this court alone has the right,
pursuant to section 4836 of our Revised Laws, to modify the judgement appealed from as to
any or all of the parties. The state, through its attorney-general, and the county, through its
district attorney, having virtually moved this court, by way of stipulation, that the judgement
be amended, reformed and modified * * * and be entered by the supreme court in favor of
plaintiff and respondent and against the defendant and appellant" in the sum specified, we
know of no reason, and none has been suggested, why we should do otherwise.
41 Nev. 220, 224 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
defendant and appellant in the sum specified, we know of no reason, and none has been
suggested, why we should do otherwise.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the trial court be and the same is hereby
modified to the sum of $11,052.17, said amount to bear interest at the rate of 7 per cent per
annum from the date of the former entry of said judgment until paid.
The cause is remanded, with instructions to the trial court to enter its judgment
accordingly.
Coleman, J., dissenting:
I dissent.
The notice of appeal in this case was served April 29, 1916. No assignment of error has
ever bee filed herein. The case was docketed in this court on appeal June 1, 1916, and nothing
more was done in the case until May 7, 1917, when the stipulation which is set out in the
prevailing opinion was filed, and to which is attached what purports to be a copy of a
resolution adopted by the board of county commissioners of Lyon County, which reads as
follows:
Upon motion of Mr. M. J. King, seconded by Mr. N. F. Bertrand, the following resolution
and order was unanimously passed: Whereas, there has been pending in the district court of
Lyon County and the Supreme Court of the State of Nevada, for approximately three years, a
case styled State of Nevada v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Company, said case involving
the payment of taxes of the railroad company to the State of Nevada and county of Lyon for
the year 1913; and whereas, the railroad company for a full and final disposition of said case
has heretofore on several occasions offered to pay the sum of ten thousand dollars; and
whereas, the railroad company, by Henry I. Moore, its representative, did at this time appear
before the board of county commissioners, and offer to pay in full and final settlement of said
case the original tax as levied, together with a penalty of ten per cent, all attorney's fees, and
all costs which have accrued in said action; and whereas, it was the opinion of the board of
county commissioners at the time said suit was instituted that the defendant had a just
cause of complaint for the amount of taxes levied against it for that year; and whereas,
the payment of the judgment at this time will give to the county of Lyon a considerable
sum of money which is very much needed, and if paid would materially reduce the tax
rate of Lyon County for the present fiscal year; and whereas, a failure to dispose of the
case at this time may mean the continuation of the litigation for a period of years: Now,
therefore, it is the resolution and order of this board that the offer of the railroad
company, defendant in said cause of action, represents a fair basis upon which to dispose
of said litigation and collect said taxes for said year 1913; that it is to the advantage of
the taxpayers of Lyon County, and all of them, that said litigation be ended, and said
money and a judgment entered and collected along the lines hereinbefore mentioned.
41 Nev. 220, 225 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
action; and whereas, it was the opinion of the board of county commissioners at the time said
suit was instituted that the defendant had a just cause of complaint for the amount of taxes
levied against it for that year; and whereas, the payment of the judgment at this time will give
to the county of Lyon a considerable sum of money which is very much needed, and if paid
would materially reduce the tax rate of Lyon County for the present fiscal year; and whereas,
a failure to dispose of the case at this time may mean the continuation of the litigation for a
period of years: Now, therefore, it is the resolution and order of this board that the offer of the
railroad company, defendant in said cause of action, represents a fair basis upon which to
dispose of said litigation and collect said taxes for said year 1913; that it is to the advantage
of the taxpayers of Lyon County, and all of them, that said litigation be ended, and said
money and a judgment entered and collected along the lines hereinbefore mentioned. It is
therefore the order of the board that the district attorney of Lyon County be authorized,
empowered, and directed to take such steps as may be appropriate, necessary and proper,
looking to the entering in said cause of action of a judgment against the defendant for the
original taxes involved, ten per cent penalty and delinquency, all attorney's fees and costs, the
enforcement and collection of said judgment, and the payment of the amount of money
represented by said judgment to the proper custodian of Lyon County.
Passed and adopted this 5th day of May, 1917. C. E. Wedertz, N. F. Bertrand, M. J. King,
Board of Commissioners of Lyon County, Nevada. Attest: Chas. A. McLeod, Clerk.
This court, in State v. C. P. R. R. Co., 9 Nev. 79, held that a claim for taxes could not be
compromised unless power to do so was expressly conferred by statute, and that view was
adhered to in the case of State v. C. P. R. R. Co., 10 Nev. 47. Those were cases in which the
compromise was sought to be effected before judgment was obtained. Apparently for the
purpose of preventing a settlement or compromise of a judgment for taxes the legislature
thereafter enacted section 3660, Revised Laws, which reads:
41 Nev. 220, 226 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
the legislature thereafter enacted section 3660, Revised Laws, which reads:
In all suits brought for the collection of delinquent taxes, as provided for in the preceding
section, the complaint and summons shall demand, and the judgment shall be entered for
twenty-five per centum in addition to the tax of ten per centum thereon and costs; and such
tax, penalty and costs shall not be discharged, nor shall the judgment therefor be satisfied
except by the payment of the tax, original penalty, costs, and the additional penalty herein
prescribed in full.
In the face of the decisions mentioned and the statute quoted I can see no theory upon
which the judgment can be modified.
It will be noted that the main reason set forth in the resolution quoted for the passage
thereof is the need of the county for money and the desire to avoid prolonged litigation. When
we recall that the appeal was taken April 29, 1916, and that no assignment of error has ever
been filed, it will be seen, from the unanimous opinion of this court in Coffin v. Coffin, 163
Pac. 731, that the appeal could have been dismissed on May 21, 1916, just eleven months and
sixteen days before the resolution was adopted by the board of county commissioners, in
which the urgent need of money is given as the ground for the settlement. So much for the
consideration which moved the board of county commissioners to pass the resolution.
Counsel for appellant contend that pursuant to section 4835, Rev. Laws, this court* * *
may reverse, affirm, or modify the judgment or order appealed from as to any or all of the
parties, and may, if necessary, order a new trial, or the place of trial to be changed. When the
judgment or order appealed from is reversed or modified, this court may make, or direct the
inferior court to make, complete restitution of all property and rights lost by the erroneous
judgment or order.
It has always been and still is my opinion that in enacting this statute the legislature
contemplated that such modification might be made in a case contested on appeal, as the
facts and circumstances, as disclosed by the testimony, might justify.
41 Nev. 220, 227 (1917) State v. Nevada Copper Belt Railroad Co.
such modification might be made in a case contested on appeal, as the facts and
circumstances, as disclosed by the testimony, might justify. I do not desire to be understood
as holding that this court could not make an order directing the trial court to modify a
judgment, without an inspection of the record, when a valid stipulation is the basis thereof,
but I am unable to find that the board of county commissioners has any authority to settle a
judgment in favor of the State of Nevada and in which it is vitally interested. In my opinion
this court spoke advisedly when it said in the Coffin case, supra:
The statute [requiring assignment of error] is express and peremptory in its terms; it is not
a mere matter of form that can be waived or dispensed with by the agreement of the parties or
lenity of the court, but is one of substance. [Italics mine.]
I conclude that this court has no jurisdiction to make any order except one of dismissal for
failure to file assignment of errors.
____________
41 Nev. 228, 228 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
[No. 2270]
E. J. HORGAN, as Administrator of the Estate of ANTON JUANTORENO, Deceased,
Appellant, v. PETER INDART, Respondent.
[168 Pac. 953]
1. EvidenceCircumstantial EvidenceQuantum.
When circumstantial evidence is relied on to prove a fact, the circumstances must be proved and not
themselves presumed.
2. Money LentActionsEvidenceSufficiency.
Evidence that defendant owed a third person money; said he would pay if he could get the money; went
with plaintiff's decedent to the bank; that the decedent withdrew $600 from the bank; that the money was
paid to the decedent; and that defendant on the same day paid the debtis insufficient to support a verdict
for money lent.
3. PaymentPresumptions.
The mere fact that defendant got $600 from deceased raises the presumption of law that he received it in
payment of a debt.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; R. C. Stoddard, Judge.
Action by E. J. Horgan, as administrator of the estate of Anton Juantoreno, deceased,
against Peter Indart. From an order denying motion for new trial after judgment for defendant,
plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.
Thos. E. Kepner and Mack & Green, for Appellant:
It is a fundamental principle that a presumption cannot be based upon a presumption. (14
Ency. Ev. 101.) However, the rule of evidence which should control in the instant case is:
Uncontradicted evidence may be sufficient, although it be very slight. (Idem, 98.) An
allegation which the evidence tends to prove must in a civil case be taken as made out where
there is no evidence to the contrary. (Dunlop v. Smith, 20 Ill. App. 288; Yarbrough v.
Arnold, 20 Ark. 592; 14 Ency. Ev. 98.)
A fact proved by a legitimate inference is proved no less than when it is directly sworn to.
(Doyle v. Boston & A. R. Co. 145 Mass. 386, 14 N. E. 461; Clark v. Manchester, 64 N. H.
461, 13 Atl. 867.) It is familiar law that it is the right, and sometimes the duty, of the trier, to
infer what a man has actually done from his conduct, beyond the positive testimony in the
case. {C. & C.
41 Nev. 228, 229 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
infer what a man has actually done from his conduct, beyond the positive testimony in the
case. (C. & C. Electric M. Co. v. Frisbi & Co., 66 Conn. 67, 33 Atl. 604.) On appeal,
although the judge may not ordinarily reverse on any disputed question of fact, he may differ
from the trial judge as to the inferences to be drawn from undisputed facts, and the appellant
is entitled to the benefit of his opinion (Booth v. Moffatt, 11 Manitoba, 25.)
Cheney, Downer, Price & Hawkins, for Respondent:
This appeal presents a very simple matter. The appellant sues in assumpsit to recover
$600, claimed to have been loaned by the intestate to the respondent, which the respondent
denies. It was attempted to prove the case by circumstantial evidence alone. The case was
tried without a jury, the court finding in favor of defendant. A motion for a new trial was
overruled, and from an order denying a new trial this appeal is taken. No errors in the
admission of testimony were specified, the only ground of appeal going to the weight of the
evidence, to the effect that the court should have found for the plaintiff and not for the
defendant.
This court will on appeal give the same consideration and effect to the findings of the
lower court as it would to the verdict of a jury. (Thompson v. Tonopah L. Co., 37 Nev. 183.)
Especially will this court be slow to disturb those findings where a motion for a new trial has
been made and denied. (Leete v. S. P. Co., 37 Nev. 49.)
The inferences to be drawn from circumstances proven depends upon the necessary relation
between the circumstances and the facts to be inferred therefrom. The vital question is the
cogency of the proof offered by the secondary facts. Whether the circumstances establish a
fact by inference depends upon the weight to be given to the testimony, and that is a question
for the jury. The circumstances must be proved, and not themselves be presumed. (1 Moore
on Facts, secs. 596, 599.)
It is the foundation of an action of assumpsit that there is a contract relation between the
partiesa promise to pay, either express or implied.
41 Nev. 228, 230 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
pay, either express or implied. (5 C. J. 1381.) The mere receipt of money does not warrant a
finding that any money was loaned. Such a payment is presumed to have been made because
it was due, and not by way of a loan. (27 Cyc. 829; Poucher v. Scott, 98 N. Y. 422; Headley
v. Read, 2 Cal. 322; Pyle v. Starbird, 130 Pac. 474; Miller v. Miller, 155 S. W. 76; Morrow
v. Frankish, 89 Atl. 740.)
This court will not disturb the findings of the trial court on conflicting evidence, especially
after a new trial has been denied. (Crisman v. Lanterman, 87 Pac. 89; People v. Siemsen, 95
Pac. 863; Fredenhagen v. Nichols & Shephard Co., 160 Pa. 997.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Plaintiff, as administrator of the state of Anton Juantoreno, brought suit to recover
judgment in the sum of six hundred dollars, alleged to have been loaned defendant by the
deceased. The case was submitted upon the testimony offered by plaintiff, and judgment was
rendered in favor of the defendant. The appeal is from an order denying a motion for a new
trial.
Plaintiff relied entirely upon circumstantial evidence to sustain his cause of action. The
facts are these: The defendant in 1912 borrowed $600 from one Jean Goyheneche, for which
he gave his promissory note. On January 18, 1915, the note being long past due, the payee
informed the defendant that he would have to have the money within ten hours. The
defendant told said payee that if he could get the money in the bank, he was going to pay the
note. On the morning following this conversation the defendant went with the deceased,
Anton Juantoreno, to the bank at which time the deceased, who could not sign his name, drew
a check, signed by his mark, and witnessed by one of the tellers and the defendant, for $600.
The money was paid, not to the defendant, but to the deceased. They left the bank together.
An hour or two later defendant paid the note held by Goyheneche with cash, some of the
money used having a bank wrapper around it at the time it was paid, though there was
nothing to indicate that it came from the same bank as that at which the check mentioned
was cashed.
41 Nev. 228, 231 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
used having a bank wrapper around it at the time it was paid, though there was nothing to
indicate that it came from the same bank as that at which the check mentioned was cashed.
1. Did the trial court err in refusing to render judgment in favor of plaintiff under this state
of facts? We think not. It is a rule of law that when circumstantial evidence is relied upon to
prove a fact, the circumstances must be proved, and not themselves be presumed. (Manning
v. Insurance Co., 100 U. S. 693-698, 25 L. Ed. 761; 16 Cyc. 1051.)
2. To make a chain of circumstances in the case at bar which will justify a finding that the
defendant borrowed the money from the deceased, it must be shown that he actually got the
money. If it were proven as a fact that the defendant actually got the money, then, if the
circumstances justified it, we might presume that it was obtained as a loan. But we cannot
infer that the defendant got $600 from the deceased and pyramid thereupon, so to speak,
another inference to the effect that the money so obtained was in the nature of a loan. In other
words, a complete chain of circumstances must be proven, and not left to inference, from
which the ultimate fact may be presumed. The ultimate fact in this case, according to the
theory of the plaintiff, is that the money was obtained as a loan. It not having been shown as a
fact that the defendant actually got the money from the deceased, we cannot presume a loan
as alleged.
3. But if it had been shown as a fact that the defendant got $600 from the deceased, the
presumption of law would be that it was received in payment of a debt, and before a judgment
could be rendered in favor of the plaintiff, this presumption would have to be overcome by
facts or circumstances.
The rule which we think is controlling in this case is laid down in 27 Cyc. 829, as follows:
Money paid by one person to another is presumed, in the absence of any explanation as
to the cause of the payment, to be paid because due, and not by way of a loan."
41 Nev. 228, 232 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
the absence of any explanation as to the cause of the payment, to be paid because due, and not
by way of a loan.
The case of Poucher v. Scott, 98 N. Y. 422, sustains this rule. Poucher, as administrator,
brought suit to recover $2,000, alleged to have been loaned by Robert Childs to Robert Scott.
The referee found that the evidence did not sustain the contention that the money was loaned,
and dismissed the complaint. The appellate court, in passing upon the question, said:
The referee was able to find from the evidence that the two checks payable to bearer, and
the money they represented, were, on the 5th day of June, the property of Childs, and on the
next day were in the possession and apparent ownership of Scott. There was no evidence
showing the manner or consideration of this change of ownership. No proof warrants a
finding that they passed directly from Childs to Scott, and upon some consideration moving
between them. The most that can be said is that such transfer, in view of the brief interval
between the ownership of one and the possession of the other, the intimacy of the parties, and
the ability of the one combined with the need of the other, was somewhat more probable than
that the transfer was made through other business channels, while nothing in the evidence
excludes the latter possibility. But if that difficulty is not insuperable, another at once arises.
If the transfer was direct, it proves not a loan, but a payment, in the absence of other and
modifying facts. We cannot presume a fraud or a felony, and if the transfer was direct we
must deem it a voluntary delivery, and in payment or discharge of an existing liability, rather
than as a loan. (Koehler v. Adler, 78 N. Y. 290.)
In Headley v. Reed, 2 Cal. 322, 323, the court said:
In this case the report discloses that the referee allowed a claim against the defendant, the
only evidence of which was a check drawn in his favor by the plaintiffs. This was certainly a
great error, because the legal presumption is that the check was drawn in payment of so much
money, due to the defendant.
41 Nev. 228, 233 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
ment of so much money, due to the defendant. Considering the amount in controversy, this
mistake is gross enough to set aside the report and renders it unnecessary to examine the other
matter of account.
See, also, Pyle v. Starbird, 72 Wash. 386, 130 Pac. 477; Miller v. Miller, 169 Mo. App.
432, 155 S. W. 76; Morrow v. Frankish, 4 Boyce, 534, 89 Atl. 740.
Counsel for appellant rely upon several authorities to support their contention, but none of
them is in conflict with the rule we have stated, but rather hold that under the circumstances
of the particular case a loan was shown to have been made. One of the cases cited is Cox v.
Cox, 72 N. H. 561, 58 Atl. 504, from which we quote:
The question presented in this case is not whether a promise can or cannot be implied, as
a matter of law, from the mere fact of benefits received (Concord Coal Co. v. Ferrin, 71 N.
H. 331, 51 Atl. 283, 93 Am. St. Rep. 496), nor whether the law will or will not presume from
the delivery of the money that the transaction was a loan, rather than a gift or the payment of
a debt (Coburn v. Storer, 67 N. H. 86, 87, 36 Atl. 607), but whether there was any evidence
from which the jury could reasonably infer that it was a loan.
It will be seen that this case is in harmony with the rule we have laid down. We think there
can be no doubt of the correctness of the rule of law which we have stated, and the only
question is: Are the circumstances in this case sufficiently strong to justify the court in
concluding that the defendant received the $600 from the deceased as a loan? In considering
this phase of the case we should keep in mind the rule laid down in 1 Moore on Facts, sec.
599, which reads:
The circumstances must be proved, and not themselves presumed. A theory cannot be
said to be established by circumstantial evidence, even in a civil action, unless the facts relied
upon are of such a nature, and are so related to each other, that it is the only conclusion that
can fairly or reasonably be drawn from them.
41 Nev. 228, 234 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
It is not sufficient that they be consistent, merely, with that theory, for that may be true, and
yet they may have no tendency to prove the theory.
This rule has been held in this state to be the proper one in criminal cases (State v.
Fronhofer, 38 Nev. 448, 150 Pac. 846), and we think it should apply in civil cases as well.
(U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Des Moines National Bank, 145 Fed. 273, 74 C. C. A. 553-557.)
Conceding for the sake of the argument that the proof shows that the money withdrawn
from the bank by the deceased was paid to the defendant, what circumstance is there to
overcome the presumption of law that the payment was in satisfaction of a debt? Unless the
prima facie case in favor of the defendant, existing because of such presumption of law, is
overcome, the judgment must be affirmed. The only evidence tending to overcome it is the
statement of the defendant that if he could get the money from the bank, he would pay the
Goyheneche note, and the fact that he paid it on the morning that deceased drew the money
from the bank. A man might make such a statement and yet receive the money from one who
is owing it to him, and thus satisfy the indebtedness. We cannot say that there is enough in
this circumstance to overcome the presumption of law that the payment by deceased to the
defendant, if there was one, was in satisfaction of a debt. But if it were a doubtful question
whether or not the deceased borrowed the money from the defendant, we would not feel
justified in reversing the judgment, for we think the rule laid down in Crisman v. Lanterman,
149 Cal. 647, 87 Pac. 89, 117 Am. St. Rep. 167 where the court was confronted with a
similar situation to the one before us, should be our guide. The court in that case said:
If those circumstances would support an inference either way, it was not only proper, but
necessary, that the trial court should make a finding of the ultimate fact. Such finding when
made is entitled to the same weight as any other finding on conflicting evidence, and will
not be overthrown unless the facts stipulated cannot by any reasonable inference,
support the conclusion reached by the trial court."
41 Nev. 228, 235 (1917) Horgan v. Indart
weight as any other finding on conflicting evidence, and will not be overthrown unless the
facts stipulated cannot by any reasonable inference, support the conclusion reached by the
trial court.
For the reasons given, it is ordered that the judgment appealed from be affirmed.
_____________
41 Nev. 235, 235 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
[No. 2281]
ROMAIN BLAKESLEE, Respondent, v. LAURA E.
BLAKESLEE, Appellant.
[168 Pac. 950]
1. MarriageRight of State to Deal with Status.
States have the right to deal with the marriage status of their own citizens.
2. DivorceJurisdiction of District CourtActs Committed in IllinoisStatute.
Under Rev. Laws, 5838, providing that divorce may be obtained by complaint under oath to the district
court of the county in which the cause shall have accrued, or in which defendant shall reside or be found, or
in which plaintiff shall reside, if the latter be either the county in which the parties last cohabited, or in
which plaintiff shall have resided six months before suit, for wilful desertion for a year, or for extreme
cruelty, a district court had jurisdiction to grant divorce for extreme cruelty and desertion to a husband
resident in the county for a year, though the acts complained of all occurred in another state, under whose
statutes there was no cause of action for divorce on those grounds, since the law of the forum controls; it
being the legislative intent that the district court have jurisdiction to determine the marriage status of
parties whose residential qualifications meet the requirements of the statute, regardless of where the cause
of action may have arisen; marriage, though a civil contract, constituting an exception to the rule of lex loci
contractus.
3. DivorceResidence of PlaintiffQuestion of Fact.
In a husband's divorce suit, the question of his residents was one of fact to be determined by the trial
court.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; Thomas F. Moran, Judge.
Action for divorce by Romain Blakeslee against Laura E. Blakeslee. From a judgment for
plaintiff, defendant appeals. Judgment affirmed.
41 Nev. 235, 236 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
Sweeney & Morehouse, for Appellant:
The judgment of the lower court is not sustained by the evidence in granting a decree for
extreme cruelty, because the parties were never domiciled in Nevada, and no act of any kind
ever occurred in Nevada; hence there was no extreme cruelty in Nevada. The acts complained
of all occurred in Illinois, and under the laws of that state, offered and admitted in evidence,
there was no cause of action for divorce in that jurisdiction; and there being no cause of
action in Illinois, and none in Nevada, the decree is wrong. This is not a case where, if there
were no law in Illinois upon the subject, our court could act upon the status of the parties
under the law of the forum. It is a case where the cause of action is provided for in Illinois, so
that the status of the parties under the laws of that state becomes the subject of investigation.
(Shreck v. Shreck, 5 Am. Rep. 251.) Many cases hold that the place where the delict arose is
immaterial, but they are all cases where a complete and perfect cause of action arose
elsewhere. (Hubbell v. Hubbell, 62 Am. Dec. 702; Tolen v. Tolen, 21 Am. Dec. 742; Harding
v. Alden, 23 Am. Dec. 549; Harrison v. Harrison, 19 Ala. 499; Thompson v. State, 25 Ala.
12; Standridge v. Standridge, 31 Ga. 223; Harteau v. Harteau, 25 Am. Dec. 372.)
To dissolve the marriage status there must be a lawful ground for dissolution. While it is
true that a transitory action follows the person and may be sued on anywhere the person is
found, there must be a legal cause of action. Divorce differs from other transitory actions only
in the fact that the plaintiff may sue the defendant by publication of summons as against a
nonresident. Status means the legal and social relation of husband and wife. While courts
distinguish a divorce as quasi in rem, and speak of marriage as the relation of the parties, as a
jurisdictional question for the purpose of process the status alone will not permit a decree of
divorce; there must be a ground for divorce. (Barney v. Tourtelotte, 138 Mass. 106.)
The evidence is insufficient to sustain the decree upon the ground of desertion, either
under the law of Nevada or Illinois, because the desertion, if any, had not continued two
years in Illinois nor one year in Nevada before the commencement of the action.
41 Nev. 235, 237 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
the ground of desertion, either under the law of Nevada or Illinois, because the desertion, if
any, had not continued two years in Illinois nor one year in Nevada before the
commencement of the action. To constitute desertion in Nevada there must be the fixed intent
to desert, and such intent is one of the important elements of desertion. (Plymate v. Plymate,
180 S. W. 29; Nelson, Div. and Sep., sec. 51.) To constitute desertion there must be a
matrimonial domicile to leave and abandon. (Rev. Laws, 5838.) A wife's mere absence from
her husband, though she wrongfully separated herself from him, is not in itself proof of a
wilful intent on her part to abandon him, sufficient to entitle him to a divorce unless he in
good faith invited her to return or made known his willingness to receive her. (Ojserkie v.
Ojserkie, 62 Atl. 113; Bridge v. Bridge, 93 Atl. 690; Wood v. Wood, 53 Atl. 51; Vosberg v.
Vosberg, 68 Pac. 697.) If there was desertion, it was on the part of the plaintiff. A husband is
presumed to intend to desert where he goes away without notifying the wife where he is
going, and makes no attempt to notify her so as to enable her to follow him. (McLain v.
Janin, 2 South. 745.)
Frank D. King, for Respondent:
What constitutes desertion is generally prescribed by the statutes of the several states. The
statute of Nevada requires that desertion must be for one year in order to constitute ground for
divorce. It does not state, however, that the year's desertion must have taken place in Nevada.
Desertion is the fact solely of his separation from her for the requisite length of time, with
the continuing intention on his part during such time not to perform his matrimonial
obligations. (Beach v. Beach, 27 Tex. 390; Colburn v. Colburn, 70 Mich. 647.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This was an action for divorce. The complaint was based on two causes of
actionextreme cruelty, and desertion.
41 Nev. 235, 238 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
The desertion constituting the basis of the second cause of action is alleged to have taken
place in the city of Chicago, State of Illinois. It appears from the record that appellant and
respondent had formerly lived together in the city of Chicago; that on or about May 1, 1914,
respondent left that city and came west, later taking up his residence in the city of Reno,
where he had resided for a period of about one year prior to the commencement of this action.
Appellant here bases her claim for reversal of the judgment of the trial court in which a
divorce was decreed to respondent upon three contentions expressed in appellant's brief as
follows:
(1) That the judgment of the court is not sustained by the evidence in granting a decree
for extreme cruelty, because the parties were never domiciled in Nevada, and no act of any
kind ever occurred in Nevada, so that there was no extreme cruelty in Nevada, and the acts
complained of all occurred in Illinois, and under the laws of Illinois offered and admitted in
evidence there was no cause of action for divorce in the State of Illinois. There being no
cause of action in Illinois and none in Nevada, the decree is wrong.
(2) The evidence is insufficient to sustain the degree upon the ground of desertion either
under the law of Nevada or Illinois, because the desertion, if any, had not continued two years
in Illinois or one year in Nevada before the commencement of this action.
(3) That the evidence fails to prove the second cause of action.
The argument of counsel for appellant is interesting, but academic. It fails to take
cognizance of the modern theory which the law has crystallized into a concrete form to give
more stable, and, if possible, uniform, existence to the marriage relation.
Christianity struck a standard for monogamous marriages; the relationship thus
established, whether recognized as sacramental or as contractual, has been the subject of
thought by theologians, academicians, philosophers, and jurists.
41 Nev. 235, 239 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
Viewed either from the standpoint of the ecclesiastical domain, where it is primarily
recognized as sacramental in nature, or from that of the civil or common law, where it takes
the form of contract only, this relationship is regarded as the nucleus of modern civilization,
being that around which groups the family, the basis of human existence. Thus courts and
lawgivers have dealt with the question with a view to uniformity of rule and harmony of
consideration.
Under our forms of government here in the United States, with the several jurisdictions
legislating on the subject, it is not surprising that some confusion is manifest; but some
cardinal points have been so well identified that the mariner on the sea of conflict may find
the true course.
Appellant's contention as to the only question involved in this appeal finds some support
in English jurisdictions. This is especially true in the earlier cases (Lolley's Case, 1812-13;
McCarthy v. De Caix, 2 Russell & Mylne, 615), but it is interesting to note in a later case,
heard and determined by the House of Lords on appeal from the Court of Sessions of
Scotland (Warrender v. Warrender, 9 Bligh's New Rep. 89), the whole question is gone into
at length, and there Lord Brougham, speaking for that august body, held to the effect that,
although a marriage was solemnized in England and the parties domiciled there, and after
separation the husband took up his residence in Scotland, and the wife resided in France, and
the acts constituting the ground of complaint were committed in the latter country by the
wife, who had never resided in Scotland, yet the Court of Sessions of Scotland had
jurisdiction to pronounce sentence of divorce.
In another case decided by the English courts (Brodie v. Brodie, 2 Swabey & Tristram's
Rep. 259) a Scotchman by birth, having married an English woman, lived in Tasmania and in
Melbourne, Australia. After separation he went to Scotland, remained there for a number of
years, and later took up his residence in England, during all of which time the wife remained
in Sydney, Australia, where she was guilty of acts of adultery.
41 Nev. 235, 240 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
Sydney, Australia, where she was guilty of acts of adultery. The husband instituted
proceedings for divorce in the English courts. The court, after determining from the proof
offered that petitioner was a bona-fide resident in England, held that he was entitled to a
decree of divorce upon grounds of adultery, although the acts were committed by the wife in
Australia, and notwithstanding the fact that the latter had never been a resident of England.
But in Shaw v. Gould, L. R. 3, H. L. 55, the doctrine is again announced by the English court
that a foreign tribunal has no authority to pronounce a decree of divorce where the marriage
was consummated in England between English subjects, unless the parties are at the time of
the rendition of the decree bona fide domiciled in the country where that tribunal had
jurisdiction; and in the case of Lesuer v. Lesuer, L. R. 1, Prob. Div. 139, the English court
denied that the domicile of one party within the territory was sufficient to give jurisdiction.
The courts of New York have held in most instances to the same effect, but primarily on
the theory that an action for divorce was one in personam rather than in rem.
The almost universal holding by the courts of the United States is that, inasmuch as a
divorce proceeding is one intended to affect the status of the parties, it is therefore essentially
an action in rem, and that the status is the res. In conformity with this doctrine, the state
courts in nearly all instances have held that a decree of divorce, whether granted in a foreign
country or in a sister state by a court having lawful jurisdiction of the case, is, in the absence
of fraud, valid and binding everywhere, provided the applicant was bona fide domiciled
within the territorial jurisdiction of the court rendering the decree. This, too, in cases where
the other party was a nonresident and notification was made only by constructive service.
(Roth v. Roth, 104 Ill. 35, 44 Am. Rep. 81; Tolen v. Tolen, 2 Blackf. 407, 21 Am. Dec. 742;
Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714, 24 L. Ed. 565.)
41 Nev. 235, 241 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
The reason for the rule and doctrine last referred to is so well set forth by the language of
Mr. Brown in his Commentaries on the Jurisdiction of Courts (2d ed.) p. 289, that we quote
approvingly. Speaking of the marriage status, he says:
In the relation in which it arises, it is purely transitory, yet follows as a condition attached
to the person; as, when a man and woman are married, each carries that status, so that a court
having jurisdiction over one may dissolve it as to both. It arises more commonly in suits for
divorce, and it may now be said that, where one of the parties becomes a resident of a state, or
is domiciled therein, he or she may apply to the court of the state having jurisdiction over that
party as a citizen thereof, and the court may dissolve that relation or status, although the other
spouse has never been within the jurisdiction of the state, and owes no allegiance to it. It
therefore is necessarily held to be a thing, within the meaning of the law, that is attached to
citizenship, or a domiciled person in the state, and the jurisdiction grows out of that thing.
The author, in support of this last-quoted assertion, cites the case of Cheeley v. Clayton,
110 U. S. 702, 4 Sup. Ct. 328, 28 L. Ed. 298, wherein Mr. Justice Gray, speaking for the
Supreme Court of the United States, expressed the sanction of that tribunal to the doctrine
that, where a wife is living apart from her husband, his domicile being her domicile in law, a
divorce obtained by him in the state of his domicile, after reasonable notice to her either by
personal service or by publication in accordance with the laws of the state of his domicile, is
valid, although she never in fact resided in that state.
In the case of Cheever v. Wilson, 76 U. S. 108, 19 L. Ed. 604, the Supreme Court of the
United States settled the question here under consideration by declaring that a wife may
acquire a domicile different from her husband's whenever it is necessary or proper that she
should have such a domicile, and in such she may institute proceedings for divorce, though it
be neither her husband's domicile nor the domicile of the parties at the time of the
marriage nor at the time of the offense.
41 Nev. 235, 242 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
her husband's domicile nor the domicile of the parties at the time of the marriage nor at the
time of the offense. There the court said:
The place of the marriage, of the offense, and the domicile of the husband are of no
consequence.
What is regarded as a leading case in the United States on the question here raised by
appellant emanates from the Supreme Court of Illinois (Dunham v. Dunham, 162 Ill. 589, 44
N. E. 841, 35 L. R. A. 70), where Mr. Justice Carter, in delivering the opinion of the court,
wrote exhaustively on the subject, and, after reviewing the question here presented in the light
of the consideration given thereto by nearly all of the text-writers and by courts in the several
jurisdictions, held in conformity with the rule as laid down by the Supreme Court of the
United States in the case of Cheever v. Wilson, supra.
In 9 R. C. L., at p. 397, the commentator has cited most eminent authority in support of
what we find to be the prevailing rule, and which is there stated thus:
The general view, however, seems to be that the fact that the cause for divorce arises in
another state where the parties were at the time domiciled is no insuperable bar to the
jurisdiction of the courts of another state to grant a divorce, if the complaining spouse
acquires a bona fide domicile or residence in the state of the forum.
Continuing, it said:
It is the prevailing view that either spouse may acquire such residence or domicile within
the state as will enable him or her to resort to the courts for divorce, even though the
defending spouse had never been a resident of the state.
1. It is a recognized principle of law that states have the right to deal with the marriage
status of their own citizens.
Our statute (section 5838) provides:
Divorce from the bonds of matrimony may be obtained, by complaint under oath, to the
district court of the county in which the cause therefor shall have accrued, or in which the
defendant shall reside or be found, or in which the plaintiff shall reside, if the latter be
either the county in which the parties last cohabited, or in which the plaintiff shall have
resided six months before the suit be brought, for the following causes:
* * *
41 Nev. 235, 243 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
accrued, or in which the defendant shall reside or be found, or in which the plaintiff shall
reside, if the latter be either the county in which the parties last cohabited, or in which the
plaintiff shall have resided six months before the suit be brought, for the following causes:
* * *
ThirdWilful desertion, at any time, of either party by the other, for the period of one
year. * * *
SixthExtreme cruelty in either party. * * *
2. Under this provision it was competent for the district court to entertain the complaint of
respondent, he having alleged his residence for the required period of time and having prayed
for the decree upon two of the causes known to our statute, namely, desertion and extreme
cruelty.
It will be noted that this statute makes no provision limiting the court to cases where the
cause of action arises within the state. Manifestly it was the legislative intent that the district
court in this state should have jurisdiction to determine the marriage status of parties whose
residential qualifications met the requirements as laid out in the statute, regardless of where
the cause of action may have arisen.
3. The question of the residence of the plaintiff, the respondent here, was one of fact to be
determined by the trial court. (Fleming v. Fleming, 36 Nev. 135, 134 Pac. 445; Merritt v.
Merritt, 160 Pac. 22; Presson v. Presson, 38 Nev. 203, 147 Pac. 1081.)
The trial court from the facts presented determined that the respondent, plaintiff in that
court, was a bona fide resident within its jurisdiction. This being true, it had the right to
determine his marital status, and this, too, even though the rounds upon which the respondent
sought divorce consisted of acts committed by appellant when each was living in a foreign
jurisdiction.
Under the authorities cited, it is the law of the forum that controls; and the fact that
extreme cruelty, as it has been interpreted by our courts and as known to our laws, is not the
same as that recognized by the laws of Illinois, the place of abode of the respondent, does
not take from the jurisdiction of our district court to grant a decree of divorce under such
conditions.
41 Nev. 235, 244 (1917) Blakeslee v. Blakeslee
of Illinois, the place of abode of the respondent, does not take from the jurisdiction of our
district court to grant a decree of divorce under such conditions. Though marriage is a civil
contract, it constitutes an exception to the rule of lex loci contractus, and by reason of the fact
that the status is the thing to be determined, the jurisdiction in which the party complaining
has established his residence pursuant to the laws thereof has the power to determine that
status.
The contract of marriage, said the Supreme Court of Texas, being sui generis, may be
regarded as an exception to the universality of the rule; as also such contracts as are against
the interests of morality and religion, which each independent municipal authority must judge
of and determine according to its convictions of what will best promote its own social
happiness and welfare. (Shreck v. Shreck, 3 Tex. 578, 5 Am. Rep. 252.)
To the same effect are the cases of Tolen v. Tolen, supra, and Hubbell v. Hubbell, 3 Wis.
662, 62 Am. Dec. 702.
On the question of residence and as to whether the facts supported the good faith of the
respondent in his residence within the jurisdiction, there is, in our judgment, sufficient in the
record to support the conclusion of the trial court in finding affirmatively in this respect.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 245, 245 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
[No. 2295]
G. F. TALBOT, Appellant, v. C. E. MACK,
Respondent.
[169 Pac. 25]
1. Appeal and ErrorScopeJudgment Roll.
Where demurrer to complaint for libel was sustained, all the matters pertaining to the proceedings in the
trial court so far as affecting the plaintiff's rights are embraced in the judgment roll within Rev. Laws,
5273, subd. 2, stating what constitutes the judgment roll, so that under Stats. 1915, c. 142, sec. 11,
permitting an appeal on the judgment roll alone, it was unnecessary to file assignments of error as required
by section 13 of such act.
2. JudgmentEntries Nunc Pro Tunc.
The object and purpose of a nunc pro tunc order is to make the record speak the truth concerning acts
already done, and not to supply an omitted action.
3. Libel and SlanderWords Libelous Per SeHow Determined.
In determining whether words charged are libelous per se, they are to be taken in their plain and natural
import according to the ideas they convey to those to whom they are addressed, reference being had not
only to the words themselves but also to the circumstances under which they were used.
4. Libel and SlanderParticular WordsOverload.
The term overload, used in a letter stating that an insurance business was overloaded, means bearing
too heavy a burden or too heavily loaded, but implies nothing defamatory on its face in the sense of
imputing dishonesty, lack of fair dealing, want of fidelity, integrity, or business ability.
5. Libel and SlanderParticular WordsOverload.
Statement in letter to stockholders in insurance company, that the company is overloaded with salaries
and traveling expenses, without making reference to the plaintiff, is not libelous per se.
6. Libel and SlanderWords Libelous Per Se.
Any false and malicious writing published of another is libelous per se when its tendency is to render
the party contemptible or ridiculous in public estimation or expose him to public hatred or contempt.
7. Libel and SlanderInnuendoFunction.
Language or terms, which are not libelous per se, when viewed in the light of their general acceptation
and understanding in the community or vicinity in which they are used, cannot be made so through the
function or force of an innuendo.
8. Libel and SlanderInnuendoFunction.
The innuendo will not introduce new matter, nor will it be permitted to aid to the extent of enlarging the
meaning of the words or expressions used.
41 Nev. 245, 246 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
9. Libel and SlanderLibelous Per SeLibelous Per Quod.
Words or expressions are actionable per se when their injurious character is a fact of common notoriety
and generally so understood where the utterance is published, and words or expressions libelous per
quod are such as require that their injurious character or effect be established by allegation and proof.
10. Libel and SlanderInnuendoFunction.
In action for libel, if the words or expressions complained of are ambiguous or equivocal, the innuendo
may assign the true meaning the plaintiff believes them to bear; but if the words alone, or the words limited
by circumstances duly pleaded, are not defamatory, the innuendo cannot make them so.
11. Libel and SlanderWords Libelous Per Se.
While words which directly tend to the prejudice of any one in his office, profession, trade, or business
are actionable per se, all words disparaging persons in such matters are not, without proof of damage,
actionable in themselves.
12. Libel and SlanderActionable WordsCharacter.
In action for libel there can be no recovery unless the actionable words or assertions referred to the
plaintiff at least with reasonable certainty.
13. Libel and SlanderPleadingSpecial Damages.
In action for libel by words not actionable per se, special damages must be alleged and proved.
14. Libel and SlanderPleadingSpecial Damages.
In action for damages by words not actionable per se, the allegation that by means of said false, libelous
and defamatory publication or publications the plaintiff herein was injured in his reputation and good name
and standing to his damage in the sum of $50,000, is insufficient as an allegation of special damages.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; Mark R. Averill, Judge.
Action by G. F. Talbot against C. E. Mack. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiff appeals.
Affirmed.
G. F. Talbot, Sardis Summerfield, Miller & Mashburn, and Robert Richards, for
Appellant:
The letter alleged to be libelous could not be absolutely privileged, as claimed in the
demurrer, because absolute privilege pertains only to matters legislative or judicial or relating
to the army or navy. (Newell, Libel and Slander, 3d ed. sec. 508; Odgers, Libel and Slander,
5th ed. p. 230.) The complaint alleges that the statement was false and made by the defendant
for the purpose of injuring the reputation of the plaintiff, thereby showing that the
defendant exceeded his privilege and made himself liable.
41 Nev. 245, 247 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
injuring the reputation of the plaintiff, thereby showing that the defendant exceeded his
privilege and made himself liable. (Newell, Libel and Slander, 2d ed. 475, 524, 527, 529;
White v. Nicholls, 3 How. 266, 11 L. Ed. 591; Hoover v. Jordan, 150 Pac. 333.)
Malice is presumed if the statement is false and made for the purpose of injuring, and it is
not indispensable to use the word malicious in the declaration, it being sufficient if words
of equivalent power or import are used. (White v. Nicholls, supra; 3 Sutherland, Code
Pleading, sec. 3948.)
The false words are actionable without an allegation of special damages. Both at common
law and in this country, without alleging special damages or words which impute crime, the
action will lie for the words published which are injurious to one in his trade or profession. A
woman may recover for slander of her good name without alleging special damages; and such
slander is actionable per se, although the moral delinquency imputed by the slanderous words
is not made an offense by statute. (Newman v. Stein, 75 Mich. 402, 42 N. W. 956, 13 Am. St.
Rep. 447; Prescott v. Tousey, 50 N. Y. Super. Ct. 12; Indianapolis Journal N. Co. v. Pugh, 6
Ind. App. 510, 33 N. E. 991; Ward v. Ward, 36 Ohio St. 107, 38 Am. Ct. Rep. 107.)
A publication tending to cover a woman named therein with ridicule, contempt, and
disgrace, and cause her to be shunned and avoided by the society in which she lives as being
lewd and immoral, is a libel for which action will lie. (Weir v. Weir, 6 Ala. 881; McKinney v.
Roberts, 68 Cal. 192, 8 Pac. 857; Williams v. McManus, 38 La. Ann. 161; Rosmie v. Ryder, 8
N. Y. Supp. 5; McGee v. Wilson, 16 Ky. 187; Miller v. Parish, 25 Mass. 384; Nelson v.
Wallace, 48 Mo. App. 193; Gibson v. Gibson, 43 Wis. 23.)
A publication concerning a clergyman of the words then there was that Beecher business
of his which beat him out of a station at Grass Lake, if it does not charge adultery, implies a
loss of position or a charge of immoral conduct affecting his character. (Bailey v. Kalamazoo
Pub. Co., 40 Mich.
41 Nev. 245, 248 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
Pub. Co., 40 Mich. 251; Page v. Merwin, 54 Conn. 426; Morris v. Barkley, 11 Ky. 64;
People v. District P. & T. Co., 54 Mich. 457, 20 N. W. 528.)
Words written of a man in relation to his business or occupation which have a tendency to
hurt or are calculated to prejudice him therein are actionable, although they charge no fraud or
dishonesty and were without actual malice, and when proved, unless defendant show a lawful
excuse, plaintiff is entitled to recover. (Moore v. Francis, 121 N. Y. 199; Krugg v. Pitass,
162 N. Y. 154, 159; Bornmann v. Star Co., 174 N. Y. 212, 219; Cruikshank v. Gordon, 118
N. Y. 178, 183; Holmes v. Jones, 121 N. Y. 461, 24 N. E. 701; Sawyer v. Bennett, 20 N. Y.
Supp. 835.) A communication imputing disgraceful complicity in the conduct of an insurance
swindle, and charging one with culpable, if not criminal, misbehaving in the management of
its business, is libelous per se. (Hartman v. Morning Journal, 19 N. Y. Supp. 398.) When
reputation, trade, or profession of a man is really affected, every appeal to the tribunals of our
country ought to be liberally sustained. (Rue v. Mitchell, 2 Dall. 58, 1 L. Ed. 238; Francis v.
Flynn, 118 U. S. 385.)
Malice is essential to the support of an action for slanderous words, but malice is
presumed until the contrary is proved, except in those cases where the occasion prima facie
excuses the publication. (Newell, Libel and Slander, 38.) Communications which upon proper
occasion are qualifiedly privileged are not privileged when made by persons actuated by
malice. (Smith v. Smith, 73 Mich. 445, 3 L. R. A. 52, 15 Am. St. Rep. 594; King v. Patterson,
49 N. J. L. 417, 9 Atl. 705.)
Words are actionable without allegation of special damage. (Smith v. Smith, 73 Mich. 445,
41 N. W. 499; Peterson v. Western U. T. Co., 65 Minn. 18, 67 N. W. 646, 33 L. R. A. 302;
Cooper v. Greeley, 1 Denio, 347; Watson v. Trask, 6 Ohio, 531; State v. Mason, 26 Or. 273,
38 Pac. 130; McCorkle v. Binns, 5 Bin. 340, 6 Am. Dec. 420; Adams v. Lawson, 7 Grat. 250,
94 Am. Dec. 455; Bradley v. Cramer, 59 Wis. 309; Solverman v. Peterson, 64 Wis. 198;
Allen v. News Pub. Co., S1 Wis.
41 Nev. 245, 249 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
News Pub. Co., 81 Wis. 120, 50 N. W. 1093; Riley v. Lee, 88 Ky. 603; Rice v. Simmons, 2
Har. 417.)
Imputations injurious to profession or business are actionable. (Kelly v. Huffington, 3
Cranch, C. C. 81; Broughton v. McCraw, 39 Fed. 672; Ohio & M. Ry. Co. v. Press Pub. Co.,
48 Fed. 206; Jones v. Greeley, 25 Fla. 629, 6 South. 448; Morasse v. Brochu, 15 Mass. 567;
Henkel v. Schaub, 94 Mich. 542; Williams v. Davenport, 42 Minn. 363; St. James M. A. v.
Gaiser, 135 Mo. 517; Burtch v. Nickerson, 17 Johns. 217; Carpenter v. Dennis, 5 N. Y.
Super. Ct. 305; Price v. Conway, 134 Pa. 340; Lapham v. Noble, 54 Fed. 108.)
Libel on trade or profession is distinguishable from cases requiring allegation of special
damage. (Shafer v. Ahalt, 48 Md. 171; Hallock v. Miller, 2 Barb. 630; Hoar v. Ward, 47 Vt.
657; Platto v. Gielfuss, 47 Wis. 491; Benz v. Wiedenhoeft, 83 Wis. 397.) An action will lie
for damages resulting from words spoken with intent to injure plaintiff in his profession,
although the words were not defamatory, though the injury was the natural and proper result
of the speaking of the words. (Morasse v. Brochu, supra; Nicholson v. Rust, 52 S. W. 933;
Johnson v. Fone, 80 Minn. 315; Kenneberg v. Neff, 74 Conn. 62.)
While innuendo may not alter the sense of the words complained of, it may point out the
real meaning of the language and give the sense of the words used as intended by the person
who used them, and as understood by those to whom they were published, especially when an
accusation has not been made bluntly and the person against whom directed has not been
named. This is the very office and function of the innuendo in pleading. (17 R. C. L. 395,
396.)
Mack & Green, Geo. S. Green, and A. F. Lasher, for Respondent:
The words complained of are not libelous in any sense. In every action for defamation
two things are necessary: (1) defamation apparent from the words themselves, for no
innuendo can alter the sense; (2) certainly as to the person who is defamed, for no
innuendo can render certain that which is uncertain."
41 Nev. 245, 250 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
certainly as to the person who is defamed, for no innuendo can render certain that which is
uncertain. (Newell, Defamation, Slander and Libel, p. 248; Chiatovich v. Hanchett, 88 Fed.
873.)
Where words are not libelous per se, the complaint must set up special damage or no cause
of action is stated. (Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d ed. vol. 18, p. 1085; Nichols v. Daily Reporter
Co., 30 Utah, 74; Furlong v. German-American Press Assn., 189 S. W. 385; Fry v. McCord,
95 Tenn. 678; Dun v. Maier, 83 Fed. 169; Manire v. Hubbard, 22 Ky. 1753; Langdon v.
Shearer, 60 N. Y. Supp. 193; Barnes v. Trundy, 31 Me. 321; Rammell v. Otis, 60 Mo. 365;
Newbold v. Bradstreet, 57 Md. 38; Studdard v. Trucks, 31 Ark. 726.)
An innuendo cannot introduce new matter, or enlarge the natural meaning of words, or
put upon them a construction they will not bear. (Price v. Conway, 19 Atl. 687; Smith v.
Agee, 178 Ala. 627; Grand v. Dreyfus, 122 Cal. 58; Mellen v. Times-Mirror Co., 167 Cal.
587.) When the words complained of are libelous per se, no innuendo is necessary. (Gustin v.
Evening Press Co., 172 Mich. 311; 25 Cyc. 451.) In determining whether language is libelous
per se, it must be construed in its relation to the entire article in which it appears. (Cooper
v. Romney, 49 Mont. 119.) When the words are not ambiguous the question of libel or no
libel is one of law for the court. (Mellen v. Times-Mirror Co., supra.)
In order to be actionable per se by reason of their tendency to injure the plaintiff in his
office or employment, the words complained of must touch him injuriously in his office or
employment. (25 Cyc. 327, 328; Stannard v. Wilson & Gibbs, 118 Md. 151, 84 Atl. 335.)
The complaint contains no allegation of special damage. Special damages are those that
are the natural, but not the necessary, result of the act complained of, and consequently are
not implied by the law, and must be particularly stated and proven. (Words and Phrases, vol.
7, p. 6572; Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d ed.
41 Nev. 245, 251 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
vol. 18, p. 1088; Pollard v. Lyon, 91 U. S. 225; Rade v. Press Pub. Co., 75 N. Y. Supp. 298;
Fry v. McCord, 95 Tenn. 678.)
Where the communication complained of is not libelous per se, malice can only be
inferred from unnecessary or impertinent language which attacks the honesty, integrity,
virtue, or reputation of plaintiff, and this is especially true where the alleged libelous
communication appears from its face to be privileged. (Holmes v. Clisby, 121 Ga. 241;
Cooley v. Galyon, 109 Tenn. 1; Holmes v. Royal Fraternal Union, 26 L. R. A. n. s. 1081;
Chambers v. Leiser, 43 Wash. 285.)
Assignment of errors not having been filed within the time limited by the statute, the
appeal should be dismissed. (Stats. 1915, sec. 13, p. 166; Coffin v. Coffin, 40 Nev. 345.)
The purpose of a nunc pro tunc entry is to correct the record of something already done; it
cannot supply omitted action. (Words and Phases, vol. 5, p. 4859; Kirby v. Bowland, 69 Ind.
290; Bramlett v. Pickett, 12 Am. Dec. 350; Hickman v. City, 141 U. S. 415; Wright v.
Nicholson, 134 U. S. 136; Hyde v. Curling, 10 Mo. 359.) The time limit fixed by statute for
filing assignments of error or bills of exception cannot be evaded by nunc pro tunc entries.
(Wyllie v. Heffernan, 58 Mo. App. 675; Nixon v. Phelps, 29 Vt. 198; State v. White, 16 Ind.
App. 260; Dorman v. Coon, 24 S. W. 731.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This was an action in tort instituted by appellant, as plaintiff, against respondent for
damages claimed to have been sustained by appellant by reason of libel. The demurrer to
appellant's complaint being sustained, and appellant having declined to amend, judgment was
entered against him in favor of respondent. From the judgment thus entered and from the
order of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer, appeal is taken to this court.
We are first concerned with the matter of a motion to dismiss the appeal upon the ground
that no assignment of errors was served or filed in this court within the time prescribed
by law.
41 Nev. 245, 252 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
dismiss the appeal upon the ground that no assignment of errors was served or filed in this
court within the time prescribed by law. In this respect respondent relies on section 13 of an
act entitled An act supplemental to and to amend an act entitled An act to regulate
proceedings in civil cases in this state and to repeal all acts in relation thereto,' approved
March 17, 1911, approved March 16, 1915, and found in Statutes of 1915 at page 164. The
section reads as follows:
Within twenty days after any appeal has been taken from any order or judgment, the party
or parties appealing shall serve the adverse parties and file with the clerk of the supreme court
an assignment of errors, which assignment shall designate generally each separate error,
specifying the page and lines of the record wherein the same may be found. Any error not
assigned shall not be considered by the supreme court. If the party fails to file such
assignment within the time limited no error shall be considered by the supreme court. The
assignment of errors herein provided for shall be typewritten, paged, and the lines numbered,
and the appellant shall furnish three copies thereof for filing in the supreme court.
The record as it is before us discloses a total failure on the part of appellant to serve or file
any assignment of errors, and appellant seeks by separate motion in this court to have an
order made permitting him to file his assignment of errors nunc pro tunc. With the
last-mentioned motion it will, in our judgment, be unnecessary for us to deal, in view of the
position that we shall here take and which we deem proper under the statute.
Section 11 of the act of 1915, referred to, is as follows:
The original bills of exceptions herein provided for, together with a notice of appeal and
the undertaking on appeal, shall be annexed to a copy of the judgment roll, certified by the
clerk or by the parties, if the appeal be from the judgment; if the appeal be from an order,
such original bill shall be annexed to such order, and the same shall be and become the record
on appeal when filed in the supreme court.
41 Nev. 245, 253 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
filed in the supreme court. A party may appeal upon the judgment roll alone, in which case
only such errors can be considered as appear upon the face of the judgment roll.
As to what constitutes the judgment roll, our civil practice act, section 5273, Revised Laws
(section 331, Civil Practice Act), provides:
Immediately after entering the judgment, the clerk must attach together and file the
following papers, which constitute the judgment roll: (1) In case the complaint is not
answered by any defendant, the summons, with the affidavit or proof of service; the
complaint with memorandum indorsed thereon that the default of the defendant in not
answering was entered, and a copy of the judgment. * * * (2) In all other cases, the pleadings,
a copy of the verdict of the jury, or finding of the court or referee, all bills of exceptions taken
and filed, and a copy of any order made on demurrer or relating to the change of parties, and a
copy of the judgment.
* * *
1. It was not necessary, in view of the specific provisions of the several sections of our
statute pertaining to practice on appeals, for the appellant in this case to file or serve an
assignment of errors as contemplated by section 13 of the practice act of 1915. The appeal
here taken is from the order of the district court sustaining the demurrer to appellant's
complaint and from the judgment entered pursuant to appellant's failure to amend; hence
under subdivision 2 of section 5273, Revised Laws, all of the matters pertaining to the
proceedings in the trial court, so far as those proceedings affect the standing or rights of
appellant, are properly here embraced within the judgment roll as certified by the clerk of the
district court. Respondents, in furtherance of their motion to dismiss plaintiff's appeal, refer to
the decision of this court in the case of Coffin v. Coffin, 40 Nev. 345, wherein we dismissed
the appeal upon a motion made for that purpose for the reason that appellant had failed to
comply with section 13 of the practice act of 1915, inasmuch as he had failed to serve or
file his assignment of errors within time.
41 Nev. 245, 254 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
practice act of 1915, inasmuch as he had failed to serve or file his assignment of errors within
time. That case is not controlling in the matter at bar. It is distinguished from the case under
consideration inasmuch as there the appeal was sought to be taken from the judgment entered
after trial on the merits and from the order overruling appellant's motion for a new trial. Here
the appeal is from an order sustaining a demurrer. In the Coffin case the errors, if any, were
not contended for as pertaining to matters properly appearing in the judgment roll. In the
matter at bar the very error contended for, and indeed the only error contended for, is the
order of the trial court sustaining the demurrer and pursuant to section 5273, Revised Laws, is
properly embraced within and is on the face of the judgment roll. Not only that, but the
section of the code last referred to provides that all bills of exceptions taken and filed shall
be a part of the judgment roll; and in the judgment roll as it is before us we find the bill of
exceptions taken to the order sustaining the demurrer and the same duly allowed by the trial
judge and filed on the date of the entry of judgment.
If the matters or proceedings which appellant sought to have reviewed by this court on
appeal were not properly embraced within the judgment roll, then the motion to dismiss
should prevail under the doctrine of the Coffin case, supra. The case at bar falls directly
within the provision of section 11 of the practice act of 1915, providing for the consideration
of errors which appear upon the face of the judgment roll when appeal is from the judgment
alone. Under this provision of the statute it is manifest that the intendment of the lawmakers
was to require no assignment of errors in a case such as this, where the order appealed from
and the error complained of were all embraced within matters properly belonging to the
judgment roll and were brought to this court in that form. Indeed, if it were otherwise, it
would at most only require a repetition, by way of assignment of error, of that which was
already excepted to and assigned as error in the bill of exceptions contained in the
judgment roll.
41 Nev. 245, 255 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
of that which was already excepted to and assigned as error in the bill of exceptions contained
in the judgment roll. This court has held Peers v. Reed, 23 Nev. 404, 48 Pac. 897) that on an
appeal taken from the judgment alone, where there is no statement or bill of exceptions in the
record, there will be a consideration only of the record constituting the judgment roll. It is in
the record constituting the judgment roll that the very error relied upon by appellant is
brought to this court. Hence we conclude that no assignment of errors as contemplated by
section 13 of the civil practice act of 1915 is necessary or required in such a case.
2. Viewing the matter as we do, it becomes unnecessary for us to determine the question
as to the right of appellant to an order nunc pro tunc. Suffice it to say in this respect, however,
that we find it to be a rule supported by eminent authority that the object and purpose of a
nunc pro tunc order is to make a record speak the truth concerning acts already done. Without
determining the question here, we deem it sufficient to intimate that an order nunc pro tunc
cannot be made use of or resorted to to supply omitted action. (Wight v. Nicholson, 134 U. S.
136, 10 Sup. Ct. 487, 33 L. Ed. 865; Hyde v. Curling, 10 Mo. 359; Hickman v. City of Fort
Scott, 141 U. S. 415, 12 Sup. Ct. 9, 35 L. Ed. 775; Wyllie v. Heffernan, 58 Mo. App. 657;
State v. White, 16 Ind. App. 260, 44 N. E. 589.)
This brings us to a consideration of the principal question here involved, namely, the
action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to appellant's complaint.
The complaint, by way of colloquium or inducement, averred the standing of appellant in
the community, relating the fact of his having conducted and demeaned himself with honesty,
integrity, and fidelity, enjoying the confidence and esteem of the people of the State of
Nevada to a remarkably high degree; of his having held positions of honor and trust within
the state; a district judge of one of the judicial districts for a period of twelve years, a justice
of the supreme court of the state for an equal period, during all of which time he had
"never been accused or suspected of having been guilty of any dishonesty or of any lack
of integrity or fair dealing, which would injure his reputation or good standing."
41 Nev. 245, 256 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
of twelve years, a justice of the supreme court of the state for an equal period, during all of
which time he had never been accused or suspected of having been guilty of any dishonesty
or of any lack of integrity or fair dealing, which would injure his reputation or good
standing. The complaint relates:
That during all of the time between the 20th day of March, 1911, and the 7th day of
March, 1916, said plaintiff (appellant here) was a director and the president and one of the
members of the executive committee of Nevada Fire Insurance Company, a corporation,
organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Nevada, doing a general
fire insurance business since the 1st day of March, 1914, and having its office at Carson City,
Nevada, a part of that time, but now at the city of Reno, State of Nevada; that, as such
director, president, and member of said executive committee of said corporation, said plaintiff
was during all that time the general, financial, and business manager of said corporation and
of the investments, business, and affairs thereof, except that the business of said corporation
relating to risks or fire insurance was under the direction of Robert Carlson, an insurance
expert; and that plaintiff, with the other directors of said corporation at the times of the
meetings of the board of directors thereof, had charge and control of and handled the business
and financial affairs and more especially the expenditures of said corporation, and, during the
intervals between such meetings of such board of directors, he with the other members of said
executive committee at the times of the meetings of said committee, had charge and control
of and handled such affairs and expenditures thereof, and, during the intervals between the
meetings of said committee and board, he alone had charge and control of and handled such
affairs and expenditures of said corporation, except that the business of said corporation
relating to risks or fire insurance was so under the direction fo said insurance expert, and
investments of the funds of the said company were made on orders drawn by the plaintiff
and signed by him and other members of the executive committee; that there was no
meeting of the said board of directors or executive committee by said corporation from
the time said corporation began writing insurance on the 1st day of March, 1914, until the
meeting thereof held on the 7th day of March, 1916, except annually; and that, during the
intervals between said meetings of said board of directors and those of said executive
committee, during that time, said plaintiff had full and complete charge and control of all
matters of expenditure of said corporation for the salaries of the employees and officers
thereof and for their traveling expenses, except such as were provided for and controlled
by the contracts of said corporation with said Robert Carlson and plaintiff providing for
their salaries and services.
41 Nev. 245, 257 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
drawn by the plaintiff and signed by him and other members of the executive committee; that
there was no meeting of the said board of directors or executive committee by said
corporation from the time said corporation began writing insurance on the 1st day of March,
1914, until the meeting thereof held on the 7th day of March, 1916, except annually; and that,
during the intervals between said meetings of said board of directors and those of said
executive committee, during that time, said plaintiff had full and complete charge and control
of all matters of expenditure of said corporation for the salaries of the employees and officers
thereof and for their traveling expenses, except such as were provided for and controlled by
the contracts of said corporation with said Robert Carlson and plaintiff providing for their
salaries and services.
III. That on or about the 2d day of March, 1915, at the office of said corporation in
Carson City, Nevada, said Nevada Fire Insurance Company, a corporation, made and entered
into a contract with the plaintiff herein by which said corporation employed the said plaintiff
for a portion of his time only for the period of one year thereafter, to serve said corporation as
its president and general counsel and, as such, to exercise general care over its affairs and, in
addition to performing the ordinary duties of its president and such other duties as might be
directed or advised by its board of directors and executive committee, to draw mortgages,
examine abstracts, and assist in making loans, to endeavor to make sales of the treasury stock
of said corporation, to secure the writing of insurance, and to increase the business and
advance the best interests of the corporation generally, for all of which said plaintiff was to be
paid a salary and remuneration by said corporation of $300 per month and 5 per cent of the
profits made by said corporation from its underwriting business, or investments, or otherwise
during that year, he to devote at least one-half of his time to the duties of such employment
and be allowed to practice law during said period of one year on his own account, which
contract plaintiff faithfully performed.
41 Nev. 245, 258 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
period of one year on his own account, which contract plaintiff faithfully performed.
IV. That said contract of employment was so made by said corporation pursuant to a
resolution duly and regularly offered, moved, and passed by the board of directors of said
corporation in and at the regular annual meeting thereof held on or about the 2d day of
March, 1915, and that at the time said resolution was so passed the plaintiff herein was one of
the directors of said corporation so assembled in annual meeting and was present at the time
but did not vote on said resolution; and that he then had been such director and the president
of the said corporation and a member of the executive committee thereof and in charge of its
affairs generally ever since it was so organized.
V. That said plaintiff was so employed by said corporation and so elected its said
president by the stockholders thereof because of his good reputation and of his business
ability and position as hereinbefore stated in paragraph numbered I hereof.
VI. That said defendant, C. E. Mack, of Reno, Nevada, on the 18th day of January, 1916,
at Reno, Nevada, contriving to injure the plaintiff herein, and his general reputation for
honesty, integrity, fidelity, business ability, and fair dealing, and thereby expose him to public
hatred and contempt, did then and there publish in a letter written and deposited by him in the
United States postoffice or mail at Reno, Nevada, postage prepaid, and addressed to one Ed.
Carville at Elko, Nevada, one of the stockholders of said corporation, the following words,
figures, and characters of and concerning the plaintiff herein:
C. E. Mack Geo. S. Green
Mack & Green, Attorneys at Law.
Rooms 221-222 Odd Fellows' Temple.
P. O. Box 317. Phone 490.
Reno, Nevada, Jan. 18, 1916.
Ed Carville, Elko, NevadaDear Sir: I went to Carson on the 31st day of December last
and examined the books and affairs of the Nevada Fire Insurance Company.
41 Nev. 245, 259 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
the books and affairs of the Nevada Fire Insurance Company. I find the company has been
doing a good business and undoubtedly will make a small net profit during the fiscal year. I
find, however, that the company is overloaded with salary and traveling expense to the extent
of nearly ten thousand dollars per year. This expense account should be reduced to $5,000 per
year.
As near as I can learn the board of trustees have not met since last March.
I urge you to attend the next stockholders' meeting to be held on March 7th next, and if
you cannot attend said meeting, then if you will sign and send me the inclosed proxy, I will
attend the next meeting of the stockholders and vote every share sent to me, together with my
own, in favor of reducing the salary and traveling expense account from ten thousand dollars
to five thousand dollars per annum. When this is done I am satisfied that within twelve or
eighteen months the Nevada Fire Insurance Company can pay a dividend to its stockholders.
As I am not personally acquainted with many of the stockholders, for that reason I refer
you to the Farmers' & Merchants' National Bank of Reno, the Lyon County Bank of
Yerington, and the Bank of Sparks, at Sparks, as to my standing in the community in which I
reside. Sincerely yours, C. E. Mack,
Stockholder of the Nevada Fire Insurance Company'
and that said plaintiff is informed and upon such information verily believes, and therefore
alleges upon such information and belief, that on or about the 18th day of January, 1916, at
Reno, Nevada, said defendant, contriving to injure the plaintiff herein, and his general
reputation for honesty, integrity, fidelity, business ability, and fair dealing, and thereby to
expose him to public hatred and contempt, did then and there publish in about 260 other
letters identical with that herein before quoted, except as to the names and addresses of the
persons to whom they were sent, the exact number of which said plaintiff does not know and
cannot ascertain and allege at the time of the filing hereof, written and deposited by him
in the United States postoffice or mail at Reno, Nevada, postage prepaid, and addressed
and directed to about 260 of the other stockholders of said corporation, among whom
were the following."
41 Nev. 245, 260 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
ascertain and allege at the time of the filing hereof, written and deposited by him in the
United States postoffice or mail at Reno, Nevada, postage prepaid, and addressed and
directed to about 260 of the other stockholders of said corporation, among whom were the
following.
Then follows a long list of the names of persons residing in this and adjoining states,
alleged to be stockholders of the Nevada Fire Insurance Company and to whom the letter is
alleged to have been written.
Section 7 of appellant's complaint is as follows:
That the following words contained in said letters and the said publication or publications
thereof were false, libelous, and defamatory, I find, however, that the company is overloaded
with salary and traveling expense to the extent of nearly $10,000 per year,' and were so
published of and concerning said plaintiff, and that the remaining statements in said letters
were wilfully and maliciously intended by said defendant to give force, color, and effect to
the false and defamatory publication hereinbefore in ths paragraph quoted.
The complaint then alleges that the stockholders who received the letter containing the
libelous matter complained of understood the same, and that the defendant intended that they
should so understand the publication, for the purpose of injuring the plaintiff and his
reputation for honesty, integrity, fidelity, business ability, and fair dealing, and thereby
expose him to public hatred and contempt. The demurrer interposed to this complaint was
lengthy and specific. It challenged the complaint, among other things, on the grounds of
failure to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The trial court held the complaint good as against the demurrer in all respects save and
except as to the necessity of alleging special damages. In other words, the only point on
which the lower court sustained the demurrer was that the words used in the letter upon
which the action was based were not actionable per se, and for this reason alone special
damages must be alleged and proven.
41 Nev. 245, 261 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
alleged and proven. Therefore the only questions with which we are here concerned may be
stated as follows:
(1) Are the words complained of actionable per se?
(2) Is it necessary, in view of the language of the letter and in view of the allegations of the
complaint, for plaintiff to allege and prove special damages?
In approaching the principal question here, it may be well to note at the outset that the
letter written by respondent, in which the libelous words and assertions are alleged to exist,
nowhere mentions the appellant. The assertion in the letter to which libel is attributed is all
contained in one sentence:
I find, however, that the company is overloaded with salary and traveling expenses to the
extent of nearly $10,000 per year.
The whole question might be said to turn on the word or term overloaded.
Section 8 of the complaint performs the office and function known in pleadings of this
kind as the innuendo. There it is alleged:
That said defendant intended and meant by said above-quoted words so constituting said
false and libelous and defamatory publication or publications that the plaintiff herein took
advantage of his offices as a director and the president of said corporation and of his position
as a member of the executive committee thereof and of the confidence and trust reposed in
him by the other directors of said corporation to obtain more compensation for his said
services so rendered by him under said contract of employment than they were worth; and
that said plaintiff and the other directors of said corporation in this way mismanaged said
corporation and its affairs and was guilty of malfeasance in his said offices of director and
president of said corporation, to the loss, damage, and detriment of said corporation and the
stockholders thereof; and that said stockholders who received said false, libelous, and
defamatory publication or publications so understood the same, and the said defendant
intended that they should so understand the said false, libelous, and defamatory publication
or publications.
41 Nev. 245, 262 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
the said false, libelous, and defamatory publication or publications.
3. In determining whether words charged are libelous per se, they are to be taken in their
plain and natural import according to the ideas they convey to those to whom they are
addressed; reference being had not only to the words themselves but also to the circumstances
under which they were used.
4, 5. The term overload, used in the expression, in connection with the other matters
contained in the letter conveys a definite and positive meaning. The expression itself in its
ordinary acceptation means loaded with too heavy a burden (Standard Dict.); to load too
heavily (Webster). The expression has been used as meaning overcharged, as with reference
to an electric circuit. We fail, however, to find any authority giving the term a meaning which
might be construed in this instance as defamatory on its face in the sense of imputing
dishonesty, lack of fair dealing, want of fidelity, integrity, or business ability. The word
overload must, as we view it, be construed as something of a comparative in which the
burden is too great for the carrying capacity or power. In this instance the expression used, I
find the company is overloaded with salary and traveling expenses to the extent of nearly
$10,000 per year, rather conveys the sense of the inability of the concern to bear so great a
burden of traveling expenses and salary than as imputing misconduct and malfeasance or
dishonesty on the part of those in charge or control of the traveling expenses and salary. The
most that can be claimed for the assertion is that it expressly declares that the burden of
traveling expenses and salary was too great for the business. This might have been brought
about through the exercise of the most honest motives or intentions on the part of those in
control, even though the same might have been brought about by misguided judgment or
oversanguine estimate of the company's ability to accomplish results. A vessel might be
honestly overloaded beyond its carrying capacity with the best of motives on the part of
the master; an electric circuit might be overloaded through the honest miscalculation of
the engineer.
41 Nev. 245, 263 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
overloaded beyond its carrying capacity with the best of motives on the part of the master; an
electric circuit might be overloaded through the honest miscalculation of the engineer. The
term overload refers rather to the ability of the appliance or conveyance to bear the burden
than to the agency by which the overload was directed or made. Giving to the words and
terms contained in the sentence here complained of their ordinary meaning and acceptation,
the whole sentence conveys one idea, namely, the business of the company was not
sufficiently ample to carry the expenditure of $10,000 per year. The very next sentence in the
letter emphasizes this idea, for there the author says: This expense account should be
reduced to $5,000 per year. Nowhere in the sentence claimed as libelous, and from no
expression or term therein used, is the sense conveyed, by the ordinary acceptation of the
terms, that either the directors of the corporation or appellant as one of them was guilty of
malfeasance in such office; no word or expression contained in this sentence, when taken in
its ordinary acceptation, conveys the idea that the appellant here had taken advantage of his
office as a director or as president of the corporation or of his position as a member of the
executive committee or of the confidence or trust reposed in him by the other directors to
obtain more compensation for his services than they were worth. The fact that the author of
the letter charged that the corporation was overloaded with traveling expenses and salary in
no wise could be distorted into a meaning which would even impliedly place a value on or
detract from the value of the services of any one.
A general agent's service might be worth a million dollars a year and a peanut butcher
might attempt to employ him at such salary; but, if the income failed to meet the salary or was
not commensurate with the outlay, it would appear to us far-fetched in the extreme to say that
libel against the agent might be charged to one who asserted that the peanut butcher's
business was overloaded with salary and traveling expenses. Neither would such expression,
in our judgment, detract from the qualifications, business ability, honesty or integrity of
the party whose services as an agent had been retained.
41 Nev. 245, 264 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
would such expression, in our judgment, detract from the qualifications, business ability,
honesty or integrity of the party whose services as an agent had been retained.
6. It is true that any false and malicious writing published of another is libelous per se
when its tendency is to render the party contemptible or ridiculous in public estimation or
expose him to public hatred or contempt. (Cooley on Torts, p. 401.) Words or expressions
that tend to lower a man in the estimation of his acquaintances or detract from the confidence
of his neighbors that he has enjoyed have in some instances been held to be libelous per se;
but the accusation that a business was not of sufficient extent to bear a burden of salary and
traveling expenses to the extent of a definitely named amount, where no dishonest motives
are charged in the creating of such salary or traveling expenses, fails to meet this test.
Words or expressions actionable per se can only attain that dignity from their natural
import and meaning according to the ideas they are calculated to convey to those to whom
they are addressed, and in ths respect reference must be had, not only to the words or
expressions themselves, but also to the circumstances under which they were used. In
applying this test, courts in general have held that the words or expressions complained of
and alleged to be libelous must receive a fair and reasonable construction, one in conformity
with the ordinary use and import attached to them in the community in which they were
published. (Reid v. Providence Journal Co., 20 R. I. 120, 37 Atl. 637; Harkness v. Chicago
Daily News, 102 Ill. App. 163; Wilcox v. Moon, 63 Vt. 481, 22 Atl. 80.)
In the case of Herringer v. Ingberg, 91 Minn. 71, 97 N. W. 460, the court had before it the
question of the libelous nature of the following expressions:
(1) I hope that Herringer can for his own sake prove that he has had nothing to do with
the management of said ditch, as those county officials that have proven their incapability to
manage the county affairs should not be reelected to continue similar failures.'
41 Nev. 245, 265 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
their incapability to manage the county affairs should not be reelected to continue similar
failures.'
(2) Why should the poor farmers along the ditch be compelled to pay more than the state
does for such work? Are they more able than the whole state? It looks as though the county
officials who were in charge of the matter had that opinion, if Mr. C. Tvedt, backed by J. C.
Norby, and others, had not come in on the day the contracts were made and bid the price
down to six, seven and eight cents per cubic yard the whole ditch would probably have been
let out at eleven cents per cubic yard, causing an additional cost of several thousand dollars.'
The analysis resorted to by the court in that instance impresses us here. There the court
dwelt at length upon the import and meaning of the expressions used, and said:
The question is: How would persons of ordinary intelligence understand the language? In
this view we are of opinion that the article complained of is not libelous. The matters
particularly complained of impute to plaintiff neither dishonesty nor corruption, nor that he
had connived to defraud the farmers out of thousands of dollars. It does not matter that the
complaint so charges, for alleged defamatory words cannot be made broader, nor their natural
meaning extended, enlarged, or restricted, by innuendo.
In dwelling upon the general proposition, the court said:
In determining whether a given publication is libelous, the language thereof must be
taken in its ordinary signification, and construed in the light of what might reasonably have
been understood therefrom by the persons who read it.
In that case the court referred to its former decision in Stewart v. Minnesota Tribune Co.,
40 Minn. 101, 41 N. W. 457, 12 Am. St. Rep. 696, holding in effect that, in order to
constitute an assertion as libelous per se, the nature thereof must be such that the court can
legally presume that the party has been injured in his reputation or business or in his
social relations or has been subjected to public scandal, scorn, or ridicule in consequence
of the publication, and to the case of McDermott v. Union Credit Co.,
41 Nev. 245, 266 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
legally presume that the party has been injured in his reputation or business or in his social
relations or has been subjected to public scandal, scorn, or ridicule in consequence of the
publication, and to the case of McDermott v. Union Credit Co., 76 Minn. 84, 78 N. W. 967,
79 N. W. 673, wherein it was declared that:
Any discommendatory language used of and concerning a person is liable to do him
injury, although such injury is often inappreciable in law. But nothing is better settled than
that much discommendatory language, whether written or spoken, is not actionable per se,
because not calculated to do the person of whom it is published any injury appreciable or
cognizable by the law. The courts have, for practical reasons and considerations of public
policy, to draw the line somewhere, and this has often to be done by a gradual process of
exclusion and inclusion, depending upon the particular facts of each case as it arises.
In the case of Urban v. Helmick et al., 15 Wash. 155, 45 pac. 747, the matter complained
of as being libelous was in the following language:
I am a strong believer in the old saying, Live and let live,' but in some localities there are
hogs, called business men, that want it all. I believe in buying at home and building up our
own trade and town as much as possible, as the more business we do the more money there is
circulated at home. We have a hotel here that does not believe in that kind of business and
will not trade at home, but sends to Seattle for supplies. As this hotel gets most of its money
from traveling salesmen who come to Sedro, I wish to say to them that I will not buy any
goods of them or the house they represent if they stop at the Hotel Sedro from now on, etc.
By way of innuendo, the complaint alleged:
Defendants meant to be understood, and were understood by all of the friends,
acquaintances, and patrons of these plaintiffs and by the readers of said newspaper and by the
public generally, to charge these plaintiffs as individuals and in the management of their said
hotel business with being 'hogs,' thereby meaning that these plaintiffs as individuals and
in the management of said business were possessed of and controlled and actuated by
the low, dirty, groveling, grasping, gluttonous, self-seeking, and selfish instincts and
characteristics of hogs or swine," etc.
41 Nev. 245, 267 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
business with being hogs,' thereby meaning that these plaintiffs as individuals and in the
management of said business were possessed of and controlled and actuated by the low, dirty,
groveling, grasping, gluttonous, self-seeking, and selfish instincts and characteristics of hogs
or swine, etc.
There, as here, a demurrer having been sustained, appellants elected to stand upon their
complaint, and, having refused to amend, judgment was given dismissing the action. The
court, after commenting on the absence of an allegation of special damages, dwelt at length
on the contention that the language was libelous per se. Quoting approvingly from 1 Boone
on Code Pleading, sec. 163, they said:
The plaintiff cannot, by innuendoes, extend the meaning beyond what the words justify in
connection with the extrinsic facts. And when the innuendo is not justified by the antecedent
facts referred to, so that without it the words are not actionable, a demurrer to the complaint
will lie.
The court after analyzing the language said:
To accuse one of being deficient in some quality which the law does not require him as a
good citizen to possess it not libelous per se. The public may disapprove appellants' conduct
in thus exercising the right to trade outside the town where they reside, but the publication
does not expose them to hatred or contempt in the sense nor to the degree required by the law
of libel.
In the case of Morgan v. Halberstadt, 60 Fed. 592, 9 C. C. A. 147, quoted from
approvingly in the case of Urban v. Helmick, supra, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit approvingly quoted from Rue v. Mitchell, 2 Dall. 58, 1 L. Ed. 288, where,
dwelling upon the question of language libelous per se, it is said:
The sense in which words are received by the world is the sense which courts of justice
ought to ascribe to them,' on the trial of actions such as this.
The court by way of comment referred to authorities holding: "That the language used
must be given its ordinary meaning; that the test is whether, in the mind of an intelligent
man, the language naturally imports a criminal or disgraceful charge; that the language is
to be understood by the court in the sense in which the world generally would understand
it, giving to the words their ordinary meaning; that the language is to be understood in
the ordinary and most natural sense; and that, when the writing complained of is plain
and unambiguous, the question in a civil action, whether it is a libel or not, is a question
of law."
41 Nev. 245, 268 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
That the language used must be given its ordinary meaning; that the test is whether, in the
mind of an intelligent man, the language naturally imports a criminal or disgraceful charge;
that the language is to be understood by the court in the sense in which the world generally
would understand it, giving to the words their ordinary meaning; that the language is to be
understood in the ordinary and most natural sense; and that, when the writing complained of
is plain and unambiguous, the question in a civil action, whether it is a libel or not, is a
question of law.
7. It is, we think, a correct statement of the law that language or terms which are not
libelous per sethat is, when viewed in the light of their general acceptation and
understanding in the community or vicinity in which they are usedcannot be made so
through the function or force of an innuendo.
It is the office of an innuendo in pleading, says the court in Pandow v. Eichsted, 90 Wis.
298, 63 N. W. 284, to point out the meaning of the alleged slanderous words, where they are
not actionable upon their face, so as to show in connection with the inducement, and in the
light of the facts and circumstances under which they were spoken, that the words are
actionable.
Mr. Cooley, in his work on Torts, quotes approvingly from the case of McLaughlin v.
Fisher, 136 Ill. 111, 24 N. E. 60, to the effect:
It is not permissible to enlarge and extend the meaning of the words spoken, beyond their
natural import, by the innuendo, except so far as such enlarged meaning is warranted by
prefatory matter set forth in the inducement or colloquium. An innuendo is properly used to
point the meaning of the words alleged to have been spoken, in view of the occasion and
circumstances, whether appearing in the words themselves, or extraneous prefatory matters
alleged in the declaration. * * * If * * * the words alleged to have been spoken are not
slanderous per se, or if they do not refer to the plaintiff, or if they require explanation by
some extrinsic matter to render them actionable, such extrinsic facts must be alleged by
way of inducement, and thus render the charge intelligible and certain."
41 Nev. 245, 269 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
to the plaintiff, or if they require explanation by some extrinsic matter to render them
actionable, such extrinsic facts must be alleged by way of inducement, and thus render the
charge intelligible and certain.
Commenting on this, the learned author says:
The innuendo cannot change, enlarge, extend or add to the sense or effect of the words
declared on, or properly impute to them a meaning, which the publication, either in itself, or
taken in connection with the facts stated in the inducement and colloquium, does not warrant
or fairly imply. If the words are incapable of a defamatory meaning, they cannot be made so
by innuendo. (Cooley on Torts, 3d ed. p. 414.)
8. The innuendo will not introduce new matter, nor will it be permitted to aid to the extent
of enlarging the meaning of the words or expressions used. (Odgers on Libel and Slander, 5th
ed. p. 116.)
The innuendo, says the author last cited, must not put upon the defendant's words a
construction which they will not bear. It cannot alter or extend the sense of the words, or
make that certain which is in fact uncertain.
9. Many courts have attempted to formulate a rule by which may be distinguished words
or expressions actionable per se from those which are actionable per quod. Without
attempting to follow this example, we think it may be safely stated that words or expressions
are actionable per se when their injurious character is a fact of common notoriety and
generally so understood where the utterance is published. Words or expressions libelous per
quod are such as require that their injurious character or effect be established by allegation
and proof. (McDonald v. Lee, 246 Pa. 253, 92 Atl. 135, L. R. A. 1916a, 915.)
A case quite illuminative of the question here to be determined is that of Mudd v. Rodgers,
102 Ky. 280, 43 S. W. 255. There, as here, the case turned upon the question of the language
used being actionable per se.
41 Nev. 245, 270 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
In the case of James v. Rutletch, decided by the Court of the King's Bench in 1599, we are
afforded an opportunity of observing how the question was viewed by jurists of the earlier
school. There it was held:
That in every action on the case for slanderous words, two things are requisite: (1) That
the person who is scandalized, is certain. (2) That the scandal is apparent by the words
themselves. * * * For the office of an innuendo is to contain and design the same person who
was named in certain before, and in effect stands in lieu of a praedict, but an innuendo cannot
make a person certain who was uncertain before. For it would be inconvenient, that action
should be maintained by imagination of an intent which doth not appear by the words upon
which the action is grounded, but is altogether uncertain and subject to deceivable conjecture.
* * * As to the second, as an innuendo cannot make the person certain which was uncertain
before, so an innuendo cannot alter the matter or sense of the words themselves. (James v.
Rutletch, 2 Coke's Rep. 305.)
Another English case which we find and which we think is illuminative of the earlier and
fundamental rule applicable to the question here presented is that of Mulligan v. Cole et al.,
44 L. J. Q. B. 153. There the plaintiff appears to have been an art master and had been such at
the Walsall Science and Art Institute. His engagement had ceased with that institution, and he
then became master of another school which was called the Walsall Government School of
Art. The following advertisement appeared in a publication called the Walsall Observer,
signed by the defendants as chairman, treasurer, and secretary of the institute, respectively:
Walsall Science and Art Institute. The people are informed that Mr. Mulligan's
connection with the institute has ceased, and that he is not authorized to receive a
subscription on its behalf.
By way of innuendo the plaintiff alleged that this meant that the plaintiff falsely assumed
to be authorized to receive subscriptions on behalf of the said institute.
41 Nev. 245, 271 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
It was held that a nonsuit was properly entered because the advertisement was not capable of
any defamatory meaning.
10. As a general proposition of law applicable to pleadings in cases of this character, if the
words or expressions complained of are ambiguous or equivocal, the innuendo may assign the
true meaning the plaintiff believes them to bear; but if the words alone, or the words limited
by circumstances duly pleaded, are not defamatory, the innuendo cannot make them so.
(Cooper v. Seaverns, 81 Kan. 267, 105 Pac. 509, 153 Am. St. Rep. 359, 25 L. R. A. n. s. 517;
Feast v. Auer, 90 S. W. 564, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 794, 4 L. R. A. n. s. 560.)
11. Viewing the question from another angle, we think a rule applicable to the subject
may well be stated thus: Words are actionable per se which directly tend to the prejudice of
any one in his office, profession, trade, or business. But even under this general assertion of
the rule it does not follow that all words to the disparagement of an officer, professional man,
or one engaged in a trade or business, will for that reason, without proof of such damage, be
actionable in themselves.
Mr. Newell, in his work on Slander and Libel, says:
When language is used concerning a person or his affairs which from its nature
necessarily must, or presumably will as its natural and proximate consequence, occasion him
pecuniary loss, its publication prima facie constitutes a cause of action and prima facie
constitutes a wrong without any allegation or evidence of damage other than that which is
implied or presumed from the fact of publication; and this is all that is meant by the terms
actionable per se,' etc. Therefore, the real, practical test by which to determine whether
special damage must be alleged and proven in order to make out a cause of action for
defamation, is whether the language is such as necessarily must or naturally and presumably
will occasion pecuniary damage to the person of whom it is spoken. (Newell on Slander, 2d
ed. p. 181.)
12. To this assertion of the law we deem another rule applicable; i.e., the actionable
words or assertions must refer to the party bringing the action, at least with reasonable
certainty.
41 Nev. 245, 272 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
applicable; i.e., the actionable words or assertions must refer to the party bringing the action,
at least with reasonable certainty. In the case at bar, even applying the broadest meaning and
significance to the term used, and taking it in the most favorable light presented by the
innuendo and under conditions delineated by the colloquium, it would require a distorted
application and a strained construction of the language used in the letter complained of to
bring such language into the category of expressions actionable per se with reference to the
appellant.
Much reliance is placed by appellant in the case of Peterson v. Western Union Telegraph
Co., 65 Minn. 18, 67 N. W. 646, 33 L. R. A. 302. There the defendant, the Western Union
Telegraph Company, received at its office in New Ulm and transmitted a message over its
telegraph line, addressed to the plaintiff in that case in which message appeared the words:
Slippery Sam, your name is pants.
[Signed] Many Republicans.
The court held that the message was on its face fairly susceptible of a libelous meaning,
saying:
The sting is in the word slippery.' This word, when used as descriptive of a person, has a
well-understood meaning. It means, when so used, that the person to whom it is applied
cannot be depended on or trusted; that he is dishonest and apt to play one false. (Cent. Dict.)
If such is the meaning of the word as used in this messageand of this the jury were the
judgesit was clearly libelous, because, if a man is dishonest, and apt to play one false, he
merits the scorn and contempt of all honorable men. To falsely publish of a man that he is
slippery tends to render him odious and contemptible. Such a publication is a libel.
There is a wide difference between that case and the one at bar. Had the letter in question
as published by respondent declared that appellant had overloaded the insurance company
with unauthorized salary and traveling expenses, then there might be some ground upon
which to base this analogy.
41 Nev. 245, 273 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
which to base this analogy. In the Peterson case, the term slippery was applied to the
plaintiff with all the force and effect that the ordinary acceptation of that term
conveyedundependable, dishonest, false dealing, etc. In the case at bar, the term overload
is directly applied to the company, and even a strained construction of the term, if such
construction were permissible, would not convey the idea of wilful wrongdoing on the part of
any one. The whole sense conveyed by the expression, taken in connection with the full
context of the letter complained of, when put in homely language, was that the burden of
expense was too great for the present capacity of the corporation; the expression is
overloaded was impersonal. The language was not actionable per se.
With a view to supporting his contention that the language complained of in this letter was
libelous per se, appellant refers us to many other cases decided in the several jurisdictions.
We proceed to analyze some of these, inasmuch as in our judgment they rather support our
conclusion reached in this matter.
In the case of McKinney v. Roberts, 68 Cal. 192, 8 Pac. 857, the actionable words charged
a woman with being a paramour of a man not her husband. Here was a term commonly
understood to impute lack of chastity. The published article referred specifically to a given
person.
In the case of Indianapolis Journal v. Pugh, 6 Ind. App. 511, 33 N. E. 991, the libelous
matter charged a woman with having traveled with a married man for five months as his wife
and that she was turned out of a hotel, and that their relations had caused sensation where it
transpired. Here was a direct charge of conduct impugning chastity.
In Newman v. Stein, 75 Mich. 402, 42 N. W. 956, 13 Am. St. Rep. 447, the action was for
slander. The actionable language was spoken directly to the plaintiff in the presence of others.
Vile, opprobrious epithets were used, imputing want of chastity.
41 Nev. 245, 274 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
In Dennis v. Johnson, 42 Minn. 301, 44 N. W. 68, the libelous matter was by way of
graphic demonstration by which a party's faithfulness and honesty as builder and architect
was impugned; but the party was specifically named and referred to.
In Hetherington v. Sterry, 28 Kan. 426, 42 Am. Rep. 169, the publication specifically
named a party, designating his former official capacity as city attorney, and detailed advice
given and directly charged abandonment of his client.
In Steele v. Southwick, 9 Johns. (N. Y.) 214, the case arose out of a published statement
specifically designating a party by a term of common knowledge and repute, i.e., the man at
the Sign of the Bible, and directly charging is no slouch at swearing falsely.
In Riley v. Lee, 88 Ky. 603, 11 S. W. 713, 21 Am. St. Rep. 358, the question was as to a
published article setting forth in unmistakable language the direct charge of a false utterance
alleged to have been made by the plaintiff.
In Sanderson v. Caldwell, 45 N. Y. 398, 6 Am. Rep. 105, there was specific reference to
the plaintiff, calling him by name, mentioning acts done in his sober moments, then
charging the collection of blood money a big thing, thus imputing extortionate conduct in
his profession.
Many other cases of like significance might be referred to as signifying what courts have
held to be language libelous per se. None of them are analogous to the case at bar. In each of
the cases to which we have last referred, language is used designating a given person with
reasonable certainty and terms or assertions are resorted to in the libelous utterance imputing
attributes which, with reference to the person, either by reason of the common use made of
the term within the locality or the acceptation of the term or assertion generally, would
naturally tend to degrade him in the estimation of his fellow men, or hold him out to ridicule
or scorn, or would tend to injure him in his business, occupation, or profession.
41 Nev. 245, 275 (1917) Talbot v. Mack
13. It is contended by appellant that, even though the language used in the letter
complained of was not libelous per se, no allegation of special damages was necessary. It is
sufficient to say in this respect that all of the authorities to which we have referred, and
indeed many others, support the proposition that where the language complained of is not
libelous per se, special damages must be alleged.
In Ruling Case Law, it is asserted thus:
The general rules applicable in pleading damages generally apply to actions for libel or
slander. In such cases it is necessary for the plaintiff to allege in his petition, as well as to
prove, special damages before he is entitled to recover, unless the defamatory words in action
are actionable per se. (17 R. C. L. 391.)
We find this text amply supported by eminent authority. (Tracy v. Hacket, 19 Ind. App.
133, 49 N. E. 185, 65 Am. St. Rep. 398; Gustin v. Evening Press Co., 172 Mich. 311, 137 N.
W. 674, Ann. Cas. 1914d, 95.)
14. It is the contention of appellant that, even though it be held that an allegation of
special damages was necessary to make the pleading good as against demurrer, his allegation
in this respect is sufficient to comply with such a rule. The allegation of damages, as we view
it, is contained in paragraph 9 of the complaint. There it is averred:
That by means of said false, libelous and defamatory publication or publications the
plaintiff herein was injured in his reputation and good name and standing to his damage in the
sum of $50,000.
No allegation of special damages, as such is understood in the law of pleading, is here set
forth.
The order of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
_____________
41 Nev. 276, 276 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
[No. 2282]
GEORGE OLIVER ROBERSON, Appellant, v.
LUCY ROBERSON, Respondent.
[169 Pac. 333]
1. DivorceDesertion.
When the husband gives up the domicile at one place and establishes another, and in good faith urges the
wife to live with him there, her refusal to accept the invitation, if without sufficient reason, amounts to
desertion.
2. DivorceDesertionSufficiency of Evidence.
In suit by husband, who was first guilty of desertion, for divorce on the ground of desertion of the wife,
evidence held insufficient to show that husband's invitation to the wife to come and live with him was made
in good faith.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; R. C. Stoddard, Judge.
Action for divorce by George Oliver Roberson against Lucy Roberson. Judgment for
defendant, and plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.
George Springmeyer, for Appellant:
The desertion proved by plaintiff's oral testimony and by letters was what may be called
constructive desertion. It appears, indirectly, that a possible reason why the lower court
denied the decree was that it took judicial notice of its own record, to the effect that in
November, 1915, a suit by plaintiff against the defendant for annulment of the marriage was
tried and relief denied plaintiff. For this we can find no legal sanction. Any cause of action
arising subsequently to a suit of any kind between the parties entitles the injured party to a
divorce in the same manner as if there had been no previous suit. A previous suit for
maintenance does not affect the right of divorce given by subsequent acts of the defendant.
(McMullin v. McMullin, 56 Pac. 553.)
In order that a cause of action may have accrued to the plaintiff, he must have made in
good faith an offer to the defendant to return and live with him as his wife; he must have had
the bona-fide intention of living with her, and he must not have written the letters simply for
the purpose of getting a cause of action to entitle him to a divorce.
41 Nev. 276, 277 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
purpose of getting a cause of action to entitle him to a divorce. The law is well settled, and
has been from the earliest day of the common law, that the wife must go to the matrimonial
domicile, unless it be such a place as will affect her health or endanger her safety. The
husband has the right to decide where the matrimonial domicile shall be, and if he changes
his residence and the wife declines to go with him, she thereby deserts him. (Bishop,
Divorce and Separation, vol. 1, secs. 788, 1714, 1715, 1717; Nelson, Divorce and Separation,
secs. 68, 79; Spencer, Domestic Relations, sec. 371; Tiffany, Persons and Domestic
Relations, 2d ed. secs. 34, 103.) As a general rule, the husband has the right to direct the
affairs of his own house, and to determine the place of abode of the family; and it is in
general the duty of the wife to submit to such determination, unless there is good reason for
her refusal to do so. * * * The refusal of the wife to accompany him in a change of domicile,
unless a change is plainly unreasonable, constitutes desertion by her. (9 R. C. L. 151.)
The refusal of the wife to go to a new home established by the husband constitutes
desertion on the part of the wife. (Hunt v. Hunt, 29 N. J. Eq. 96; Albee v. Albee, 31 N. W.
157; Hair v. Hair, 10 Rich. Eq. 163, Beck v. Beck, 163 Pa. St. 649; Franklin v. Franklin, 77
N. E. 48; Baurens v. Giroux, 40 South. 224; Greene v. Greene, 11 Pick. 410; Hackettstown
Bank v. Mitchell, 4 Dutcher, 516; Williams v. Saunders, 5 Coldw. 60; Dalhousie v.
McDonall, 7 Cl. & F. 817; Dolphin v. Robins, 7 H. L. Cas. 390; Sanderson v. Ralston, 30 La.
Ann. 312; Gahn v. Darby, 39 La. Ann. 70; Angier v. Angier, 7 Phila, 305; Buell v. Buell, 84
Pa. 821; Sisemore v. Sisemore, 21 Pac. 820; Roby v. Roby, 77 Pac. 213.)
It is immaterial that the party to the marriage relation who refuses to resume the marital
relation was not originally the offending party. (Hanberry v. Hanberry, 29 Ala. 719; Fellows
v. Fellows, 31 Me. 342; Hooper v. Hooper, 34 N. J. Eq. 93; Ogilvie v. Ogilvie, 37 Or. 171;
Conlin v. Conlin, 163 Iowa, 420; Creasey v.
41 Nev. 276, 278 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
Conlin v. Conlin, 163 Iowa, 420; Creasey v. Creasey, 168 Mo. App. 68; McAllister v.
McAllister, 62 Atl. 1131; Crow v. Crow, 23 Ala. 583; Silverstein v. Silverstein, 178 Ill. App.
145.)
[No appearance for Respondent.]
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Appellant brought suit in the district court of Washoe County, Nevada, to obtain a divorce
from his wife upon the ground of desertion. Service of summons was had, but, the defendant
failing to appear and plead to the complaint, her default was entered. At the trial plaintiff
offered evidence in support of the cause of action pleaded in the complaint, and upon his
testimony the case was submitted for the consideration of the court. Judgment was entered in
favor of the defendant, and, a motion for a new trial having been denied, this appeal was
taken.
The facts of the case are these: The parties were married in Martin County, N. C., and left
immediately for Raleigh, where they lived for five months. The plaintiff then obtained a
position at Hemlet, N. C., with a railroad company, and the defendant went to her parents in
Martin County. Plaintiff held his position for about two weeks, when he went to New York
State, where he remained for about one year, coming to this state the latter part of December,
1914.
It appears from the testimony that some time in 1915 the plaintiff brought a suit in Washoe
County to have the marriage between himself and his wife annulled, which suit was decided
in favor of the wife. On November 29 of the same year he wrote his wife as follows:
Reno, Nevada, November 29, 1915.
Mrs. Lucy Roberson: The result of the annulment suit and your conduct, particularly the
way you broke your word to me, have made me dislike you more than ever and I have
completely gotten over any regard for you, if I ever had any. However, despite your continued
deception and cruelty, I must face the music, and therefore I ask you to come as my wife and
make your home with me, as the law requires.
41 Nev. 276, 279 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
with me, as the law requires. I can never forgive you, but I am doing what I must do, even
though you have completely ruined my life and prospects. Of course, you will understand that
I cannot live in North Carolina, and that I could not even hold up my head in any town with
you as my wife. And you will also understand that I shall probably have to go to work on
some farm at small wages and little chances of getting ahead. You cannot expect any
assistance from any of my relatives, and you will simply have to live as I live and suffer
whatever hardships I must go through.
If you will live with me as my wife, which I now ask you to do, write me, and I will
arrange for your coming when I am able. Respectfully.
On the trial of the present action the following testimony was given, the questions being
asked by the presiding judge:
Q. Why did you separate from your wife at that time (alluding to the time of their
separation in Raleigh)? A. Why, I didn't feel like I wanted to live with her, and I don't
presume she did with me.
Q. You changed your mind after the jury in the case in this court decided against you? A.
I saw there was nothing else to do. * * *
Q. There is one child, as I understand, born subsequent to the marriage? A. Yes, sir.
In reply to plaintiff's letter above quoted, the defendant wrote at great length, the letter
being full of expressions of love and good-will. We quote the following extract from her
letter:
Ponder well and long these lines before you offer a final answer. Upon that answer hinges
the destiny of us both. God grant that my suggestions and asseverations of love may touch a
responsive chord in your heart, and arouse you from the lethargy under which you so long
have been languishing. Strike the chords of Life's great autoharp whenever you may, and
there comes forth the wails of misery and woe commingling with those of laughter and song.
So the world's history is written, and you and I cannot hope to be exceptions thereto.
41 Nev. 276, 280 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
But, I am done. I have written all that a patient, heartbroken wife and mother could say,
and I can only leave the consequences with Him who doeth all things well.
I shall longingly await your reply, and with outstretched arms and a bruised, yet loving,
heart, am once more willing and anxious to welcome you and your inheritance of wifely
devotion and love.
Imploring God's benedictions upon you, and confident in the ultimate triumph of truth
and justice, I remain.
Sincerely and lovingly, your wife, Lucy.
On the 15th day of December, 1915, plaintiff acknowledged receipt of defendant's letter of
the 8th, again asking her to come and live with him in Nevada, to which the defendant replied
in a letter of January 6, 1916. On February 3, 1916, plaintiff wrote as follows:
Reno, Nevada, February 3, 1916.
My Dear Lucy: I have been thinking over your letter and Mr. Stubbs's letter very
carefully, and all I can say is that, I have not changed my mind, and that I think you and your
lawyer must be trying to put up some job on me, as you did when you were here in Reno.
Nevada is my home, and I cannot and will not go to North Carolina to be thrown in jail.
At least, I can keep out of jail in Nevada so far as you are concerned. Perhaps, I would not be
safe in another state.
I refer you again to my letters of November 29th and December 30th. I do not mean to
write you again on this subject. Sincerely.
On March 20 the defendant replied with a long letter, full of expressions of love, and in
concluding her letter said:
Love to you from your forsaken wife and child. Remember us in your prayer, and pray
that we may be loved and cared for if you do not care for us. May God always bless you and
make you perfectly happy is my prayer. Will you sometimes think of your forsaken wife and
babe and pray for us?
Your brokenhearted wife, yours, Lucy.
41 Nev. 276, 281 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
Appellant contends that the refusal of his wife to come to Reno and live with him
constitutes desertion on her part, and that the lower court erred in not granting him a divorce.
One of the grounds for divorce in this state is willful desertion, at any time, of either party by
the other, for the period of one year. (Rev. Laws, 5838.)
1, 2. As a general proposition of law, we think it may be said that, since the burden of
supporting the family rests upon the husband, he is entitled to choose the place of domicile of
the family; and whenever he gives up his domicile in one place and establishes it in another,
and in good faith urges his wife to live with him at the place where his domicile is thus
established, it is her duty to accept the invitation, and her refusal to do so, without a good and
sufficient reason, amounts to a desertion. (9 R. C. L. 365; 1 Nelson, Div. & Sep. sec. 68; 14
Cyc. 613.) But this is a case somewhat different from the ordinary case where the head of the
family merely decides to change his place of residence. In the case at bar the plaintiff left his
wife in North Carolina and went to New York, for the reason, as he testified, that he did not
feel like he wanted to live with her, and after being in Nevada for some months brought suit
to annul the marriage. Thus it would seem that he was the one who was first guilty of
desertion, and, as he stated in his testimony, offered her a home in Nevada because there was
nothing else to do. In the face of this situation, considering the tone of his letters, should we
reverse the judgment of the trial court? The rule which we believe should control such a
situation is laid down in 9 R. C. L. 373, as follows:
Though one spouse has separated from the other without excuse, if he or she in good faith
seeks a reconciliation, and offers to return, and the latter refuses such overtures, the former is
not to be deemed thereafter, as a general rule, guilty of desertion; and it seems that after such
overtures for a reconciliation have been made in good faith by the spouse offending in the
first instance, the other spouse's refusal to accept them and to resume the marital
cohabitation may constitute desertion on the latter's part.
41 Nev. 276, 282 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
the marital cohabitation may constitute desertion on the latter's part. The spouse offending in
the first instance must, however, exercise all reasonable efforts in good faith to right his or
her wrong, and the other spouse is entitled to a reasonable time for a consideration of the
overtures for reconciliation in order to convert his or her refusal to resume the marital
cohabitation into a desertion by the spouse so refusing.
Was the plaintiff's invitation to the defendant to come and live with him extended in good
faith? The letter of November 29, in which plaintiff opened up the negotiations for his wife's
coming to live with him, was frankly brutal. In the very first line he charges her with conduct
which he said caused him to dislike her more than ever, overlooking the fact that the wife had
a legal right to defend the annulment suit, and that both the court and the jury decided in her
favor. If he, in good faith, invited her to come and live with him, why was it necessary for
him to allude to the past? Would it not have been the natural thing for him to have said
nothing about the past? Throughout the entire letter he makes her acquainted with the fact
that he does not want her to come, but that he is writing her to do so because he must face
the music and do as the law requires, and this, too, in the face of the fact that he had been
guilty of desertion.
It may be that under the circumstances as they existed the law would not require the
plaintiff to love the defendant before he could in good faith extend her an invitation to come
and live with him, but we certainly maintain that he could not extend the left hand to
welcome her and with the right smite her, and then insist that he had in good faith urged her
to come and make her home with him. Still, figuratively speaking, that is exactly what he did.
Not content with expressing his dislike for his wife, and notwithstanding the fact that he was
a stenographer and had a position as such, he went out of his way to discourage his wife from
coming by telling her that he might have to go to work on a farm at small wages, with little
chance of getting ahead.
41 Nev. 276, 283 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
little chance of getting ahead. Ordinarily one who in good faith invites his wife to come and
live with him lays aside all past unpleasantnesses and manifests a spirit befitting the offer. In
our opinion, the so-called invitation to his wife was, in spirit, a warning that he did not want
her to come. By this letter he branded himself as unworthy of the love, confidence, sympathy,
and trustfulness of his wife. Why should she, in the face of such a letter, leave home, friends,
parents, relatives, and the associations of youth, to be at the mercy of one so heartless? Yet in
her letter of reply she did not refuse to come to him; she simply pleaded with him,
endeavoring to rouse within his breast the nobler sentiments of man. But all in vain; for so
late as February 3, 1916, apparently fearing that she might forget it, he again wrote to his
wife, calling attention to the cruel letter of November 29. It looked as though he feared that
time might serve to blot from her memory that frightful letter. He did not want her to forget
that letter; he wanted her to read it again. Is there any right-thinking man who would permit
his daughter to go thousands of miles to one who could display such brutal tendencies as were
manifested in the letter of November 29? Evidently the district judge before whom the case
was tried concluded that the letter in question was not written in good faith, but for the
purpose of paving the way for the divorce suit which followed. We think the language of the
court in McClurg's Appeal, 66 Pa. 373, where the plaintiff requested his wife to come and
live with him after a period of separation, is most appropriate. Said the court:
In view of all these facts, we are not able to say that the court below erred in disregarding
these offers to return. It was a question for the court whether the offers were made in all due
sincerity, and with an intention bona fide to perform his marital duty. An unmeaning
formality cannot always be accepted as a genuine act. It may have the hand of Esau, and yet
betray the voice of Jacob. It must be remembered that the desertion was on his part, not hers,
and was fully proved.
41 Nev. 276, 284 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
In the case of Fishli v. Fishli, 2 Litt. (Ky.) 338, the court said:
Nor do we think that the offer made in the letter he exhibits, and afterwards repeats in his
answer, of supporting her in his own house or elsewhere, calculated to defeat her right to a
divorce. The letter is dated a few weeks before the lapse of two years from the time he had
left her; and if the offer had been of a character, and made in a manner which she ought to
have accepted, it would have been entitled to great consideration, if not to conclusive effect;
but we cannot admit that the offer was of such a character, or made in such a manner as she
ought to have accepted. The offer was not to live with her in the relation of husband and wife;
and as she was, by the nature and terms of the marriage contract, entitled to stand in that
relation to him, she was not bound to accept of an offer to stand in any other relation. But the
manner in which the offer was made is no less objectionable than the matter of it; for, instead
of candidly acknowledging the wrong which he had done her, and promising to atone for it,
as in justice he ought to have done, he accompanies the offer he makes with the same
groundless insinuations against her chastity which he repeats in his answer; and, instead of
making the offer through the medium of some friend of hers, it is sent, as far as appears, by a
stranger, without any instructions to attempt conciliation. The whole circumstances, in fact,
evince that the offer was made, not with a sincere wish that it should be accepted, but that it
was, in truth, a mere artifice, devised with the hope of thereby defeating the right of the
complainant to a divorce, which, in the lapse of a few weeks, would be complete.
The offer on the part of the plaintiff must have been made in good faith, free from
improper qualifications or conditions, and really intended to be carried out in its spirit, if
accepted. (Fulton v. Fulton, 36 Miss. 528.)
In Woolard v. Woolard, 18 App. D. C. 326, in considering a somewhat similar case, the
court says:
To convert her continuation of this voluntary separation into the statutory desertion, it
was, at the very least, incumbent upon him to show that he had, in a conciliatory manner
and in perfect good faith, invited her return without condition.
41 Nev. 276, 285 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
incumbent upon him to show that he had, in a conciliatory manner and in perfect good faith,
invited her return without condition. This proof has not been made.
Notwithstanding the terms of the first letter written to the defendant and the precaution
taken to copy it and insure positive proof of its delivery, it would probably be too harsh to
say, in the light of some explanatory statements of friends in whom the plaintiff confided, that
this letter was not an attempt, in good faith, to bring about reconciliation, but rather to lay the
foundation for a bill of divorce after the expiration of two years. At the same time it is quite
clear to our apprehension that the defendant's failure to acknowledge receipt of the letter and
to accept the invitation as given did not amount to the wilful desertion and abandonment' of
the statute.
The invitation was cold, formal, and upon condition. Demanding her return and the
resumption of her full duty' as his wife, together with the love which she should have' for
him, there was no assurance of continued affection on his part, or indication of regret that he
had insisted upon their separation. Moreover, the general tone of the letter is one of
complaint, and the last sentence is in the nature of a reproach for which there is no foundation
in the evidence respecting the causes of the separation that had taken place. That the
defendant did not accept such invitation, following so speedily after the plaintiff's withdrawal,
is not to be wondered at.
In Heaton v. Heaton, 8 Pa. Dist. Ct. R. 658, where the husband wrote his wife offering to
provide a home for her, the court said:
An earnest consideration of the letter leads us to conclude that it was a mere formal offer,
not made in good faith, but purposely so framed as to prevent acceptance within the time
limited. This determination ends the case. There being no bona-fide offer, there could have
been neither refusal nor unreasonable delay in accepting.
An offer of reconciliation must be made in good faith and not merely to lay a foundation
for a divorce, and must be free from improper qualifications and conditions, and also be
concluded in terms likely to bring about a reconciliation.
41 Nev. 276, 286 (1917) Roberson v. Roberson
must be free from improper qualifications and conditions, and also be concluded in terms
likely to bring about a reconciliation. A cold and formal invitation to return, especially if it
contains unfounded charges, or does not contain an offer to accord the other spouse full
marital rights or an expression of regret for the offerer's own wrongdoing, is not sufficient as
an offer of reconciliation and may be disregarded. (14 Cyc. 619.)
We think the judgment and order of the trial court were clearly right, and should be, and
they are hereby, affirmed.
____________
41 Nev. 287, 287 (1918)
REPORTS OF CASES
DETERMINED BY
THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF NEVADA
____________
JANUARY TERM, 1918
____________
41 Nev. 287, 287 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
[No. 2227]
MARY DE REMER, Respondent, v. CHARLES J.
ANDERSON, Appellant.
[169 Pac. 737]
1. Landlord and TenantReceiptEffect.
A rental receipt for a period longer than that named in the lease is only evidence of money paid, and does
not establish a new consideration necessary to a modification of the lease.
2. Landlord and TenantModifying LeaseConsideration.
Evidence that lessee worked the demised premises from the date of the lease, although the landlord's
horses were pastured on it for several weeks from such date, held not to establish a consideration for an
agreement extending the lease two weeks.
3. EvidenceLeaseParol Evidence.
Land covered by a lease may be identified by parol evidence, but such evidence cannot supply an entire
absence of description.
4. Reformation of InstrumentsReforming ContractFraud.
A written contract, in which an omission occurs through fraud or mistake, will not be reformed, in order
to decree specific performance.
5. EvidenceDescriptionAny Part.
A lease authorizing the lessee to purchase any part of certain premises held too indefinite to be aided
by parol evidence, and to afford the lessee no defense in a forcible entry and detainer action.
6. Vendor and PurchaserDescriptionSufficiency.
An option contract must so describe the property that it can be identified from the instrument itself,
although parol evidence is admissible to show the description's application.
41 Nev. 287, 288 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
7. Appeal and ErrorReviewFindings.
A finding supported by substantial evidence will not be disturbed, where no passion or prejudice on the
trial court's part is indicated.
8. JuryWaiving Right toSetting Aside.
Where the right to a jury trial is waived by oral consent in open court, entered in the minutes pursuant to
Rev. Laws, 5226, setting aside such waiver rests in the trial court's discretion.
9. JuryWaiver of RightSetting Aside.
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to set aside a waiver of jury trial made in open
court, where the application was not made until the trial.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; R. C. Stoddard, Judge.
Unlawful detainer action by Mary De Remer against Charles J. Anderson. Judgment for
plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Affirmed (Coleman, J., dissenting).
M. B. Moore and J. M. Frame, for Appellant:
Judgment in the lower court should have been entered for the appellant, for the reason that
the term to which the lease had been extended by the act of the respondent had not expired
when this action was commenced; the appellant at the time of the commencement of the
action was rightfully in the possession of the premises, and the action was premature. It is
well settled that an action of unlawful detainer will not lie until after the expiration of the
time for which the premises have been leased, or to which the lease may have been extended.
(Ray v. Armstrong, 4 Cal. 208; Rogers v. Hackett, 49 Cal. 121.)
That is not uncertain which can be made certain. The contract having conferred upon
appellant the right to elect as to the part of land he would purchase, it provided a means by
which the portion he might elect to purchase could be ascertained. Mutual agreement of the
parties, the designation by them of a particular portion of a larger tract, and the purchaser
taking possession thereunder, cures any uncertainty in the written agreement, and such a
contract can be enforced in specific performance. (36 Cyc. 595.)
Courts of equity will specifically enforce agreements for the sale of real estate to the
same extent that courts of law will enforce contracts and award damages for their
breach.
41 Nev. 287, 289 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
for the sale of real estate to the same extent that courts of law will enforce contracts and
award damages for their breach. The specific enforcement of such contracts does not depend
upon the circumstances of the particular case, but in all cases will be enforced as a matter of
course where the same is based upon a sufficient consideration and is sufficiently certain in
its terms to enable the court to enforce the specific performance thereof. (Schroeder v.
Gemeinder, 10 Nev. 355; 36 Cyc. 549, 552.)
A. A. Heer and James Glynn, for Respondent:
The appellant's payment of the rent at the time for the alleged extension agreement did not
constitute a new and sufficient consideration for the extension. This payment and the time of
its making were both obligatory upon him by reason of the original contract, and therefore did
not form a consideration for any new and additional contract. (1 Beach on Contracts, secs. 6,
165, 168; 1 Underhill, Landlord and Tenant, 255; Robinson v. Hyer, 17 South. 745;
Hasbrouck v. Winkler, 6 Atl. 22.)
The option, as to the any part at least, was void for uncertainty. The rule in specific
performance cases is that the description must be such as to enable the court to determine
with certainty, with the aid of such extrinsic evidence as is admissible under the rules of
evidence, what part of the property was intended by the parties to be covered thereby. (36
Cyc. 591.) Even if there had been a specification of the number of acres to be covered by the
option, the option would still be void for uncertainty. (36 Cyc. 592.)
Even had appellant been specifically given the right of selection by the contract in
question, it is incumbent upon him to show that his selection is reasonable and not arbitrary;
he must show that the price named by the contract is fair and reasonable for the particular
land selected. The land selected might have been worth many times per acre the value of the
land rejected. (Windsor v. Miner, 124 Cal. 492.) The contract gave appellant no right of
selection. The option portion of the contract is absolutely void and could not be specifically
enforced, for the reason that no land is designated by the words "any part," and there is
no way pointed out by which the land intended can be determined.
41 Nev. 287, 290 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
absolutely void and could not be specifically enforced, for the reason that no land is
designated by the words any part, and there is no way pointed out by which the land
intended can be determined. (Luttrell v. Whitehead, 48 S. E. 691; McSwain v. Ricketson, 58
S. E. 655; Richardson v. Perrin, 66 S. E. 899; Estes v. Winn, 71 S. E. 470; Clayton v.
Newberry, 76 S. E. 63; Wetmore v. Watson, 97 N. E. 237; Greer v. Rhyme, 69 N. C. 247; Brix
v. Ott, 101 Ill. 70; Windsor v. Miner, 124 Cal. 492; 36 Cyc. 592.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This was an action for unlawful detainer. It appears that on the 14th day of March, 1914, a
lease was entered into between the appellant and respondent here, pursuant to which
instrument appellant took possession of the premises, a part of which is involved in this
controversy. The lease on the premises contained, among other things, the following
provisions:
That the said party of the first part, for and in consideration of the amount herein
mentioned and the terms and conditions hereinafter stated, hereby leases and lets to the said
party of the second part all of her home ranch, the same consisting of about sixty acres of land
and lying south of Reno, in Washoe County, Nevada, on the Virginia road to the Corcoran
ditch, and extending on the south from the Haynes ranch northerly to what is known as the
South Side drain ditch. This lease is to be in force and effect and to extend for one year from
the date hereof, or to and including the 14th day of March, 1915.
It is understood and agreed that this lease is extended for another four years or from the
14th day of March, 1915, to and including the 14th day of March, 1919, on the south ten
acres, more or less, which said south ten acres extends from the Haynes ranch north to the
irrigating ditch used by Menke. The said party of the second part is to pay for the use of the
said land herein leased for the first year, or until the 14th day of March, 1915, the price and
sum of $375 in cash. Said $375 is to be paid as follows: $100 on or before April 10, 1914,
and $275 on or before the 1st day of November, 1914.
41 Nev. 287, 291 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
$375 is to be paid as follows: $100 on or before April 10, 1914, and $275 on or before the 1st
day of November, 1914.
It is understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that the said second party is
to pay for the use of the south ten acres for the term of four years and extending from March
14, 1915, until March 14, 1919, the price and sum of $150 per year. Said sum and amount is
to be paid $75 on or before the 10th day of April, and $75 on or before the 1st day of
November, of each and every year during the life of said lease.
It is understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that said first party hereby
gives and grants to the second party an option or right to purchase all or any part of the land
herein leased which lies south of the fence on the south side of the orchard running due west
from the Virginia road to the Corcoran ditch, and extending southerly to the Haynes ranch
and containing twenty acres more or less. This option or right to purchase is for the term of
five years from date hereof, or to and including the 14th day of March, 1919.
It is further understood that, if the said party of the second part does at any time during
the life of this option elect to exercise his right of option and to purchase the said property or
any part thereof, he may do so by paying therefor the price and sum of $300 per acre cash, or
such as he elects to purchase during the life of the option.
On October 29, 1914, pursuant to the terms of the lease, appellant visited the home of
respondent and there paid the amount specified in the lease as the last payment, to wit, $275.
On that date a receipt was given, and this instrument, as admitted in evidence, reads as
follows:
October 29, 1914.
Received of Charles J. Anderson, two hundred and seventy-five dollars, in full for rent on
De Remer ranch for one year to the first of April, 1915.
275.00 Mary De Remer.
41 Nev. 287, 292 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
It will be noted that that which is designated in the lease as the south ten acres, being
demised to the appellant by the terms of the lease for a period of five years, or until March 14,
1919, is not involved in this controversy.
Appellant here contends that the action was prematurely commenced in the court below,
inasmuch as it was instituted prior to the 1st day of April, 1915. In this respect appellant
contends that the time within which appellant should have possession of the premises
pursuant to the terms of the lease was extended by the mutual agreement of the parties, and
that this is evidenced by the receipt of October 29, 1914, containing the words to the first of
April, 1915. The record as it is before us as to all matters of fact presents sharp conflicts in
the evidence. Respondent here, in testifying in the trial court, denied the existence of the
receipt of October 29 in the form in which it was presented; that is, containing the words to
the first of April, 1915. She admitted having signed the receipt, but contended that at the
time of the placing of her signature to the instrument it terminated with the words one year.
1. Primarily it may be said that the receipt here in question was but an evidence of money
paid by appellant and received by respondent. It in no wise referred to the lease pursuant to
which the money was paid, nor did it set up or establish new or different consideration
sufficient to validate a new contract, or one varying the terms of the old. This latter was a
prime essential. (Robinson v. Hyer, 35 Fla. 544, 17 South. 745.) The holding over by the
appellant from the 14th day of March, 1915, to the 1st day of April of that year, could only be
pursuant to a valid agreement or contract by which the terms of the old contract were
extended.
2. It is the contention of appellant that the relation of possession by respondent of the
leased premises for a period of time after making of the lease, to wit, from the 14th day of
March to the 1st day of April, 1914, and the depriviation to appellant of the possession of
the premises for that period, constituted the consideration by reason of which the lease
was extended, as evidenced by the receipt from the 14th day of March 1915, to the 1st
day of April.
41 Nev. 287, 293 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
and the depriviation to appellant of the possession of the premises for that period, constituted
the consideration by reason of which the lease was extended, as evidenced by the receipt from
the 14th day of March 1915, to the 1st day of April. This contention of appellant, if it were
supported by the evidence, might have some stability, for it is a rule eminently recognized
that a consideration emanating from some injury or inconvenience to the one party, or from
some benefit to the other, is a valuable consideration (Conover v. Stillwell, 34 N. J. Law, 54;
Story on Contracts, 429; Parsons on Contracts, 431); but the element of inconvenience or
injury to the one party or the convenience to the other, when the same is controverted, is a
matter of fact, to be determined as any other element. Such may be inquired into, and, if the
inconvenience to the one or the convenience to the other is not supported by the proof, the
element of consideration based upon such facts falls. (Conover v. Stillwell, supra.)
The evidence in this case bearing upon the question of the inconvenience to appellant,
affected by his failure to secure possession of the premises between the 14th day of March,
1914, and the 1st day of April of that year, is, to say the least, unsatisfactory. It was testified
by the respondent and by the witness Brewington that appellant had immediate possession of
the premises on and after the 14th day of March, 1914. In fact, appellant himself testifies to
his having put a man to work on the premises, and nothing is presented by the record which
would indicate that the respondent did anything the nature of which would be to deprive
appellant from taking possession. It is claimed that during the interim between the 14th day of
March and the 1st day of April, 1914, certain horses were pastured on the premises, and that
the respondent had collected the pasturage for the same. If this be true it constitutes a separate
matter, involving a right and a remedy of which appellant could have availed himself.
Everything being considered, we are unable to find wherein the action for unlawful
detainer was prematurely instituted.
41 Nev. 287, 294 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
are unable to find wherein the action for unlawful detainer was prematurely instituted.
3-6. It is the contention of appellant that, inasmuch as the lease pursuant to which he
obtained possession of the premises granted him an option or right to purchase all or any
part of the land * * * leased which lies south of the fence on the south side of the orchard,
etc., and further granted him the right to exercise such option or right to purchase at any time
within five years, or to and including the 14th day of March, 1919, and he having elected to
purchase a certain designated tract included within the premises described and containing
5.21 acres, and having tendered the purchase price thereof pursuant to the terms of the lease,
it was error for the trial court to refuse to allow appellant to prove that he was put into
possession of that portion of the land sued for. Further, it is contended in this respect that,
inasmuch as the judgment for rental was based upon an acreage including this 5.21 acres so
selected, the judgment to that extent was excessive, and the rental fixed exorbitant. In this
respect the respondent argues, and we think correctly, that, had appellant in view of the terms
of the lease, sought to purchase all of the tract of land, the expression all or any part, as set
forth in the lease, might have been a sufficient description; but, inasmuch as appellant elected
to purchase only a fractional portion of the tract of land, to wit, 5.21 acres arbitrarily selected
by him, the language of the lease constituted no description whatever. It is a doctrine well
established with reference to the introduction of oral evidence explanatory of ambiguities in
written instruments of a nature such as the one involved here that, where there is a description
of some sort, which description may be made intelligibly definite by evidence aliunde, parol
evidence may be introduced to identify the land or premises in the contemplation of the
makers of the instrument. But the rule is universal that courts will not, for the purpose of
decreeing a specific performance, reform a written contract in a case of omission through
fraud or mistake.
41 Nev. 287, 295 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
specific performance, reform a written contract in a case of omission through fraud or
mistake. It is doubtful or ambiguous terms only that may be clarified by evidence aliunde.
But the entire absence of terms of description or definition will not be supplied by parol
evidence. (Crockett v. Green, 3 Del. Ch. 466.)
The case of Rampke v. Beuhler, 203 Ell. 384, 67 N. E. 796, affords an illustration of an
application of the rule which we deem applicable here. There the agreement between the
parties reads:
Claus Eggers and Ester Eggers herein agree to deed to William Beuhler, of Harvey, Cook
County, Illinois, four lots, 25 feet by 150 feet deep, in either section 8 or 9, town 36 north,
range 14 east of the third principal meridian, in Cook County, Illinois, for his assistance in
case of Mohr et al. v. Eggers et al., to be on the road north side of said land.
The court, in reviewing the question of law applicable to the admissibility of parol
evidence for the purpose of establishing the tract of land, said:
A description of land may be sufficient if a surveyor can locate it with or without the aid
of extrinsic evidence, and where a sufficient description is given, parol evidence may be
resorted to to locate the premises, but where there is no description, and the uncertainty is
patent, parol proof cannot be permitted to show what was intended.
Continuing, the court says:
In this case the lots agreed to be conveyed could not be ascertained or identified, and, as a
matter of fact, had no existence. * * * In specific performance of a contract the province of
the court is to enforce the contract which the parties have made, and not to make a contract
for them and then enforce it.
In the case of Reed v. Lowe, 8 Utah, 39, 29 Pac. 740, the agreement pursuant to which
specific performance was sought to be enforced read thus:
Also do I sell to N. K. Ardahl a part of my lot on the bench, size 6x10 rods deep, to be
taken either way from my house, for the sum of $75 per rod, or, if it is taken 6x20 rods,
for the sum of $100 per rod; in either case on the following agreement," etc.
41 Nev. 287, 296 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
bench, size 6x10 rods deep, to be taken either way from my house, for the sum of $75 per rod,
or, if it is taken 6x20 rods, for the sum of $100 per rod; in either case on the following
agreement, etc.
The court, in passing upon the matter, held, in conformity with the general rule, that a
description is regarded as sufficiently definite and certain when it contains a reference from
which it can be made certain. The description there was held to contain no reference from
which definiteness could be established. The contract was held void from uncertainty. That
case is an expression of the rule that parol evidence is not admissible to supply that which is
lacking in the contract by reason of which the indefiniteness resulted.
In the case of Knight v. Alexander, 42 Or. 521, 71 Pac. 657, the description in the
agreement was 100 acres of land off the west end of a certain tract of land lying along Lake
Labish. There the court, while reviewing many cases applicable to the question here, said:
Courts do not permit parol evidence to be given to describe the property intended to be
included in the contract, and then apply such description to the terms thereof.
To the same effect are the cases of Omaha Loan & Trust Co. v. Goodman, 62 Neb. 197, 86
N. W. 1082, and Nippolt v. Kammon, 39 Minn. 372, 40 N. W. 266, and Wieger v. Franck, 56
Mich. 200, 22 N. W. 303.
Following the rule of the admissibility of parol evidence under such circumstances as laid
down by courts and chancellors in so many instances, the trial court in this instance ruled
correctly in excluding evidence bearing upon the selection of a 5.21-acre tract contended by
appellant to be excluded from the effect of this suit.
As we have already intimated, had the appellant exercised the option to purchase the entire
tract involved in this controversy, and in so exercising had complied with the terms of the
lease, a different question would be involved. The term any part, used in the lease, having
no fixity as to amount, position, boundary, or form, was so indefinite that parol evidence
could not, under the rule, be resorted to for its establishment.
41 Nev. 287, 297 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
so indefinite that parol evidence could not, under the rule, be resorted to for its establishment.
We are referred by appellant to the case of Schroeder v. Gemeinder, 10 Nev. 355. There
Mr. Justice Hawley, speaking for this court, referred approvingly to the decision of the
Supreme Court of California in the case of De Rutte v. Muldrow, 16 Cal. 513, wherein that
court had before it a controversy in which was involved an instrument of lease containing the
provision:
That the said Muldrow shall have the privilege of purchasing any part of said land during
the continuation of this lease, at its value in preference to any other persons.
It will be observed that neither the Schroeder case nor the De Rutte-Muldrow case is of
assistance to us in determining the question here involved. Indeed, it may be said that neither
of these cases holds contrary to the view we have heretofore expressed in conformity with the
authorities cited. In neither of these cases does the court attempt to discuss the validity of the
contract from the standpoint of uncertainty as to the premises described. In the Schroeder case
the premises were specifically and definitely fixed by the description, while in the Muldrow
case the controversy turned on the right of the lessee to purchase any part of the premises
when such part had been designated and offered for sale to third parties. The case rather
turned on the right of one to make such contract. The question of definiteness of the premises
involved was not before the court, as we read the decision.
The uncertainty existing with reference to the option sought to be established by the lease
here in question exists not only with reference to the description and amount of the land to be
selected, but equally so with reference to the manner of selection or as to who was to make
such selection. Appellant contends that by this language the meaning conveyed was that he
alone had the right to make the selection as to the part which he would elect to purchase. But
the language used fails to affirm this contention.
41 Nev. 287, 298 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
to affirm this contention. It might with equal propriety be claimed by respondent that she
should make the selection, and under such circumstances would it be contended that appellant
was bound to purchase the part selected by respondent for sale at the price stipulated? The
appellant is not designated as the party to make the selection any more than is the respondent.
The indefiniteness as to this phase has more than one aspect.
Our attention has also been directed to the case of Fleishman v. Woods, 135 Cal. 256, 67
Pac. 276, wherein the Supreme Court of California dealt with the question here presented,
and we deem that case worthy of comment, only for the purposes, however, of differentiation.
In that case Fleishman brought his action to quiet title to a certain ten-acre tract of land. At a
subsequent date the defendant, Woods, filed a cross-complaint praying for the specific
performance of a certain contract relating thereto. This contract, made the basis of the
cross-complaint, was entered into between the plaintiff, Fleishman, and a third party, and
provided that upon the third party's performing certain conditions he should, at the end of
three years, become entitled to a conveyance of 4-1/2 acres of the west half of said 10 acres,
to be selected by the plaintiff. The court, in dealing with the specific question, said:
There is no uncertainty as to the manner in which the selection is required to be made,
nor do we see any lack of power in a court of equity to compel the selection to be made.
It will be noted that by the cross-complaint in that case the defendant sought to compel the
plaintiff to do that which by his contract he had agreed to do, namely, to select the number of
acres designated. In the matter at bar the party to make the selection is unnamed and
unindicated. Where the terms and conditions of the contract between the parties here at all
analogous to those referred to by the court of California in the Fleishman-Woods case, we
would have no hesitancy in concurring in the rule there asserted.
41 Nev. 287, 299 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
in the rule there asserted. Whatever may be said as to the doctrine laid down in Fleishman v.
Woods, supra, the correct rule, and that which is in conformity with greater weight of
authority, is to be found in the case of Eaton v. Wilkins, 163 Cal. 742, 127 Pac. 71, where the
Supreme Court of California, speaking through Mr. Justice Melvin, said:
The description in the contract must be sufficient to bind interested parties, and cannot be
made to depend for its very existence upon the subsequent action of one of them.
Our attention has been directed to the case of Repetto v. Baylor, 61 N. J. Eq. 501, 48 Atl.
774. The case was there brought before the chancellor on motion to dismiss under rule. On
such motion it was held that the facts alleged in the bill of complaint were to be taken as true.
In the light of this rule the court held that specific performance would be required; but the
contract as set forth, together with the allegations of the bill in equity, established an
agreement between the parties whereby the vendor was to convey 138 lots, the same to be
chosen and designated by the said R., and said lots to remain as now marked upon map made
by Morris Hillman, etc.; further, that at the time of making the contract the vendee, by the
vendor's direction, marked on the map designated the 138 lots referred to in the contract. In
that case the contract entered by the parties, together with the map setting forth the marked
selections, became a part of the bill in equity, and the court said:
In the contract and map exhibited in the amended bill it appears that certain ascertained
lots were originally selected by both parties, and that there was an agreement of both that, in
case any of them had been previously sold, one party should choose an equal number from
those indicated in the same blocks to take their places. Here was an exact designation of a
number of lots, and an agreement whereby, in case any selected could not be conveyed for
want of title, one party only should choose enough other lots from the defined limits to fill
the number.
41 Nev. 287, 300 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
should choose enough other lots from the defined limits to fill the number. The minds of the
parties had come to a final agreement upon the subject-matter of the sale; the vendor
agreeing, in a named contingency, that the vendee should select what a part of it should be.
Nothing remained to be done between them as negotiating contractors. It was always in the
power of either to enforce the contractthe vendor, by requiring payment of the price; the
vendee, by selecting the number of lots necessary to supply the deficiency and requiring
conveyance.
The rule, as asserted by some commentators and courts, that a contract giving one of the
parties the right of selection of the lot or lots to be conveyed is not incapable of specific
performance, would be applicable here, if the conditions of the contract or the facts presented
were in keeping with the rule. In the matter at bar the absence of designation in the contract as
to who was to make the selection constitutes an element which removes this case from the
rule referred to.
We would close the question with the assertion of a rule which, directly applicable and
eminently just under the requirement of the statute of frauds, will serve to recapitulate our
views as heretofore set forth: The description of real property in an option contract must be so
set forth in the writing that it can be identified from the instrument itself. Parol evidence is
admissible for no other purpose than to show the application of the description, as given in
the instrument, to the particular property intended to be conveyed by and described therein.
Exclusion of all other property from the effect of the agreement is primarily the purpose of
admitting such evidence at all. Not for the purpose of furnishing or supplying a description is
parol evidence admissible, but only to identify that which the agreement describes. (Barnes v.
Rea, 219 Pa. 287, 68 Atl. 839; Heyward v. Bradley, 179 Fed. 325, 102 C. C. A. 509; Wadick
v. Mace, 191 N. Y. 1, 83 N. E. 571; Bauer v. Lumaghi Co., 209 Ill. 316, 70 N. E. 634;
Broadway Hospital and Sanitarium v. Decker, 47 Wash.
41 Nev. 287, 301 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
Hospital and Sanitarium v. Decker, 47 Wash. 586, 92 Pac. 445; Tippins v. Phillips, 123 Ga.
415, 51 S. E. 410; Eaton v. Wilkins, supra.)
It is our conclusion here that that portion of the lease which attempted to confer an option
or right to purchase any part of the leased premises herein involved, being void for
indefiniteness, was therefore not enforceable; and evidence offered for the purpose of
establishing selection by the appellant of a fractional tract included within the whole of the
premises leased and less than all of such premises, as well as evidence going to establish
tender of money as payment for the same, was properly excluded by the trial court.
The trial court found that the monthly value of the rental and profits of the premises
involved and held over by appellant was the sum of $62.49. The court found, among other
things, that while the appellant was in possession of the premises, and holding the same over,
he caused large portions of the land, bearing valuable crops, to be frequently inundated and
flooded with water, and had damaged the premises by allowing large quantities of water to
remain standing on the land, thereby impairing its productive qualities. The court assessed the
damages, including the rental value of the land, at $702.08. There is a substantial conflict
appearing in the record as to the element of rental value of the premises and as to the damage
accruing thereto by the acts of appellant.
7. In view of the long-established rule of this court not to disturb a finding of the trial
court on a matter of fact, where there is substantial evidence to support it, and further, in view
of the fact that in assessing the damages and fixing the rental value we find nothing which
would indicate the slightest element of passion or prejudice on the part of the trial court, we
do not find ourselves justified in doing other than sustaining the judgment rendered.
8, 9. Error is assigned to the action of the trial court in denying appellant a trial by jury. It
appears that at the time of the setting of the case, and approximately two weeks before
the date of trial, duly authorized counsel for both appellant and respondent appeared in
open court and waived a jury trial.
41 Nev. 287, 302 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
the time of the setting of the case, and approximately two weeks before the date of trial, duly
authorized counsel for both appellant and respondent appeared in open court and waived a
jury trial. Nothing further appears to have been done in this respect until the day and at the
hour set for the trial, at which latter time new and additional counsel appeared for appellant
and asked for trial by jury, which request was denied. The constitution of this state provides
(art. 1, sec. 3):
The right of trial by jury shall be secured to all and remain inviolate forever; but a jury
trial may be waived by the parties in all civil cases in the manner to be prescribed by law. * *
*
Section 5226, Revised Laws, being section 284 of our civil practice act, provides:
Trial by jury may be waived by the several parties to an issue of fact in actions arising on
contract, or for the recovery of specific real or personal property, with or without damages,
and with the assent of the court, in other actions, in the manner following:
1. By failing to demand the same at or before the time the cause is set for trial or to
appear at the trial.
2. By written consent, in person or by attorney, filed with the clerk.
3. By oral consent in open court, entered in the minutes.
Were this other than a case for the recovery of specific real property with damages for
wrongful retention, we might, in view of the language of the statute, regard the question
differently. The waiver entered into by counsel for the appellant through his attorney in the
first instance was such as is contemplated by subdivision 3 of section 5226, Revised Laws;
that is, oral consent in open court entered in the minutes. Trial by jury having been waived
in the first instance by counsel for appellant, it was within the discretion of the trial court to
thereafter, upon motion or request, disregard or set aside the waiver theretofore entered and
try the case by jury. Hence what we are called upon to determine here is rather as to whether
the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to set aside the waiver of jury theretofore
entered.
41 Nev. 287, 303 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
discretion in refusing to set aside the waiver of jury theretofore entered. While in our
judgment the better policy under such circumstances, if no material injury or delay were
caused or occasioned, would be for the trial court to have set aside or disregarded the waiver
and called in a jury, we find no ground upon which to hold that the trial court in this instance
was guilty of abuse of discretion in refusing so to do. (Ferrea v. Chabot, 121 Cal. 233, 53
Pac. 689, 1092; Swasey v. Adair, 88 Cal. 179, 25 Pac. 1119.)
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Coleman, J., dissenting:
I dissent.
The agreement entered into between the parties described in detail the entire tract of land
leased to appellant, and gave him an option or right to purchase all or any part of the land
herein leased which lies south of the fence, * * * containing twenty acres, more or less. It is
a general rule that contracts capable of being made certain will be specifically enforced. (26
Ency. Law, 2d ed. p. 38.) Since the twenty-acre tract is sufficiently described, two questions
arise: First, did the agreement confer upon the lessee the right to select? Secondly, was the
5.21 acres selected by the lessee capable of being made certain? The twenty-acre tract being
clearly described, there can be no doubt in my mind but that the 5.21 acres selected by the
lessee was capable of being made certain, and was made certain by the acts of the lessee. I
think this view is sustained by the authorities. (Fleishman v. Woods, 135 Cal. 256, 67 Pac.
276; 36 Cyc. 595, note 4; 26 Ency. Law, 2d ed. 36.) I am also of the opinion that no other
construction can be put upon the language used except that the lessee should have the right to
select. If he be given the option to purchase any part of the twenty-acre tract, it is evident to
my mind that the parties must have contemplated that the mental process of selection should
be exercised by the lessee.
41 Nev. 287, 304 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
As to the case of Eaton v. Wilkins, which is quoted from in the prevailing opinion, the
option agreement gave no further description of the land than our land of 1,060 acres. It did
not name the county and state in which it was situated. The court in that case said:
The contract here pleaded is one which in and of itself gives no clue to the property
involved, and the complaint states no facts which would clarify the obscure references therein
contained.
It was in view of this situation that the court said:
The description in the contract must be sufficient to bind interested parties, and cannot be
made to depend for its very existence upon the subsequent action of one of them.
The court evidently intended to lay down a rule applicable to the facts of that particular
case. I am of the opinion that the language of Lord Halsbury, which we quoted in Jensen v.
Pradere, 39 Nev. 466, 159 Pac. 55, is of striking application in construing the language last
quoted. The quotation alluded to reads:
Every judgment must be read as applicable to the particular facts proved, or assumed to
be proved, since the generality of the expressions which may be found there are not intended
to be expositions of the whole law, but governed and qualified by the particular facts of the
case in which such expressions are to be found. A case is only an authority of what it actually
decides. I entirely deny that it can be quoted for a proposition that may seem to follow
logically from it.
If the court (in Eaton v. Wilkins) had not used the language referred to in this sense, I am
of the opinion that it would have expressly overruled the case of Fleishman v. Woods, supra.
If the Eaton case is to be construed as contended in the prevailing opinion, then should A give
B a lease for one year upon two adjoining town lots, both of which are described by the
number designated in the recorded plat of the town, and also by metes and bounds, and in the
agreement of lease an option is given B to purchase the entire tract leased, or either of the
lots described, as he may elect, an action for specific performance would not lie in case he
elected to purchase one of the lots only, because his right to do so would depend upon the
"subsequent action of one of" the parties, namely, the designating of the lot he elected to
buy.
41 Nev. 287, 305 (1918) De Remer v. Anderson
either of the lots described, as he may elect, an action for specific performance would not lie
in case he elected to purchase one of the lots only, because his right to do so would depend
upon the subsequent action of one of the parties, namely, the designating of the lot he
elected to buy.
I cannot give my assent to any such rule.
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
____________
41 Nev. 305, 305 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
[No. 2266]
ALEXANDER C. FORSYTH, Respondent, v. J. H. HEWARD, as Administrator of the
Estate of JANE FORSYTH, Deceased; GEORGE ROBSON, JANE LAW, JAMES
PATTISON, ANDREW PATTISON, JOHN PATTISON, J. H. HEWARD, THERESA
HEWARD, and SOPHIA G. BLUM, Appellants.
[170 Pac. 21]
1. WitnessesCompetencyStatute.
Under Rev. Laws, 5419, declaring that no person shall be allowed to testify when the other party to the
transaction is dead, or when the opposite party to the action or the person for whose immediate benefit the
action or proceeding is prosecuted or defended, is the representative of a deceased person when the facts to
be proven transpired before the death of such deceased person, testimony of the mother of plaintiff who
was adopted by the testatrix and her husband, in a suit against the testatrix's executor to enforce specific
performance of alleged contracts by which plaintiff was to inherit any property of which testatrix and her
husband might die possessed, it appearing that testatrix's husband conveyed all his property to her, as to
matters relative to the alleged agreement transpiring before the death of the testatrix, all of which tended to
establish the alleged contract of adoption, is inadmissible.
2. WitnessesCompetencyStatute.
In such case testimony by plaintiff's own father concerning acts and conduct of testatrix and her husband
when they went to his house to get plaintiff is also inadmissible under Rev. Laws, 5419; for it would be a
mere evasion to allow testimony as to acts when testimony as to transactions with deceased persons is
inadmissible.
41 Nev. 305, 306 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
3. WillsAgreement to MakeEvidenceSufficiency.
In a suit to specifically enforce a contract that plaintiff who was adopted by testatrix and her husband
should inherit whatever property they might die possessed of, evidence held insufficient to show more than
the adoption of plaintiff, and not to establish the agreement as to the inheriting of property.
4. AdoptionEffectRight of Adopted Child.
An adopted child acquires no greater right of inheritance than a natural child, and the adoption does not
deprive the adoptive parent of the right to dispose of his property by will.
5. Specific PerformanceEvidenceSufficiency.
One seeking specific performance of a contract whereby he was to inherit the property of others has the
burden of proof, and specific performance will be denied unless the contract is established by clear and
satisfactory evidence.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; J. Emmett Walsh, Judge.
Action by Alexander C. Forsyth against J. H. Heward, as administrator of the estate of
Jane Forsyth, deceased, and others. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendants appeal.
Reversed, and remanded for new trial.
James T. Boyd and Ayres & Gardiner, for Appellants:
An agreement to adopt is not of itself an agreement to convey. By the weight of authority
the laws permitting the adoption of children confer on them simply the ordinary rights of
inheritance, and do not affect the power of the adoptive parent to dispose of his property by
will. (1 C. J. 1396.) An agreement to adopt does not prevent the person making the
agreement from disposing by will of all his property to other persons than the child to be
adopted. (1 C. J. 1378; Melaney v. Cameron, 161 Pac. 1180; Townsend v. Perry, 164 N. Y.
Supp. 441.) A contract to adopt a child is one thing and a contract to make a will in the
child's favor is another. If a child is adopted it is entitled to inherit as an heir, if the adopting
party should die intestate; but it is liable to be cut out by will, as one's own child is.
(Grantham v. Gossett, 182 Mo. 651; Davis v. Hendricks, 12 S. W. 887; Westerman v.
Schmidt, 80 Mo. App. 344; Dickin v. McKinley, 163 Ill. 318; 1 C. J. 1379.) Under our statute,
as elsewhere, an adopted child's rights are no greater than those of a natural child. (Rev.
Laws, 5830.)
41 Nev. 305, 307 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
Not only the plaintiff's contract, but its terms, must be established by evidence which is
clear, satisfactory, cogent and convincing. Some states refuse the remedy altogether. (36 Cyc.
675, 692; 1 C. J. 1379; Strange v. Crowley, 91 Mo. 287; Taylor v. Von Schraeder, 107 Mo.
206; Richardson v. Orth, 40 Or. 252; Jones v. Patrick, 145 Fed. 440; Hubbard v. Hubbard,
140 Mo. 300; Wolfinger v. McFarland, 67 N. J. Eq. 687; Ross v. Ross, 137 N. W. 1034.)
Evidence in support of a decree for specific performance must leave no room for
reasonable doubt in the mind of the chancellor. (Missouri P. R. Co. v. McCarty, 97 Mo.
214.)
In cases where there is a will a contract to adopt will not upset it. An agreement to make
one an heir is not sufficient. Plaintiff must prove a contract to convey or leave property.
(Davis v. Hendricks, 12 S. W. 887; Asbury v. Hicklin, 81 S. W. 393.)
The trial court erred in permitting plaintiff to testify, over objection, to any matters which
happened before the death of Jane Forsyth. Defendant Heward, as executor, and others as
devisees, are the representatives of a deceased person. Plaintiff being the opposite party could
not testify. Disqualification goes to witness and excludes him from testifying to anything
except incidental and preliminary matters. (Higgs v. Hansen, 13 Nev. 357; Rev. Laws,
5419; Roney v. Buckland, 4 Nev. 45, 55, 57; Burgess v. Helm, 24 Nev. 242.)
That the law will not allow testimony of circumstances by witnesses disqualified to testify
directly is thoroughly established. (Parker v. Ballard, 51 S. E. 465; Cash v. Kirkham, 55 S.
W. 18; Lodge v. Train, 63 Atl. 233; Cowan v. Musgrave, 35 N. W. 496; Harring v. Harring,
62 N. W. 666; Knight v. Everett, 67 S. E. 328; Knight v. Russ, 19 Pac. 698; Ruley v. Sweeney,
60 S. W. 574.)
Dixon & Miller and W. L. Hacker, for Respondent:
The complaint sets out certain contracts made between the natural parents of the boy,
Alexander Forsyth, and the deceased, John Forsyth, and his wife, Jane Forsyth, whereby the
natural parents surrendered and gave up their son to the said Forsyths, who agreed and
promised that they would adopt the boy as their own son, and that on their death he
would become entitled to and inherit and have all the property of which they might be
possessed at the time of their death.
41 Nev. 305, 308 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
that they would adopt the boy as their own son, and that on their death he would become
entitled to and inherit and have all the property of which they might be possessed at the time
of their death. Plaintiff must prove the contracts, but it is not necessary that they be proved in
any particular manner. Such agreements, either express or implied, are enforcible, and they
may be established by circumstances. The adoptive parent may deprive himself of the power
to dispose of his property by a contract binding him to give the adopted child a certain share
of his property. An agreement, either express or implied, to give the adopted child a certain
portion of the adoptive parent's property will be enforced. (1 C. J. 1378, 1379, 1396.)
Contract to make the child equal heir with other children will be enforced. (Nowack v.
Berger, 31 L. R. A. 810.) An agreement to make the adopted child the sole heir of the
adopting parents may be enforced, although the instrument is insufficient to create an
adoption. (Fuselier v. Masse, 4 La. 423.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Plaintiff by this action seeks the specific performance of two alleged contracts. The
complaint alleges that the plaintiff is the issue of the marriage of Wm. T. Bacon and Harriet
G. Bacon, now Harriet G. Murdock; that two agreements of adoption were entered into
whereby it was understood and agreed that John T. Forsyth and his wife, Jane Forsyth,
would adopt him [plaintiff] as their own son, and promised and agreed that on their deaths
he would become entitled to and inherit and have all of the property of which they might be
possessed at the time of their deaths; that in pursuance of such agreement plaintiff was given
to the said Forsyths, and that they gave him their name, reared and educated him; that said
Forsyths made one or more futile attempts to adopt plaintiff; that John Forsyth died in 1907,
but prior to his death conveyed his property to his wife, Jane Forsyth, who died in 1913.
41 Nev. 305, 309 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
The answer denies all of the material allegations pertaining to an agreement to adopt and
of plaintiff's right to take the property of the Forsyths, and pleads affirmatively that Jane
Forsyth, prior to her death, made and executed her last will and testament, whereby she
disposed of her property to parties other than the plaintiff, and nominated and appointed the
defendant Heward as executor of her estate; that said will had been admitted to probate; and
that the defendant Heward had qualified as executor thereof.
1. It is insisted on behalf of defendants that the court erred in permitting the natural
mother of the plaintiff to testify in his behalf relative to certain matters and things which
transpired before the death of John and Jane Forsyth and pertaining to the contract sought to
be established by the plaintiff, upon the ground that such testimony should have been
excluded in pursuance of section 5419, Revised Laws, which provides:
No person shall be allowed to testify:
1. When the other party to the transaction is dead.
2. When the opposite party to the action, or the person for whose immediate benefit the
action or proceeding is prosecuted or defended is the representative of a deceased person,
when the facts to be proven transpired before the death of such deceased person.
This court, in Torp v. Clemons, 37 Nev. 483, 142 Pac. 1115, in considering a very similar
question, laid down what we believe to be a sound doctrine, and one which must guide us in
determining the question now before us. In that case, in determining the propriety of
admitting testimony of a witness as to transactions between himself and a deceased person, it
was held that the following elements must concur and be apparent:
First, the witness must belong to a class which the statute renders incompetent; second,
the party against whom the testimony is to be offered must belong to a class protected by the
statute; and third, the testimony itself must be of a nature forbidden by the statute.
41 Nev. 305, 310 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
The question, then, is: Does the testimony admitted in evidence violate the rule
enunciated? Plaintiff's mother was permitted to testify to numerous circumstances which
transpired prior to and after the plaintiff went to live with the Forsyths, in which the Forsyths
played a part, all tending to establish the alleged contract of adoption, and among such
testimony was evidence to the effect that, at the request of the Forsyths, she went with them
and the plaintiff to a notary public to have adoption papers prepared, and was informed by the
notary that such papers would have to be prepared by another. We think the court erred in not
sustaining an objection to this testimony, for the reason that the witness testified squarely to a
circumstance growing out of an alleged request of the deceased parties, who are dead and
cannot give testimony concerning the same, or as to that which it is contended transpired as a
consequence thereof.
2. Error is also assigned to the ruling of the court upon an objection to certain testimony
given by the natural father of the plaintiff concerning certain acts and conduct of the Forsyths
when they went to the house of the witness to get the plaintiff, tending to establish plaintiff's
cause of action. Testimony of this character is as much a violation of the letter and spirit of
the statute as to permit testimony of what was said by the deceased parties. It is an old saying
that, Actions speak louder than words, and it was clearly error on the part of the court to
permit one of the parties to the alleged contract to testify to anything which transpired
between the parties tending to establish plaintiff's cause of action, in view of the fact that the
other parties were dead.
3. It is next contended that the evidence does not sustain the judgment. From a careful
reading of the record we are of the view that the trial judge, in his written opinion, stated the
evidence as strongly in favor of the plaintiff as it will permit, and hence we quote at length all
that is contained in that opinion relative to the evidence in the case.
41 Nev. 305, 311 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
length all that is contained in that opinion relative to the evidence in the case. It reads:
In September, 1885, when the first contract was entered into, as alleged in the amended
complaint, the custody of the plaintiff was surrendered by his mother to John F. Forsyth and
Jane Forsyth, his wife, in whose custody he remained continuously, except during the period
he was with his father. It was while he was in the custody of his father in 1890, at Reno,
Nevada, the second alleged contract was entered into, and the custody of the plaintiff was
surrendered by his father to John F. Forsyth and Jane Forsyth, his wife, in whose custody he
remained. John F. Forsyth died on February 6, 1907, but prior to his death he conveyed all of
his property to Jane Forsyth, his wife. Jane Forsyth died on April 26, 1913, leaving a last will
and testament, which has been admitted to probate in this court, in which no provision was
made for plaintiff, and the said Jane Forsyth bequeathed to other parties the property that
came to her from her husband, the said John F. Forsyth.
The evidence in this case shows that John F. Forsyth, Jane Forsyth, his wife, plaintiff, and
his mother called to see Richard Martin, when plaintiff was very small, with reference to
having adoption papers prepared and both of the Forsyths stated to him they were there for
the purpose of adopting the boy; that his mother gave him to them to adopt, as they had no
children of their own, and called the boy theirs.
H. Lund testified the Forsyths said they took the boy to raise; that they took to adopt as
their own.
H. R. Brown testified Mr. Forsyth introduced plaintiff to him as his son.
Ross Peterson testified of Mr. Forsyth speaking of plaintiff as his boy.
Herbert E. Watts testified Mrs. Forsyth told his mother they had adopted the boy.
William Watts testified he had a conversation with Mrs.
41 Nev. 305, 312 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
Mrs. Forsyth directly after 1885, in which she said she liked the boy and wanted to keep him
as long as he lived and as long as they lived.
To Mary A. Dickinson the Forsyths referred to plaintiff as their own and said he was
there to stay. Both said the boy was theirs; had taken him to raise; spoke of how much they
thought of him, how handy he was, and how much he could do for them; also that in a
conversation with Mrs. Forsyth she said that Mr. Forsyth said the affairs were settled now,
and for her to see that he was not forgotten; that what was left was supposed to be his; that his
wish was for Alex to get the property, and wanted Mrs. Forsyth not to forget him. This was
said after Mr. Forsyth's death.
It appears from the time plaintiff went to the Forsyths he has always gone by the name of
Forsyth and always called them Father and Mother. The fact that he was not their son was not
mentioned to him, and it does not appear when he first learned they were not his parents.
The fact in issue is whether either or both of the contracts alleged in the amended
complaint were made. Plaintiff contends he has established the contracts pleaded by him in
his amended complaint and the full and faithful performance of all on his part thereof, while
defendants contend that no such contract or contracts have been established. It is essential
that a contract be established substantially as claimed by plaintiff. Such a contract may be
established by circumstances, but these must be strong and satisfactory.
On two different occasions, as it appears from the testimony, the Forsyths were ready and
willing to have the necessary and proper adoption papers taken out, and plaintiff's parents
should have seen to it that it was attended to. A little attention to the matter then on their part
would have avoided the trouble and litigation at this date, and the reason given by plaintiff's
mother when she found it would be necessary to go to Susanville, Cal., for this purpose was
that she was postmistress and could not get away, but on the second occasion, in 1S90, no
sufficient excuse can be offered by the father of plaintiff for not seeing to it and having
the matter properly attended to.
41 Nev. 305, 313 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
in 1890, no sufficient excuse can be offered by the father of plaintiff for not seeing to it and
having the matter properly attended to. If plaintiff's parents were in this respect derelict in
their duty, would it be right to cause the plaintiff to suffer for their seeming negligence, for in
a case like this, where the alleged agreement was for the adoption of a young child, who was
taken into the family and raised, the child could not be expected to see to the issuance of
adoption papers.
It also appears that first one and then the other of the Forsyths stated to disinterested
parties that plaintiff was their boy; they had taken him to adopt, and even went so far as to say
they had adopted him; also what they had would be his. Then in 1890, when plaintiff was in
the custody of his father, they threatened legal proceedings in order to regain his custody. The
testimony covers a period of thirty years, and it is not likely the witnesses could remember
everything that was said during that time.
The evidence upon which plaintiff relies to prove the alleged contracts consists of
admissions and declarations made by John F. Forsyth and Jane Forsyth, his wife, during their
lifetime. The value of admissions as evidence depends on the circumstances under which and
to whom and when they were made. Here it appears, when plaintiff was very small, in
company with his mother and John F. Forsyth and Jane Forsyth, his wife, they called upon
Richard Martin, who was a notary public, living at Summit, Cal., for the purpose of having
him prepare adoption papers; the Forsyths stating they were there for the purpose of adopting
the boy who had been given to them by his mother for that purpose. They had no children of
their own, and were about 40 years old at the time.
From a reading of the record, as well as from this statement of the evidence, we are of the
opinion that no stronger deduction can be made than that a contract of adoption simply was
entered into. There is no evidence tending to show an agreement to the effect that plaintiff
should become the owner of whatever property the Forsyths might own at the time of their
death.
41 Nev. 305, 314 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
Forsyths might own at the time of their death. The strongest testimony tending to sustain such
a contention was that given by the witness Mary A. Dickinson, to the effect that Mrs. Forsyth
said to the witness that Mr. Forsyth had said to Mrs. Forsyth:
The affairs were settled now, and for her to see he [the plaintiff] was not forgotten; that
what was left was supposed to be his; that his wish was for Alex to get the property, and
wanted Mrs. Forsyth not to forget him.
But this is not evidence of a contract that he should become the owner of property upon
the death of the Forsyths. If it indicates anything, it is simply that Mr. Forsyth thought, in
view of the relation which had existed, the plaintiff deserved consideration at their hands. In
concluding his opinion, the trial judge said:
From the testimony introduced on the trial of this case it clearly appears that John F.
Forsyth and Jane Forsyth, his wife, entered into the contracts with the plaintiff's father and
mother for his adoption, and that plaintiff is entitled to a specific performance of the same,
which entitled him to the property owned by Jane Forsyth at the time of her death, and that
findings and decree should be prepared accordingly, and for costs of suit.
4. From this it will be seen that the judge based his conclusion that plaintiff was entitled
to a decree of specific performance upon the theory that a contract of adoption simply had
been entered into, and not upon the theory that he should become the absolute owner of the
property of the Forsyths upon their death. The courts are almost unanimous in holding that an
adopted child acquires no greater right than a natural child, that of inheritance, and that such
adoption does not deprive the adoptive parent of the right to dispose of his property by will,
unless he is deprived of such power by a contract binding him to give his property to the
adopted child. (1 C. J., sec. 122, p. 1396.)
5. But conceding, for the purposes of this case, that the findings of the court are
sufficient to sustain the judgment, we are clearly of the opinion that the findings are
against the evidence.
41 Nev. 305, 315 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
the findings of the court are sufficient to sustain the judgment, we are clearly of the opinion
that the findings are against the evidence. It is a well-established rule that the burden of
showing, by clear and satisfactory evidence, a contract which it is sought to have specifically
enforced, rests upon the party who sets up and asks its enforcement, and unless this is done
specific performance will not be decreed. (Strange v. Crowley, 91 Mo. 287, 2 S. W. 421;
Taylor v. Von Schraeder, 107 Mo. 206, 16 S. W. 679.)
The Supreme Court of Oregon, in a suit for the specific performance of a contract to will
property, quotes approvingly the following language:
In this class of cases,' says Barrett, J., in Gall v. Gall (Sup.) 19 N. Y. Supp. 332, 333,
the ordinary rules which govern in actions to compel the specific performance of contracts,
and which furnish reasonable safeguards against frauds, should be rigidly applied. These rules
require that the contract be certain and definite in all [of] its parts; that it be mutual, and
founded upon an adequate consideration; that it be established by the clearest and most
convincing evidence. Even then, when the contract limits a man's right to dispose of his
property by will, it is regarded with suspicion, and enforced only when it is apparent that the
hand of equity is required to prevent a fraud upon the promisee.' (Richardson v. Orth, 40 Or.
263, 66 Pac. 930.)
In the case of Jones v. Patrick, 145 Fed. 440, Judge Hawley quotes approvingly as follows
from Morrow v. Matthew, 10 Idaho, 423, 79 Pac. 197:
The courts have quite generally held that, in order to enforce the specific performance of
a parol contract, it must be clearly and satisfactorily shown to the trial court as to its
execution and the terms and conditions thereof. If the contract has not been reduced to
writing, it must of necessity require a greater weight of evidence to establish its existence, and
the terms and conditions thereof, and in those respects satisfy the mind of the court, than if
the contract were in writing and produced in evidence.
41 Nev. 305, 316 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
and produced in evidence. * * * Neither the amount of testimony, nor its contradictory or
corroborative nature, constitute the leading or controlling elements in satisfying a court or
jury as to the existence or non-existence of the fact in issue. It is rather the convincing
character and quality of the evidence concerning the particular fact in dispute.
The general rule which we think controls in such cases may be found in 36 Cyc. 692, and
reads:
The rules as to the weight of evidence are applied with the utmost strictness to oral
contracts to devise the whole or part of an estate. Such contracts are viewed with suspicion by
the courts, and must be established by the clearest and most convincing evidence. In these, as
in other contracts, one party to which is deceased, the defendant heirs or devisees are under
the disadvantage that they are deprived by his death of their most important testimony. In
such contracts the proof, in addition to inferences from the situation, circumstances, and
relations of the parties, must generally consist of evidence of verbal declarations made by the
deceased to third persons. This is a kind of evidence which the law recognizes as weak and
unsatisfactory, and to be scrutinized with care. Vague admissions, mere declarations of an
intention to confer a benefit, loose and unconnected statements made to different persons at
various times in chance conversations, do not, unless well corroborated, furnish proof of such
a character as will warrant specific performance of an oral contract or gift.
In considering evidence offered to support an alleged contract similar to the one contended
for in this case, the Court of Appeals of New York, in the case of Hamlin v. Stevens, 177 N.
Y. at page 50, 69 N. E. at page 121, said:
Such contracts are dangerous. * * * Unless they are established clearly by satisfactory
proofs and are equitable, specific performance should not be decreed. We wish to be
emphatic upon the subject, for we are impressed with the danger, and aim to protect the
community from the spoliation of dead men's estates by proof of such contracts through
parol evidence given by interested witnesses."
41 Nev. 305, 317 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
impressed with the danger, and aim to protect the community from the spoliation of dead
men's estates by proof of such contracts through parol evidence given by interested
witnesses.
We do not think there is any evidence in the record even tending to sustain a conclusion of
greater force and effect than that the Forsyths agreed to adopt the plaintiff, and certainly the
evidence entirely fails to measure up to the requirements necessary to establish a contract to
the effect that the plaintiff was to become the owner of whatever property the Forsyths might
leave at their death.
For the reasons given, it is ordered that the judgment and order appealed from be reversed,
and that the case be remanded for a new trial.
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur in the order and in the opinion of Mr. Justice Coleman.
This action was primarily an action for specific performance. The cause rested upon two
parol agreements alleged to have been entered into, the first by John and Jane Forsyth and
Harriet G. Murdock, the natural mother of respondent, the second by John and Jane Forsyth
and William T. Bacon, the natural father of respondent. Each of the parol agreements,
according to the allegations of the complaint of respondent and according to the theory of his
counsel, consisted of two elements: First, an agreement on the part of the Forsyths to adopt
Alexander C. Forsyth; and, second, an agreement to leave to Alexander C. Forsyth, the
respondent, all property of which John and Jane Forsyth died possessed. Enough is stated in
the first section of the amended complaint to correctly set forth the position of respondent. It
recites:
That William T. Bacon and Harriet G. Murdock were married in the year 1879, and the
plaintiff, Alexander C. Forsyth, was born to them on the 25th day of March, 1882; that after
the birth of the said Alexander C.
41 Nev. 305, 318 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
C. Forsyth, the said William T. Bacon and Harriet G. Murdock were divorced, and by mutual
consent the care and custody of the said Alexander C. Forsyth was given to and assumed by
the said Harriet G. Murdock; that thereafter and during the year 1882 the said Harriet G.
Murdock was married to Jonathan B. Roberts; that thereafter the said Harriet G. Murdock,
with her child, the said Alexander C. Forsyth, visited the home of John F. Forsyth and Jane
Forsyth, now deceased, who then resided on a ranch in Lassen County, State of California,
and that the said Harriet G. Murdock left her son, the said Alexander C. Forsyth, with the said
John F. Forsyth and the said Jane Forsyth during an illness from which she, the said Harriet
G. Murdock, then Harriet G. Roberts, was suffering; that during such time the said Forsyths,
and particularly the said Jane Forsyth, became greatly attached to the said Alexander C.
Forsyth, and desired to keep the boy and adopt him as their own child, in and about the month
of September, 1885, and requested the said Harriet G. Murdock that she give her son to them,
the said Forsyths; that the said John F. Forsyth and Jane Forsyth then and there undertook,
promised, and agreed to and with the said Harriet G. Murdock that, if she would give them
her said son, the said plaintiff, Alexander C. Forsyth, they would adopt him as their own son,
and promised and agreed that on their deaths he would become entitled to and inherit and
have all the property of which they might be possessed at the time of their deaths; that in
consequence of such undertaking, promise, and agreement on the part of the said John F.
Forsyth and Jane Forsyth, the said Harriet G. Murdock gave her said son to the said Forsyths,
with the express intention of improving the condition and prospects of her said son, and they
thereupon took and kept the said plaintiff, Alexander C. Forsyth, gave him their own name of
Forsyth, had much affection for him, treated him as their son, brought him up as their own
child, educated him, and introduced him as their own child.
41 Nev. 305, 319 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
Section 2 of the complaint recites as to the agreement between the Forsyths and William
T. Bacon at a subsequent date; such agreement being of similar import to that averred in the
first section.
It appears to me to be well established by a line of competent evidence that a parol
agreement to adopt was made between the Forsyths and the natural parents of respondent.
The trial court so found, and in this finding he was, as I view it, amply supported by the facts
presented. The proof in this respect meets the test. The second phase of the agreement,
namely, to leave to respondent the property of which the Forsyths should die possessed, is not
supported by the evidence to that degree of cogency required by the rule applicable to such
matters, as that rule has been established and maintained by an almost overwhelming line of
authority. The strongest element of proof found in the record which goes to support the
contention of respondent as to this phase of the agreement is that furnished by the witness
Mary Dickinson, wherein were recited utterances made by Jane Forsyth some years prior to
her demise. It was expressed by the witness thus:
She said that Mr. Forsyth said that Alex [the respondent] had been very good to them and
had spent his time and money on them. The affairs were settled now, and for her to see that
he would not be forgotten; that what was left was supposed to be his.
Again and again writers of the law have given expression to the doctrine that specific
performance of a parol contract will be decreed only when the contract itself, as well as the
terms thereof, have been clearly proven.
In the matter of estates of deceased persons especially, courts have zealously guarded the
avenues by which fraud or misrepresentation might find entrance. Some authorities have gone
so far as to say that, where an oral contract is relied upon, the evidence to establish the same
must be overwhelming in its probative force. Indeed, it has been asserted by some authorities
that such contracts must be so proven as to leave no room for reasonable doubt.
41 Nev. 305, 320 (1918) Forsyth v. Heward
reasonable doubt. (Missouri Pac. Ry Co. v. McCarty, 97 Mo. 214, 11 S. W. 52.) The
probative force of the testimony of the witness Mrs. Mary Dickinson, giving every word
thereof full significance, is not, in my judgment, commensurate with the rule. What was left
was supposed to be his was testified to as being the assertion of John Forsyth, deceased,
repeated to the witness by Jane Forsyth. It would require a long and tortuous stretch of
imagination to convert this language into an expression signifying prior established
contractual relations. I have already expressed myself as to the first element of the contract,
namely, that of adoption. Assuming that a contract for adoption was established as having
been entered into between the Forsyths and the natural parents of respondent, the most that
can be said is that as a consequence thereof the right of inheritance would flow to respondent.
In this, however, he would take no greater right than that of a natural child. If Jane Forsyth
had died intestate, then as a consequence of the establishment of a contract to adopt the
respondent would have become an heir at law to the estate of the deceased. It is established in
this case that Jane Forsyth left a will making disposition of the property of which she died
possessed. If the contract of adoption had primarily been established as having been entered
into between the Forsyths and the natural parents of respondent, the respondent could have
availed himself of the remedy to establish his heirship. Such, however, is not invoked by an
action for specific performance.
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
____________
41 Nev. 321, 321 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
[No. 2271]
J. W. LAWSON, Appellant, v. HARRY DUNSEATH, as Justice of the Peace of the
Township of Tonopah, County of Nye, and GEORGE L. BAILEY, Respondents.
[170 Pac. 19]
1. Justices of the PeaceService of SummonsStatute.
Under Rev. Laws, 5732, providing that summons may be served by a sheriff or constable of the state or
by any other person of the age of 21 years or over, not a party to the action, personal service upon a
nonresident defendant made by a non-resident whose affidavit recited that he was over the age of 18 years
was ineffectual, and could not give the justice court jurisdiction to render judgment.
Appeal from Fifth Judicial District Court, Nye County, Mark R. Averill, Judge.
Certiorari by J. W. Lawson against Harry Dunseath, as Justice of the Peace of the
Township of Tonopah, County of Nye, and George L. Bailey. From a judgment and order
dismissing the petition, petitioner appeals. Reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions
to grant the prayer of the petition.
H. R. Cooke, for Appellant:
The complaint was never actually filed in the justice's court, and hence the action was
never legally commenced. The so-called complaint is merely designated a complaint,
sufficient for the purpose had it taken the course prescribed by law. The court must endorse
on the complaint the date upon which it was filed, and at any time within one year thereafter
the plaintiff may have summons issued. (Rev. Laws, 5723.) The word must' is mandatory.
(People v. Thomas, 66 N. Y. S. 191.) Its imperative sense is ordinarily the one intended when
the word must is employed in a statute. (West Chicago Co. v. Scanlan, 48 N. E. 149;
Osborn v. Lidy, 37 N. E. 434; Hemmer v. Hustace, 3 N. Y. S. 850; Hodeker v. Hodeker, 56
N. Y. S. 954; Eaton v. Alger, 57 Barb. 179.)
The word indorse has been held to mean to write upon the back. (22 Cyc. 496.) Under
the plain provisions of the statute (Rev. Laws, 5723), requiring the justice to endorse on the
complaint the date upon which it was filed, there can be no interpretation but that he
must do the thing which the statute prescribes.
41 Nev. 321, 322 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
justice to endorse on the complaint the date upon which it was filed, there can be no
interpretation but that he must do the thing which the statute prescribes.
The summons was not served by a citizen or person over the age of 21 years. The person
who served the summons was not affirmatively shown to be either a citizen of the United
States or a person of the required age. (Rev. Laws, 5022.)
H. H. Atkinson, for Respondents:
The complaint in the justice's court was properly filed and the action legally commenced.
An action in the justice's court is commenced by filing a complaint and the issuance of a
summons thereon. (Rev. Laws, 5722.) The statute does not provide that an action is
commenced by the filing of a complaint and the indorsement on the complaint of the date of
the filing. The requirement of the indorsement is merely a ministerial act. The court must
indorse on the complaint the date upon which it was filed. (Rev. laws, 5723.) The
indorsement is but the evidence that the complaint has been filed, and is not essential to the
filing. (In Re Conant's Estate, 73 Pac. 1018; State v. Lamb, 69 N. W. 592; Manhattan Co. v.
Laimber, 15 N. E. 712; Wilkinson v. Elliott, 23 Pac. 614; Peterson v. Taylor, 60 Am. Dec.
705.)
The summons was properly and legally served. It is the fact of service, and not the proof
thereof, that gives the court jurisdiction. (Estate of Newman, 16 Pac. 887.) Jurisdiction over
the person of the defendant is acquired by service of summons, and dates from such service.
(Pico v. Sunol, 6 Pac. 295.) Our courts will take judicial notice of the fact that a constable or
a sheriff of another jurisdiction is over the age of 21 years. (Sherwin v. Sherwin, 33 Nev.
331.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This is an appeal from a judgment and order dismissing a petition for a writ of certiorari.
On petition of the appellant, the district court issued an order to show cause, addressed
to Harry Dunseath, justice of the peace of Tonopah township, by which order that officer
was required to appear and show cause, if any he had, why the proceedings mentioned
and described in the petition for the order should not be quashed, vacated, and set aside,
and that the justice of the peace produce before the district court on said hearing the
entire original documents, papers, and files pertaining to the proceedings mentioned in
the petition or a transcript or true copy thereof, without changes, additions, or
corrections, etc.
41 Nev. 321, 323 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
an order to show cause, addressed to Harry Dunseath, justice of the peace of Tonopah
township, by which order that officer was required to appear and show cause, if any he had,
why the proceedings mentioned and described in the petition for the order should not be
quashed, vacated, and set aside, and that the justice of the peace produce before the district
court on said hearing the entire original documents, papers, and files pertaining to the
proceedings mentioned in the petition or a transcript or true copy thereof, without changes,
additions, or corrections, etc. The appeal is based upon three assignments of error. We need
determine but one, i.e.:
I. The holding of the lower court that the complaint in the case of Bailey v. Lawson was
actually filed, and said action duly commenced, there being no indorsement upon said
complaint as required by law.
It appears that one Bailey had attempted to commence an action in the justice's court of
Tonopah township against the appellant, Lawson. The steps taken to commence the action in
the justice's court, as disclosed by the return of the justice in response to the order to show
cause, appear as follows: An instrument entitled a complaint, on which no file marks or
indorsement of any kind appear. The instrument is entitled:
In the Justice's Court of Tonopah Township, Nye County, Nevada. George L. Bailey,
Plaintiff, v. J. W. Lawson, Defendant. Complaint.
The certified copy of the justice's docket filed in the lower court pursuant to the order to
show cause, after an entitlement of the case in the same caption as that of the complaint,
shows among other things, the following entries:
Date, 8-23-15. Demand, $271. Date, 8-23-15. Complaint filed. Case docketed. Summons
issued.
It is the contention of appellant here under his first assignment of error that, inasmuch as
no indorsement appears upon the complaint filed in the justice's court setting forth the date
upon which complaint was filed, no action was commenced in that court as contemplated
by the provisions of our civil practice act.
41 Nev. 321, 324 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
no action was commenced in that court as contemplated by the provisions of our civil practice
act.
The manner in which an action is commenced in a justice's court is governed, controlled,
and prescribed, as we view it, by two sections of our civil practice act.
Section 780 (Rev. Laws, 5722), is as follows:
An action in a justice's court is commenced by filing a complaint and the issuance of a
summons thereon.
Section 780 (Rev. Laws, 5722), is as follows:
The court must indorse on the complaint the date upon which it was filed, and at any time
within one year thereafter the plaintiff may have summons issued.
From these two sections it appears manifest, first, that an action in a justice's court is
commenced when three affirmative acts have been accomplished by the justice of the peace,
namely: First, the filing of the complaint; setting forth the date upon which it was filed; third,
the issuance of a summons signed by the justice. (Rev. Laws, 5727.)
Section 780 of the civil practice act makes clear that an action in a justice's court is
commenced only when a complaint is filed and a summons issued. When may a summons be
issued? This query is answered by the succeeding section (section 781, C. P.). By that section
the issuance of a summons is made directly contingent upon the second affirmative act
required of the justice of the peace, namely, the indorsement on the complaint setting forth
the date on which it was filed. It is at any time within one year thereafter that the plaintiff
may have summons issued. The term thereafter refers directly to the act of indorsement,
and it is not until after indorsement of the complaint by the justice setting forth the date of its
filing that summons can be issued. A complaint unindorsed by the justice as prescribed by
this section cannot constitute a basis for the issuance of a summons, but a complaint when
filed and indorsed as prescribed by sections 780 and 781 may constitute the basis for the
issuance of a summons by the plaintiff at any time within one year after indorsement.
41 Nev. 321, 325 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
plaintiff at any time within one year after indorsement. It is the contention of respondent, and
in that contention he was upheld by the court below, that the issuance of a summons is
contingent rather upon the filing of the complaint. The term filing, as here used, may mean
the mere acceptance or receipt of the instrument by the officer. If it were the intention of the
legislative body to have the issuance of summons contingent upon the act of filing, that is,
contingent upon the mere receipt and acceptance of the complaint by the justice, it would
have been a simple matter to have transferred the clause and at any time within one year
thereafter the plaintiff may have summons issued and attached the same to section 780 rather
than to section 781. We must read these sections as we find them. They are mandatory and
limiting, in that they prescribe, limit, and fix the manner in which an action may be
commenced in the justice's court.
By the term must, as used in section 781, the act of indorsement by the justice of the
peace is made mandatory, and the act of issuance of summons can only follow the
performance of this required function. No summons can be issued by the justice until
thereafter. In this instance there being no indorsement upon the complaint setting forth the
date upon which it was filed, no summons recognized by our procedure could issue, and the
instrument purporting to be a summons in this instance was a nullity. No summons having
issued, no action was commenced as prescribed by section 780.
Our practice act prescribes the mode of commencing suits in the justice's courts and lays
the foundation for jurisdiction. A summons to have force and effect must issue by virtue of
the provision of the statute, and when it fails in this it fails in everything. (Dupuy v. Shear, 29
Cal. 238.)
We are referred to the cases of Hook v. Fenner, 18 Colo. 283, 32 Pac. 614, 36 Am. St.
Rep. 277, and Hilts v. Hilts, 43 Or. 162, 72 Pac. 697. It is contended that these authorities are
of assistance in arriving at a conclusion in this matter.
41 Nev. 321, 326 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
in this matter. These cases, together with many other authorities that might be cited, are
expressive of a rule adhered to by a most eminent line, determinative only of the question as
to when an instrument is considered as filed. We say a line of authorities, because courts have
differed widely in expressing their views as to the question; and even were such authority
applicable here, it would be a matter of very careful investigation before we should align
ourselves with any of the diversified contentions.
A consideration of the discussions on the question as to when an instrument is actually
filed only serves to lead us away from the vital matter in the case at bar. The question here for
determination rather is: When, under our code provision, could summons issue from a
justice's court? Does the mere act of filing, assuming that filing is accomplished by delivery
alone, constitute the sole and only act precedent to the issuance of summons? In answer to
this we can call to our aid no higher authority than the unequivocal language of our statute,
and parenthetically let us say, statutes, the manifest meaning of which is clear and
unconfused, require no construction.
Section 5722, Revised Laws, says:
An action in a justice's court is commenced by filing a complaint and the issuance of a
summons thereon.
Let us say, for argument's sake, that the mere act of delivery by the plaintiff to the justice
constituted filing. Could summons issue from the justice without further affirmative action on
his part? The very next section of the code answers this in the negative.
The court must indorse on the complaint, says section 5723, * * * and * * * thereafter
the plaintiff may have summons issued.
The expression here used by the code makes the issuance of summons a thing that may be
performed in future (Ercanbrack v. Faris, 10 Idaho, 584, 79 Pac. 817) determinative by the
act of indorsement on the part of the justice. The period of time within which the summons
may issue takes its inception in the act of indorsement by the justice.
41 Nev. 321, 327 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
indorsement by the justice. It is limited to any time within one year thereafter.
We are referred to the case of Wilkinson v. Elliott, 43 Kan. 590, 23 Pac. 614, 19 Am. St.
Rep. 158. If the case were at all applicable, the expression of the Supreme Court of Kansas
found therein might go to reinforce our position here taken. There it was emphatically
declared that the handing of the petition to the clerk of a court of record and his mere
indorsement thereon was not a sufficient filing to comply with the statute in language as
follows:
When the petition had been filed, the action is pending, so as to charge third persons with
notice of its pendency, and while pending no interest can be acquired by third persons in the
subject-matter thereof as against the plaintiff's title; but such notice shall be of no avail unless
the summons be served, or the first publication made, within sixty days after the filing of the
petition. (Comp. Laws, 3880; Civil Code, sec. 81.)
The requirements of our statute fixing the manner and prescribing the time within which
and designating an act after which summons might issue are, in our judgment, reasonable in
conformity with the fact that justice's courts in this state are not courts of record, but, on the
contrary, are tribunals the jurisdiction of which depends upon affirmative acts in substantial
conformity with the statutory prescription.
The order here appealed from must be reversed for another and equally potential reason.
Lawson, who was sought to be made defendant in the proceedings in the justice's court, was a
resident of California. An affidavit of nonresidence was filed by the plaintiff in that matter,
and an order issued by the justice for service of summons by publication. The plaintiff in the
matter sought to make personal service upon the defendant, Lawson. An affidavit of service
was made by party, resident of California, in which affidavit he recites as to his being over
the age of 18 years. Section 5732 of our Revised Laws (section 790, C. P.) prescribes:
Summons may be served by a sheriff or constable of any of the counties of this state or
by any other person of the age of twenty-one years or over, not a party to the action," etc.
41 Nev. 321, 328 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
of any of the counties of this state or by any other person of the age of twenty-one years or
over, not a party to the action, etc.
Our views in this respect may be expressed in the language of Mr. Justice Talbot in his
concurring opinion in the case of Sherwin v. Sherwin, 33 Nev. 325, 111 Pac. 286, 122 Pac.
481, Ann. Cas. 1914a, 108, where, referring to the identical question, and supporting his
conclusion by California decisions pat on the subject (Maynard v. MacCrellish, 57 Cal. 355;
Horton v. Gallardo, 88 Cal. 581, 26 Pac. 375), he says:
When the service is made out of the state, it may be proved by affidavit of any person
showing that he has served the summons, and that at the time of such service he was a citizen
of the United States over 21 years of age.
Service of summons out of the state by one who fails to meet the requirements of our
statute in this respect is a useless act. The affidavit here fails to meet the requirement of our
statute; hence proof of service was wanting in the justice court, accordingly want of
jurisdiction followed, and no valid judgement could flow.
The act of the justice of the peace in entering judgment against appellant where no action
had been commenced and where there had been no service of summons was in excess of
jurisdiction, and certiorari will always lie to review such.
The order and judgment appealed from are reversed. The case is remanded to the trial
court, with instructions to that court to issue its order quashing the proceedings in the justice's
court pursuant to the prayer of appellant in his petition for writ of certiorari.
It is so ordered.
Coleman, J., concurring:
I concur in the order reversing the judgment of the trial court, and in that portion of the
foregoing opinion relating to the alleged service of summons, but I am unable to approve of
the views expressed relative to the filing of the complaint in the justice's court.
41 Nev. 321, 329 (1918) Lawson v. Dunseath
unable to approve of the views expressed relative to the filing of the complaint in the justice's
court. As a general proposition, it may be said that a document is filed when deposited with
and received by the proper officer for filing, and the necessary fees paid, if demanded. (Hook
v. Fenner, 18 Colo. 283, 32 Pac. 614, 36 Am. St. Rep. 277; Hilts v. Hilts, 43 Or. 162, 72 Pac.
697; Wilkinson v. Elliott, 43 Kan. 50, 23 Pac. 614, 19 Am. St. Rep. 158; Manhattan Co. v.
Laimbeer, 108 N. Y. 578, 15 N. E. 712; Beebe v. Morrell, 76 Mich. 114, 42 N. W. 1119, 15
Am. St. Rep. 288; 19 Cyc. 529.)
I do not think there is anything in section 5723, Revised Laws, justifying a different view.
I take it that the language used in the section mentioned, wherein it is provided that the date
upon which the complaint was filed be indorsed on the complaint, expressly recognizes the
filing as an act precedent to the indorsement, and that the word thereafter, used in the
section mentioned, refers to the actual date of filing, and not to the date of the clerical act of
making the indorsement upon the complaint.
Sanders, J., did not participate.
____________
41 Nev. 330, 330 (1918) Gay v. District Court
[No. 2317]
SAM GAY, Petitioner, v. THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE TENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLARK, and
CHARLES LEE HORSEY, Judge of Said Court, Respondents.
[171 Pac. 156]
1. CountiesOfficersRemovalJurisdiction of District Court.
Whether or not Const. art. 6, sec. 6, gives the district court jurisdiction of proceedings for removal of
county officers, article 7, section 4, gives the legislature plenary power to provide procedure therefor, and
therefore Stats. 1908-09, c. 200, secs. 21, 22 (Rev. laws, 2851, 2852), giving such jurisdiction, is
constitutional.
2. Constitutional LawDelegation of Power to Judiciary.
Const. art. 3, sec. 1, providing that none of the three departments of government shall exercise
functions belonging to the others except where expressly directed, makes it plain that the district court
could be delegated powers other than those expressly mentioned by article 6, section 6.
3. Constitutional LawOfficersRemovalJury Trial.
Stats. 1908-09, c. 200, secs. 21, 22 (Rev. Laws, 2851, 2852), providing for summary trial in cases of
removal of officers, does not violate the constitutional provision that one charged with crime is entitled to a
jury trial, because the legislature has plenary power in such cases.
4. OfficersRemovalTitle of Action.
A proceeding for removal of a county officer need not be brought in the name of the state, under Stats.
1908-09, c. 200, secs. 21, 22 (Rev. Laws, 2851, 2852), giving procedure for removal of officers.
5. Constitutional LawConstitutionality of StatuteWho May Challenge.
Where the requirement under Stats. 1908-09, c. 200, secs. 21, 22 (Rev. Laws, 2851, 2852), providing for
removal of officers, that officer removed shall pay complainant $500, is waived, the constitutionality of
such requirement cannot be considered.
6. StatutesTitle and SubjectRemoval of Officers.
The title to Stats. 1908-09, c. 200, relates to only the one subject of removal of officers, although it
provides several independent methods for removing them.
Original proceeding in certiorari by Sam Gay to inquire into the jurisdiction of the District
Court of the Tenth Judicial District of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Clark,
and Charles Lee Horsey, Judge of said Court. Dismissed.
41 Nev. 330, 331 (1918) Gay v. District Court
Richard Busteed, Thomas & Ham, and Charles E. Barrett, for Petitioner:
The supreme court has power to issue a writ of certiorari. (Const. Nev., art. 6, sec. 4.) The
legislature cannot take away or limit the right and power of the court to issue the writ. (State
v. Johnson, 103 Wis. 591.) Certiorari lies in all cases unless taken away by the express words
of the statute. (New Jersey R. R. & T. Co., v. Snydham, 17 N. J. Law, 25; Kingsland v. Gould,
6 N. J. Law, 161.)
It is the rule that the writ of certiorari will lie in all cases where no adequate remedy exists
by which an erroneous determination can be reviewed or excess of judicial jurisdiction
restricted. (Independent Pub. Co. v. American Press, 102 Ala. 495; Territory v. Zoan, 60 Pac.
893; Lyon v. Green, 68 Ark. 205; Warren v. Oliver, 111 Ga. 807; Don v. True, 19 Me. 46;
Spener v. Bloom, 149 Pa. St. 106; Ex Parte Boynton, 44 Ala. 261.)
The right of appeal, while held an adequate means of correcting mere errors committed in
the exercise of jurisdiction, may prove inadequate to redress or prevent a wrong done in the
absence or excess of jurisdiction. (2 Spelling, Ext. Rel., secs. 1918, 1963; Memphis v.
Brannon, 96 Ala. 461; State v. Ashland, 71 Wis. 502.) In this regard, certiorari accomplishes
in effect the same functions as a court of equity, because the remedy at law is neither
adequate, certain or complete. (State v. Dobson, 135 Mo. 19.) Certiorari is a summary and
more effective remedy for judicial excess than writ of error or appeal. (2 Spelling, Ext. Rel.,
sec. 1890.) The inadequacy, and not the absence of all other legal remedies, and the danger of
a failure of jurisdiction without it, must usually determine the propriety of the writ. (People v.
State Treasurer, 24 Mich. 477; Cushing v. Gay, 23 Me. 9; Hopkins v. Folger, 60 Me. 266;
Knapp v. Kellar, 32 Wis. 468.)
An adequate remedy is a remedy which is equally beneficial, speedy, and sufficient; not
merely which at some time in the future will bring about a reversal of the judgment of the
lower court, but one that will promptly relieve the petitioner from the injurious effects of
that judgment and the acts of the inferior court.
41 Nev. 330, 332 (1918) Gay v. District Court
relieve the petitioner from the injurious effects of that judgment and the acts of the inferior
court. (People v. Public Park Commission, 66 How. Pr. 293; Keplinger v. Woolsey, 93 N. W.
1008.)
The proceedings in the district court are absolutely void. Section 6, article 7, Constitution
of Nevada, provides the jurisdiction and powers of the district court, and there is no provision
granting power to the district court to hear or determine an action of the kind and character at
bar. There is no allegation in the complaint which brings the case within any other provision
of the constitution.
The act of the legislature upon which the prosecution is based is void because more than
one subject is embraced in the act; because one part of the act covers matters coming within
the penal code and another part indicates that the action should be in the nature of a civil
proceeding; because that part of the act giving the right to any person to institute a proceeding
against a public officer violates the state constitution, which provides that action of a criminal
nature must be in the name and by the authority of the state; because the act provides a
penalty which is to go to the informer, and no mention of this penalty, or of the informer,
appears in the title of the act; and for the reason that the section of the act which attempts to
create a liability against a public officer in favor of an individual, takes away from the public
officer the right of trial by jury, and undertakes to deprive him of his property and give it to
an individual without compensation.
The title of an act cannot be increased by construction when too narrow to cover all of the
provisions of the enacting part, nor can its purview be contracted by construction to fit the
title. (Sutherland, Stat. Const., sec. 87; Fort Worth Ry. Co. v. Loyd, 132 S. W. 899; State v.
Hallock, 19 Nev. 384; State v. Silver, 9 Nev. 229; Bell v. District Court, 28 Nev. 280;
Johnson v. Grady Co., 150 Pac. 497; Ex Parte Brown, 81 Pac. 554; Wabash Ry. Co. v.
Young, 69 N. E. 1003; State v. Holliday & O'Leary, 115 Pac.
41 Nev. 330, 333 (1918) Gay v. District Court
Young, 69 N. E. 1003; State v. Holliday & O'Leary, 115 Pac. 205.)
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General; E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General; A. S.
Henderson, District Attorney, and F. A. Stevens, Deputy District Attorney, for Respondents:
Certiorari will not lie, because petitioner has the right of appeal from the decree
complained of. The proceedings under sections 2851 to 2854, inclusive, Revised Laws 1912,
are civil proceedings, and an appeal therein is provided for in section 4, article 6, Constitution
of Nevada, defining the appellate jurisdiction of the supreme court. This appellate jurisdiction
is also defined in chapter 46 of the civil practice act, and in acts amendatory thereof and
supplemental thereto. The great weight of authority and the better reasoned cases hold that
proceedings to remove from office a public official are in their nature civil. (Skeen v. Craig,
31 Utah, 20; Skeen v. Paine, 90 Pac. 440; Rankin v. Jauman, 4 Idaho, 53; Ponting v. Isaman,
7 Idaho, 283; Fuller v. Ellis, 98 Mich. 96; Clay v. Stuart, 74 Mich. 411; Attorney-General v.
Jochim, 99 Mich. 358; Moore v. Strickling, 46 W. Va. 513.)
The object of the statute is to protect the public from corrupt officials, not to punish the
offender. (Ponting v. Isaman, supra; Rankin v. Jauman, supra; Skeen v. Craig, supra.) The
proceedings are not in the nature of criminal punishment, for they must be instituted while the
accused is still in office. (In Re Stow, 98 Cal. 587; Smith v. Ling, 68 Cal. 324; Woods v.
Varnum, 85 Cal. 639; Thurston v. Clark, 107 Cal. 285; Skeen v. Craig, 31 Utah, 20.) A
removal from office for the commission of a crime does not bar a subsequent prosecution for
a crime. (People v. Meakim, 133 N. Y. 214.)
Where the lower court proceeds to try a case upon the theory that a statute which is
involved in the action is valid when it is not, a judgment rendered in the case may be void,
but the right of appeal would still apply. (Chapman v. Justice Court, 29 Nev. 158; Hastings v.
Burning Moscow Co.,
41 Nev. 330, 334 (1918) Gay v. District Court
Burning Moscow Co., 2 Nev. 97; Jumbo Mining Co. v. District Court, 28 Nev. 253; Ex
Parte Rosenblatt, 19 Nev. 440.)
Certiorari will not lie to inquire into the constitutionality of the act upon which the
proceedings in the lower court were based. (McConnell v. Board, 83 Pac. 494; State v.
Osburn, 24 Nev. 187.)
Petitioner was not deprived of any constitutional right in having a trial before the court
instead of before a jury, the statute providing for a trial before the court being valid and
constitutional. (Rev. Laws, 2852; State ex rel. Payne v. District Court, 165 Pac. 294; Rankin
v. Jauman, 36 Pac. 502; Woods v. Varnum, 24 Pac. 843; Moore v. Strickling, 50 L. R. A.
279.)
The power to remove an unfaithful or negligent public official is not essentially a judicial
power. Under constitutional provisions similar to section 4, article 7, Constitution of Nevada,
the power conferred upon the legislature has been held to be plenary. (State v. Peterson, 52
N. W. 655; State ex rel. Payne v. District Court, 165 Pac. 294; Clay v. Stuart, 74 Mich. 411;
State v. Grant, 81 Pac. 795; State ex rel. Kirby v. Henderson, 124 N. W. 767.)
Proceedings for the summary removal of officers need not be in the form of criminal
actions, nor brought in the name of the state. (Woods v. Varnum, 85 Cal. 639; State ex rel.
Payne v. District Court, 165 Pac. 294.) Even where the proceeding is considered to be
criminal, it is held to be one not prosecuted by indictment or information. (In Re Curtis, 108
Cal. 661; Wheeler v. Donnell, 110 Cal. 655; People v. McKamy, 168 Cal. 531.) The petition
and the return show that petitioner waived any defect of process, if any existed, and no
objection was made in the lower court as to any defect in the citation. Therefore, the question
as to whether the proceedings should have been brought in the name of the state need not be
considered. (12 Cyc. 203; Golden v. District Court, 31 Nev. 250.)
The provision in the body of the act for a judgment of $500 in favor of the informer does not
make the act broader than its title. The subject of the act is the removal of an unfaithful
officer, and a judgment of $500 is merely incidental thereto.
41 Nev. 330, 335 (1918) Gay v. District Court
removal of an unfaithful officer, and a judgment of $500 is merely incidental thereto. (Rev.
Laws, 2851-2854; Smith v. Ling, 9 Pac. 171; Wheeler v. Donnell, 110 Cal. 655, 43 Pac. 1;
State v. Power, 88 N. W. 769.)
McNamara & Van Fleet, Amici Curiae.
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
This is an original proceeding in certiorari to inquire into the jurisdiction of the Tenth
judicial district court of the State of Nevada to enter a judgment removing the petitioner, Sam
Gay, as sheriff of Clark County, Nevada, from office.
A complaint was filed in the district court of said county, wherein it was alleged that the
defendant, Sam Gay, as sheriff, was guilty of nonfeasance in office, in that he neglected and
refused to arrest one Joe Keate, his deputy, while the latter was making an assault with a
pistol upon W. H. Harkins, a justice of the peace, in the presence of the defendant. Upon the
filing of the complaint citation was issued and served upon the defendant. Defendant did not
demur to the complaint, or in any way question the jurisdiction of the court, but filed an
answer denying certain of the allegations of the complaint. The matter was heard upon the
issue thus raised, and the court found the allegations of the complaint to be true and entered
judgment removing the defendant from office.
The constitution of Nevada, as do the constitutions of the various states, divides the
powers of the state into three branches, and provides that the judicial power of the state shall
be vested in a supreme court, district courts, and in justices of the peace, and authorizes the
legislature to establish municipal courts. Section 6, art. 6, of the constitution, provides that
the district courts shall have jurisdiction in certain cases, but does not say that they shall have
jurisdiction in proceedings for the removal of any public officer; hence council for petitioner
contend that the district court had no jurisdiction to hear and determine the charges filed with
said court and to make the order for the removal of the petitioner from office.
41 Nev. 330, 336 (1918) Gay v. District Court
and to make the order for the removal of the petitioner from office.
1. Without determining as to the scope and effect of section 6, article 6, of the
constitution, but conceding for the sake of this matter that the district court acquired no
jurisdiction under the section of the constitution mentioned, we are nevertheless of the
opinion that the court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter presented in the
complaint filed in the district court charging the petitioner with nonfeasance in office. From
time immemorial society has found it necessary to make some provision for the removal of
venal, corrupt, faithless, and negligent public officers. The importance of this was realized
when the constitution of the United States was drafted, and this policy has been carried into
the constitution of every state in the union. The impeachment of all of the state and judicial
officers of Nevada, except justices of the peace, is provided for in article 7 of the constitution;
and while no procedure is prescribed in the constitution for the removal of other officials,
section 4 of article 7 reads:
Provision shall be made by law for the removal from office of any civil officer other than
those in this article previously specified, for malfeasance, or nonfeasance in the performance
of his duty.
It was pursuant to this provision of the constitution that the legislature passed An act
providing for the removal from office of public officers for malfeasance or nonfeasance in
office, regulating the mode of procedure, and other matters properly connected therewith.
(Stats. 1909, p. 293; Rev. Laws, 2851, 2852.)
Sections 21 and 22 of the act read:
Sec. 21. If any person now holding or who shall hereafter hold any office in this state,
who shall refuse or neglect to perform any official act in the manner and form as now
prescribed by law, or who shall be guilty of any malpractice or malfeasance in office may also
be removed therefrom as hereinafter prescribed.
Sec. 22. Whenever any complaint in writing duly verified by the oath of any
complainant, shall be presented to the district court, alleging that any officer within the
jurisdiction of said court has been guilty of charging and collecting any illegal fees for
services rendered or to be rendered in his office, or has refused or neglected to perform
the official duties pertaining to his office as prescribed by law, or has been guilty of any
malpractice or malfeasance in office, it shall be the duty of the court to cite the party
charged to appear before him on a certain day, not more than ten nor less than five days
from the time when said complaint shall be presented, and on that day, or some
subsequent day not more than twenty days from that on which said complaint is
presented, shall proceed to hear, in a summary manner, the complaint and evidence
offered by the party complained of, and if, on such hearing, it shall appear that the charge
or charges of said complaint are sustained, the court shall enter a decree that said party
complained of shall be deprived of his office, and shall enter a judgment for five hundred
dollars in favor of the complainant and such costs as are allowed in civil cases."
41 Nev. 330, 337 (1918) Gay v. District Court
verified by the oath of any complainant, shall be presented to the district court, alleging that
any officer within the jurisdiction of said court has been guilty of charging and collecting any
illegal fees for services rendered or to be rendered in his office, or has refused or neglected to
perform the official duties pertaining to his office as prescribed by law, or has been guilty of
any malpractice or malfeasance in office, it shall be the duty of the court to cite the party
charged to appear before him on a certain day, not more than ten nor less than five days from
the time when said complaint shall be presented, and on that day, or some subsequent day not
more than twenty days from that on which said complaint is presented, shall proceed to hear,
in a summary manner, the complaint and evidence offered by the party complained of, and if,
on such hearing, it shall appear that the charge or charges of said complaint are sustained, the
court shall enter a decree that said party complained of shall be deprived of his office, and
shall enter a judgment for five hundred dollars in favor of the complainant and such costs as
are allowed in civil cases.
The constitutional convention, in adopting section 4 of article 7 of the constitution,
realized, no doubt, that to confer upon legislative bodies the duty of impeaching, trying, and
removing district, county, township, and municipal officers would be to place an undue
burden upon the legislature, and furthermore might, in some instances, unreasonably delay
the removal of vicious officials, and in many cases would afford no relief whatever, in view
of the fact that a majority of the officers contemplated by section 4, article 7, of the
constitution, are elected for only two years, and since the legislature convenes during the
month in which the public officers referred to take office, and adjourns at the end of sixty
days, not to reconvene until after the term of all county officers shall have expired, and
therefore conferred plenary power upon the legislature to provide a special and summary
proceeding for the removal of certain officers. (State v. Borstad, 27 N. D. 533, 147 N. W.
380, Ann.
41 Nev. 330, 338 (1918) Gay v. District Court
Ann. Cas. 1916b, 1014; State v. District Court, 53 Mont. 350, 165 Pac. 294.)
Numerous objections are made to the act under which the proceedings in the district court
were had, but, as we view the authority conferred by the section of the constitution
mentioned, they may be all brushed aside, save and except such objections only as go to the
title of the act. We say this for the reason that the power of the legislature is plenary so far as
providing for the method of procedure is concerned. We do not think there is any authority
which questions this view. The Supreme Court of California, in Re Marks, 45 Cal. 199, had
under consideration a statute substantially the same as ours, and one which was enacted
pursuant to a constitutional provision to all intents and purposes the same as ours. The court
in that case said:
The act of 1853 does provide how, in what manner, upon what procedure, in what court,
officers, not of the first class, shall be tried for that misdemeanor in office known at common
law, and recognized in this statute as neglect of official duty. The power of the legislature to
enact such a statute (under the latter clause of section 18) is plainas obvious as is the power
of the assembly to prefer and that of the senate to try articles of impeachment under the first
clause of the same section. The power to remove certain officers for misdemeanor in office is
exercised only by the assembly and senate under the name of impeachmentthe like power
to remove all other officers under like circumstances and for like causes is to be exercised in
such manner as the legislature may provide.' (Section 19.) The power to provide the manner
in which a delinquent is to be tried in the second case is on a footing with the power to
directly remove the delinquent by the judgment of the senate in the first case.
In a comparatively recent case, in an opinion by Beatty, C. J., and concurred in by the full
court, the Supreme Court of California said:
This is a summary proceeding regulated, as far as it is regulated at all, by a statute {Pen.
41 Nev. 330, 339 (1918) Gay v. District Court
is regulated at all, by a statute (Pen. Code, sec. 758, et seq.) which the legislature has plenary
power to pass under the authority of section 18 of article 4 of the constitution, providing for
the trial of public officers for misdemeanor in office otherwise than by impeachment. It is
exempt from merely technical rules of procedure. (Case of Burleigh, 145 Cal. 36, 78 Pac.
242.) (In Re Shepard, 161 Cal. 171, 118 Pac. 513.)
The Supreme Court of Minnesota, in considering the authority of the legislature under a
similar constitutional provision in the case of State v. Peterson, 50 Minn. 239, 52 N. W. 655,
expressed the following views:
Article 13 of the constitution, after providing in section 1 for the removal of state
officers and judges of the supreme and district courts by impeachment,' then provides in
section 2 that the legislature of the state may provide for the removal of inferior officers
from office for malfeasance or nonfeasance in the performance of their duties.' The power
thus conferred is plenary, and confers authority upon the legislature to vest the power of
removal, and the determination of the question whether cause for removal exists, in any
department of the government, or in any officer or official body, it may deem expedient.
There is no requirement that this power shall be conferred only on the courts. Indeed, the very
purpose of this provision was to provide a more summary and less cumbersome method of
removing inferior officers than by impeachment or by indictment, according to the course of
the common law, for malfeasance or nonfeasance in office. If, then, the power of removal
vested in the governor by this act be judicial, we have here the constitutional authority for it.
The Supreme Court of Montana, in State ex rel. Payne v. District Court, 53 Mont. 350,
165 Pac. 296, in speaking of the authority conferred by a section of the constitution of that
state similar to section 4, article 7, of our constitution, used the following language:
Proceedings for the removal of a public officer do not necessarily partake of the nature
of a criminal prosecution.
41 Nev. 330, 340 (1918) Gay v. District Court
not necessarily partake of the nature of a criminal prosecution. Indeed, the power to remove
an unfaithful or negligent public official is not essentially a judicial power. Under our
constitution, its exercise is left to the legislature itself or to such other authority as the
legislature may designate. This is the plain import of section 18, above, and is the general rule
in the absence of any constitutional declaration upon the subject. (29 Cyc. 1370; State v.
Doherty, 25 La. Ann. 119, 13 Am. Rep. 131; Territory v. Cox, 6 Dak. 501.) The power may
be conferred upon the governor (Cameron v. Parker, 2 Okl. 277, 38 Pac. 14), or upon a board
(Donohue v. Will Co., 110 Ill. 94). It may be conferred upon a court of general or limited
jurisdiction to be exercised in the mode provided by law, and consequently, if the legislature
sees fit to require a jury trial, a jury trial must be had; but, if it sees fit to provide for a
summary hearing without a jury, no constitutional right of the accused is infringed.
In State v. Grant, 14 Wyo. 41, 81 Pac. 798, 1 L. R. A. n. s. 588, 116 Am. St. Rep. 982, the
Supreme Court of Wyoming, in passing upon the power of the legislature under a similar
constitutional provision, said:
The legislature, however, under the provisions of section 19, article 3, of the constitution,
did have express warrant for the passage of an act for the removal of officers not subject to
impeachment, and the method of procedure in effecting such removal is not limited by any
other constitutional provision. (Attorney-General v. Jochim, 99 Mich. 358, 58 N. W. 611, L.
R. A. 699, 41 Am. St. Rep. 606.)
In Skeen v. Paine, 32 Utah, 295, 90 Pac. 440, it is said:
Section 21, article 6, of the constitution, among other things, provides that such removals
may be made in such manner as may be provided by law.' Here a plenary power is conferred
upon the legislature. This provision of the constitution is special, and the mere fact that in
another part of the same instrument (sec. 18, art. 8) it is provided that prosecutions shall be in
the name of 'The State of Utah' does not necessarily prevent a proceeding civil in its
consequences from being conducted in the name of a private person."
41 Nev. 330, 341 (1918) Gay v. District Court
the name of The State of Utah' does not necessarily prevent a proceeding civil in its
consequences from being conducted in the name of a private person.
The Supreme Court of Michigan, in People ex rel Clay v. Stuart, 74 Mich. 411, 41 N. W.
1091, 16 Am. St. Rep. 644, in passing upon a similar constitutional provision, observed:
It will be noticed that the power conferred by this section of the constitution is plenary.
The legislature is to provide by law for the removal of county officers, etc., in such manner as
to them shall seem just and proper. The power conferred is in its nature political, and has
reference exclusively to the polity of government, which would be inherently defective if no
remedy of a summary nature could be had to remove from office a person who, after his
election, had been convicted of crime, or who neglected his duty, or who was guilty of
malversation in the administration of his office. Every person elected to a county, township,
or school district office holds it subject to removal, in the manner provided by law under this
section of the constitution, which commits to the legislature the whole subject of removal.
They are to prescribe the mode in which it shall be done, and this includes everything
necessary for the accomplishment of the object. The causes, the charges, the notice, the
investigation, and the determination, and by whom these shall be conducted and the removal
adjudged, are all in the discretion of the legislature.
In State v. Henderson, 145 Iowa, 657, 124 N. W. 767, Ann. Cas. 1912a, 1286, in passing
upon a case growing out of constitutional and statutory provisions similar to ours, we find the
following:
Section 5 of the act under which this proceeding is prosecuted expressly provides that the
proceeding shall be summary in its nature and triable as an equitable action.' We think,
therefore, that no constitutional right of the defendant was invaded.
See, also, Moore v. Strickling, 46 W. Va. 515, 33 S. E. 274, 50 L. R. A. 279; Woods v.
Varnum, 85 Cal. 639, 24 Pac.
41 Nev. 330, 342 (1918) Gay v. District Court
Pac. 843; People v. Stuart, 74 Mich. 411, 41 N. W. 1093, 16 Am. St. Rep. 644; State v.
Seawell, 64 Ala. 225; State v. Savage, 89 Ala. 1, 7 South. 7, 7 L. R. A. 426.
2. In this connection we incidentally call attention to section 1, article 3, of our
constitution, which reads:
The powers of the government of the State of Nevada shall be divided into three separate
departmentsthe legislative, the executive, and the judicial; and no persons charged with the
exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any
functions appertaining to either of the others, except in the cases herein expressly directed or
permitted.
Thus we see that the constitutional convention made it plain that other powers than those
expressly mentioned in section 6, article 6, of the constitution, might be delegated to the
district court.
The language of Norcross J., in Bell v. District Court, 28 Nev. 280, 81 Pac. 875, 1 L. R. A.
n. s. 843, 113 Am. St. Rep. 854, 6 Ann. Cas. 982, is not opposed to the view we have
expressed. What was said in that case was directed to an entirely different question from the
one here presented, as will be readily seen from a reading of the opinion.
3. But it is urged, and with apparent earnestness, that the complaint in removal
proceedings in the district court charged the defendant with a crime, and that he was entitled
to a jury trial under that section of the constitution which provides that the right of trial by
jury shall remain inviolate forever. We think we have disposed of this question by showing
that the legislature had plenary power under the terms of the constitution to pass an act
authorizing the removal of officers, and pursuant to that authority had passed a law which
provided a summary and special proceeding for such cases. In this connection we wish to say
that the case of Kilburn v. Law, 111 Cal. 237, 43 Pac. 615, is not in conflict with this view;
for, while it is true that the court in that case, as in other cases, held that the proceeding to
remove a public officer was criminal in its nature, the court said: "The intent to make it a
criminal prosecution is to my mind clear."
41 Nev. 330, 343 (1918) Gay v. District Court
to remove a public officer was criminal in its nature, the court said: The intent to make it a
criminal prosecution is to my mind clear. The opinion then proceeds to give the reasons
which induced the court to take that view, and it is apparent that its conclusion was reached
because it was the evident intent of the legislature that the proceeding should be criminal in
its nature, and not because the constitution contemplated a proceeding inherently criminal in
its character. In fact, strange as it may seem, the reply brief of the petitioner practically
concedes as much; for, in answering the contention of respondent on this point, wherein it
was sought to show why different proceedings had existed in California in removal cases,
counsel say:
The caseIn Re Marks, 45 Cal. 199is relied upon by respondent, but it will be noted
that the opinion in that case was prior to the adoption of the codes and was had under a
provision of law which ceased to exist upon the adoption of the codes.
But the Supreme Court of California has held that though the proceeding is criminal in
nature, under certain statutes, the defendant was not entitled to a jury. (People v. McKamy,
168 Cal. 533, 143 Pac. 752.)
4. The contention that the proceeding should have been instituted in the name of the State
of Nevada is entirely without merit. As we have shown, the inquiry was had under a special
proceeding, provided pursuant to plenary power conferred by the constitution. Even in
California, after the adoption of the codes, and under statutes which the supreme court of that
state held showed a clear intent upon the part of the legislature to make the proceedings
criminal in their nature, it was decided that the accusation did not have to be made in the
name of the people. (Woods v. Varnum, 85 Cal. 639, 24 Pac. 843.)
5. Objection is made to that part of the act which provides that the court in making the
order of removal shall enter a judgment in favor of the complainant for $500.
41 Nev. 330, 344 (1918) Gay v. District Court
for $500. The complainant and the defendant in the removal proceedings expressly agreed
that this requirement of the statute might be waived, and accordingly no such judgment was
rendered by the court; hence we are of the opinion that it is not necessary that we determine
this question, as it is a well-established rule of law that no one can urge that an act or part of
an act is unconstitutional if his rights are in no way infringed by it. (6 R. C. L. p. 89; 8 Cyc.
789.)
6. The objection made to the title of the act of 1909 is without merit. The title of the act
relates to one subject only, and that is to the removal of public officers. It is true that the act
deals with three methods of removalone by accusation made by the grand jury, one by
impeachment by the assembly, and one by accusation by a private citizen. That part of the act
relating to impeachment by the assembly prescribes the method of procedure to be followed
in the trial by the senate. The act also provides for the summary method by accusation of a
private individual, and makes provision for the proceedings after the accusation is filed. And,
apparently realizing that individuals are reluctant to file charges against a public official as
the basis for his removal, the legislature also made provision for the initiation of proceedings
for the removal of a public officer by accusation on the part of the grand jury. In other words,
this act not only supplements the constitutional provisions for the removal of state officials,
but creates two separate, distinct, and independent methods of removal of county officers.
Just why the legislature thought it necessary to create two methods of removal of county
officials is not clear, but since one method is more drastic than the other, it may be that the
legislature anticipated that there might be occasions when a drastic measure would be needed;
but whatever the reason, or lack of reason, the statute, which was enacted pursuant to plenary
authority by clear and unmistakable language, creates the two methods, and beyond that we
cannot inquire.
41 Nev. 330, 345 (1918) Gay v. District Court
For the reasons given, it is ordered that the writ of certiorari heretofore issued be, and the
same is hereby, dismissed.
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur.
Sections 1, 2, and 3 of article 7, of our constitution lay down the manner and authority by
which certain specified state and judicial officers may be removed from office. So far as these
officers are concerned, the mode of removal from office is by the constitution limited and
fixed. But in contemplation of the necessity for removal of civil officers other than those
designated, section 4 of article 7 of the constitution provides:
Provision shall be made by law for the removal from office of any civil officer other than
those in this article previously specified, for malfeasance, or nonfeasance in the performance
of his duty.
By this provision of the organic law the power was reserved and assigned to the legislative
branch of the government to provide a way by which civil officers other than those whose
office is within the contemplation of sections 1, 2, and 3 of article 7 might be removed for
malfeasance or nonfeasance in office. To meet this and to provide a rule of conduct by which
removal from office might be accomplished as to those officers not affected by sections 1, 2,
and 3 of article 7 of the constitution, the legislature of 1909 passed the act under which
petitioner, as sheriff of Clark County, was brought before the district court. It is the right of
the designated authority or tribunal of determination, the district court, to entertain such
proceeding that is here questioned. Section 6 of article 6 of the constitution, in prescribing the
jurisdiction of the district court, contains no words of limitation as to matters of which that
court may take jurisdiction, but rather excludes other courts and tribunals from exercising
jurisdiction over those subject-matters specifically named as belonging to that of the district
court.
41 Nev. 330, 346 (1918) Gay v. District Court
To declare that section 6 of article 6 of the constitution by its language limited the
jurisdiction of the district court to matters specifically named in that section would be to open
discussion to any number of matters and proceedings which by reason of this constitutional
provision would find no jurisdictional resting place. Such was never the intention of the
authors of our constitution.
By section 4 of article 7 of the constitution the legislative branch of the government was
given full power to enact laws looking to the impeachment and removal of civil officers other
than those mentioned in the preceding sections. The power to enact such laws implied power
to assign the accomplishment of the law's purpose to a designated functionary. The legislature
of 1909 carried out this power by designating the district court as the tribunal before which
matters of this character should be heard and determined. In enacting the statute and
designating the tribunal before which its object should be carried out, the legislature, having
full power in the matter, could, as it did, concisely and emphatically outline the steps to be
taken and rigidly lay the course to be pursued. (In Re Shepard, 161 Cal. 171, 118 Pac. 513.)
In my judgment, the matter contemplated by the statute cannot properly be termed a
criminal proceeding, and I say this fully aware of the decision of the Supreme Court of
California in the matter of People v. McKamy, 168 Cal. 531, 143 Pac. 752, in which is
reviewed the former decisions of that court. (In Re Curtis, 108 Cal. 661, 41 Pac. 793; Wheeler
v. Donnell, 110 Cal. 655, 43 Pac. 1; In Re Burleigh, 145 Cal. 35, 78 Pac. 242.) It is a
proceeding for removal from office, rather than a prosecution for malfeasance or nonfeasance
in office. Criminal prosecution might follow after removal, in which event a plea of once in
jeopardy could not be interposed.
It is contended that this statute is in contravention of constitutional provision because trial
by jury is not contemplated in the proceeding before the district judge.
41 Nev. 330, 347 (1918) Gay v. District Court
In this respect it may be properly said that the proceeding contemplated by the statute is not a
trial but rather a proceeding to remove from public office, and as such does not involve either
life, liberty, or property.
The question here involved has in one form or another been passed upon on several
occasions by the Supreme Court of the United States under the contention that by such statute
the officer removed was deprived of due process of law under the fourteenth amendment.
In the case of Kennard v. Louisiana ex rel. Morgan, 92 U. S. 80, 23 L. Ed. 478, statutory
proceedings much more summary than those of ours were considered. In that instance a
statute of Louisiana, instituted for testing right to office, was under consideration. The statute
was upheld as providing due process of law, and the provision which eliminated hearing
before a jury was held to be not repugnant to the amendment.
In the case of Foster v. Kansas ex rel. Johnston, Attorney-General, 112 U. S. 201, 5 Sup.
Ct. 8, 97, 28 L. Ed. 696, it appears that the attorney-general of the State of Kansas proceeded
in quo warranto in the supreme court of the state for the removal of a county attorney,
alleging his failure to prosecute certain violations of the law of that state. The case went to the
supreme court of the United States on rule, and there, after referring to Kennard v. Louisiana,
supra, the court held that the proceeding was of a civil nature, and inasmuch as the process
for removal, though summary, provided for bringing the party into court and notifying him of
the case he had to meet, and gave him an opportunity to be heard in his defense and gave
opportunity for deliberation and judgment of the court, it constituted due process of law.
In the case of Wilson v. North Carolina, 169 U. S. 586, 18 Sup. Ct. 435, 42 L. Ed. 865, the
matter grew out of the suspension of a railroad commissioner by the governor of North
Carolina. When the case was carried to the Supreme Court of the United States, Mr. Justice
Peckham, speaking for that court, said:
The controversy relates exclusively to the title to a state office, created by a statute of
the state, and to the rights of one who was elected to the office so created.
41 Nev. 330, 348 (1918) Gay v. District Court
state office, created by a statute of the state, and to the rights of one who was elected to the
office so created. Those rights are to be measured by the statute and by the constitution of the
state, excepting in so far as they may be protected by any provision of the federal
constitution.
Continuing, it was said:
The procedure was in accordance with the constitution and laws of the state. * * What
kind and how much of a hearing the officer should have before suspension by the governor
was a matter for the state legislature to determine, having regard to the constitution of the
state.
In my judgment, that portion of the statute here involved which would permit of a
judgment against the deposed officer of any sum of money is clearly in violation of the
constitutional guaranty prohibiting the deprivation of property without due process of law.
Even, however, were this involved here, which is not the case, since no such judgment was
entered in this matter against petitioner in the district court, it would not avail in furtherance
of petitioner's contention, for, under the established rule in this court, constitutional portions
of the statute might be enforced if intact and operative, and the unconstitutional portions
might be rejected. Virginia & Truckee R. R. Co. v. Henry. 8 Nev. 165.)
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
____________
41 Nev. 349, 349 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
[No. 2290]
PHOEBE J. GUISTI, Respondent, v. JOHN GUISTI,
Appellant.
[171 Pac. 161]
1. Appeal and ErrorService of Transcript.
Where transcript was served in part before docketing of cause in the supreme court and the remainder
within a reasonable time thereafter, the appeal will not be dismissed under court rule 13 relating to the
curing of technical objections, the policy of the court being to give the appellant every reasonable
opportunity to be heard.
2. Appeal and ErrorMemorandum of Errors on Motion for New TrialWhen Necessary.
Rev. Laws, 5322, requiring service of memorandum of errors upon adverse party, has reference only to
errors committed at the trial under section 5320, subd. 7, and not error committed in arriving at an
erroneous conclusion as to the legal effect of all of the evidence in the case, the making of findings, or
entering of judgment.
3. Money LentContributedPleading.
A complaint, alleging that plaintiff contributed money to the erection of a building, does not allege a
loan.
4. Fraudulent ConveyancesCreditor.
An unrecorded bill of sale of undelivered personalty, executed by a deceased, is not void as to an order of
court setting aside a monthly allowance to wife of deceased, the wife not being a creditor within Rev.
laws, 1078 (Comp. Laws, 2703), making sales and assignments of personalty without delivery fraudulent as
to creditors.
5. Executors and AdministratorsFraudulent ActsEffect.
No matter how many fraudulent acts an administrator is guilty of, he is not divested of contractual rights
under a valid mortgage which he has purchased.
Appeal from Fifth Judicial District Court, Nye County; Mark R. Averill, Judge.
Action by Phoebe J. Guisti against John Guisti. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant
appeals. Reversed.
Wm. Forman and P. E. Keeler, for Appellant:
Respondent has made two motions which do not go to the merits of the case. One is to
dismiss the appeal upon the ground that no copy of the transcript on appeal was served upon
respondent, the other motion being to strike out certain assignments and specifications of
particular errors upon the ground that the same were not embraced in the memorandum
of exceptions filed in support of motion for new trial.
41 Nev. 349, 350 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
errors upon the ground that the same were not embraced in the memorandum of exceptions
filed in support of motion for new trial. Upon the first motion, no contention is made that the
record on appeal was not filed within thirty days after the appeal was perfected. The records
show that the record was filed within thirty days, and therefore rules 2 and 3, cited by
respondent, have no application.
Respondent invokes rule 25, and argues that the appeal should be dismissed because no
transcript on appeal was ever served upon her. This contention cannot be upheld, for three
reasons: (1) Respondent waived service of copy of transcript by stipulation extending the time
for filing and service thereof, without reserving any right to move to dismiss appeal. (2)
Appellant filed and served his opening brief within the time stipulated, respondent filing and
serving her answering brief, and by answering to the merits waived any objection which she
might have had for failure to serve copy of record on appeal. (3) Respondent was served with
copy of bill of exceptions, and after motion to dismiss was filed, was served with copy of
judgment roll. (Henningsen v. T. & G. R. Co., 32 Nev. 54; Curtis v. McCullough, 3 Nev. 213;
Bliss v. Grayson, 24 Nev. 432; Smith v. Wells Estate Co., 29 Nev. 213.)
In the matter of the estate of Lawrence Guisti, the court could not do otherwise than pay the
claim of John Guisti out of the proceeds of the sale of the property described in the deed and
bill of sale held as a mortgage on the property therein described. The allowance or rejection
of the claim exhausted the authority of the court in the matter of the mortgage; and the
plaintiff, not being a creditor of the estate at the time the sale complained of was made,
cannot after a lapse of six years have the sales set aside. (Rev. Laws, 6014; Kirman v.
Powning, 25 Nev. 378.)
The manner and mode of the disposition of the assets of the estates of deceased persons is
prescribed by law, and the plaintiff or the administrator, or both combined, cannot vary those
provisions by agreement to the prejudice of the creditors of the estate. (18 Cyc. 422.) The
administrator must not purchase claims against the estate {Rev. Laws, 6039), but at the
time of the purchase of the note John Guisti had not been appointed administrator. Even
had he been administrator at that time, he would be entitled to the amount paid {Furth v.
Wyatt, 17 Nev. 1S0
41 Nev. 349, 351 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
administrator must not purchase claims against the estate (Rev. Laws, 6039), but at the
time of the purchase of the note John Guisti had not been appointed administrator. Even had
he been administrator at that time, he would be entitled to the amount paid (Furth v. Wyatt,
17 Nev. 180), and even though the mortgage was void, he would be entitled to the amount he
paid on the note. (Wilson v. Wilson, 18 Cyc. 772; Highsmith v. Whitehurst, 23 S. E. 917;
Charles v. Daniels, 131 S. W. 42; Baker v. Lane, 118 S. W. 963; Lafranchini v. Clark, 39
Nev. 49.)
It is contended that the sales are fraudulent because the administrator became the owner of the
property. However, he was the owner of the note and the mortgage, and was interested in the
property of the estate to that extent. (18 Cyc. 771; Cuttingham v. Moore, 30 South. 784;
Penny v. Jackson, 4 South. 720; Brannan v. Oliver, 19 Am. Dec. 39; Truman v. Riggins, 8
Am. St. Rep. 549; Estate of Millenovich, 5 Nev. 161.)
The bill of sale, if void at all, is only void as against creditors. (6 Cyc. 1065; 5 R. C. L. 414.)
An unrecorded chattel mortgage may be enforced after the legal title has vested in the widow
of the mortgagor, even under a statute conferring title upon the widow, where the estate is
less than a specific amount. (Rev. Laws, 1080; Wolfe v. Perkins, 9 S. W. 432.)
Thompson & Thompson, for Respondent:
The appeal should be dismissed. The rules of this court prescribe that the transcript on
appeal shall be filed within thirty days after the appeal has been perfected and the statement
settled, if there be a statement. A complete copy of the transcript must be served upon the
opposite party, and no transcript on appeal has ever been served upon the opposite party or
her attorneys. The transcript will be stricken out unless the same has been served upon the
respondent or her attorneys. (Supreme Court rules 2, 3, 25; Gardner v. Pacific Power Co., 40
Nev. 343.) No errors can be heard on appeal unless the same are set forth in the memorandum
of exceptions. (Rev. Laws, 5322.) Where the appeal is upon the ground that the evidence is
insufficient to support the verdict or decision, the appellant must set forth specifically the
particulars in which the evidence is alleged to be insufficient.
41 Nev. 349, 352 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
evidence is insufficient to support the verdict or decision, the appellant must set forth
specifically the particulars in which the evidence is alleged to be insufficient. (Thorne v.
Hammond, 46 Cal. 531; Watson v. Railroad, 50 Cal. 523.) The filing of an appeal, or the
doing of any other act which indicates that the opposite party has notice, is a waiver of the
notice. (1 Hayne, New Trial and Appeal, 114, 115; Corbett v. Swift, 6 Nev. 194; Hunter v.
Truckee Lodge, 14 Nev. 24.)
The decrees of the lower court establish the fact that respondent is the widow of deceased.
The fact that she yielded up the administration of the estate and did not contest the
appointment of appellant as administrator constitutes a consideration, or so alters her position
that appellant is estopped from now denying that respondent is not the widow of the
deceased. The record cannot be denied nor the judgment questioned. (11 Am. & Eng. Ency.
Law, 389, 390.) the records of the estate having been introduced in evidence, the appellant
cannot impeach any order or decree therein. (Crim v. Kessing, 89 Cal. 483.)
The second item of the decree, $3,000, has very little to do with the widowhood of the
respondent. It is based upon the promise of appellant to pay that amount to respondent at the
close of the estate, but not out of the estate. Permitting appellant to act as administrator,
without objection, constituted sufficient consideration. The consideration arises from the
permission, irrespective of the benefits derived from it. (6 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 741.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
The complaint alleges that plaintiff, Phoebe J. Guisti, is the widow of Lawrence Guisti,
who, at the time of his death in October, 1907, was a resident of Beatty, Nye County, Nevada;
that deceased, at the time of his death, was the owner of a dwelling-house and the lot upon
which it was situated, and certain other real estate and personal property. The complaint also
alleges:
That at the time of the erection of said building and the furnishing said saloon said
Lawrence Guisti did not have funds sufficient to pay for the erection of said building and
purchasing of said bar and bar fixtures, iron safe, cash register, piano, slot machine, and
gambling layouts and liquors and cigars for said saloon, and solicited this plaintiff to
contribute toward the erection of said building and the paying for said bar, bar fixtures,
furnishings, liquors, and cigars for said saloon.
41 Nev. 349, 353 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
have funds sufficient to pay for the erection of said building and purchasing of said bar and
bar fixtures, iron safe, cash register, piano, slot machine, and gambling layouts and liquors
and cigars for said saloon, and solicited this plaintiff to contribute toward the erection of said
building and the paying for said bar, bar fixtures, furnishings, liquors, and cigars for said
saloon. That pursuant to said request this plaintiff did contribute the sum of three thousand
dollars ($3,000) toward the erection of said building and the paying for said bar, bar fixtures,
furnishings, iron safe, cash register, piano, slot machine, gambling layouts, cigars, and liquors
for said saloon. That said Lawrence Guisti nor any other person has ever paid or returned said
money or any part thereof to this plaintiff.
That the plaintiff and the defendant (father of the deceased) are the sole heirs at law of the
deceased; that the defendant, conspiring to cheat and defraud plaintiff, purchased of the
Bullfrog Bank and Trust Company a note of deceased for about $3,000, which purported to
be secured by a mortgage upon certain real and personal property of the deceased, which note
it is alleged was paid by the deceased prior to his death.
It is also alleged that the defendant, designing to cheat and defraud plaintiff, induced
plaintiff to waive her right to be appointed administratrix of said estate, and as a
consideration for such waiver promised and agreed that plaintiff should have a lien upon the
real estate and personal property covered by the mortgage to the bank above mentioned, to
secure the payment of the alleged indebtedness to her of $3,000; and that plaintiff, having
great faith and confidence in the defendant, did execute such waiver, and nominate and
request that the defendant be appointed to administer upon said estate, and that thereafter he
was appointed by the court as administrator thereof and thereafter qualified as such. Other
allegations of fraud are contained in the complaint, but, taking the view which we do of the
case, it is not necessary to state them.
It is further alleged that upon her petition the court made an order setting aside to
plaintiff, as a widow's allowance, the dwelling-house mentioned above and the sum of
$130 per month, and that no part of said monthly allowance has been paid; that on
February 19, 1910, the court approved the final report of the defendant, as such
administrator, and granted him a discharge from his trust as such administrator.
41 Nev. 349, 354 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
made an order setting aside to plaintiff, as a widow's allowance, the dwelling-house
mentioned above and the sum of $130 per month, and that no part of said monthly allowance
has been paid; that on February 19, 1910, the court approved the final report of the defendant,
as such administrator, and granted him a discharge from his trust as such administrator.
By the prayer of the complaint plaintiff asks that the decree of final distribution in the
matter of the estate of Lawrence Guisti, deceased, and the decree settling the final account of
the administrator, and such other orders as may interfere with granting full relief to plaintiff,
be set aside and annulled; that the defendant be declared a trustee for the benefit of plaintiff,
and that plaintiff recover judgment against the defendant for $3,000, the amount contributed
by her, as alleged in the complaint, and in a further sum to cover the monthly allowance of
$130, and that the same be made a lien upon the real estate bought by defendant from said
estate, and for general relief.
Defendant filed a demurrer to the complaint, for the reason, among others, that it did not
state a cause of action, which being overruled, an answer was filed. By his answer defendant
denies that plaintiff is the widow of the deceased; denies that the deceased contributed any
money as alleged in the complaint; denies that he solicited plaintiff to renounce her right to
administer upon the estate of the deceased; denies that he told her she did not need an
attorney, or that he would see that her family allowance and her claim of $3,000 would be
paid; denies all allegations of fraud on his part, and pleads affirmatively the indebtedness of
the Bullfrog Bank and Trust Company, its assignment to him, and all of the various orders in
the matter of the estate of Lawrence Guisti, deceased, including the approval of his final
report and the order of his discharge as administrator.
Defendant also alleges that the cause of action pleaded by the plaintiff is barred by section
4967, Revised Laws.
41 Nev. 349, 355 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
It is also alleged that plaintiff's cause of action is barred by section 6018, Revised Laws.
It is also alleged that if the promise sued on was made at all, it was made with reference to
the administration of said estate; that it was a specific promise to answer for the debt of said
intestate out of the estate of defendant; that said alleged agreement was not, nor was any note
or memorandum thereof, in writing, ever made or signed by defendant, or by his agent.
Plaintiff filed a reply, pleading estoppel on the part of defendant to deny that she was the
widow of Lawrence Guisti, deceased.
The case was tried by the court without a jury, and the court made its findings of fact,
whereby it found all of the material allegations of the complaint to be true, except the
allegation that the note to the bank had been paid, and entered a decree setting aside,
annulling, and canceling the decree of final distribution in the matter of the estate; also the
order approving the final account of the administrator; also the order confirming the sale of
the real estate and personal property under the mortgage. The court rendered judgment in
favor of plaintiff and against defendant in the sum of $3,000, the amount alleged to have been
contributed by plaintiff to deceased, as alleged in the complaint, and in the further sum of
$3,010 on account of the monthly allowance of $130. It was further ordered that said
judgment be made a lien upon the property bought by defendant at the administrator's sale,
and that the same be sold to pay said judgment and costs.
On motion for a new trial the court modified its judgment, so that, instead of giving
judgment for $3,010 on account of the allowance of the court, it was given for a sum
aggregating twelve monthly payments, for the reason that our statute provides that when an
estate is insolvent such allowance cannot run for more than twelve months (Rev. Laws,
5958); and it was further adjudged that the defendant is a trustee and holding the property in
question as a trustee for the benefit of plaintiff to the extent of the amount found to be
due the plaintiff on account of the family allowance.
41 Nev. 349, 356 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
property in question as a trustee for the benefit of plaintiff to the extent of the amount found
to be due the plaintiff on account of the family allowance.
This appeal is from the original judgment, from the judgment as modified, and from the
order denying the motion for a new trial.
Before entering upon a consideration of the merits of the case, it becomes necessary that
we dispose of a motion to dismiss the appeal. This motion is based upon two grounds: First,
because a transcript of the record was not filed within thirty days after the taking of the appeal
had been perfected, as provided in rule 2; and, second, for the reason that no transcript on
appeal has ever been served upon respondent.
1. All that we need to say as to the first ground of the motion is that the record shows that
the appeal was taken on June 16, 1917, and the transcript was filed on July 5, 1917, less than
thirty days from the taking of the appeal. As to the second ground, we might say that we think
there are at least two good reasons why it is not well taken, but we will confine ourselves to
one only. Paragraph 3 of rule 25 provides that a copy of the transcript shall be served by the
appellant upon the opposite party. Rule 8 of this court reads:
Exceptions or objections to the transcript, statement, the undertaking on appeal, notice of
appeal or to its service or proof of service, or any technical exception or objection to the
record affecting the right of the appellant to be heard on the points of error assigned, which
might be cured on suggestion of diminution of the record, must be taken at the first term after
the transcript is filed, and must be noted in the written or the printed points of the respondent,
and filed at least one day before the argument, or they will not be regarded.
From a reading of this rule, it is apparent that it is the policy of this court to give the
appellant every reasonable opportunity to be heard upon the merits and that an appeal should
not be dismissed where an error or oversight can be corrected without injury to the opposite
party, where appellant desires to make such correction.
41 Nev. 349, 357 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
From the record and affidavit on file in this matter, it appears that a copy of a part of the
transcript was served before the case was docketed in this court, and that the balance thereof
was served within a reasonable time thereafter. No injury, inconvenience, or delay appears to
have been sustained by respondent. The case of Gardner v. Pacific Power Co., 40 Nev. 343,
is dissimilar from this, in that no copy of the transcript was ever served and no brief was ever
filed, nor did appellant in any way seek to cure the defects pointed out. In fact, it appears that
the appeal in that case was entirely abandoned.
2. Counsel for respondent also moves to strike from appellant's assignment of errors
assignment No. 11, for the reason that said assignment was not embraced in and made a part
of the memorandum of exceptions required by section 5322, Revised Laws. The section
mentioned provides that where the motion for new trial is based upon error in law occurring
at the trial and excepted to by the party making the application (section 5320, subd. 7), the
party moving for a new trial shall within ten days * * * serve upon the adverse party a
memorandum of such errors excepted to as he intends to rely upon, and that no other errors
upon such ground shall be considered, either upon the motion for a new trial or upon appeal,
than those mentioned in such memorandum of exceptions. It is very evident that by section
5322 reference is had only to errors committed by the court at the trial, and not to an error
committed by the court in arriving at an erroneous conclusion as to the legal effect of all of
the evidence in the case. Motion is also made to strike numerous other assignments of error,
upon the ground that they were not embodied in the memorandum of exceptions required by
section 5322, Revised Laws, above quoted. In our opinion, the assignment of errors just
alluded to does not go to errors contemplated by section 5322, Revised Laws, but rather to
error committed by the court after the trial had been completed, and in the making of findings
and in the entering of judgment and decree. In our opinion, none of the motions are well
taken, and they are denied, for the reasons which we have given.
41 Nev. 349, 358 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
our opinion, none of the motions are well taken, and they are denied, for the reasons which
we have given.
We come now to a consideration of the merits of the case. This action was brought to
recover upon two alleged claims, one being based upon the allowance by the court in the
matter of the estate of Lawrence Guisti, deceased, of the so-called monthly allowance of
$130, and the other upon the so-called contribution by plaintiff to Lawrence Guisti in his
lifetime of the sum of $3,000. The complaint is replete with allegations of fraud alleged to
have been committed by defendant as administrator of the said estate, all of which alleged
fraudulent acts, it is claimed, go to aid in the establishment of both causes of action.
3. We will first dispose of the cause of action based upon the $3,000 claim; and, in this
connection, we call attention to the allegations in the complaint, which we have quoted,
which are pleaded by plaintiff as the very foundation of her claim. It will be noted from the
allegations that it is contended that the plaintiff contributed to the erection by Lawrence
Guisti, deceased, of a certain building and toward the purchase by him of certain personal
property, and upon the strength of this allegation it is claimed that proof of a loan from
plaintiff to Lawrence Guisti can be established. There is a marked difference between
contributing money and loaning money. the court did not find that plaintiff loaned the
deceased $3,000, but that she did contribute the sum of $3,000 toward the erection of said
building and paying for said bar, bar fixtures, furnishings, cigars, and liquors, etc. In Parks,
Admr., v. American Home Mis. Soc., 62 Vt. 19, 20 Atl. 107, it is said:
A contribution,' then, is the act of giving to a common stock, or in common with others,
that which is given to a common stock or purpose,' etc. (Webst. Dict.)
The New Standard Dictionary defines contribute as follows: "To give or furnish, in
common with others, for a common purpose; supply as part of a common stock; give in
aid of some object."
41 Nev. 349, 359 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
To give or furnish, in common with others, for a common purpose; supply as part of a
common stock; give in aid of some object.
See, also, Century Dict.; Black's Law Dict. 2d ed.
From these definitions of the word contribute, it is clear that the complaint does not
allege a loan by the plaintiff to Lawrence Guisti.
4. In disposing of the claim based upon the monthly allowance of $130 by the court in the
estate matter, it becomes necessary that we determine the force and effect of the mortgage
given by the deceased to the Bullfrog Bank and Trust Company, and assigned to defendant.
The note mentioned was dated September 11, 1907, payable on demand, in the sum of
$2,296.20. The deceased died October 23, 1907, a little over one month after the execution of
the note. The uncontradicted evidence of F. L. Warburton, the cashier of the bank, and a
disinterested witness, is to the effect that this note was secured by a mortgage upon the real
and personal property in question, and that the note being unpaid, the bank sold the same to
the defendant in this action for the sum of $3,000. This evidence being uncontradicted, it is
evident that the claim thus held was a prior valid claim, unless there was some inherent defect
in the mortgages. The real estate mortgage is not attacked because of any such defect, but the
trial court held that the mortgage upon the personalty is void as against creditors, and that
plaintiff was a creditor. The mortgage upon the personalty was in the form of a bill of sale.
There is no question but that an unrecorded chattel mortgage or bill of sale of personalty,
unaccompanied by an immediate change of possession, is void as to creditors, as a general
proposition; but plaintiff's claim based upon the monthly allowance does not come in that
class. The statute which was in force at the time the bill of sale was given in section 2703,
Cutting's Compiled Laws (Rev. Laws, 1078), which reads as follows:
Every sale made by a vendor of goods and chattels in his possession, or under this
control, and every assignment of goods and chattels, unless the same be accompanied by
an immediate delivery, and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession
of things sold or assigned, shall be conclusive evidence of fraud, as against the creditors
of the vendor, or the creditors of the person making such assignment, or subsequent
purchasers in good faith."
41 Nev. 349, 360 (1918) Guisti v. Guisti
in his possession, or under this control, and every assignment of goods and chattels, unless
the same be accompanied by an immediate delivery, and be followed by an actual and
continued change of possession of things sold or assigned, shall be conclusive evidence of
fraud, as against the creditors of the vendor, or the creditors of the person making such
assignment, or subsequent purchasers in good faith.
5. The order of the court setting aside a monthly allowance to plaintiff did not constitute
her a creditor in the sense contemplated by the statute. Both the real and personal estate of the
deceased, so far as covered by the mortgages, were subject to specific liens, which were, at
the time of the death of deceased, valid as to plaintiff, and nothing which could be done
subsequent to the death of the deceased would operate to deprive him of his lien. No matter
how many acts of fraud the defendant may have been guilty of as administrator, if any, or
how gross they may have been, such conduct would not divest him of his contractual rights
under his mortgages; hence we do not deem it necessary to consider his alleged fraudulent
conduct.
For the reasons given, it is ordered that the judgment and order appealed from be, and the
same are hereby, reversed.
McCarran, C. J.: I concur.
Sanders, J., did not participate.
On Petition for Rehearing
Per Curiam:
Rehearing denied.
____________
41 Nev. 361, 361 (1918) Shute v. Big Meadow Inv. Co.
[No. 2286]
JAMES L. SHUTE, Respondent. v. BIG MEADOW INVESTMENT COMPANY
(a Corporation), Appellant.
[170 Pac. 1049]
1. Appeal and ErrorUndertaking on Appeal.
An undertaking not filed within five days after filing of notice of appeal, as required by Rev. Laws, 5330,
5346 (Civ. Prac. Act, secs. 388, 404), prevents a review of the case, unless such undertaking is actually
approved by a majority of the justices of the supreme court before a hearing on a motion by the respondent
to dismiss, under Rev. Laws, 5358 (Civ. Prac. Act, sec. 416), providing that no appeal shall be dismissed
for insufficiency of the undertaking on appeal if a good and sufficient undertaking approved by a majority
of the justices be filed before a hearing upon motion to dismiss the appeal.
Appeal from Sixth Judicial District Court, Humboldt County; E. A. Ducker, Judge.
Action by James L. Shute against the Big Meadow Investment Company. Judgment for the
plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Appeal dismissed.
Young & Brown and M. B. Moore, for Appellant.
R. M. Hardy and Callahan & Brandon, for Respondent.
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This matter comes on at this time on motion to dismiss an attempted appeal from an order
of the district court. The movant relies on the provision of the code of civil procedure
directing the manner in which an appeal may be perfected to this court. Section 5346,
Revised Laws (sec. 404, Civ. Prac. Act), provides:
To render an appeal effectual for any purpose, in any case, a written undertaking shall be
executed on the part of the appellant by at least two sureties, to the effect that the appellant
will pay all damages and costs which may be awarded against him on the appeal, not
exceeding three hundred dollars; or that sum shall be deposited with the clerk with whom the
judgment or order was entered, to abide the event of the appeal. Such undertaking shall be
filed, or such deposit made with the clerk, within five days after the notice of appeal is filed,
etc.
41 Nev. 361, 362 (1918) Shute v. Big Meadow Inv. Co.
It is admitted in this case that no attempt was made by appellant to comply with the
provisions of this statute in that no written undertaking was executed on the part of the
appellant, and no deposit was made with the clerk with whom the judgment and order
appealed from was entered. Section 5330, Revised Laws (sec. 388, Civ. Prac. Act), provides:
An appeal is taken by filing with the clerk of the court in which the judgment or order
appealed from is entered, a notice stating the appeal from the same or some specific part
thereof, and within three days thereafter serving a similar notice or copy thereof on the
adverse party or his attorney. * * * The order of service is immaterial, but the appeal is
ineffectual for any purpose unless within five days after service of the notice of appeal an
undertaking be filed, or a deposit of money be made with the clerk, as hereinafter provided, or
the undertaking be waived by the adverse party in writing.
It is provided by section 5325, Revised Laws (sec. 383, Civ. Prac. Act):
A judgment or order in a civil action, except when expressly made final by this act, may
be reviewed as prescribed by this title, and not otherwise.
The absence of an undertaking on appeal was held to preclude this court from reviewing
the case in Marx v. Lewis, 24 Nev. 306, 53 Pac. 600. That case was reversed by the case of
Hoffman v. Owens, 31 Nev. 481, 103 Pac. 414, 104 Pac. 242, Ann. Cas. 1912a, 603. The
reversal, however, was only to the extent that litigants might by stipulation waive an appeal
bond. The rule must prevail as laid down in Marx v. Lewis, and unless such stipulation and
waiver of undertaking affirmatively appears, this court cannot take jurisdiction for the
purpose of reviewing, unless there be a compliance with the statute. The failure to file such
undertaking within the time prescribed renders the notice of appeal nugatory. This rule was
established by the cases of Peran v. Monroe, 1 Nev. 484, and Lambert v. Moore, 1 Nev. 345.
It is subject to modification at this time by reason of the effect of section 535S, Revised
Laws {sec.
41 Nev. 361, 363 (1918) Shute v. Big Meadow Inv. Co.
section 5358, Revised Laws (sec. 416, Civ. Prac. Act), and an appeal should not be dismissed
if the party appealing brings himself in due time within the provisions of the section last
named. It provides as follows:
No appeal shall be dismissed for insufficiency of the notice of appeal or undertaking
thereon; provided, that a good and sufficient undertaking approved by the justices of the
supreme court or a majority thereof, be filed in the supreme court before the hearing upon
motion to dismiss the appeal; provided, that the respondent shall not be delayed, but may
move when the cause is regularly called, for the disposition of the same, if such undertaking
be not given, etc.
The record in this case discloses an instrument, in the form of an undertaking, filed with
the clerk of this court August 20, 1917, more than two and one-half months after the filing of
the record on appeal. This instrument has never been approved by this court, nor has it as yet
been presented for approval. By the terms of the statute the approval by the court is made
indispensable to the efficacy of the undertaking. In its present condition the instrument is
without force or effect so far as this appeal is concerned. No undertaking on appeal having
been filed, and no deposit made with the clerk of the district court, and no undertaking
meeting with the requirements of section 5338 having been filed in this court, it follows
under the provision of the statute (sections 5330 and 5346) that the appeal is ineffectual for
any purpose.
The motion to dismiss must prevail.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 364, 364 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
[No. 2274]
FRANK L. WILDES, as Receiver of the State Bank and Trust Company
(a Corporation), Respondent, v. LOU DILLON GOLDFIELD MINING COMPANY (a
Corporation), Appellant.
[170 Pac. 1046]
1. Constitutional LawDue ProcessService on Foreign Corporations.
Rev. Laws, 5024, 5025, relating to service of process on foreign corporations, fail to provide means
whereby proper notice should be given, and do not constitute due process of law.
2. ProcessDefendants Residing Out of the StateAffidavitSufficiency.
Under Rev. Laws, 5026, 5027 (Civ. Prac. Act, secs. 84, 85), relating to service by publication, it is
jurisdictional that the affidavit for order of publication state either the residence of the defendant, whether
person or corporation, or that affiant does not know the residence.
Appeal from First Judicial District Court, Ormsby County; Frank P. Langan, Judge.
Suit by Frank L. Wildes, as receiver of the State Bank and Trust Company, a corporation,
against the Lou Dillon Goldfield Mining Company, a corporation. Judgment for plaintiff by
default. From an order refusing to set aside the judgment, the defendant appeals. Reversed.
M. A. Diskin, for Appellant:
The showing made by the affidavits presented upon the hearing of the motion to set aside
the default proved conclusively that the default had been entered through the mistake,
inadvertence, surprise, and excusable neglect of defendant, and it was an abuse of discretion
for the lower court to refuse to set aside the default and judgment. Affidavits of merit, such as
were presented, were sufficient. (Howe v. Coldren, 4 Nev. 171; State v. C. V. & C. M. Co., 13
Nev. 194; Horton v. New Pass M. Co., 21 Nev. 184.)
The affidavit and order for publication of summons were not sufficient, for the reason that the
court failed to find in the order that the residence of defendant was unknown. There is no
allegation in the affidavit that the residence of defendant is unknown, but there is an
allegation of the last known address of the defendant.
41 Nev. 364, 365 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
the residence of defendant is unknown, but there is an allegation of the last known address of
the defendant. (Rev. Laws, 5027.) Where a constructive service is relied upon to sustain a
judgment, a strict compliance with the statute is required; otherwise the court acquires no
jurisdiction over the defendant. (Coffin v. Bell, 22 Nev. 169.)
The court acquired no jurisdiction over the defendant, for the reason that no service of
summons as required by law was ever made on defendant. The attempted service of summons
was ineffectual and void. (Rev. Laws, 5023, 5026, 5027.) Under some statutes, where the
corporation has designated no agent for the service of process, service of process upon the
secretary of state is substituted for service by publication. (32 Cyc., sec. 8, p. 568; Olender
v. Crystalline M. Co., 86 Pac. 1082; Brooks v. Nevada Syndicate, 24 Nev. 311; Lonkey v.
Keys S. M. Co., 21 Nev. 312.)
Mack & Green, for Respondent:
This court cannot presume that the order denying the motion to vacate the judgment was
not supported by the evidence adduced at the hearing. It is fundamental that, in the absence of
a showing to the contrary, it will be presumed that the evidence was sufficient to justify and
support the findings, order or judgment made.
The statutes provide the only legal method by which constructive service may be obtained
on a foreign corporation having no officer or agent in this state. (Rev. Laws, 5026, 5027.)
Appellant made no showing in the trial court of a meritorious defense to the action, and
the affidavits presented were insufficient in form and substance to justify a vacation of the
judgment. Appellant had no standing on its application to vacate the judgment upon the
ground that it was taken against him through his mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable
neglect. The trial court is invested with wide discretion. (Rev. Laws, 5084; Conley v.
Chedic, 7 Nev. 336.)
Having had actual notice of the pendency of the action and time to make a defense, the
corporation cannot avail itself of the provisions of section 50S4, Revised Laws, even
though the summons was served by publication only.
41 Nev. 364, 366 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
itself of the provisions of section 5084, Revised Laws, even though the summons was served
by publication only. (Clark v. Tull, 113 Iowa, 143; McBride v. Harn, 52 Iowa, 79; Satterlee
v. Grub, 38 Kan. 234.)
Affidavit of merits must show that the affiant has fully and freely stated the facts of the
case to his counsel, and that such counsel has advised that there is a good, legal and
meritorious defense to the action. (Horton v. New Pass G. M. Co., 21 Nev. 184; State v. Con.
Va. M. Co., 13 Nev. 194; Howe v. Coldren, 4 Nev. 171; 23 Cyc. 953-957; Esden v. May, 36
Nev. 611, 37 Nev. 305.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This is an appeal from an order of the district court refusing to set aside a default judgment
entered against appellant. The Lou Dillon Goldfield Mining Company is a corporation
organized and existing under the laws of the State of Arizona. It had at one time done
business in this state, and at the time of the institution of this suit was the owner of mining
claims in the Goldfield mining district. At the time of the commencement of this action it had
no managing or business agent, cashier, or secretary, within this state (Rev. Laws, 5023), nor
had it a process agent as provided for by section 5024, Revised Laws. Notwithstanding the
fact that the only place at which the appellant company had ever conducted business within
this state and the only place in which it was the owner of property within the state was
Esmeralda County, the action in this instance was commenced in Ormsby County, the place
of residence of the respondent-receiver. The return of the sheriff of Esmeralda County made
to the summons disclosed the inability of that officer to obtain personal service on the
corporation. He certifies:
I have been unable to find any agent, president, cashier, director, resident agent,
designated agent, superintendent or other officer, business head or person representing said
corporation within this state, upon whom service of said summons could be made as service
upon said corporation and have been unable to find any officer of said corporation within
this state."
41 Nev. 364, 367 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
said corporation and have been unable to find any officer of said corporation within this
state.
Section 5024, Revised Laws, provides:
Every incorporated company or association created and existing under the laws of any
other state, or territory, or foreign government, or the government of the United States,
owning property or doing business in this state, shall appoint and keep in this state an agent
upon whom all legal process may be served for such corporation or association. Such
corporation shall file a certificate, properly authenticated by the proper officers of such
company, with the secretary of state, specifying the full name and residence of such agent,
which certificate shall be renewed by such company as often as a change may be made in
such appointment, or vacancy shall occur in such agency.
Section 5025, Revised Laws, provides:
If any such company shall fail to appoint such agent, or fail to file such certificate for
fifteen days after a vacancy occurs in such agency, on the production of a certificate of the
secretary of state showing either fact, which certificate shall be conclusive evidence of the
fact so certified to and be made a part of the return of service, it shall be lawful to serve such
company with any and all legal process, by delivering a copy to the secretary of state, or, in
his absence, to any duly appointed and acting deputy secretary of state, and such service shall
be valid to all intents and purposes; provided, that in all cases of such service the defendant
shall have forty days (exclusive of the day of service) within which to answer or plead. This
section shall be construed as giving an additional mode and manner of serving process and as
not affecting the validity of any other valid service.
1. It is the contention of appellant here that the respondent should have complied with the
terms and provisions of these sections, otherwise the constructive service is void. We
conclude this contention by adopting the reasoning and conclusion set out by the federal court
for this district in the case of King Tonopah Mining Co. v. Lynch, in which, after extended
consideration, it was held that these sections, inasmuch as they failed to provide a means
whereby proper notice should be given to a party defendant, did not constitute due
process of law.
41 Nev. 364, 368 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
Lynch, in which, after extended consideration, it was held that these sections, inasmuch as
they failed to provide a means whereby proper notice should be given to a party defendant,
did not constitute due process of law. (King Tonopah Mining Co. v. Lynch, 232 Fed. 485.)
2. In this instance the plaintiff, respondent here, sought to obtain service by publication;
and for the validity of the constructive service here relied on, the respondent contends that he
has complied with sections 5026 and 5027, Revised Laws, the same being sections 84 and 85
of our civil practice act, and reading as follows:
Sec. 84. When the person on whom the service is to be made resides out of the state, or
has departed from the state, or cannot, after due diligence, be found within the state, or
conceals himself to avoid the service of summons, and the fact shall appear by affidavit, to
the satisfaction of the court or judge thereof, and it shall appear, either by affidavit or by a
verified complaint on file, that a cause of action exists against the defendant in respect to
whom the service is to be made or that he is a necessary or proper party to the action, such
court or judge may grant an order that the service be made by the publication of the summons.
Sec. 85. The order shall direct the publication to be made in a newspaper, to be
designated by the court or judge thereof as one most likely to give notice to the person to be
served, for a period of six weeks, and at least once a week during said time. In case of
publication, where the residence of a nonresident or absent defendant is known, the court or
judge shall also direct a copy of the summons and complaint to be deposited in the postoffice,
directed to the person to be served at his place of residence. * * *
Inasmuch as, in our judgment, this appeal turns on the last sentence quoted, we have
italicized the same.
The affidavit for the order of publication in this case presents a striking avoidance of
compliance with the last provision quoted in section 85. After relating as to the filing of the
complaint, the issuance of summons, the issuance of a writ of attachment, and the levy of
said writ, the affidavit proceeds to set forth facts as to a cause of action, and refers to the
verified complaint on file, making a copy of that complaint an exhibit attached to the
affidavit.
41 Nev. 364, 369 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
issuance of a writ of attachment, and the levy of said writ, the affidavit proceeds to set forth
facts as to a cause of action, and refers to the verified complaint on file, making a copy of that
complaint an exhibit attached to the affidavit. The affidavit then proceeds:
That the above-named defendant, Lou Dillon Goldfield Mining Company, was at all the
times and dates in said complaint mentioned, and now is, a corporation duly chartered,
organized, and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the Territory of Arizona (now State
of Arizona) and that said corporation was and now is the owner of property and engaged in
the transaction of business at Goldfield mining district, county of Esmeralda, State of Nevada,
and resides out of and is a nonresident of the State of Nevada.
The affidavit then proceeds to relate as to the inability of the sheriff to make personal
service of summons, and then sets forth a copy of the return of the sheriff of Esmeralda
County. Continuing, the affidavit states:
Affiant further says that he and the said plaintiff, Frank L. wildes, have each made due
and diligent search and inquiry to find any agent, president, cashier, director, resident agent,
designated agent, superintendent, or other officer, business head, or person representing said
corporation within the State of Nevada, upon whom service of the summons in said action
may be made for said defendant, but that after such due and diligent search and inquiry the
said plaintiff and the said affiant and the said sheriff of Esmeralda County have been unable
to and cannot find within this state any agent, president, cashier, director, resident agent,
designated agent, superintendent, secretary, or other officer, business head, or person
representing said corporation, upon whom service of the summons in said action may be
made for said corporation.
The affidavit relates as to no designated agent being filed with the secretary of state, and
continues:
That personal service of the summons in said action cannot be made upon said defendant
within this state for the reasons hereinbefore specified and by the said verified complaint
made to appear, and for the reason that the said corporation resides out of and is a
nonresident of the State of Nevada, and therefore affiant prays that an order be made,"
etc.
41 Nev. 364, 370 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
verified complaint made to appear, and for the reason that the said corporation resides out of
and is a nonresident of the State of Nevada, and therefore affiant prays that an order be
made, etc.
Where the residence of a nonresident absent defendant is known the depositing of a copy
of the summons and complaint in the postoffice addressed to the person to be served at his
place of residence is as much a part of the prescribed method for complete constructive
service as any other act designated by the code. The object of service of summons in a civil
action is to bring notice to the party whose property or rights may be affected. The appellant
was shown to be a nonresident absent defendant, and as such was entitled to notice in strict
conformity with all the requirements of the statute. In the affidavit for publication, there
appears a most conspicuous absence of mention as to the known residence of the Lou Dillon
Goldfield Mining Company or as to the known residence of its officers to whom notice might
be sent, or on whom service might be made. The most that is declared in the affidavit is that
diligent search within the state failed to disclose the whereabouts within the state of any
agent, president, cashier, director, resident agent, designated agent, superintendent, secretary
or other officer, business head, or person representing said corporation upon whom service of
summons in said action may be made for said corporation. It appears that the order for
publication also contained an order requiring that a copy of the summons and complaint be
deposited in the postoffice, but directing that the same be addressed to the appellant at
Goldfield, stating that the corporation had its last known place of business and postoffice
address in the State of Nevada at the town of Goldfield, county of Esmeralda, State of
Nevada.
This court has always held, and in this respect it is in conformity with the great weight of
authority, that nothing less than a strict compliance with the statute providing for
constructive service will confer jurisdiction.
41 Nev. 364, 371 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
providing for constructive service will confer jurisdiction. (Coffin v. Bell, 22 Nev. 169, 37
Pac. 240, 58 Am. St. Rep. 738.)
The affidavit is singularly silent as to the present place of residence of the defendant
corporation. It is even silent as to the last-known place of residence or as to the present or
last-known address. The statute requires that where the residence of a nonresident absent
defendant is known, it must be stated. If the residence of a nonresident absent defendant is
unknown to the party making the affidavit, a statement to that effect must be made. It is in the
probative facts stated in the affidavit that the order of the court directing service by
publication must find justification. It is from these that the court must find ground upon
which to conclude that the ultimate facts required by the statute exist. (Cohen v. Portland
Lodge No. 142, B. P. O. E., 144 Fed. 266.)
In the case of Victor Mining Co. v. Justice Court, 18 Nev. 21, 1 Pac. 831, this identical
matter was passed upon by this court and the question here raised was set at rest. The
defendant there was a nonresident corporation. In that case, as here, the plaintiff failed to state
as to knowledge of the defendant's residence. This court, speaking through Mr. Justice Lewis,
said:
Plaintiff may have known the residence. If he did, he should have stated it in his affidavit;
the court should have made the requisite order, and the return in this proceeding should have
shown a full compliance therewith. Nothing less, at least, than an affidavit to the effect that
plaintiff did not know defendant's residence, could justify the failure to order the depositing
of copies of the complaint and summons in the postoffice directed as required.
The term last-known place of business and postoffice address in the State of Nevada
does not meet the requirements of the statute calling for a declaration on the part of the maker
of the affidavit stating the residence if known.
41 Nev. 364, 372 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
residence if known. If the residence is not known, it is for the affidavit, rather than the order
of the court, to make this fact appear.
The diligence resorted to by the plaintiff-receiver in this case to properly bring to the
attention of the officers of the appellant company the existence of a suit affecting property of
that corporation, or rather the lack of diligence in this respect, is to our mind a matter worthy
of comment. It appears conclusively that the residence of the president and of the secretary of
the Lou Dillon Goldfield Mining Company was at all times during the pendency of the action
known to the plaintiff-receiver. The record discloses letters which admittedly passed between
the secretary of the company, Mr. Charles E. Hudson, and Mr. Wildes. A communication of
September 5, 1916, from Mr. Hudson, addressed to Mr. Wildes, mentions the subject of the
reorganization of the Lou Dillon Company. A letter dated September 12, 1916, from the
plaintiff-receiver, addressed to Mr. Hudson, is in part as follows:
Yours 5th received in my absence. As to the Lou Dillon, I am suing the company for
approximately $12,000, owing by them, including annual labor, etc., since 1907. This
property has been maintained by me without any outside assistance or expressed interest until
developments seem to indicate a possible value, and I naturally consider my interests the
paramount ones. I shall not consider a proposition to reorganize after obtaining title without
the payment to me of all the debt, and then upon the basis of any preceding reorganization. In
the ordinary process of law I am unable to say when the matter may be adjudicated and shall
have to contain my soul in patience, as shall you, until then. Sincerely yours,
F. L. Wildes, Receiver.
At the date on which this letter was written by the plaintiff-receiver, the summons in the
action had been published in the Goldfield Tribune, a newspaper in the town of Goldfield,
Esmeralda County. It appears that on receipt of this letter Mr.
41 Nev. 364, 373 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
receipt of this letter Mr. Hudson wired the president of the Lou Dillon Mining Company at
Tonopah, Nevada, as follows:
Ascertain if Wildes has filed suit against Lou Dillon and if so put in answer general
denial. Very important.
The record contains an affidavit made by Herman Zadig, president of the appellant
corporation, in which it is related that inquiry was made in Goldfield, the former place of
business of the corporation, to ascertain if suit had been commenced in that place. At that
time the publication of the summons in the Goldfield Tribune had been completed and the
affidavit of the publisher had already been filed in the district court of Ormsby County. It was
the natural thing that the officers of the appellant company would expect suit, if commenced
at all, to be instituted in that county where its property was located and where its business had
been conducted.
On September 26, 1916, a letter was written by Charles E. Hudson, the secretary of the
appellant company, addressed to the plaintiff-receiver, as follows:
Answering your letter with reference to bringing suit against the Lou Dillon Company,
wish to say that our arrangement has always been this property should belong to our pool for
the assessment money which we have advanced, and, when your suit is filed, there should be
some arrangement in writing with us showing our interest. Before you file the suit I should
like very much to see you and talk the matter over with you and trust that you will let us hear
from you before doing so.
On the date of the writing of this communication, judgment had already been entered in
the district court of Ormsby County against the appellant corporation. In all of these
communications the plaintiff-receiver knew that the party with whom he was exchanging
communications was the secretary of the Lou Dillon Goldfield Mining Company. If he (the
plaintiff) had been desirous, he could have ascertained, or at least made inquiry to ascertain,
the residence of the corporation. If Hudson, the secretary of the company, had been found
within this state, a personal service of summons on him would have met the requirements
of section 5023.
41 Nev. 364, 374 (1918) Wildes v. Lou Dillon Mining Co.
found within this state, a personal service of summons on him would have met the
requirements of section 5023. If found within the state, he represented, for the purpose of
process, the person of the corporation of which he was secretary. It would have been a simple
matter, in furtherance of due diligence, for the plaintiff-receiver to have transmitted to the
secretary of the Lou Dillon a certified copy of the complaint and summons, and to thereby
have brought home knowledge to that officer of the corporation of the existence of the suit
pending and the place of its pendency. From the record we are impressed with the fact that
had such knowledge been conveyed to the officers of the appellant company, an answer
would have been filed within time, and the appellant would have had an opportunity to have
its rights litigated.
It might be said that the plaintiff-receiver was not bound to convey information either to
the president or secretary of the appellant company, notwithstanding the fact that he was
aware of their residence and whereabouts, and it might be suggested that the residence of the
secretary or the residence of the president of a corporation is not necessarily the residence of
the corporation itself. Without commenting on the force of these assertions, it will suffice to
say that good faith and due diligence on the part of the plaintiff would in our judgment have
prompted him to inquire of these officers as to the residence of the corporation, and to convey
notice of the institution of the action and of the court in which such action was pending.
Inasmuch as the affidavit for order of publication clearly fails to comply with the terms of the
statute, the order for publication issued by the court was void (Victor Mining Co. v. Justice
Court, supra), and the subsequent proceedings were of no greater validity.
The order appealed from is reversed. The case is remanded, with instructions to the trial
court to set aside its judgment and default and permit appellant to file its answer.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 375, 375 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
[No. 2302]
In the Matter of the Estate of ALBERT
KATTENHORN, Deceased.
[171 Pac. 164]
1. Descent and DistributionCommunity Property.
Stats. 1915, c. 130, does not affect or repeal Rev. Laws, 2164, 2165, relating to descent of community
property, and where spouse dies intestate all the community property goes to the surviving spouse.
Appeal from Third Judicial District Court, Lander County; Peter Breen, Judge.
In the matter of the estate of Albert Kattenhorn, deceased. From a decree distributing all of
the estate to Lulu Kattenhorn, widow of the deceased, Annie F. Kattenhorn appeals.
Affirmed.
Frank Curran and L. B. Fowler, for Appellant:
Whether it is community or separate, the appellant, mother of the deceased, is entitled to
one-half of the property. The estate consists of both community and separate property. In
determining the right of appellant, three provisions of law must be considered, namely,
sections 2165 and 6125, Revised Laws, and subdivision 2 of an amendatory act relating to the
estates of deceased persons, passed in 1915, and found in Statutes of 1915, at page 149. The
father of Albert Kattenhorn died prior to the death of his son, the widow of Albert Kattenhorn
is without issue of her marriage, and therefore the estate should go one-half to the surviving
widow and one-half to the mother of the decedent.
The act of 1915 is in direct conflict with section 2165, Revised Laws. Section 2165 is
altered by the act of 1915 in that it changes the rule in regard to community property in so far
as a father or mother is concerned. As to other persons, the provisions of the section are in
force, because they have not been changed by any subsequent enactment.
The administratrix, the widow, will contend that section 6125, Revised Laws, which reads,
The provision of this act, as to the inheritance of the husband and wife from each other,
applies only to the separate property of the intestate," is of consequence in considering
the disposition of this estate.
41 Nev. 375, 376 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
each other, applies only to the separate property of the intestate, is of consequence in
considering the disposition of this estate. Such, however, from the standpoint of all the
accepted rules of statutory construction and interpretation is absolutely untenable. This
section was clearly controlling until the legislature, by a subsequent enactment of the descent
provision of the same act, made it apply to community property as far as a mother or father is
concerned. This the legislature clearly had the power to do; and in that the act of 1915
constitutes the latest enactment on the subject, section 6125 is necessarily abrogated and
repealed in so far as it conflicts with the act of 1915.
An intention will not be ascribed to the law-making power to establish conflicting and
hostile systems upon the same subject, or to leave in force provisions of law by which the
later will of the legislature may be thwarted and overthrown. Such a result would render
legislation a useless and idle ceremony, and subject the law to the reproach of uncertainty and
unintelligibility. (Lewis's Sutherland, Statutory Construction, p. 473.) Laws are presumed to
be passed with deliberation, and with a knowledge of all existing laws on the same subject.
(Idem, p. 459.) Where the later or revising statute clearly covers the whole subject-matter of
antecedent acts, and it plainly appears to have been the purpose of the legislature to give
expression in it to the whole law on the subject, the latter is held to be repealed by necessary
implication. (Winslow v. Morton, 118 N. C. 486, 491, 492.) A statute repeals by implication
all existing statutes plainly inconsistent therewith. (Ex Parte Maginnis, 162 Cal. 200.) If two
statutes are irreconcilably conflicting, the last enacted controls. (State v. Esser, 35 Nev. 429.)
A statute conflicting with the provisions of an earlier statute on the same subject operates to
the extent of the conflict as a repeal of the former statute. (Griswold v. Griswold, 23 Colo.
App. 365.)
A statute revising the whole subject-matter of former acts, and containing their main
provisions, and evidently intended as a substitute for them, repeals them though it
contains no express words to that effect.
41 Nev. 375, 377 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
intended as a substitute for them, repeals them though it contains no express words to that
effect. (Garnett v. Goldman, 135 Pac. 410.) A statute which is a complete revision of existing
statutes on a subject is a substitute for the existing statutes, which must be deemed repealed.
(Santa Ana School District v. Talbert, 19 Cal. App. 104.) The court in construing a statute
must give effect to the legislative intent. (State v. Ducker, 35 Nev. 214.)
Callahan & Brandon, for Respondent:
The peculiar wording of the statute covering descent and distribution, referred to by
counsel for appellant, occurs first in the amendment to the act to regulate the settlement of the
estates of deceased persons, found in Statutes of 1903, p. 218, subd. 1. This subdivision was
reenacted as a part of the law governing the estates of deceased persons by the legislature of
1911. (Rev. Laws. 6116.) In 1913 there were further amendments. (Stats. 1913, p. 56.) It will
be noticed that the only change made by this later amendment is in the words both
community and separate. In 1915 a further amendment was made, providing that all of the
property, both community and separate, of the intestate, shall go to the surviving husband or
wife. (Stats. 1915, p. 149.)
The act governing the property rights of husband and wife as it now stands in the Revised
Laws has been the law of this state for a great many years, and the courts, both of original and
appellate jurisdiction, have been engaged, prior and subsequent to the amendment of 1903, in
construing and settling the meaning of the husband and wife act. (In Re Williams's Estate, 40
Nev. 241; 161 Pac. 741.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
To the marriage of Albert Kattenhorn and Lulu Kattenhorn there was no issue. Albert
Kattenhorn died intestate; Lulu Kattenhorn survives. The district court in the probate
proceedings found that the property of which Albert Kattenhorn died possessed was in its
nature community.
41 Nev. 375, 378 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
nature community. Lulu Kattenhorn, respondent here, contended in the district court, and that
court sustained her contention, that she was entitled to a distribution of the entire estate of her
deceased husband. Annie F. Kattenhorn, mother of the deceased, contended that as such she
was entitled to have an interest in the estate of her deceased son distributed to her. By decree
of the district court the entire estate was ordered distributed to Lulu Kattenhorn, the widow.
From this decree the mother of the deceased appeals to this court.
Nothing appears in the record from which we would be required to disturb the finding of
the trial court as to the nature and character of the property left by the deceased Kattenhorn.
One question, and one only, comes to this court for determination on appeal. In this is
involved the interpretation of the force and effect of an amendatory statute enacted by the
legislature of 1915, entitled:
An act to amend an act entitled An act to amend section 1 of an act entitled An act to
regulate the settlement of the estates of deceased persons, approved March 23, 1897, and as
amended and approved March 16, 1899, approved March 6, 1901,' and as amended March 11,
1913.
The amendatory act, in so far as its effect in the case at bar is concerned, is as follows:
Section 1. Section 259 of the above-entitled act is hereby amended so as to read as
follows:
Section 259. When any person having title to any estate, not otherwise limited by
marriage contract, shall die intestate as to such estate, it shall descent and be distributed,
subject to the payment of his or her debts, in the following manner:
FirstIf there be a surviving husband or wife, and only one child, or the lawful issue of
one child, one-half to the surviving husband or wife, and one-half to such child or issue of
such child. If there be a surviving husband or wife and more than one child living, or one
child living and the lawful issue of one or more deceased children, one-third to the surviving
husband or wife, and the remainder in equal shares to his or her children, and to the
lawful issue of any deceased child by right of representation.
41 Nev. 375, 379 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
children, one-third to the surviving husband or wife, and the remainder in equal shares to his
or her children, and to the lawful issue of any deceased child by right of representation. If
there be no child of the intestate living at his or her death, the remainder shall go to all of his
or her lineal descendants, and if all of the said descendants are in the same degree of kindred
to the intestate, they shall share equally, otherwise they shall take according to the right of
representation.
SecondIf he or she shall leave no issue, the estate shall go, one-half to the surviving
husband or wife, one-fourth to the intestate's father and one-fourth to the intestate's mother, if
both are living; if not, one-half to either the father or mother then living. If he or she shall
have no issue, nor father, nor mother, the whole community property of the intestate shall go
to the surviving husband or wife, and one-half of the separate property of the intestate shall
go to the surviving husband or wife, and the other half thereof shall go in equal shares to the
brothers and sisters of the intestate, and to the children of any deceased brother or sister by
right of representation. If he or she shall leave no issue, or husband, or wife, the estate shall
go, one-half to the intestate's father and one-half to the intestate's mother, if both are living, if
not the whole estate shall go to either the father or mother then living. If he or she shall leave
no issue, father, mother, brother, or sister, or children of any issue, brother or sister, all of
the property, both community and separate, of the intestate shall go to the surviving husband
or wife. (Stats. 1915, p. 149.) We italicize.
The original act thus amended by the legislature of 1915 was a part of an act entitled An
act to regulate the settlement of the estates of deceased persons. The statute from its first
enactment (Stats. 1861, p. 238) until the present time has referred to but one class of property.
It has been subject to change by way of amendment, and on the several occasions when the
language was changed it was either to make it more lucid or to change the interest of the
recognized heirs.
41 Nev. 375, 380 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
or to change the interest of the recognized heirs. (Stats. 1897, p. 158; Stats. 1899, p. 110;
Stats. 1901, p. 44; Stats. 1903, p. 218; Stats. 1915, p. 149.) It never referred to other than the
separate property of the person deceased. (In Re Estate of Foley, 24 Nev. 197, 51 Pac. 834, 52
Pac. 649.) The language of the amendatory statute of 1915 first appeared in the amendatory
statute of 1903. (Stats. 1903, p. 218.) In the latter statute we find for the first time the
expression:
If he or she shall leave no issue nor father nor mother, the whole community property of
the intestate shall go to the surviving husband or wife, and one-half of the separate property
of the intestate shall go to the surviving husband or wife, etc.
The expression the whole community property of the intestate shall go to the surviving
husband or wife we read as in the nature of a parenthetical clause, the substance of which the
lawmaking body recognized as being a matter of course pursuant to the force and effect of,
and taking its authority and existence from, a statute specifically affecting the disposition of
the community property. (Rev. Laws, 2165.) There is nothing about the language of the
second subdivision of the amendatory statute of 1915, any more than in the amendatory
statute of 1903, which attempts to amend, modify, or repeal the statute dealing with the
disposition of community property on the death of one spouse.
By section 11 of the act defining the rights of husband and wife, which section bears
specifically on the distribution of community property, it is declared that community property
on the death of the husband without will goes one-half to the wife and one-half to the issue. If
there be no issue and no will, all community property goes to the surviving wife. Does the
second subdivision of the amendatory act of 1915, concerning descent and distribution,
designate any part of the community property as going to either the father or mother in the
event of no issue? There is not a word in that statute that would convey such an idea with any
degree of definiteness whatever. The amendatory statute says no more with reference to
the community property than does section 2165, Revised Laws, i.e., if there be no issue
and no will, the whole community property goes to the surviving spouse, and more, for, if
there be separate property, one-half of that also goes to the survivor if there be no issue
and a father or mother living, and if there be no issue and no father or mother and no
brothers or sisters and no issue of brothers or sisters, then the whole property of the
intestate, separate as well as community, goes to the surviving husband or wife.
41 Nev. 375, 381 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
any degree of definiteness whatever. The amendatory statute says no more with reference to
the community property than does section 2165, Revised Laws, i.e., if there be no issue and
no will, the whole community property goes to the surviving spouse, and more, for, if there
be separate property, one-half of that also goes to the survivor if there be no issue and a father
or mother living, and if there be no issue and no father or mother and no brothers or sisters
and no issue of brothers or sisters, then the whole property of the intestate, separate as well as
community, goes to the surviving husband or wife.
Sections 10 and 11 of the statute defining the rights of husband and wife (Rev. Laws,
2164, 2165) prescribe:
Sec. 10. Upon the death of the wife the entire community property belongs without
administration to the surviving husband. * * *
Sec. 11. Upon the death of the husband, one-half of the community property goes to the
surviving wife, and the other half is subject to the testamentary disposition of the husband,
and in the absence of such disposition goes to the surviving children equally, and in the
absence of both such disposition and surviving children, the entire community property
belongs without administration to the surviving wife. * * *
In the case of Clark v. Clark, with eminent counsel on both sides, it was conceded, that,
the property being community in nature, the case did not come within the statutes concerning
descents. (Clark v. Clark, 17 Nev. 124, 28 Pac. 238.)
In Re Foley's Estate, this court had before it the consideration of the same statutes as here
presented. True, the statutes, were somewhat different at that time as to the distributees under
the statute governing descent and distribution. The statute then provided:
SecondIf he or she shall leave no issue, the estate shall go in equal shares to the
surviving husband or wife and to the intestate's father. (Gen. Stats. 1885, sec. 2981.)
41 Nev. 375, 382 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
It was there held that the lower court exceeded its jurisdiction in its decree distributing
community property to other than the wife. Indeed, the most that was contended for there was
the right of the heirs to take a part of the property, both community and separate, by reason of
a written agreement to that effect entered into with the surviving wife. The court held in
effect that even under such agreement the community property was not subject to distribution
to the heirs, but passed to the wife. In our judgment, the amendment of 1915 was intended to
effect no different result. The amendatory statute of 1915, in so far as it refers to community
property, if anything, serves only to carry out the strict object and intent of the statute dealing
with the disposition of community property heretofore quoted. That portion of the second
subdivision in the amendatory statute of 1915 which refers to the whole community
property as going to the surviving husband or wife is but a reenunciation of the statute
directing the disposition of community property. (Rev. Laws, 2165.) The same may properly
be said with reference to the latter part of the second subdivision, wherein it prescribes when
and under what circumstances all the property, both community and separate, goes to the
surviving husband or wife. The amendatory statute of 1915 in no wise conflicts with sections
10 and 11 of the statute defining the rights of husband and wife (Rev. Laws, 2164, 2165),
bearing specifically on the disposition of community property. In the amendatory statute of
1915, as the same affects the settlement of estates of deceased persons, there is not a word or
expression designating any part or fraction of the community property as going to, belonging
to, or distributable to other than the husband or wife where there be such survivor. The
amendatory statute of 1915 cannot be said to even impliedly repeal or affect sections 10 and
11 of the act pertaining to husband and wife, because as regards the subject of community
property they stand and operate coordinately and harmoniously.
41 Nev. 375, 383 (1918) In Re Kattenhorn's Estate
Any other interpretation of the amendatory act of 1915 would not only do violence to the
cardinal principles of statutory construction, but would serve to destroy the community
property law of this state, a law enacted and carried down on the statute books of this state
under a policy coexistent with the history of the state itself. In the absence of specific and
positive declaration by the legislative branch of the government, such havoc would not
reasonably be contemplated.
The property here in question being found by the court to be common or community in
nature, left by deceased unaffected by testamentary disposition or the rights of living issue,
passes, pursuant to the specific language of section 2165 of our Revised Laws, to the
surviving wife.
The order and decree of the lower court from which this appeal is taken is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Sanders, J.: I concur.
Coleman, J.: I concur in the order.
____________
41 Nev. 384, 384 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
[No. 2311]
In the Matter of the Estate of PATRICK H.
DELANEY, Deceased.
[171 Pac. 383]
1. Executors and AdministratorsSpeculative ExpendituresNecessity of Court Order.
Where an estate had few debts, and consisted largely of cash and four mining claims, and the
administrator, without court order, paid out $1,600 for assessment work on the claims, when adjoining
claims gave promise of profit, and later abandoned the claims, the venture was so speculative as to
surcharge the administrator with such sums.
2. Executors and AdministratorsDutiesSuretiesLiability.
An administrator is bound to the exercise of care and diligence, such as prudent and judicious men
ordinarily bestow upon their own important affairs, and it is his duty to settle and distribute the estate with
as little delay as practicable; and whenever he does what the law prohibits, or fails to exercise reasonable
care and diligence in the endeavor to do what the law enjoins, he and his sureties are liable for the damage
consequent upon such act or omission.
3. Executors and AdministratorsDuties of Administrator.
Under Rev. Laws, 5963, 5964, 5967, 6041, as to duties of an administrator, expedient administration is
required, and where an estate had cash on hand to meet all indebtedness, and everything was present to
facilitate a speedy discharge of the trust, but the administrator permitted the estate to drag on for nearly
seven years without an accounting and without any attempt to secure an order for expenditure of money, he
was guilty of a breach of his duties.
4. Executors and AdministratorsFundsInterest.
Where the estate at all times had sufficient money on deposit under certificates of deposit to pay
indebtedness, but the administrator made no accounting for nearly seven years, he was chargeable with
interest on the moneys, although there was a suit to establish heirship.
5. Executors and AdministratorsSurcharging Administrators.
Where an estate was administered in a judicial district consisting of two counties where sessions of the
district court might occur at the judge's direction, the administrator's failure to secure an order for
expenditure of moneys in assessment work on mining claims for one year would not necessarily charge him
with such amount when the investment proved to be speculative and worthless.
6. Executors and AdministratorsFundsInterest.
Where money of an estate is held by an administrator after the time when by proper accounting and other
administrative acts in conformity with the statutory requirements, he could have paid out and distributed
the same by court order, he should be chargeable with interest on the money thus held.
41 Nev. 384, 385 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
Appeal from Third Judicial District Court, Lander County; Peter Breen, Judge.
In the matter of the estate of Patrick H. Delaney, deceased. On appeal from rulings on
items of the account of the administrator. Reversed and remanded.
Milton B. Badt, for Appellants:
Although the administrator may have done the assessment work on the mining claims in
the best of good faith, he will not be heard at this time to say that he is entitled to credit for
those speculative expenditures that resulted so disastrously for the persons entitled to
distribution. If he takes the responsibility of improving the estate or bettering the title in this
way, it must be at his own risk. (Estate of Knight, 12 Cal. 200, 208.) An executor has no
right to speculate for or with the estate. (Lucich v. Medin, 3 Nev. 93; In Re Shinn's Estate,
166 Pa. St. 121; Estate of Nicholson, 1 Nev. 518; Estate of Rose, 22 Pac. 86.)
Where an estate suffers loss by reason of the administrator's failure to distribute the funds
within a reasonable time, as by the failure of the bank with which such funds are deposited,
the administrator and his bondsmen are liable for the loss. (McNabb v. Wixom, 7 Nev. 163;
Brenham v. Story, 39 Cal. 175.) The simple duties devolving on executors up to the point
when the estate is ready for distribution have been set forth as follows: The duties of the
executors are to preserve the estate, pay the indebtedness of the deceased, the charges of
administration, and put the estate in such condition that distribution may be had to those
entitled to it under the will. (Willey's Estate, 73 Pac. 998.)
If there has been delay in the closing up and settlement of an estate, and such delay has
been reasonable, the administrator will not be liable for interest; but if the delay was
unreasonable, he will be charged with interest. (Estate of Bullion, 87 Neb. 700; note p. 351,
31 L. R. A.; Benson v. Bruce, 4 Desauss Eq. 463; Truney v. Williams, 7 Yerg. 172; Johnson
v. Pulner, 1 Neb. 290; Marshall v. Coleman, 187 Ill. 556; King v. Berry, 3 N. J. Eq. 261.)
41 Nev. 384, 386 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
Pending litigation concerning the estate does not relieve the administrator of liability for
interest for keeping the funds uninvested in his hands. (Foster v. Arnold, 60 Ga. 316;
Crouse's Estate, 16 Pa. Super. Ct. 212.)
The good faith of the administrator in acting as he did is wholly immaterial. (Woerner on
Administration, 2d ed. vol. 2, p. 688; Austin v. Munro, 47 N. Y. 360; Lucht v. Behrens, 28
Ohio St. 231.)
Chas. B. Henderson and Carey Van Fleet, for Respondent:
It was the duty of the administrator to have the assessment work done on the mining
claims. If the administrator, in good faith, did an act which the law declares shall not be done
without an order of court, if the act was one which the court would have approved or ordered
done, and no injury resulted from the action, he should not be chargeable with
mismanagement of the estate. (Estate of Millenovich, 5 Nev. 185; In Re Freud's Estate, 63
Pac. 1081; In Re Armstrong's Estate, 58 pac. 184.) It is his duty to keep the property insured,
and to pay the taxes thereon. He may, if the exigencies of the case demand, pay off a lien or
encumbrance on the real or personal estate, and the fact that the property thereafter sells for
less than the amount of the liens does not establish gross mismanagement on his part and
make him answerable for the loss. (Ross, Prob. Law & Pr., vol. 1, sec. 305.)
The personal liability for interest does not exist where the delay in settlement was owing to
the fact that it was difficult to ascertain or find the distributees. (Estate of Davis, 35 Mont.
273; Ross, Prob. Law & Pr., vol. 1, sec. 452.) It certainly was not the fault of the
administrator that this estate was in litigation. The heirs certainly would not have wanted the
estate distributed before they began the litigation, and certainly during the time of the
litigation there was no penalty upon the administrator for not distributing the estate to them.
(In Re Sylvar's Estate, 81 Pac. 663.)
There has been no affirmative showing at all of any misconduct upon the part of the
administrator, and there must be in order to give rise to a liability for interest.
41 Nev. 384, 387 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
misconduct upon the part of the administrator, and there must be in order to give rise to a
liability for interest. At best, the only showing has been that made by the administrator
himself in regard to the payment for assessment work, and this is purely a question of
judgment. If the administrator has misjudged in this particular, he has done so entirely in
good faith. So long, then, as it continued to be the duty of Wixom, the administrator, to
retain this money in his custody, he had the right to deposit it for safekeeping in a bank of
good standing and credit. This is exactly what prudent and judicious men ordinarily do with
such of their own funds as the exigencies of their business require them to keep on hand.
(McNabb v. Wixom, 7 Nev. 171.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
An administrator was appointed on the 26th day of February, 1908, to take charge of and
administer the estate of Patrick H. Delaney, deceased. On December 8, 1908, an inventory
and appraisement was filed which set forth the property of the estate and the appraised values
as follows:
Certificate of deposit, Horton Banking Company........................................................
$5,000.00
Cash in bank, Horton Banking Company....................................................................
1,200.00
Cash received from coroner........................................................................................
6.10
Four lots in Battle Mountain, Nevada..........................................................................
118.00
One cabin, 12x14........................................................................................................
250.00
Four mining claims in Battle Mountain mining district, known as Delaware No. 1,
No. 2, No. 3, and No. 4......................................................................................
500.00
One iron bed, springs, and mattress............................................................................
12.00
Two comforters and two pillows..................................................................................
4.00
One camp stove............................................................................................................
3.00
Cooking utensils, three pieces......................................................................................
1.00
A total
$7,094.10
It appears that from December, 1908, until July 1, 1915, no accounting was ever made by
the administrator as to the estate or its condition. On the last-named date, pursuant to a
citation duly issued by the district court, a first and final account was rendered. In this first
and final accounting it appears that the administrator charges himself with cash received
$6,224.45, and credits himself with cash paid out in the total sum of $4,370.94.
41 Nev. 384, 388 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
himself with cash paid out in the total sum of $4,370.94. Of the $6,224.45 with which the
administrator charges himself, $6,200.45 was in the nature of certificates of deposit and cash
at the time at which the administration commenced. The sum of $24 appears to have been
received in the form of rental for the cabin. In addition to this, the administrator testified at
the hearing that he had on hand $100 received as additional rental for this cabin.
Objection was raised in the district court to the several items of cash paid out by the
administrator from the moneys of the estate. It is from the court's rulings on these objections
that appeal is taken to this court.
In the first and final accounting there appear the items of cash paid out as follows:
Nov. 7, 1908To George W. Tripplett, assessment work on four mining
claims ............................................................................
$400
Dec., 1909To George W. Tripplett, assessment work on four mining
claims. ............................................................................
400
Nov., 1910To George W. Tripplett, assessment work on four mining
claims ............................................................................
400
Dec., 1911To George W. Tripplett, assessment work on four mining
claims ............................................................................
400
making a total of $1,600 appearing as paid out by the administrator from the moneys of the
estate for assessment work on the Delaware claims for the years 1908, 1909, 1910 and 1911.
It is admitted by the administrator, and in this the record is conclusive, that no order of
court was ever applied for, nor was any order made or entered, authorizing, allowing,
requiring, or directing the expenditure of these several sums prior to their expenditure. It is
the contention of respondent that inasmuch as the four mining claims known as the Delaware
No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, and No. 4 were the property of the deceased Delaney, in order to hold
these mining claims for the estate it was necessary to perform the annual assessment work
thereon. From the testimony of the administrator it is disclosed that after the year 1911 no
assessment work was performed on these claims. In other words they were abandoned.
41 Nev. 384, 389 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
other words they were abandoned. In justification for the performance of the assessment work
and the expenditure of the moneys of the estate on these mining claims, the administrator
relates of the existence of other mining property in the immediate vicinity which, being
worked and developed by other parties, gave promise of presenting mineral deposits of great
value; that inasmuch as the Delaney group was contiguous to this other mining property, he,
as administrator, believed that the Delaney group should be protected by the performance of
the annual assessment work, and thereby held for the estate. It is disclosed that no work was
performed on the Delaware group after the year 1911, because development on the
contiguous mining property had ceased and nothing of value had been disclosed.
Nothing appears in the record by way of justification or excuse for the failure of the
administrator to secure an order of the district court allowing or directing the expenditure of
these several sums of money. He was appointed administrator on the 26th day of February,
1908, and according to his own statement, as appears in the first and final accounting, the first
expenditure of money for the assessment work was in December of that year. The inventory
and appraisement disclosing the existence of the mining claims known as the Delaware No. 1,
No. 2, No. 3, and No. 4 belonging to the estate of Patrick Delaney had been made long prior
to the date on which the first expenditure for assessment work was made by the administrator.
The existence of the Delaware group of mining claims as property belonging to the estate of
the deceased was known to the administrator prior to the death of the deceased. We make
reference to these facts because we are forced to the conclusion that there was ample time and
opportunity for the administrator to have presented the matter to the district court, the
properly constituted authority, and to have received from that court an order directing the
expenditure of such money as it deemed necessary for the preservation of the mining claims
to the estate. And another fact appears quite significanti.e., even though it might have
been reasonably necessary that the assessment work for the year 190S should be
performed upon the mining claims in order to hold them for the estate, later expenditures
under the administration appear to us to have been entirely unnecessary and
unwarranted, inasmuch as the condition of the estate, as disclosed by the final
accounting, was such as would have warranted its being closed and the residue properly
distributed to the parties entitled, long prior to the time at which it became necessary to
perform the assessment work of 1909.
41 Nev. 384, 390 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
for the preservation of the mining claims to the estate. And another fact appears quite
significanti.e., even though it might have been reasonably necessary that the assessment
work for the year 1908 should be performed upon the mining claims in order to hold them for
the estate, later expenditures under the administration appear to us to have been entirely
unnecessary and unwarranted, inasmuch as the condition of the estate, as disclosed by the
final accounting, was such as would have warranted its being closed and the residue properly
distributed to the parties entitled, long prior to the time at which it became necessary to
perform the assessment work of 1909.
Aside from three claims of minor importance, amounting in the aggregate to $306.19, the
estate was practically free from indebtedness. Aside from the group of mining claims and a
small piece of realty in the town of Battle Mountain, and a few items of minor personal
property, the estate consisted entirely of cash represented by the certificates of deposit for
$5,000 and the open account of $1,200 in the Horton Banking Company in the town of Battle
Mountain.
It is the contention of respondent here that good faith on the part of the administrator is all
that is necessary to warrant the allowance of these several items, and that it was the duty of
the administrator to see to it that the assessment work on this group of claims belonging to
the estate was performed each succeeding year in order to hold the property for the estate. The
learned counsel for the respondent, by way of argument in his brief, puts the matter thus:
But what would have been said, and what bitter attack would have been made, if these
claims had been abandoned by the administrator at the time he took possession of the
property and Senator Kearns had been doing the assessment work on these claims alongside
of the claims possessed by the estate?
In furtherance of the contention of respondent, we are referred to a number of decisions
rendered by this court dealing with matters of somewhat similar import, and inasmuch as
these decisions support the position which we take here, we deem it proper to review the
same at some length.
41 Nev. 384, 391 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
and inasmuch as these decisions support the position which we take here, we deem it proper
to review the same at some length. In the Matter of the Estate of Marco Millenovich, 5 Nev.
161, this court had occasion to pass upon the acts of an administrator where objection had
been filed to his paying out certain sums of money to meet assessment levied upon mining
stock belonging to the estate. At the very outset of the opinion of the court, speaking through
Chief Justice Lewis, an observation is made which we deem most pertinent to the matter at
bar. There it is said:
When the law requires a thing to be done, and has not plainly marked out the manner in
which it shall be performed, the executor or administrator is required to exercise not only the
utmost good faith but also ordinary prudence and judgment in its execution. But when it has
already pointed out a certain course to be pursued, that course must be strictly followed. * * *
If the administrator has acted for the benefit of the estate, used proper diligence, and acted
with ordinary care and circumspection in the discharge of his trust, he ought not to be held
answerable for the losses which could not have been foreseen, and which ordinary precaution
could not guard against.'
Again, the court says, and here its observation is especially applicable:
If, for example, he [the administrator] should in good faith do an act without an order of
court, which the law declares shall not be done without such order, and if the act were one
which the court would have approved or ordered done, and no injury has resulted from his
action, he should not be chargeable with mismanagement of the estate. In every such case,
however, the executor renders himself liable for any loss which may be sustained by reason of
the irregularity of his proceeding.
As to the propriety of paying the assessment on valuable mining stock held in the estate
and the continuation of such assessment, the court said:
To allow valuable stock to be sold for assessments less than its value would certainly
subject an executor to the charge of misconduct.
41 Nev. 384, 392 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
less than its value would certainly subject an executor to the charge of misconduct. It is
perhaps not his duty, nor do we think he would be justified in holding stock which is subject
to assessments beyond such time as will be necessary to obtain an order of court respecting it.
Property of this kind, which is only an expense to the estate, should certainly be disposed of
in some way, unless it be quite evident that it would be for the interest of the estate to hold it.
But in such case an executor would certainly subject himself to liability for all loss unless he
acted under the direction of the court; for his primary duty, it would seem, is to obtain an
order to sell such property. But an order of court, ordering him to pay all assessments, is a
sufficient protection to him.
It appears that in that case the executor, before paying the assessment on the mining stock,
had obtained an order of the probate court authorizing his action in this respect, and this court
in reviewing the matter said:
Had he not acted under an order of the court we should be induced to think it should not
be allowed, for payment of the amount of assessments here charged would, if not paid by
order of court, be unwarranted under the circumstances.
In the case of Lucich v. Medin, 3 Nev. 93, 93 Am. Dec. 376, the court, in dealing with the
question of the right of the administrator to pay out the moneys of the estate for assessments
on mining stock, said:
If he held mining stock which was likely to be forfeited before he could apply to the court
for instructions, he might be justified in paying something to preserve it. * * * If he held stock
liable to large assessments, he should have applied to the court for leave to do one of two
things: Either to sell the stock, or better still, if the estate was surely solvent, without the
stock, to turn it over to the legatees, and let them sell or take their chances on speculation
with it.
1. The doctrine here announced is exactly applicable to the matter at bar. The mining
claims belonging to the estate were of but conjectural or speculative value.
41 Nev. 384, 393 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
At most they were but a prospect, the possibility of which was enhanced by the reason of the
contiguity of the property to other mining prospects upon which development work was being
done. An administrator, in conducting the affairs of an estate, is not required nor presumed to
enter into a game of chance where the money which belongs either to the creditors or to the
heirs is thrown into the gamble. Expenditures made for the purpose of preserving the estate
until proper court orders may be made with reference to its disposition is one thing; hazarding
the money of the estate on speculative ventures, without court order, is another. The former
looks to the preservation of the property of the estate until such time as it may be properly
disposed of by order of court; the latter is an unwarranted depletion of the estate. An order of
court is the administrator's protection in either case.
In the Matter of the Estate of Knight, 12 Cal. 200, 73 Am. Dec. 531, the supreme court
there laid down the doctrine that an administrator is not permitted at discretion to expend the
money of the estate even for the purpose of paying off incumbrances arising upon the
property, upon the theory that the property may increase in value, and thereby a speculation
may be made for the estate. In that case the right of the court to direct such expenditures as
might be necessary to save the estate from great sacrifice is recognized, but the act of the
administrator in diverting the money of the estate without such order is declared to be one the
result of which must be borne by him and for which he must be accountable.
A very interesting consideration of a matter quite similar to that presented in the case at
bar is found in Shinn's Estate, 166 Pa. 121, 30 Atl. 1026, 1030, 45 Am. St. Rep. 656. There
the money of the estate was expended in developing certain mining properties situated in a
foreign jurisdiction. The property had been held by the deceased, and during his lifetime he
had undertaken to develop the same. The administrator, with a view of continuing such,
expended large sums of money.
41 Nev. 384, 394 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
with a view of continuing such, expended large sums of money. The venture was a failure.
The court said:
The iron ore operation was a speculative venture which the decedent, in his lifetime, had
a perfect right to enter upon; his business was to accumulate an estate. If his ventures turned
out successful, he reaped the profits; if unsuccessful, no other were interested or had a right to
complain. But the business of this administrator was not to make money for the state by
hazardous ventures, but to save that which came into his hands, for creditors and kin, by
prudent business management. Speculative ventures were not prudent business management.
In that case, as in the matter at bar, the expenditure was made by the administrator without
order of court, and we find there the doctrine applied that under such circumstances such act
was sufficient to establish a devastavit against the administrator, warranting a surcharge of
the amount lost to the estate.
The doctrine applicable to risking assets of an estate in the continuation of the trade or
business of the decedent, while not strictly applicable to the matter at bar, furnishes,
nevertheless, no small degree of support for the position which we take here. The rule in that
respect has been asserted to be that an administrator or executor, in the absence of authority
therefor, is not permitted to use any part of the estate in trade or manufacturing or stock
speculation, or other business ventures whereby the trust fund is put at hazard. (Western
Newspaper Union v. Thurmond, 27 Okl. 261, 111 Pac. 204, Ann. Cas. 1912b, 727; Mathews
v. Sheehan, 76 Conn. 654, 57 Atl. 694, 100 Am. St. Rep. 1017; Campbell v. Faxon, 73 Kan.
675, 85 Pac. 760, 5 L. R. A. n. s. 1002; Kelley v. Kelley, 84 Fed. 420; Fleming v. Kelly, 18
Colo. App. 23, 69 Pac. 272; Lusk v. Patterson, 2 Colo. App. 307, 30 Pac. 253; Rose's Estate,
80 Cal. 166, 22 Pac. 86; In Re Smith, 118 Cal. 462, 50 Pac. 701.)
2. The estate was held by administrator for a period of seven years, without even so
much as filing the first accounting; and it appears that the first and final account was only
filed by the administrator after the issuance of an order and citation by the district court
directing the same.
41 Nev. 384, 395 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
of seven years, without even so much as filing the first accounting; and it appears that the first
and final account was only filed by the administrator after the issuance of an order and
citation by the district court directing the same. From all that appears in the record, every
claim against the estate could have been paid in cash, and every matter pertaining to the estate
could have been, in compliance with statutory provision, performed and the whole estate
wound up, ready for distribution, within a year, or at most a year and a half, from the date on
which the administrator here was appointed.
The language of Mr. Justice Garber, in speaking for this court in the case of McNabb v.
Wixom, 7 Nev. 171, and the doctrine laid down there, are especially pertinent to the matter at
bar. There it was said:
We quite agree that an administrator is bound to the exercise of care and diligence, such
as prudent and judicious men ordinarily bestow upon their own important affairs; that it is his
duty to settle and distribute the estate with as little delay as practicable; and that whenever he
does what the law prohibits, or fails to exercise reasonable care and diligence in the endeavor
to do what the law enjoins, he and his sureties are liable for the damage consequent upon
such act or omission.
The respondent here relies upon the case of Freud's Estate, 131 Cal. 667, 63 Pac. 1080, 82
Am. St. Rep. 407, and it is contended that there the Supreme Court of California reversed its
decision and overruled the doctrine as made in the case of Knight's Case, supra. His
contention in this respect is not tenable. In the Freud case the Supreme Court of California,
referring to its decision in the Knight case, said:
Nor is the decision in Re Knight's Estate applicable here. In that case it was said, as is
doubtless true, that while it is the duty of the administrator to preserve the estate, this does
not mean that he is, at discretion, to pay off all incumbrances resting on the property upon the
notion that the property may increase in value, and thereby a speculation may be made by
the estate; and the point directly ruled was that 'he cannot advance money to remove
incumbrances unless his intestate was bound to pay the money.' Thus, apparently, the
decision is placed on two grounds, namely: {1) On the ground expressed, which is in
effect that the administrator cannot pay all incumbrances at discretion for speculative
purposes, or, it might have been said, for any purpose except for the preservation of the
property, and where necessary for the purpose; and {2) on the ground that he cannot pay
off incumbrances 'unless his intestate was bound to pay the money.'"
41 Nev. 384, 396 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
thereby a speculation may be made by the estate; and the point directly ruled was that he
cannot advance money to remove incumbrances unless his intestate was bound to pay the
money.' Thus, apparently, the decision is placed on two grounds, namely: (1) On the ground
expressed, which is in effect that the administrator cannot pay all incumbrances at discretion
for speculative purposes, or, it might have been said, for any purpose except for the
preservation of the property, and where necessary for the purpose; and (2) on the ground that
he cannot pay off incumbrances unless his intestate was bound to pay the money.'
Continuing the court says:
But the power of the administrator to pay off incumbrances in any case results solely
from the necessity of preserving the property, and can be justified only on the ground that the
lien is a charge on the estate, and therefore a peril to it; and this is equally true whether the
lien was created by the intestate, or, as in the case of taxes, in some other way.
It will be seen that the Supreme Court of California in the Freud case rather adhered to the
doctrine laid down in the case of In Re Knight, but deemed the same inapplicable to the case
then under consideration. In the case of In Re Smith, 118 Cal. 462, 50 Pac. 701, the Supreme
Court of California referred approvingly to its decision laid down in Re Moore's Estate, 57
Cal. 437. There the court gave expression to that which is the accepted rule, namely, that the
primary purpose and reason of administration of any estate are, first, to preserve the estate
until distribution can be made, and, second, to pay off the debts of the decedent. In the case at
bar the very nature and condition of the estate, as disclosed by the record, the fact that the
estate consisted almost entirely of cash on hand, and that as against the estate there were but
few and minor claims, made the whole trust one which could have been speedily discharged.
The mining claims belonging to the decedent and remaining in his estate could have been
made the subject of prompt and speedy court orders, by means of which they could have
been properly disposed of or turned into the hands and possession of the heirs, in which
case it would have been for them to have assumed the responsibility of speculation; or, if
the conditions were such as to warrant the expenditure of the moneys of the estate, the
court could have properly ordered such.
41 Nev. 384, 397 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
the subject of prompt and speedy court orders, by means of which they could have been
properly disposed of or turned into the hands and possession of the heirs, in which case it
would have been for them to have assumed the responsibility of speculation; or, if the
conditions were such as to warrant the expenditure of the moneys of the estate, the court
could have properly ordered such.
Much stress is laid by the respondent on the case of Armstrong's Estate, 125 Cal. 603, 58
Pac. 184. In that case an administrator, finding that certain horses belonging to the estate were
held by a party who claimed a lien upon them for pasturage to the amount of $93.66,
redeemed the same under a compromise in which he paid out the money of the estate to the
amount of $89.50, believing at the time that the horses would sell for considerably more than
the amount of the lien. It developed later, however, that the amount derived from the sale was
but $56.75. The court charged the administrator with the difference. The supreme court, in
reviewing the question, held that the surcharge was improper, but said:
The act might have been for the benefit of the estate, and as there is no proof of
negligence or want of ordinary care, and the proof shows that the administrator acted in good
faith, we must hold that if his acts could, under any state of facts, be sustained as valid, they
must be presumed to be valid under such state of facts rather than be held invalid from the
mere fact that the property did not sell for enough to repay the amount paid out by the
administrator.
Continuing, the court said:
We do not lay down the rule that an administrator can, of his own volition, redeem
pledged personal property, or property upon which there is a valid lien, under all
circumstances, and justify his acts in case of loss to the estate. If the proof should show that
the property, at the time it was redeemed, was of little value, while a large amount was paid
out for the purpose of redeeming it, or if the circumstances were such that we could not
say a reasonably prudent man would have done the same thing, then the circumstances
might justify the charging of the loss to the administrator."
41 Nev. 384, 398 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
redeeming it, or if the circumstances were such that we could not say a reasonably prudent
man would have done the same thing, then the circumstances might justify the charging of the
loss to the administrator.
The assertion but emphasizes the position which we take here with reference to the
question at bar. The property upon which the money was invested was of no fixed, definite
value. It was a mining prospect, pure and simple. A large amount was paid out for the
purpose of doing assessment work year after year without any effort to relieve this estate of
the necessity of such expenditure, either by attempting to sell the property in the open market,
under court order, or to distribute the same to the heirs of the estate; and, moreover, without
any attempt on the part of the administrator to clothe himself with an order of court
authorizing his acts in making such expenditures.
Respondent quotes at length from Ross on Probate Law, vol. 1, sec. 305, but the very
doctrine which we apply to the case at bar is asserted in the quoted excerpt from the learned
author. Speaking of the administrator, he says:
In short, he may do whatever is necessary to the preservation of the estate intrusted to his
care, subject to the contingency of the expense being disallowed by the court; but, as a rule,
his duty is confined to preserving and administering the estate and turning it over to the heirs
or devisees as soon as practicable, and not to speculate with it, carry on business on its
account, or improve it for the benefit of distributees.
3. In an estate like that presented by the record in the case at bar, where there is cash on
hand in the estate to meet outstanding claims and indebtedness, where everything is present to
facilitate a speedy discharge of the trust, but where, notwithstanding this, the estate is
permitted to drag on for a period of nearly seven years without any accounting, without any
attempt to secure an order of court permitting the expenditure of money, we are at a loss to
know how, under such circumstances, it can be said the administrator complied with the
rule fixing the duty of such officer as the same is laid down by Mr.
41 Nev. 384, 399 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
expenditure of money, we are at a loss to know how, under such circumstances, it can be said
the administrator complied with the rule fixing the duty of such officer as the same is laid
down by Mr. Ross in his work on Probate Law.
The duties of the executors, says Judge Lorigan in Re Willey's Estate, are to preserve
the estate, pay the indebtedness of the deceased, the charges of administration, and put the
estate in such condition that distribution may be had to those entitled to it, under the will. (In
Re Willey's Estate, 140 Cal. 238, 73 Pac. 998.)
Not only was the money of the estate forever lost to the heirs and devisees, but in addition
to this the very property on which this money had been expended in the way of speculation
had been by the administrator later abandoned and it, too, lost to those entitled. Such conduct,
we say, fails to measure up to the rule, and fails, in our judgment, to clear the administrator of
a surcharge.
We are referred to the case of In Re Sylvar's Estate, 1 Cal. App. 35, 81 Pac. 663. This case
is especially relied upon by respondent as asserting a doctrine justifying the delay in closing
up the estate. In that case we find one of the very contingencies which might justify delay in
administration, namely the pendency of litigation. Indeed, we might concur in the assertion of
the court there set forth:
There are many cases in which the settlement of estates is unavoidably delayed without
the fault of the administrator.
Indeed, we might join in the assertion that all presumptions are in favor of the regularity of
the management of the estate by the administrator, and we would add to this by saying that
when on the very face of the proceedings irregularity is made manifest, and neglect and
irregularity made to be the apparent basis for loss to the estate, the presumption in favor of
regularity is then overcome.
41 Nev. 384, 400 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
Deep-seated in the lines of our law as that law is written we find a persistent manifestation
of a policy declaring for efficiency and promptness in the matter of administration of estates
of persons deceased, and we might say here that this is especially true and especially to be
desired where intestacy is present. Section 5963, Revised Laws, provides that every executor
and administrator shall, immediately after appointment, cause notice thereof to be given.
Section 5964 provides that all persons having claims against such an estate shall file proof
thereof within three months after the first publication of notice. Section 5967 provides that
within fifteen days after the time for filing proof of claims against an estate shall have
expired, the executor or administrator shall examine and allow or disallow the claims so filed,
and within five days from the time of taking such action all the claims so acted upon by the
executor or administrator shall be presented to the district judge for his allowance or
disallowance. Section 6041 provides that within thirty days after the district judge shall have
acted upon the claims so presented to him, the executor or administrator shall file his first
account. The spirit, as well as the letter of these sections last referred to, expresses the policy
of our law. Expedient administration is called for by every section of the statute. Conditions
may arise in the course of an administration where reasonable delays in excess of those
contemplated by the statute might be tolerable or justifiable.
4. Appellants contend that the administrator should be surcharged with interest on the
money of the estate held by him. The record shows that when he came into control of the
estate the cash belonging thereto was represented to the extent of $5,000 by certificates of
deposit bearing no interest, and approximately $1,200 was in the bank subject to check. The
record suggests proceedings to establish heirship, filed in the year 1911, and decree
establishing heirship entered March 16, 1915. The general rule applicable to personal liability
of an administrator or executor to distributees for interest where there has been delay in
closing up the estate is that it depends entirely upon the reasonableness or
unreasonableness of the delay under all the circumstances of a particular case.
41 Nev. 384, 401 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
where there has been delay in closing up the estate is that it depends entirely upon the
reasonableness or unreasonableness of the delay under all the circumstances of a particular
case. Nonresponsibility for interest applies where the delay was reasonable; responsibility for
interest attaches where the delay was unreasonable. (11 R. C. L. p. 148, sec. 156.)
In a number of cases courts have held the pendency of suits to be sufficient cause for
delaying settlement, hence sufficient cause to avert a charge of interest. (Chase v. Lockerman,
11 Gill & J. 185, 35 Am. Dec. 277; McIntire v. Mower, 204 Mass. 233, 90 N. E. 567; Clark
v. Knox, 70 Ala. 607, 45 Am. Rep. 93.)
In the case of Clark v. Knox, supra, interest was deemed a proper charge against the
administrator, he having held the moneys after the period of eighteen months.
In Jacoway v. Hall, 67 Ark. 340, 55 S. W. 12, interest was held a proper charge where
funds were held for twenty years.
In McDonald v. People, 22 Ill. 325, 78 N. E. 609, the administrator was held chargeable
with interest after the expiration of two and one-half years from his appointment, where
moneys of the estate were held after that time.
In Hall v. Grovier, 25 Mich. 428, interest was held properly chargeable where the money
came into the hands of the administrator about one year after his appointment and was held
twenty years.
Holding to the same effect is the case of Owens v. Owens, 84 Miss. 673, 37 South. 149.
In Brandon v. Hoggatt, 32 Miss. 335, the estate was distributed after one year from the
appointment of the administrator. He was charged with interest because before that time there
was more than sufficient money on hand to meet the payment of debts.
In Scott v. Crews, 72 Mo. 261, the administrator sold property of the estate and accepted
notes of solvent persons in payment therefor. He failed to collect notes until compelled so to
do by proceedings.
41 Nev. 384, 402 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
until compelled so to do by proceedings. Interest was held properly chargeable.
In Re Childs, 5 Misc. Rep. 560, 26 N. Y. Supp. 721, the administrator was held personally
liable for interest, having allowed ten years to elapse. Two years was held to be a reasonable
time.
Under varying circumstances and periods of time administrators have been held personally
liable for interest on money held by them belonging to the estate. (McKinney v. Nunn, 82
Tex. 44, 17 S. W. 516; Kenyon v. Kenyon, 31 R. I. 270, 76 Atl. 798; Foster v. Harris, 10 Pa.
457; Hasler v. Hasler, 1 Bradf. 248.)
The case of Pickens v. Miller, 83 N. C. 543, as to time and conditions, is quite in point
here.
The rule in England is found in the case of Littlehales v. Gascoyne, 2 Eng. Rul. Cas. 172,
and again in Holgate v. Hawarth, 17 Beavan's Rep. 259.
Respondent contends here that inasmuch as it required some time to establish heirship and
such was not decreed until 1915, hence as administrator he should not be personally
responsible for interest. Such does not appeal to us with any degree of force, in view of the
circumstances presented by the record. From the very first the money was in the hands of the
administrator. It was in the Horton Bank in Battle Mountain, where the administrator lived.
The estate was almost free from indebtedness. There was nothing about the estate which
would cause the administrator to allow the money to remain idle. We find courts dealing with
the proposition under very similar conditions, and in almost every instance the administrator
has been charged with interest.
In the case of McCanse v. Goffe, 66 Mo. App. 586, the estate was one against which there
were no claims. The administrator made no settlement for a period of about five years. As a
reason for delay he asserted a contention between the distributees as to a proper construction
of the will, alleging that after long delay and contention with the heirs he filed a suit praying
for an interpretation of the will.
41 Nev. 384, 403 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
interpretation of the will. It was held that even though he was justified in asking for a
construction of the will, he was not justified in delaying four or five years before proceeding.
He was held chargeable with interest.
In the case of Boyd v. Swallows, 59 Ill. App. 635, it was held that the administrator was
chargeable with interest on the money retained for two and one-half years from the date of his
appointment; this, too, notwithstanding that if any order had been made directing him to
distribute the money he could not have done so because the whereabouts of some of the
distributees were unknown and others were thought to be dead.
Interest was held by the court to be properly chargeable where the executor delayed the
settlement of the estate for more than three years, justifying his acts by saying that the
distributees were foreigners and could not be reached. (King v. Berry, 3 N. J. Eq. 261.) To the
same effect is the holding in the case of Hetfield v. Debaud, 54 N. J. Eq. 371, 34 Atl. 882.
In the case of Almy v. Probate Court, 18 R. I. 612, 30 Atl. 458, the money of the estate
was held by the executors for a period of three years. The court said:
The fact that it was not made to appear at the trial that the executors knew who the
persons were that were entitled to share in the money in their hands, or their places of
residence, is not enough to relieve them from the payment of interest. Even if such was the
fact, it was still the duty of the executors to have deposited the money where it would have
earned interest for the benefit of those entitled to the money when they were ascertained.
In the case of Doster v. Arnold, 60 Ga. 316, it was held that pending litigation with
reference to the estate did not relieve the administrator from liability for interest, he having
kept the funds uninvested in his hands.
5. In view of the fact that this estate was administered in a judicial district consisting of
two counties, where sessions of the district court may occur at such times as the judge thereof
may direct, there might have been some reasonable excuse for the failure of the
administrator to secure an order of the court authorizing the expenditure of the money
for the first annual assessment work after his appointment.
41 Nev. 384, 404 (1918) In Re Delaney's Estate
been some reasonable excuse for the failure of the administrator to secure an order of the
court authorizing the expenditure of the money for the first annual assessment work after his
appointment. For that reason, the administrator might be properly relieved of the surcharge
for that item. As to the other items for assessment work, the absence of an order of court was
without justification.
6. We deem it proper to say that where money of an estate is held by an administrator
after the time when by proper accounting and other administrative acts in conformity with the
statutory requirements, he could have paid out and distributed the same by court order, he
should be chargeable with interest on the money thus held. This matter must, in most
instances, be for the court to determine. In the case at bar we are unable to see from the record
as it is before us why distribution was not made. If the money of the estate or any part thereof
was held by the administrator after he could, with reasonable diligence on his part, have
distributed the same pursuant to proper orders, then he is chargeable with interest on the
money thus retained. As this matter must be sent back to the district court, we assume that
that tribunal, in conformity with the proofs as made when the matter is again presented, will
apply the rule we have here asserted.
The order appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 405, 405 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
[No. 2314]
STATE OF NEVADA, Ex Rel. CITY OF RENO, a Municipal Corporation in
Washoe County, Nevada, Plaintiff, v. RENO TRACTION COMPANY
(a Corporation), Defendant.
[171 Pac. 375]
1. Removal of CausesDiversity of CitizenshipQuo Warranto by State Against Foreign
CorporationCitizen.
Quo warranto proceeding by the state, on the relation of a city against a foreign corporation, for failure to
comply with its franchise, instituted by the attorney-general, under Rev. Laws, 5656-5659, 5663, as to quo
warranto, held, an action by the state, and not the city, preventing removal for diversity of citizenship; a
state not being a citizen.
Original proceeding in quo warranto by the State, on the relation of the City of Reno,
against the Reno Traction Company. Defendant moves to have the cause removed to the
Federal Court. Denied.
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, and L. D. Summerfield, City Attorney of Reno, for
Plaintiff:
The record in this action shows that the removal is sought under the statutes of the United
States providing that the district court of the United States shall have original jurisdiction of
all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity where the matter in controversy exceeds,
exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of three thousand dollars, and is between
citizens of different states. (Sec. 24, Judiciary Code, 36 St. at L. 1091; Compiled Stats. 1911,
p. 135, 1912; Supp. F. S. A., vol. 1, p. 139.) The case at bar is not a suit between citizens of
different states. The action was brought under the statutes of the State of Nevada, as set forth
in sections 5655-5682, Revised Laws. The cause of action arises under paragraphs 3 and 4 of
section 5657. An action in quo warranto can be brought only by the State of Nevada, and the
only person who can file a complaint therein is the attorney-general. The present action was
brought by the State of Nevada; the complaint was filed by the attorney-general; the State of
Nevada sued on the relation of the city of Reno, a municipal corporation, and its own agent.
"Cities are mere instrumentalities of the state, for the convenient administration of
government." {City of Reno v. Stoddard, 40 Nev. 537
41 Nev. 405, 406 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
own agent. Cities are mere instrumentalities of the state, for the convenient
administration of government. (City of Reno v. Stoddard, 40 Nev. 537.)
The franchise involved relates to the right of the defendant to continue to use the public
streets and highways within the city of Reno. These belong to the state, which is primarily
interested in the use to which they are put. (28 Cyc. 287:)
The State of Nevada being plaintiff, the suit is not removable. The state cannot be a
citizen, and therefore the case does not come within the provisions of the statute relating to
diversity of citizenship. (Arkansas v. Kansas & T. Coal Co., 183 U. S. 185; Postal
Telegraph-Cable Co. v. State of Alabama, 155 U. S. 482; Germania Ins. Co. v. State of
Wisconsin, 119 U. S. 473; Stone v. South Carolina, 117 U. S. 430; Ames v. Kansas, 111 U. S.
449; In Re Rivers, 199 Fed. 495; State v. King, 112 Fed. 369; State v. Trust Co., 73 Fed. 914;
State v. Tolleston Club, 53 Fed. 18; State v. Wolfe, 18 Fed. 836; Darnell v. State, 174 Ind.
143; Comm. v. Ayer, 117 Ky. 161; Railway Co. v. Comm., 115 Ky. 278; State v. Adams, 9
Ohio Cir. Ct. 21.)
Hoyt, Gibbons, French & Springmeyer (Goodfellow, Eels, Moore & Orrick, of Counsel),
for Defendant:
As to removal proceedings, a city is separate and distinct from the state. If it were not, no
case in which a city was a party could be removed unless it arose directly under the
constitution or laws or treaties of the United States; and there are innumerable cases of
removal in which incorporated cities are taken to be in precisely the same position as private
corporations; that is to say, if a municipal corporation is one of the parties to the suit and a
private corporation or a private individual is the other party, the suit is removable on the
ground of diversity of citizenship. A municipal corporation, such as a city, a township, or a
county, or a public board, composed of public officers, which has been created a corporation
by the state laws, is considered to be a citizen of the state within which it is situated, or to be
composed of citizens of that state."
41 Nev. 405, 407 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
of citizens of that state. (Foster's Fed. Prac., 5th ed. vol. 1, sec. 47.) Cases in which counties
are parties are removable. (Lincoln County v. Luning, 10 Sup. Ct. 363, 133 U. S. 529; Floral
Springs Water Co. v. Rives, 14 Nev. 434.) A municipal corporation is a citizen of the state
creating it, for the purposes of removal of causes to the federal courts. (City v. Canda, 67 Fed.
6; City v. Sheppard, 10 La. Ann. 268; City v. Tacoma R. & P. Co., 244 Fed. 989.)
Although quo warranto historically is a quasi-criminal proceeding like mandamus and all
extraordinary writs, under the Nevada practice and the prevailing modern view it is
essentially civil in its nature. In all quo warranto proceedings the state is merely a nominal
party plaintiff, while the relator is the real party in interest. The franchise sought to be
forfeited is solely a grant through an ordinance of the city of Reno, the state being in no sense
concerned with or interested in the suit, unless it be said that the state is interested in the suit,
unless it be said that the state is interested in all matters of public welfare, and the state has no
interest in franchises granted by cities to municipal corporations. (State v. Ill. Cent. Ry. Co.,
33 Fed. 721; Ames v. Kansas, 11 U. S. 460; 32 Cyc. 1414; State ex rel. City of Tacoma v.
Tacoma R. & P. Co., supra.)
Quo warranto proceedings may be tried in the federal courts. Section 28 of the Federal
Judicial Code of 1912 is interpreted by the courts to include quo warranto proceedings as
being of a civil nature, at law or in equity. (State ex rel. Johnson v. Ames, 111 U. S. 449.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This is an original proceeding in quo warranto. The defendant has filed the necessary
notice, petition, and bond, and has moved this court for an order removing the cause to the
United States District Court for the District of Nevada, upon the ground and for the reason
that the controversy is between citizens of different states and that more than $3,000 is
involved. It is admitted by the plaintiff here that there is involved more than $3,000.
Objection is interposed to the removal, however, on the ground that the State of Nevada is
party plaintiff, and therefore the controversy is not between citizens of different states.
41 Nev. 405, 408 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
however, on the ground that the State of Nevada is party plaintiff, and therefore the
controversy is not between citizens of different states.
It is the contention of defendant, as movant in this proceeding, that the action is properly
one between the city of Reno, as a municipal corporation, and the defendant as a foreign
corporation. The complaint in this proceeding is entitled State of Nevada ex rel. City of
Reno, a Municipal Corporation. The proceedings were instituted in this court by the
attorney-general of the State of Nevada, after having made application to this court for leave
to bring action upon the relation of the city of Reno, and after having obtained orders granting
leave pursuant to said applications. This action is commenced pursuant to the provisions of
our civil practice act, sec. 714 (Rev. Laws, 5656, et seq.):
A civil action may be brought in the name of the state: 1. Against a person who usurps,
intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises, a public office, civil or military, or a franchise,
within this state, or an officer in a corporation created by the authority of this state.
Section 5657, Revised Laws, provides:
A like action may be brought against a corporation: 1. When it has offended against a
provision of an act by or under which it was created, altered, or renewed, or any act altering
or amending such acts. 2. When it has forfeited its privileges and franchises by a nonuser. 3.
When it has committed or omitted an act which amounts to a surrender or a forfeiture of its
corporate rights, privileges, and franchises. 4. When it has misused a franchise or privilege
conferred upon it by law, or exercised a franchise or privilege not so conferred.
Section 5658, Revised Laws, provides:
The attorney-general, when directed by the governor, shall commence any such action,
etc.
Section 5659, Revised Laws, provides:
Such officer [the attorney-general] may, upon his own relation, bring any such action, or
he may, on the leave of the court, or a judge thereof, in vacation, bring the action upon the
relation of another person; and, if the action be brought under subdivision one of the first
section of this chapter, he may require security for costs to be given as in other cases."
41 Nev. 405, 409 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
leave of the court, or a judge thereof, in vacation, bring the action upon the relation of another
person; and, if the action be brought under subdivision one of the first section of this chapter,
he may require security for costs to be given as in other cases.
Section 5663, Revised Laws, provides:
An action under this chapter can be brought in the supreme court of the state, or in the
district court of the proper county.
On the face of the complaint it appears that the action is commenced by the State of
Nevada, on the relation of the city of Reno, a municipal corporation. After relating the
corporate existence of the city of Reno, as well as the corporate existence of the defendant,
the complaint proceeds as to the adoption of a city ordinance by the city of Reno, which said
ordinance granted to H. E. Reid, H. J. Gosse, H. J. Darling, and S. H. Wheeler, their
successors in interest, and assigns, a franchise to construct, maintain, and operate a street
railroad over certain streets and avenues in the city of Reno; that thereafter the franchise thus
granted to the parties named was by them sold to the Reno Traction Company, defendant in
the proceedings instituted in this court; that the Reno Traction Company constructed in the
city of Reno street railway tracks on certain designated streets within the corporate limits of
the city of Reno; that for more than three years last past the defendant, Reno Traction
Company, has wholly failed, refused, and neglected at its own expense to keep the space
within and between its railway tracks and for two feet on each side thereof on certain
designated streets in as good repair as the adjoining street, although frequently directed by the
city council of said city of Reno so to do during the period aforesaid.
The complaint sets up, by way of exhibit, Ordinance No. 28, under which the defendant,
Reno Traction Company, obtained and secured its franchise, and in violation of the
provisions of which it is alleged the traction company has failed, refused, and neglected to
keep its tracks and the space between the rails thereof in as good repair as the adjoining
street.
41 Nev. 405, 410 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
company has failed, refused, and neglected to keep its tracks and the space between the rails
thereof in as good repair as the adjoining street. The complaint further alleges failure, refusal,
and neglect on the part of the traction company to maintain its electrical equipment used in
operating said street railway, so that return currents shall be carried according to the most
approved method, so as to avoid, so far as possible, injury to the water pipes through property
on certain designated streets; further, that for more than three years the defendant, Reno
Traction Company, has failed, refused, and neglected to run cars sufficient for the
transportation of all desiring passage over said railway tracks constructed under Ordinance
No. 28; and that the failure, refusal, and neglect of the defendant in this respect was not due
to the elements, riots, strikes, litigation, or other unavoidable causes. The complaint avers
failure on the part of the traction company to comply with the city ordinance in the way of
carrying lights on the front and rear of its cars during the nighttime, when the same were
being operated over the lines of the company on the streets designated.
Chapter 3 of the Judicial Code of the United States, relative to removal of causes,
provides, inter alia:
Any suit of a judicial nature, at law or in equity, arising under the constitution or laws of
the United States, or treaties made, or which shall be made under their authority, of which the
district courts of the United States are given original jurisdiction by this title, which may now
be pending or which may hereafter be brought, in any state court, may be removed by the
defendant or defendants therein to the District Court of the United States for the proper
district. Any other suit of a civil nature, at law or in equity, of which the district courts of the
United States are given jurisdiction by this title, and which are now pending or which may
hereafter be brought in any state court, may be removed into the District Court of the United
States for the proper district by the defendant or defendants therein, being nonresidents of
that state.
41 Nev. 405, 411 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
therein, being nonresidents of that state. And when in any suit mentioned in this section there
shall be a controversy which is wholly between citizens of different states, and which can be
fully determined as between them, then either one or more of the defendants actually
interested in such controversy may remove such suit into the District Court of the United
States for the proper district. (Judicial Code of the United States, c. 3, p. 22; U. S. Comp. St.
1916, sec. 1010.)
The motion for removal in this case is sought for solely upon the ground that it is a
controversy between citizens of different states, the matter in controversy exceeding,
exclusive of interest and costs, the sum of $3,000. In furtherance of this motion, the movant
here asserts that the city of Reno is the real party in interest as plaintiff, and, it being a citizen
of the State of Nevada, defendant may properly demand removal, being a citizen of
California.
Mr. Moon, in his work on the Removal of Causes, concisely states the proposition thus:
When does the duty of the state court to accept said petition and bond' arise? Clearly, if
the language of the statute is given any force, it does not arise unless the suit is a removable
one and petitioner is entitled to remove it; nor does it arise in any such case until the petition
and bond have been made and filed in compliance with the statute. When the case is found to
be a removable one, and the conditions precedent to a removal have been performed, then,
and not until then, shall the state court accept said petition and bond and proceed no further
in such suit.' (Moon on Removal of Causes, sec. 177.)
Mr. Justice Harlan, in speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of
Crehore v. Ohio & M. R. Co., 131 U. S. 240, 9 Sup. Ct. 692, 33 L. Ed. 144, illuminated the
subject by the following assertion:
It thus appears that a case is not, in law, removed from the state court, upon the ground
that it involves a controversy between citizens of different states, unless, at the time the
application for removal is made, the record, upon its face, shows it to be one that is
removable.
41 Nev. 405, 412 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
at the time the application for removal is made, the record, upon its face, shows it to be one
that is removable. We say, upon its face, because the state court is only at liberty to inquire
whether, on the face of the record, a case has been made which requires it to proceed no
further,' and all issues of fact made upon the petition for removal must be tried in the circuit
court.' * * * If the case be not removed, the jurisdiction of the state court remains unaffected,
and, under the act of Congress, the jurisdiction of the federal court could not attach until it
becomes the duty of the state court to proceed no further. No such duty arises unless a case is
made by the record that entitles the party to removal.
It is a well-settled principle that a city as a municipal corporation is a citizen of the state
within which it exists, within the meaning of the judicial code. (Foster, A Treatise on Federal
Practice, vol. 1, p. 134; Vincent v. Lincoln County, 30 Fed. 749; Lincoln County v. Luning,
133 U. S. 529, 10 Sup. Ct. 363, 33 L. Ed. 766; Loeb v. Columbia Twp., 179 U. S. 472, 21
Sup. Ct. 174, 45 L. Ed. 280.) Another principle which we deem to be established beyond
successful controversy is that a suit between an incorporated city and a citizen of another state
may be removed for diversity of citizenship. (Ysleta v. Canda, 67 Fed. 6.) The proposition
before us may be put thus: If the action is one instituted by the state as the real party in
interest against a foreign citizen, the cause is not removable. If the action is one between the
city of Reno as plaintiff and a foreign citizen, the cause is removable, and the order prayed for
should be entered.
It is the contention of the movant here that inasmuch as the franchise by authority of which
they operate their street railroad was granted by the municipal corporation, and inasmuch as
the streets over which their street railroad is operated are properly within and under the
control of the city of Reno, therefore it is the municipal corporation that is the real party in
interest; hence the cause should be removed for diversity of citizenship. It is, as a proposition
of law, eminently established that a municipal corporation is but the agency by and
through which the state exercises its sovereignty in a given locality.
41 Nev. 405, 413 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
is, as a proposition of law, eminently established that a municipal corporation is but the
agency by and through which the state exercises its sovereignty in a given locality. The
former is the creature of the latter and subject to its dominance and control within
constitutional limitations. (City of Reno v. Stoddard and Dunkle, 40 Nev. 537, 167 Pac. 317.)
It is established by almost universal acceptation that the state, acting through its
legislature, may exercise complete control and dominance over the streets, avenues, and
alleyways of towns, cities, and municipal corporations. This rule has found sanction in the
expression of courts in various proceedings and for many purposes. We find it asserted to
permit public service corporations to lay pipes and wires. (St. Paul v. Chicago R. Co., 63
Minn. 330, 63 N. W. 267, 65 N. W. 649, 68 N. W. 458, 34 L. R. A. 184; Hodges v. W. U. Tel.
Co., 72 Miss. 910, 18 South. 84, 29 L. R. A. 770; Portland R. Co. v. Portland, 14 Or. 188, 12
Pac. 265, 58 Am. Rep. 299; San Antonio Traction Co. v. Altgelt, 200 U. S. 304, 26 Sup. Ct.
261, 50 L. Ed. 491; 13 R. C. L. 163.) And where it was deemed necessary to destroy a public
highway for the establishment of other public works. (Heffmer v. Cass, etc., Counties, 193 Ill.
439, 62 N. E. 201, 58 L. R. A. 353.) The rule has been invoked to require a municipal
corporation to appropriate money for the maintenance of a public way. (Pumphrey v.
Baltimore, 47 Md. 145, 28 Am. Rep. 446; Simon v. Northrup, 27 Or. 487, 40 Pac. 560, 30 L.
R. A. 171.) It has been upheld where by legislative action the state sought to control certain
streets of a city and to exercise that control through commissioners for the purposes of a
driveway. (People v. Walsh, 96 Ill. 232, 36 Am. Rep. 135.)
In the case of Cicero Lumber Co. v. Town of Cicero et al., 176 Ill. 9, 51 N. E. 758, 42 L.
R. A. 696, 68 Am. St. Rep. 155, the court said:
While it is true that the public highways are for the use of the general public, it is at the
same time true that the legislature is a representative of the public at large.
41 Nev. 405, 414 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
the legislature is a representative of the public at large. As such representative, it may grant
the use or supervision and control over the highways to a municipal corporation, so long as
the highways are not diverted to some use, substantially different from that, for which they
were originally intended. * * * A city or incorporated town, not only bears a property or
private relation to the state, but is also bears a political relation thereto. In its political
relation, it is merely an agency of the state. The municipal corporations of the state are the
mere creatures of the state, and exist by the authority of the legislature and subject to its
control. Hence, when a city or incorporated town holds a street for the benefit of the public, it
holds it for the benefit of that entire public, of which the legislature is the representative. As
the municipality is a mere agent of the state, the legislature can direct the manner in which it
shall control the streets within its limits. The property rights and easements, which the
municipality has in public streets and ways, are held by it at the will of the legislature. Of
course, this statement is subject to the further statement, that such property, as the
municipality holds in its private capacity, is as much protected by the constitution as the
property of the private citizen. But, so far as it holds property as a mere agency of the
government of the state, the constitutional provisions above referred to have no application,
because the state can control the agencies created by it for the purposes of government.
Mr. Dillon, in his work on Municipal Corporations, says:
The plenary power of the legislature over streets and highways is such that it may, in the
absence of such constitutional restrictions, vacate or discontinue them, or invest municipal
corporations with this authority. Without a judicial determination, a municipal corporation,
under the authority conferred by its charter to locate and establish streets and alleys and to
vacate the same, may constitutionally order a vacation of a street; and this power, when
exercised with due regard to individual rights, will not be restrained at the instance of a
property owner, claiming that he is interested in keeping open the streets dedicated to
the public."
41 Nev. 405, 415 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
same, may constitutionally order a vacation of a street; and this power, when exercised with
due regard to individual rights, will not be restrained at the instance of a property owner,
claiming that he is interested in keeping open the streets dedicated to the public. (Dillon on
Municipal Corporations, sec. 666.)
When the defendant in this action, through its predecessors, secured its franchise for the
construction and maintenance of a street railroad on and over the streets and avenues of the
city of Reno, it secured this franchise by the authority and grant of the State of Nevada acting
by and through its duly authorized agent, the city of Reno. To the city of Reno was delegated
the power to grant the franchise and to pass ordinances in connection therewith. This,
however, constituted but a delegation of authority, from the sovereignty of the state. A
municipal corporation, it is said, has no powers which are not derived from and subordinate
to those of the state. This has been held, even in cases where the municipal corporation had
its existence before the state in which it was located became an independent sovereign. (Mt.
Pleasant v. Beckwith, 100 U. S. 514, 25 L. Ed. 699; Williams v. Eggleston, 170 U. S. 304, 18
Sup. Ct. 617, 42 L. Ed. 1047; Attorney-General v. Lowrey, 199 U. S. 233, 26 Sup. Ct. 27, 50
L. Ed. 167.)
It is stated in the text of Ruling Case Law that the people of a particular portion of a state,
by enjoying the privilege of self-government, acquire no vested right therein as against the
legislature representing the people of the state. (19 R. C. L. 731.) That the state, acting
through its legislature, may exercise supreme control over all streets, alleyways, and avenues,
has been declared to be a law in nearly every jurisdiction where the question has been brought
before the courts. (Grand Trunk R. R. Co. v. South Bend, 227 U. S. 544, 33 Sup. Ct. 303, 57
L. Ed. 633, 44 L. R. A. n. s. 405; Marietta Chair Co. v. Henderson, 121 Ga. 399, 49 S. E.
312, 104 Am. St. Rep. 156, 2 Ann. Cas. 83; Cummins v. Seymour, 79 Ind.
41 Nev. 405, 416 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
491, 41 Am. Rep. 618; Stanley v. Davenport, 54 Iowa, 463, 2 N. W. 1064, 6 N. W. 706, 37
Am. Rep. 216; Ottawa R. R. Co. v. Larson, 40 Kan. 301, 19 Pac. 661, 2 L. R. A. 59;
Crawford Electric Co. v. Knox County Power Co., 110 Me. 285, 86 Atl. 119, Ann. Cas.
1914c, 933; Dooly Block v. Salt Lake Rapid Transit Co., 9 Utah, 31, 33 Pac. 229, 24 L. R. A.
610; Ex Parte Smith, 26 Cal. App. 116, 146 Pac. 82; Heppes Co. v. Chicago, 260 Ill. 506, 103
N. E. 455; Wabash R. R. Co. v. Defiance, 167 U. S. 88, 17 Sup. Ct. 748, 42 L. Ed. 87; United
R. R. Co. v. Jersey City, 71 N. J. Law, 80, 58 Atl. 71; Hoey v. Gilroy, 129 N. Y. 132, 29 N. E.
85; Simon v. Northrup, supra; State v. Missouri Tel. Co., 189 Mo. 83, 88 S. W. 41; Prince v.
Crocker, 166 Mass. 347, 44 N. E. 446, 32 L. R. A. 610; Council Bluffs v. Kansas City Ry.
Co., 45 Iowa, 338, 24 Am. Rep. 773; La Harpe v. Elm Tp. Gas. Co., 69 Kan. 97, 76 Pac. 448;
Baltimore R. R. Co. v. Reaney, 42 Md. 117; Baird v. Rice, 63 Pa. 489; 13 R. C. L. 163.)
It was the function of the state to determine as to what conveniences for traffic or travel
the public might enjoy over the streets or avenues of the city of Reno. (Cicero Lumber Co. v.
Cicero, supra; Barrows v. Sycamore, 150 Ill. 588, 37 N. E. 1096, 25 L. R. A. 535, 41 Am. St.
Rep. 400; Simon v. Northrup, supra.)
The rule recognizing the sovereignty of the state over the streets and avenues of a
municipal corporation within its borders, founded as it is upon necessity and reason, must be
regarded as a reality and not a fiction. Hence in this case the state, looking to the mode of
travel that was to be furnished as an accommodation to the public over the streets and
avenues of the city of Reno, and being sovereign in control over those streets and avenues,
granted, through its agent, the municipal corporation, a franchise to the predecessors in
interest of defendant here. The granting of this franchise did not constitute a relinquishment
of the sovereignty held by the state over those streets and avenues, nor a relinquishment of the
power to control the letting and regulation of franchises on or over such streets and avenues.
41 Nev. 405, 417 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
The city of Reno as a municipal corporation may have had at all times an interest coordinate
with the state in the letting of franchises for public service on the streets and avenues within
its limits. This, however, in no wise detracted from the sovereignty or control or interest
which the state held in the matter. If the state, exercising its right of control over the streets of
the city of Reno, was the real party in interest, and only acted through its agent in the granting
of the franchise to the predecessors of the defendant, then we take it that it will not be
gainsaid that the state is the real party interested, looking to the carrying out of the terms of
that franchise and the enforcement of the ordinance by and through which the franchise was
in the first instance granted. In the action at bar the state proceeds in this court on the relation
of the city of Reno, but the State of Nevada is the plaintiff and the real party in interest.
Aside from the fact that the state, being sovereign over the streets and avenues of the city,
is therefore the real party in interest, hence the real party plaintiff, it must be further observed
that, inasmuch as the action commenced in this court is a special proceeding, which under our
statute could only be instituted by the state through its attorney-general, and which in this
instance is instituted in strict compliance with that statute, courts are bound to regard the state
as the real party plaintiff. The municipal corporation as such has no power under the statute to
institute the proceeding. This right is limited to the state alone. Were we to hold that the
municipality is the party plaintiff, as contended for by defendant here, then for want of
authority in the plaintiff corporation the proceeding would fall, and there would be no cause
of action to remove.
In view of the many decisions rendered by the federal courts and by the Supreme Court of
the United States, we take it that it will not be seriously contended that the rule of diversity of
citizenship operates for the purpose of removal under the judicial code, where the state is a
party and the other party to the action is the citizen of a foreign state. The action here is not
such as may be termed a "suit arising under the constitution or laws of the United States
or treaties made under their authority," inasmuch as a correct decision of the matter in
controversy does not depend on the construction of either, nor is the title set up by the
parties, so far as the pleadings are before this court, one such as may be denied by one
construction of the constitution or the laws of the United States or sustained by the
opposite construction.
41 Nev. 405, 418 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
be termed a suit arising under the constitution or laws of the United States or treaties made
under their authority, inasmuch as a correct decision of the matter in controversy does not
depend on the construction of either, nor is the title set up by the parties, so far as the
pleadings are before this court, one such as may be denied by one construction of the
constitution or the laws of the United States or sustained by the opposite construction.
(Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 379, 5 L. Ed. 257; Railroad Co. v. Mississippi, 102 U. S. 135,
26 L. Ed. 96; Starin v. New York, 115 U. S. 248, 6 Sup. Ct. 28, 29 L. Ed. 388.) A suit by a
state in one of its own courts cannot be removed, says the Supreme Court of the United
States, unless it be a suit arising under the constitution or laws of the United States or
treaties made under their authority. (Germania Ins. Co. v. State of Wisconsin, 119 U. S. 473,
7 Sup. Ct. 260, 30 L. Ed. 461.) A state is not a citizen, says the Supreme Court of the
United States, and, under the judiciary acts of the United States, it is well settled that a suit
between a state and a citizen or a corporation of another state is not between citizens of
different states, and that the Circuit Court of the United States has no jurisdiction of it unless
it arises under the constitution, laws or treaties of the United States. (Postal Tel. Cable Co.
v. Alabama, 155 U. S. 482, 15 Sup. Ct. 192, 39 L. Ed. 231.)
In the case of Arkansas v. Kansas & Texas Coal Co., 183 U. S. 185, 22 Sup. Ct. 47, 46 L.
Ed. 144, the action was commenced by the State of Arkansas, on the relation of Jo Johnson,
as prosecuting attorney for the Twelfth judicial circuit, against a foreign corporation
defendant. The defendant filed a petition for removal to the United States court on the ground
that the relator, Jo Johnson, was a citizen of Arkansas, and that the defendant was a citizen of
Missouri. On refusal by the state court to remove, the matter was taken to the federal court.
The latter refused to remand and retained the case for trial. On appeal to the Supreme Court
of the United States, the action of the federal court in refusing to remand was reversed.
41 Nev. 405, 419 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
refusing to remand was reversed. In speaking for the court, Mr. Chief Justice Fuller said:
We need not spend any time on the contention that this was a controversy between
citizens of different states. The circuit court correctly held otherwise. The State of Arkansas
was the party complainant, and a state is not a citizen.
Holding to the same effect are the cases of Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. State of
Alabama, 155 U. S. 482, 15 Sup. Ct. 192, 39 L. Ed. 231; Stone v. South Carolina, 117 U. S.
430, 6 Sup. Ct. 799, 29 L. Ed. 962.
We are referred by defendant to a number of authorities which they claim to support their
contention that this is a case for removal. In the case of State of Illinois ex rel. Hunt,
Attorney-General, v. Illinois Central R. R. Co., 33 Fed. 721, the action was in quo warranto,
brought in the name of the state, by the attorney-general, to prevent a railroad from exercising
certain rights and privileges and from controlling certain lands. The motion for removal was
based upon ownership in land acquired under an act of the legislature; that subsequently the
act granting the land was repealed, and that such repealing act was in violation of the
provisions of the constitution of the United States relating to laws impairing the obligations
of contracts and of the fourteenth amendment declaring that no person shall be deprived of
property without due process of law. On motion to remand from the federal circuit court for
the Northern District of Illinois, the court denied the motion, but rather upon the ground that
the case was one arising under the constitution of the United States and involving the
interpretation of the federal constitution, in order to arrive at a correct decision of the
question presented. In that case the question of diversity of citizenship was not before the
court.
In the case of Ames v. Kansas ex rel. Johnston, Attorney-General, 111 U. S. 449, 4 Sup.
Ct. 437, 28 L. Ed. 482, two questions were considered by the Supreme Court of the United
States: First, whether the suit was of a civil nature, at law or in equity, arising under the
laws of the United States; and, second, whether, if they were such, it could be removed
under the act of March 3, 1S75, inasmuch as it was brought by a state to try the right of a
corporation and its directors to exercise corporate powers and franchises within the
territorial jurisdiction of the state.
41 Nev. 405, 420 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
suit was of a civil nature, at law or in equity, arising under the laws of the United States; and,
second, whether, if they were such, it could be removed under the act of March 3, 1875,
inasmuch as it was brought by a state to try the right of a corporation and its directors to
exercise corporate powers and franchises within the territorial jurisdiction of the state. The
purpose of the action was to test the validity of a consolidation entered into between the
Kansas Pacific Railway Company and the Union Pacific Railway Company. The case turned
solely upon the validity of the consolidation in the light of authority conferred for that
purpose by an act of Congress. In arriving at a determination as to the matter, the court said:
If the acts of Congress confer the authority, the consolidation is valid; if not, it is invalid.
Clearly, therefore, the cases arise under these acts of congress, for, to use the language of Mr.
Chief Justice Marshall in Osborn v. United States Bank, 9 Wheat. 825, 6 L. Ed. 204, an act of
Congress is the first ingredient in the caseis its originis that from which every other part
arises.' The right set up by the company, and by the creditors as well, will be defeated by one
construction of these acts and sustained by the opposite construction. When this is so, it has
never been doubted that a case is presented which arises under the laws of the United States.
We are referred to the case of City of New Orleans v. Sheppard, 10 La. Ann. 268. There
the suit was instituted by the municipal corporation for an amount alleged to be due for
municipal taxes. The defendant Sheppard took a rule to show cause why the suit should not
be transferred to the Circuit Court of the United States, asserting in furtherance of his motion
that he was a citizen of the State of Virginia. The municipality contested his citizenship. The
trial court held, under the facts presented, that he was a citizen of the State of Louisiana. On
appeal to the supreme court, that tribunal, reviewing the case, held that on the showing made
the defendant had established his citizenship in the State of Virginia, and, inasmuch as
the action was between a citizen of the State of Louisiana as plaintiff and a citizen of a
foreign state as defendant, the action was properly removable to the federal court.
41 Nev. 405, 421 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
the defendant had established his citizenship in the State of Virginia, and, inasmuch as the
action was between a citizen of the State of Louisiana as plaintiff and a citizen of a foreign
state as defendant, the action was properly removable to the federal court. It will be noted that
this case turned rather on a question of fact than on a proposition of law.
In the case of City of Ysleta v. Canda et al., 67 Fed. 6, the controversy was between the
city of Ysleta, a municipal corporation in El Paso County, Texas, as plaintiff, and a citizen of
the State of New York. There the municipal corporation was suing in its individual corporate
capacity, and the case was retained by the Circuit Court of the United States because this fact
appeared on the face of the complaint. In the matter at bar we find from the face of the
complaint that the action is one between the State of Nevada, on the relation of a citizen of
that state, and a citizen of a foreign state. We are at a loss to discover the analogy.
In the case of Vincent v. Lincoln County, 30 Fed. 749, the action was between an
individual citizen of a foreign state and one of the counties of this state. There it was
established, in conformity with the decisions of this court (Waitz v. Ormsby County, 1 Nev.
370; Clarke v. Lyon County, 8 Nev. 181; Floral Springs Water Co. v. Rives, 14 Nev. 434),
that a county as a municipal corporation, or at least as a quasi municipal corporation, was
liable to be sued in any court of competent jurisdiction. In that action the state was not a
party, either nominally or otherwise.
In the case of State of Washington ex rel. City of Tacoma v. Tacoma Railway and Power
Co., 244 Fed. 989, the action was in the form of a proceeding instituted pursuant to the code
of the State of Washington for a writ of mandamus to compel the holder of a street railway
franchise to operate cars on one of its lines, so as to render an adequate service, for the
compensation of a single continuous trip. The question of diversity of citizenship was not
considered by the court. We take it from a reading of the opinion that it was conceded by
all parties that the action was instituted by the city of Tacoma, acting in its individual
corporate capacity.
41 Nev. 405, 422 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
from a reading of the opinion that it was conceded by all parties that the action was instituted
by the city of Tacoma, acting in its individual corporate capacity. The Circuit Court of the
Western District of Washington did not assume to determine its right to retain the action on
the ground of diversity of citizenship. The court, after quoting from the statute of the State of
Washington (Pierce's Code, 1905, sec. 1408), said:
If this suit is such a proceeding as contemplated and authorized by the above-quoted
sections of the code, for a writ of mandamus pure and simple, it is not cognizable in this
court, and the motion to remand should be granted. It becomes necessary, however, for the
court to examine the record, and form its own conclusion as to the real nature of the
proceeding, irrespective of the means by which the litigants propose to obtain the relief
desired. The affidavit of the mayor, which stands as the complainant's pleading, does not set
forth any duty specifically enjoined by law, nor any specific right or office, to the use or
enjoyment of which any particular person is entitled, and from which he has been unlawfully
precluded. On the contrary, the proceeding is in the interest of the general public, and the
grounds of complaint are neglect and refusal to render the service of a common carrier in
accordance with general principles of law and in the discharge of an obligation assumed by
contract. In other words, the powers of a court of equity are invoked to compel the specific
performance of a contract.
In view of the fact that the question presented in the matter at bar turns squarely on the
question of diversity of citizenship, rather than as to its being an action at law or in equity
under the constitution of the United States or the acts of Congress, the Tacoma case, last
cited, furnishes neither assistance to determine nor light to review the matter before us. If the
authority last reviewed does anything, it inferentially supports the position which we take
here. The observation of the court there made is pat in the matter at bar; there it is said:
If this suit is such a proceeding as contemplated and authorized by the above-quoted
section of the code [Code of Washington], for a writ of mandamus pure and simple, it is
not cognizable in this court, and the motion to remand should be granted."
41 Nev. 405, 423 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
authorized by the above-quoted section of the code [Code of Washington], for a writ of
mandamus pure and simple, it is not cognizable in this court, and the motion to remand
should be granted.
The proceeding here is that contemplated and authorized by the different sections of the
code of this state providing for actions in quo warranto to be instituted by the state through
its adviser, the attorney-general, against a corporation, basing such proceeding on the several
grounds nominated by the statute. It is therefore such a proceeding as, in the judgment of the
learned federal court in the case of Washington ex rel. City of Tacoma v. Tacoma, etc., Co.,
supra, would call for an order to remand, were it in that jurisdiction.
Section 1 of article 8 of our constitution provides:
The legislature shall pass no special act in any matter relating to corporate powers except
for municipal purposes; but corporations may be formed under general laws; and all such
laws may from time to time be altered or repealed.
Under the provision of the organic law quoted, plenary powers were reserved to the
legislature to enact laws dealing with corporations and with franchises granted to
corporations. Under this constitutional provision is contemplated statutes such as that under
which this action was commenced. Franchises such as that held by the defendant issue from
the sovereign. (State ex rel. Kansas City v. Fifth St. R. R. Co., 140 Mo. 539, 41 S. W. 955, 38
L. R. A. 218, 62 Am. St. Rep. 742.)
In the matter at bar the city of Reno could not, under the statute, bring this action in its
own name. The proceeding is one reserved to the state.
It is suggested that, to justify this court in refusing to enter the order of removal, the action
must be based upon some act done in violation of the common law or of the statute law of the
state. In this respect it will be noted that the proceedings here are based on the violation of a
city ordinance, passed in conformity with and under sanction and authority of our statutes.
The very suggestion made is dealt with convincingly by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in
the case of State ex rel.
41 Nev. 405, 424 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
Supreme Court of Wisconsin in the case of State ex rel. Attorney-General v. Madison St.
Railway Co., 72 Wis. 612, 40 N. W. 487, 1 L. R. A. 771. There it was said that a violation of
the ordinance is a violation of the statute permitting such ordinance and sanctioning such
franchise. The court observed:
The common council, in passing the ordinance, acted as the agent of the state and as
public officers by virtue of such delegated authority. The streets are for the public use, and so
also are the street railways, affording increased advantages and facilities to the public, and
they are primarily under the control of the legislature, and the power of the municipalities in
respect thereto is entirely derived from the legislature. * * * The immunities and privileges
granted to the company by the ordinance are as much the franchises of the corporation as if
they had been directly granted by the statute under which it was organized. The common
council of the city of Madison is authorized to grant them by the statute, and such power is a
delegated once. What the common council does within that power is done by the legislature
through its agency. The public has an interest in these franchises; the power to grant them,
therefore, must be derived from the legislature.
To the same general effect was the declaration of the Supreme Court of the United States
in the case of Transportation Co. v. Chicago, 99 U. S. 641, 25 L. Ed. 336.
It has been suggested that the ground relied upon in these proceedings is based entirely
upon the violation of contractual rights flowing from the franchise granted by the city of
Reno. In our judgment, it had better be said to be a proceeding where the ground relied upon
is the abuse of corporate powers granted by the franchise and failure to comply with the
requirements and conditions on which the franchise was acquired. It is a settled principle of
law that the acts of a corporation in this respect can be assailed most appropriately in direct
proceedings brought by the state for that purpose.
41 Nev. 405, 425 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
proceedings brought by the state for that purpose. (Hovelman v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 643;
Mackall v. C. & C. Canal Co., 94 U. S. 308, 24 L. Ed. 161.)
This principle was asserted, with approved authorities, by the Supreme Court of the United
States in the case of National Bank v. Matthews, 98 U. S. 628, 25 L. Ed. 188. This very
suggestion was made to the Supreme Court of Kansas in the case of City of Olathe v. Mo. &
Kan. Interurban Ry. Co., 78 Kan. 193, 96 Pac. 42. The proceedings there, as here, were quo
warranto, brought by the city of Olathe against the railway company, seeking to forfeit the
rights granted by the ordinance to the corporation. It was contended by the company there that
the controversy indicated by the petition related to mere matter of contractual rights between
the city and the company, and was therefore not triable in quo warranto proceedings. The
court there referred to its previous determination of the question in the case of State v. Des
Moines City Ry. Co., 135 Iowa, 694, 109 N. W. 867, saying:
But it is a thoroughly well-established proposition that rights granted to a corporation,
either directly, or by the state indirectly, through the act of a minor municipality authorized by
the state, are to be regarded as franchises no less than is the right to be a corporation. Both
classes of rights are derived mediately or immediately from the state, and both are subject to
the inherent power of the state to guard against their abuse by the grantee or usurpation by a
wrongdoer. The occupation of the public street for railway purposes is not a matter of
common right, and without a legislative grant therefor the construction or maintenance of
such a railway would expose the party responsible therefor to punishment as for a nuisance.
The municipality to which is given authority to grant such privilege exercises a delegated
power only, and it cannot grant to any person or corporation a privilege which is confessedly
in derogation of the common right, in a manner which shall exclude the power of the state
to inquire into its abuse, or to prevent the subversion of the public interests which the
legislative grant was intended to protect.
41 Nev. 405, 426 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
shall exclude the power of the state to inquire into its abuse, or to prevent the subversion of
the public interests which the legislative grant was intended to protect. * * * That the right to
occupy the public streets with a railway depends entirely upon legislative grant and is
therefore a franchise, notwithstanding the fact that the terms of such grant and their
acceptance constitute also a contract, is too well settled to be open to serious question. * * *
Not only is the application of quo warranto or its statutory substitute to cases of this kind
upheld by the overwhelming weight of authority, but it is clearly in accord with the dictates of
sound public policy.
At this point and pursuant to the objection made, it may be well to consider the nature of
the proceeding instituted here, and which defendant seeks to remove. This is an action in quo
warranto. The common-law writ of quo warranto was in the nature of a writ from the
sovereign, directed to one who claimed an office or franchise. The purpose in cases of
franchise was to require of the defendant that he show by what warrant he exercised such.
This writ, or proceedings identical in nature, has been written into the statute law of many of
the states of the union, and in nearly every instance the principles of the ancient writ have
been recognized, in that the state has been made to take the place of the sovereign, the writ
issuing from and by the state for the purpose of inquiring by what warrant an office or
franchise is held or enjoyed. We have already made mention of the rule as to the propriety of
the proceedings in quo warranto to test the right to exercise a franchise.
As regards foreign corporations it has been generally held that such like domestic bodies
are subject to quo warranto proceedings to try rights to the enjoyment of franchises. (State v.
Western Union Mutual L. I. Co., 47 Ohio St. 167, 24 N. E. 392, 8 L. R. A. 129;
Attorney-General v. Booth Co., 143 Mich. 89, 106 N. W. 868.) The proceeding here, being
that of quo warranto, is to be distinguished from a proceeding involving acts violative of
contractual obligations.
41 Nev. 405, 427 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
distinguished from a proceeding involving acts violative of contractual obligations. So the
matter at bar is, by reason of its nature, one to be distinguished from cases involving
injunctive proceedings instituted to prevent municipalities from annulling or violating
contractual relations by subsequent ordinance. Quo warranto inquires if, in view of certain
alleged conditions, any franchise really exists.
One other view of this matter seems pertinent, in response to the suggestion. The franchise
which is the subject-matter of the action here was accepted and its privileges enjoyed subject
to the fulfillment of conditions therein expressly laid down. Under the ordinance by which the
franchise came into existence, user and improvement being conditions stated upon which
enjoyment might continue, the question cannot arise as to the impairment of the obligation of
a contract; the company defendant having accepted its franchise privileges subject to the
reserved power of the state to question by quo warranto proceedings the validity and
existence of that franchise. (Sioux City St. Ry. Co. v. Sioux City, 138 U. S. 108, 11 Sup. Ct.
226, 34 L. Ed. 898; State ex rel. Kansas City v. Fifth St. R. R. Co., 140 Mo. 539, 41 S. W.
955, 38 L. R. A. 218, 62 Am. St. Rep. 742.)
Reference is made to section 26 of the city ordinance under which the franchise was
granted. The latter part of that section reads:
The said city shall thereupon be entitled to take such action and institute such
proceedings as may be necessary or essential to have such forfeiture fixed and declared.
This provision in the ordinance of the city of Reno could not be said to abrogate or
suspend the plain provisions of the statutes of the state providing for actions such as that
instituted here. Indeed, the city could not by the mere adoption of this ordinance delegate to
itself the sole power to fix or declare a forfeiture of the franchise. The identical question here
suggested was dealt with under a similar provision of a city ordinance in the case of State ex
rel.
41 Nev. 405, 428 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
case of State ex rel. Kansas City v. Fifth St. R. R. Co., supra, where, referring to the provision
of the ordinance as to the right of the city to proceed in its own name, the court said:
The sovereign power of the state to proceed against defendant by quo warranto for
forfeiture of its franchise, even at the relation of the city, cannot be contracted away or in any
way abridged by the city. At most, such a provision in the ordinance only provided the city
another remedy.
In this respect we might with propriety refer to similar analysis resorted to by the Supreme
Court of Massachusetts in the case of Attorney-General v. Tudor Ice Co., 104 Mass. 239, 6
Am. Rep. 227.
But there is yet another view to be expressed as to this section of the ordinance. It must be
presumed that this ordinance was enacted by the city with a view to general laws and statutes
bearing upon the institution of necessary or essential proceedings to have such forfeiture fixed
and declared. By the very language of this section of the ordinance it is made plain that the
city did not limit itself as to the manner or mode by which, or the jurisdiction in which, it
would take action or institute such proceedings. If the city saw fit, as it did here, to make
itself the relator to its sovereign, the State of Nevada, that the latter might under constitutional
rights and statutory provisions, institute this action, then it has done neither more nor less
than that which by the language of the ordinance it declared the right to do.
Assuming that the city, acting in its own name, could have brought action to curtail or
annul the franchise held by the defendant here, which is not according to our understanding of
the law (People v. Sutter St. Ry. Co., 117 Cal. 612, 49 Pac. 736), would the existence of such
a right limit the city to that right only, if other modes or proceedings for accomplishing the
same result were available? Or would the existence of such a right prevent the State of
Nevada from instituting this action on relation of the city?
41 Nev. 405, 429 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
on relation of the city? Manifestly not. Neither the institution of this action nor the enactment
of the legislature providing for such constitutes an abrogation, abridgment, or circumscription
of any right acquired by the city of Reno through the special act of incorporation. In the
language of section 26 of the ordinance we find nothing which attempts to take from the force
and effect of the general statute, nor which would attempt to bind the city to become the sole
party plaintiff in taking such action or instituting such proceeding necessary or essential to
have forfeiture declared.
It is asserted that to justify the refusal of this court to enter an order of removal under the
statute the action must be based upon some act done in violation of the common law or of the
statute law of the state. It will be sufficient to observe, in response to this suggestion, that the
motion for removal here is instituted solely on the diversity of citizenship; and in view of the
rule in that respect so oft declared, the movant here relies on the asserted fact that such
diversity appears on the face of the complaint. Growing out of the suggestion it may be
further observed that, in order to demand removal warrantable from the nature of the action,
the latter must be such as, under the provision of chapter 3 of the judicial code, constitutes an
action in law or in equity arising under the constitution or laws of the United States, which
might be defeated by one construction of these acts or sustained by the opposite construction.
(Ames v. Kansas, supra.) Such is not even contended for by eminent counsel here.
We must not be understood here as deciding any matter, save and except the question of
the removal of the quo warranto proceedings from this court, where they were instituted, to
the United States District Court for the District of Nevada, on the ground of diversity of
citizenship. We do not, therefore, assume to determine the law of the case as regards the
merits of the quo warranto proceedings. Many matters touched upon in the opinion are set up
arguendo, and not as matters which we assume to decide.
41 Nev. 405, 430 (1918) State v. Reno Traction Co.
which we assume to decide. In this proceeding on motion for removal there was in fact but
one question to be determined, namely, as to whether the action here commenced was one by
the city of Reno, as a citizen of the State of Nevada, against a citizen of a foreign state, or one
between the State of Nevada and a citizen of a foreign jurisdiction. Having determined that it
is the latter, and not the former, a mere suggestion as to the law fixing the jurisdiction of
federal courts might have served to answer all other questions. This, however, is not for our
concern.
We conclude the question, in the light of observations already made, by saying that,
inasmuch as the matter pending in this court is a proceeding instituted by the State of Nevada
as plaintiff, in conformity with statutory provision, notwithstanding that it is on relation of the
city of Reno, the state, and not the municipal corporation, is the party plaintiff. The
proceeding here, being one between the State of Nevada and a citizen of a foreign state, is not
an action between citizens of different states, hence is not such as may be removed to the
United States District Court on the ground of diversity of citizenship.
The motion for removal is denied.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 431, 431 (1918) McKibbin v. District Court
[No. 2325]
L. H. McKIBBIN, Petitioner, v. THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL
DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF
WASHOE, and Honorable THOMAS F. MORAN, Judge of Said District Court,
Respondents.
[171 Pac. 374]
1. Insane PersonsActionsAppointment of Guardian Ad Litem.
Under Rev. Laws, 4992, as to appointment of guardian ad litem, such appointment may be made for an
insane defendant in any case where jurisdiction of the subject-matter has been acquired.
2. Insane PersonsActionsGuardian Ad LitemInsane Nonresident DefendantDivorce
Suit.
Under Rev. Laws, 4992, the court may appoint a guardian ad litem for a nonresident insane defendant in
a divorce suit; the action being substantially in rem.
Original proceeding in certiorari by L. H. McKibbin against the District Court of the
Second Judicial District of the State of Nevada, in and for Washoe County, and Thomas F.
Moran, Judge thereof. Dismissed.
H. V. Morehouse, for Petitioner:
The question involved is the construction to be given to section 4992, Revised Laws. The
lower court took the view that the words any case mean that should the pleadings show that
the defendant was a nonresident or insane person, and not appearing in court by a general
guardian (or even if so appearing), the court had the power to appoint a guardian ad litem; of
that, if it should appear to the satisfaction of the court that the defendant was a nonresident
infant or insane person, the court had the power, and it was his duty, to appoint a guardian ad
litem, upon the theory that the court was sitting in equity, and was thereby authorized as a
chancellor to exercise the power over the insane defendant as a ward of the court.
No court, either of law or equity, has any power over an infant or insane defendant unless
(1) such infant or insane defendant is a ward of the court, and a nonresident insane
defendant or infant is not, and cannot be, the "ward" of the court; or {2) unless the
nonresident infant or insane person defendant owns or has some property right involved
in the litigation, within the territorial jurisdiction of the court.
41 Nev. 431, 432 (1918) McKibbin v. District Court
the ward of the court; or (2) unless the nonresident infant or insane person defendant owns
or has some property right involved in the litigation, within the territorial jurisdiction of the
court. Section 4992, Revised Laws, must be construed with and as part of the general law of
the state and in harmony with such general law. The statute nowhere contemplates the
appointment of a guardian ad litem in a cause where the law would not authorize the
appointment of a general guardian. (Granfier v. Puymival, 19 Cal. 629.) Where no general
guardian can be appointed, there can be no guardian ad litem. (Dupuy v. Hunt, 2 La. Ann.
562.) Jurisdiction by our court over an absentee defendant, by the appointment of a curator
ad hoc to represent him, is only acquired when the subject-matter of the suit and the nature of
the proceeding render such an appointment proper. (Walker v. Sanchez, 13 La. Ann. 505;
Hunt v. Johnson, 1 Freeman, Ch. 282.)
The lower court arbitrarily appointed a guardian ad litem, when the defendant is not and
never was a resident of the state, and has not and never had any property therein, and where
the state has no control over the person or property of the defendant, and proposes to force an
appearance and personal jurisdiction. Such an order was beyond and in excess of the
jurisdiction of the court. (Geier v. McLendon, 7 Ga. 362; Augusta Ins. Co. v. Morton, 3 La.
Ann. 417; Woerner on Guardianship, p. 63; Pomeroy, Equity Juris., vol. 3, secs. 1305, 1306.)
It may be contended that the res or status of marriage is before the court, and therefore the
court, having jurisdiction of the cause of action, owing to the plaintiff being a bona-fide
resident, and the publication of the summons being legally made, the defendant is before the
court, thereby authorizing the court to enter her appearance by the appointment of a guardian
ad litem. Such is not the law. The publication of a summons against a nonresident never
brings the defendant before the court; it only enables the court to take jurisdiction of the
status of marriage, the summons operating simply as notice to the defendant and not as a
writ or process.
41 Nev. 431, 433 (1918) McKibbin v. District Court
defendant and not as a writ or process. The defendant is not before the court. (De La
Montanya v. De La Montanya, 44 Pac. 345.)
Hoyt, Gibbons, French & Springmeyer, for Respondents:
It is the duty of a court to appoint a guardian ad litem to represent an insane defendant.
(Harrison v. Rowan, Fed. Cas. No. 6143, 4 Wash. C. C. 202; Fietsam v. Kropp, 6 Ill. App.
144; Ryder v. Topping, 15 Ill. App. 216; In Re Hewitt, 3 Bland, 184; Mansfield v. Mansfield,
13 Mass. 412; Bensieck v. Cook, 110 Mo. 173; Markle v. Markle, 4 Johns. Ch. 168;
Montgomery v. Montgomery, 3 Bart. Ch. 132 Sturgis v. Longworth, 1 Ohio St. 544; Boyce v.
Lake, 17 S. C. 481; Speak v. Metcalf, 2 Tenn. Ch. 214; Steifel v. Clark, 68 Tenn. 466.)
An action for divorce is a suit in equity. (Lyons v. Lyons, 18 Cal. 447; Sharon v. Sharon,
67 Cal. 185; Wadsworth v. Wadsworth, 81 Cal. 82.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
This is an original proceeding in certiorari to review an order of the Second judicial
district court of the State of Nevada, made sua sponte, appointing a guardian ad litem for an
insane defendant in a divorce suit, it being the contention of the petitioner that in making the
appointment the court exceeded its jurisdiction.
The statute under which the court acted in making the appointment of a guardian ad litem
is section 4992, Revised Laws, which reads:
When an infant, or an insane or incompetent person is a party, he must appear either by
his general guardian or by a guardian ad litem appointed by the court in which the action is
pending, in each case. A guardian ad litem may be appointed in any case, when it is deemed
by the court in which the action or proceeding is prosecuted, or by a judge thereof, expedient
to represent the infant, insane, or incompetent person in the action or proceeding,
notwithstanding he may have a general guardian and may have appeared by him.
41 Nev. 431, 434 (1918) McKibbin v. District Court
It is the contention of petitioner that the district court has no jurisdiction to appoint a
guardian ad litem for an infant or insane defendant, unless such defendant is: (1) A ward of
the court, or (2) owns or has some property right in the state which is involved in the
litigation; and it is contended that since defendant is a nonresident of Nevada she cannot be a
ward of the court, and as no property rights are involved in the divorce action, the order
appointing a guardian ad litem was in excess of the jurisdiction of the court.
It is insisted that the legislature, in enacting the section of the statute quoted, meant to
legislate in behalf only of such infants and insane persons as were residents of the state, or
who had property rights within the state. For the purpose of presenting an argument in
support of his contention, counsel for petitioner rears a straw man and then proceeds to
demolish it. He says in his brief:
To illustrate, no action in personam will lie against a nonresident. Now section 4902,
Revised Laws, says nothing about actions in personam or in rem or quasi in rem or as to the
procedure or process of serving defendants, whether sane or insane or infants or adults.
Suppose, then, A should sue B upon a promissory note for $5,000 made by B in Nevada when
sane, and after making the note B should go to Alabama and become a resident of Alabama,
and there goes insane and is sent to an asylum. Could the court appoint a guardian ad litem
for B as such defendant, and by appearance through such guardian ad litem proceed to
judgment and render a judgment in personam? No. But if the court's construction of section
4992, Revised Laws, is correct, then the court should confer upon itself jurisdiction, and enter
a judgment in personam, by appointing a guardian ad litem, because the defendant was an
insane defendant. The guardian ad litem represents the defendant. His appearance by
demurrer or answer is the appearance of the defendant.
There is no parallel between the case presented to the district court and the hypothetical
case presented by counsel. In the imaginary case the court would be powerless to enter any
kind of an order, for the reason that no jurisdiction could be obtained to put the
machinery of the court in motion, while in the case presented in the petition herein the
machinery of the court was set in motion by the constructive service of summons upon
the defendant, and the court thereby acquired jurisdiction to hear and determine.
41 Nev. 431, 435 (1918) McKibbin v. District Court
powerless to enter any kind of an order, for the reason that no jurisdiction could be obtained
to put the machinery of the court in motion, while in the case presented in the petition herein
the machinery of the court was set in motion by the constructive service of summons upon the
defendant, and the court thereby acquired jurisdiction to hear and determine.
1. We cannot agree with counsel for petitioner that the appointment and appearance of a
guardian ad litem would constitute such an appearance on the part of the defendant as would
be equivalent in legal effect to a personal appearance by a sane defendant. (Rhoads v.
Rhoads, 43 Ill. 239.) There is only one question involved under the allegations of the
complaint filed in the divorce action, and that pertains solely to the petitioner's right to a
divorce. Counsel concedes the authority of the court to appoint a guardian ad litem for a
nonresident insane defendant in an action in which property rights are involved, even though
of limited value. This is an action substantially in rem, and to our mind the right to have the
marriage status preserved is one which may be of incalculable value to the defendant. The
defendant is helpless; she cannot defend herself; if the court is without jurisdiction to appoint
some one to defend her, gross fraud and injustice may be perpetrated upon her. We are of the
opinion that the courts of this state may appoint a guardian ad litem in any case in which the
defendant is insane, whether resident or nonresident, in which jurisdiction to hear and
determine the matter involved has been acquired. To hold to the contrary would be to open
wide the door for the perpetration of fraud.
2. A nonresident defendant in a divorce action has a right to defend such a suit, and that
right should not be forfeited merely because the defendant happens to be insane. As was said
in Malin v. Malin, 2 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 240:
A person incompetent to protect himself, from age or weakness of mind, * * * ought to
come under the protection of the court.
41 Nev. 431, 436 (1918) McKibbin v. District Court
Greater reasons exist for the enforcement of this rule in divorce actions, because of the
interest of the public in the preservation of the marriage status. The power of the court to
make the appointment complained of cannot be doubted.
It is urged by appellant that certain language in the opinion in De La Montanya v. De La
Montanya, 112 Cal. 101, 44 Pac. 345, 32 L. R. A. 82, 53 Am. St. Rep. 165, where there had
been no personal service, wherein the authority of the trial court to enter a decree relative to
alimony and the custody of the children of the parties was considered, sustains his contention.
We are unable to so view the matter. About all that was decided there was that, in view of the
lack of personal service of summons upon the defendant, the trial court had before it to act
upon only the marriage status, and that so much of the judgment as pertained to alimony and
the custody of the children was erroneous. The reasoning in that case would apply with equal
force to an action to quiet title to real estate where the defendant was a nonresident and where
service of summons was obtained by publication.
It is ordered that the proceedings be, and the same are hereby, dismissed.
____________
41 Nev. 437, 437 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
[No. 2179]
NEVADA INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION, Respondent,
v. WASHOE COUNTY, Appellant.
[171 Pac. 511]
1. StatutesSubjects and TitlesSufficiency.
Stats. 1913, c. 111, entitled An act relating to the compensation of injured workmen in the industries of
this state and the compensation to their dependents where such injuries result in death, creating an
industrial insurance commission, providing for the creating and disbursement of funds for the
compensation and care of workmen injured in the course of employment, and defining and regulating the
liability of employers to their employees, and repealing all acts and parts of acts in conflict with this act,
sufficiently embraces within its title the purpose expressed by section 1, subd. b, thereof, making counties
and other municipal corporations subject to the act, and therefore does not offend Const. art. 4, sec. 17,
providing that every law shall embrace but one subject, which shall be briefly expressed in its title.
2. Constitutional LawMaster and ServantDue Process of LawWorkmen's
Compensation Act.
Workmen's Compensation Act (Stats. 1913, c. 111), sec. 1, subd. b, making counties subject thereto, is
not unconstitutional as depriving counties of due process of law, the money required to be paid by the
counties going for a public purpose of supporting the indigent, which is a legitimate charge on the people
of the state and its various subdivisions.
3. Master and ServantWorkmen's Compensation ActDefenses.
A county cannot defeat the state industrial commission's action for moneys to compensate an injured
employee of the county, on the theory that there is no money in the county treasury available, in the
absence of an answer pleading such fact.
4. Constitutional LawClass LegislationWorkmen's Compensation Act.
Stats. 1913, c. 111, sec. 1 subd. b, making counties liable under the Workmen's Compensation Act, is not
unconstitutional as discriminatory; the classification of counties being reasonable.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; A. N. Salisbury, Judge.
Suit by the Nevada Industrial Commission against Washoe County. Judgment for plaintiff
on defendant's refusal to plead further after its demurrer to the complaint was overruled, and
defendant appeals. Affirmed.
41 Nev. 437, 438 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
E. F. Lunsford, District Attorney, and A. N. Salisbury, Assistant District Attorney, for
Appellant:
The complaint in this action fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, the
statute upon which it is based (Stats. 1913, p. 137) being invalid and unconstitutional, for the
following reasons:
1. Said statute violates the fifth amendment to the constitution of the United States, which
provides that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of
law, and that private property shall not be taken for private use without just compensation,
and is violative of section 8, article 1, of the constitution of Nevada, which contains similar
provisions.
2. It is violative of the provisions of section 21, article 4, of the constitution of Nevada,
which provides that in all cases where a general law can be made applicable, all laws shall be
general and of uniform operation throughout the state.
3. The statute unduly and unjustly discriminates between individuals and municipal
corporations, creating and establishing a classification unwarranted by law and not founded
upon any reasonable basis, and for which classification no natural or substantial reason
inheres in the subject-matter.
The title of the act indicates clearly that the act is designed to protect only workmen
employed in the industries of the state. The word industries has a restricted and
well-defined meaning. (Webster's Dictionary; Words and Phrases, vol. 4.) While the details
of a statute need not be specifically stated in the title, the matters germain to the subject and
adapted to the accomplishment of the object in view may properly be included; and this court
has always held that it is necessary to express in the title of a legislative act the principal
subject embodied in the law, and that the general purpose is accomplished only when a law
has but one general object, fairly indicated by its title. (Humboldt Co. v. County Comm., 6
Nev. 31; State v. Ah Sam, 15 Nev. 27; State v. Hallock, 19 Nev. 384; State v. Hoadley, 20
Nev. 317
41 Nev. 437, 439 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
Hoadley, 20 Nev. 317; State v. Comm., 22 Nev. 399; State v. Gibson, 30 Nev. 353; State v.
Stone, 24 Nev. 308.)
It cannot be seriously contended that a county is an industry, as contemplated within the
meaning of the word used in the title of this act. And it is well settled that a county is not
even a municipal corporation, but is only a governmental division of the state for a matter of
convenience. Counties, as such, have a corporate capacity only for particular specified
purposes, and such powers only as are specifically granted by the act of incorporation. (11
Cyc. 341, 457; Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, vol. 7, pp. 901, 902.)
The taking of private property for public purposes by taxation authorized by competent
legislative authority is according to due process of law, but when the purpose is clearly not
public the courts will declare the act unconstitutional. (8 Cyc. 1130.)
The paying of any assessment under the act in question would require the levy of a special
tax for the purpose of raising the necessary fund, which is not permissible. The legislature has
no power to appropriate to a creditor or to a donee of the state money raised by a tax levied
upon and collected from the taxpayers of a particular county. (Williams v. Bidleman, 7 Nev.
71.)
Counties, in the absence of statutory provisions, are not liable for tortious actions. (7 Am. &
Eng. Ency. Law, 947; 11 Cyc. 497; Madden v. Lancaster Co., 65 Fed. 188; Kinkead v.
Hardin, 36 Am. Rep. 236.)
The statute is violative of the provisions of the state constitution because it is not of
general and uniform operation, unjustly discriminating between private individuals and
municipal corporations and establishing a classification unwarranted by law. A statute which
imposes upon a private corporation a liability for injuries to employees which does not exist
in the case of individuals or partnerships, the conditions and circumstances being similar,
violates the constitutional provision guaranteeing equal protection of the laws. (Bedford
Quarries Co. v. Bough, 168 Ind. 671, 80 N. E. 529, 14 L. R. A. n. s.
41 Nev. 437, 440 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
418; Matheson v. Minneapolis Street Ry. Co., 148 N. W. 71; Ives v. South Buffalo Ry. Co.,
201 N. Y. 271.)
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, and Wm.
McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General, for Respondent:
There is no merit whatever in any of the objections raised by appellant. The word
industries has a much broader meaning than that attributed to it by counsel. It means the
department or branches of art, occupation or business. (Webster's New International Dict.)
Occupation is defined to be that which occupies or engages the time or attention; the
principal business of one's life, vocation, employment, calling, trade. (Union Mut. A. Assn. v.
Frohard, 134 Ill. 228.) It embraces the duties of a public office. (Schuchardt v. People, 99 Ill.
501.) Workmen, in the title to the act, was employed in its generic sense, intended to
include the employees of a county as well as the servants of individuals or private
corporations. (L. & C. Co. v. Industrial Accident Board, 155 Pac. 268.)
The provisions of the constitution under consideration should be liberally construed. (State
v. Comm., 21 Nev. 235; State v. Comm., 22 Nev. 399; State v. Ah Sam, 15 Nev. 27; State v.
State B. & T. Co., 31 Nev. 456; State v. Ah Pah, 34 Nev. 283; McBride v. Griswold, 38 Nev.
56: First Nat. Bank v. Nye Co., 38 Nev. 123.) This is especially true with reference to acts
providing compensation to injured workmen. (Mackin v. Detroit-Timken Axle Co., 153 N. W.
49; Memphis Cotton Oil Co. v. Tolbert, 171 S. W. 309; Shade v. Ash Grove L. Co., 144 Pac.
249.) It is perfectly proper to give some slight enlargement to the literal meaning of the title
of a law. (State v. Ah Sam, supra.)
Legislatures may enact laws which apply only to certain classes, if the basis for the
classification is reasonable. (Pyramid L. & L. Co. v. Pierce, 30 Nev. 237; Ex Parte Boyce, 27
Nev. 299; State v. Cal. M. Co., 15 Nev.
41 Nev. 437, 441 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
249; Ex Parte Pittman, 31 Nev. 43; Porter v. Hopkins, 109 N. E. 629.)
All presumptions are in favor of the constitutionality of a statute; it will be held valid until
the mind of the court is clearly convinced to the contrary. (Evans v. Job, 8 Nev. 322; State v.
Comm., 21 Nev. 238.) In cases of doubt, every possible presumption and intendment will be
made in favor of the constitutionality of the statute in question. (State v. Irwin, 5 Nev. 120;
State v. Comm., 21 Nev. 238; Quilici v. Strosnider, 34 Nev. 9.) The constitutionality of
workmen's compensation and industrial insurance laws has many times been before the
courts, and such laws have been uniformly declared constitutional. (L. R. A. 1916a, 409;
Ann. Cas. 1912b, 174, 1915a, 247, 1916b, 1286.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
The Nevada Industrial Commission brought suit against Washoe County, in the district
court of that county to collect premiums alleged to be due pursuant to an act relative to the
compensation of injured workmen. (Stats. 1913, p. 137.) A general demurrer was interposed
by the defendant, and, upon being overruled, the defendant electing to stand upon its
demurrer, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, from which this appeal is taken.
The complainant alleges its right to sue, pursuant to the terms of the act mentioned; alleges
the existence of the defendant; that defendant employed in the carrying on of its county
government various and sundry persons; and that on account thereof the defendant became
indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $313.15, which it refused to pay. Subdivision b of
section 1 of the act in question reads:
Where the state, county, municipal corporation, school district, cities under special
charter or commission form of government is the employer, the limitations of two employees
shall not apply, and as to such employees and employers thereof the rights and remedies as
by this act provided to pay compensation for personal injury sustained by such employees
arising out of and in the course of the employment shall be exclusive, compulsory and
obligatory."
41 Nev. 437, 442 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
and employers thereof the rights and remedies as by this act provided to pay compensation for
personal injury sustained by such employees arising out of and in the course of the
employment shall be exclusive, compulsory and obligatory.
In support of its claim that the lower court erred in overruling its demurrer the county
maintains that the act in question is unconstitutional, the first contention being that the title of
the act is in violation of section 17, article 4, of the constitution, which provides that every
law enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one subject and matters properly connected
therewith, which subject shall be briefly expressed in the title, in that it is not sufficiently
comprehensive to embrace within its scope the counties of the state. It is said that the word
industries in the title of the act means pursuits in which human exertion is employed for the
creation of value and regarded as a species of capital or wealth, and that a county is not thus
engaged. Conceding for the purposes of this case, without so deciding, that the contention of
appellant as to the meaning of the word industries is correct, we are nevertheless of the
view that the title of the act is so comprehensive in its scope as not to offend against section
17, article 4, of the constitution without regard to the rule that a liberal construction should be
given in considering the objection urged. (State v. State B. & T. Co., 31 Nev. 456-473, 103
Pac. 407, 105 Pac. 567.) The title of the act reads:
An act relating to the compensation of injured workmen in the industries of this state and
the compensation to their dependents where such injuries result in death, creating an
industrial insurance commission, providing for the creating and disbursement of funds for the
compensation and care of workmen injured in the course of employment, and defining and
regulating the liability of employers to their employees; and repealing all acts and part of acts
in conflicting with this act.
1. We have italicized that portion of the title of the act to which objection is made. We are
of the opinion that, had the portion objected to been entirely omitted, the title of the act
would be broad enough to comply with the requirements of the law.
41 Nev. 437, 443 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
that, had the portion objected to been entirely omitted, the title of the act would be broad
enough to comply with the requirements of the law. Even then it indicates that the purpose of
the act is to create an industrial insurance commission, to provide funds to compensate
workmen injured in the course of employment, and to define and regulate the liability of
employers to their employees. The Supreme Court of Michigan, in Purdy v. City of Sault St.
Marie, 188 Mich. 573, 155 N. W. 597, Ann. Cas. 1917d, 881, was called to pass upon an
objection to the title of an act upon the ground that it was not broad enough to include
employees of a municipal corporation. The title of the act under consideration in that case
reads:
An act to promote the welfare of the people of this state, relating to the liability of
employers for injuries or death sustained by their employees, providing compensation for the
accidental injury to or death of employees, and methods for the payment of the same,
establishing an industrial accident board, defining its powers, providing for a review of its
awards, making an appropriation to carry out the provisions of this act, and restricting the
right to compensation or damages in such cases to such as are provided by this act. (Pub.
Acts. Mich. [Ex. Sess.] 1912, No. 10.)
In determining the question presented, the court said:
The title of the act mentions and indicates that its provisions relate to liability of
employers for injuries or death sustained by their employees.' It is general, as title of acts
must be, and is broad enough to include municipal corporations if they are employers.
2. Since the act in question is compulsory so far as counties are concerned, it is insisted
that it is in violation of the due process of law clause of both the state and federal
constitutions, although nothing peculiarly applicable to our state constitution is urged under
this objection. We think this contention is fully answered by the Court of Appeals of New
York in Jensen v. Southern Pacific Co., 215 N. Y. 514, 109 N. E. 600, L. R. A. 1916a, 403,
Ann. Cas. 1916b, 276, where it is said: "Moreover, upon the question whether an act
offends against the constitution of the United States the decisions of the United States
Supreme Court are controlling.
41 Nev. 437, 444 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
Moreover, upon the question whether an act offends against the constitution of the United
States the decisions of the United States Supreme Court are controlling. The only one of the
numerous workmen's compensation acts which appears to have been directly passed on by the
United States Supreme Court is the act of Ohio, which contained an optional clause. (Jeffrey
Mfg. Co. v. Blagg, 235 U. S. 571, 35 Sup. Ct. 167, 59 L. Ed. 364.) The single question
decided in that case was that limiting the application of the act to shops with five or more
employees did not result in arbitrary and unreasonable classification. This act is compulsory.
The employer is subjected to a penalty for not adopting one of the three methods of insurance
allowed him, and the employee has no choice at all except possibly as to whether he will
enter one of the classified employments. However, except for a feature presently to be
considered, the decision in Noble State Bank v. Haskell, 219 U. S. 104, 31 Sup. Ct. 186, 55 L.
Ed. 112, 32 L. R. A. n. s. 1062, Ann. Cas. 1912a, 487, is decisive. Indeed, upon close analysis
it will appear that the taking justified in that case as a proper exercise of the police power was
no more in the public interest than that involved in this case, and that the mutual benefits to
the parties immediately concerned were not as direct. In that case an act of the State of
Oklahoma requiring every bank existing under the state laws to pay an assessment based on
average daily deposits into a guaranty fund to secure the full repayment of deposits in case
any such bank became insolvent was sustained not merely under the reserve power of the
state to alter or repeal charters, but as a proper exercise of the police power. Solvent banks
were thus required to pay money into a fund for the direct benefit of others, the banks
benefiting only indirectly from the supposed benefit to commerce and the greater stability of
banking. In this case the mutual benefits are direct. Granted that employers are compelled to
insure, and that there is in that sense a taking. They insure themselves and their employees
from loss, not others.
41 Nev. 437, 445 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
employees from loss, not others. The payment of the required premiums exempts them from
further liability. The theoretical taking, no doubt, disappears in practical experience. As a
matter of fact every industrial concern, except the very large ones who insure themselves,
have for some time been forced by conditions, not by law, to carry accident indemnity
insurance. A relatively small part of the sums thus paid actually reached injured workmen or
their dependents. With the economic saving of the present scheme, insurance in the long run
should certainly be as cheap as under the old wasteful plan, and the families of all injured
workmen, not a part only, will receive some compensation for the loss of earning power of
the wage-earner. We should consider practical experience as well as theory in deciding
whether a given plan in fact constitutes a taking of property in violation of the constitution. A
compulsory scheme of insurance to secure injured workmen in hazardous employments and
their dependents from becoming objects of charity certainly promotes the public welfare as
directly as does an insurance of bank depositors from loss.
The same question has been passed upon by the Supreme Court of California in the case of
Western Indemnity Co. v. Pillsbury, 170 Cal. 686, 151 Pac. 398, where the various decisions
in point were considered, the court reaching the conclusion that the act did not violate the
constitutional inhibition. As has been seen, these statutes are upheld upon the theory that they
are but the exercise of the police power of the state.
The Supreme Court of the United States in considering the compulsory workmen's
compensation law of the State of Washington in Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington, 243 U.
S. 220, 37 Sup. Ct. 260, 61 L. Ed. 685, Ann. Cas. 1917d, 642, where the identical objection
was urged, said:
There remains, therefore, only the contention that it is inconsistent with the due process
and equal protection clauses of the fourteenth amendment to impose the entire cost of
accident loss upon the industries in which the losses arise.
41 Nev. 437, 446 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
the entire cost of accident loss upon the industries in which the losses arise. But if, as the
legislature of Washington has declared in the first section of the act, injuries in such
employments have become frequent and inevitable, and if, as we have held in New York C. R.
Co. v. White, the state is at liberty, notwithstanding the fourteenth amendment, to disregard
questions of fault in arranging a system of compensation for such injuries, we are unable to
discern any ground in natural justice or fundamental right that prevents the state from
imposing the entire burden upon the industries that occasion the losses. The act in effect puts
these hazardous occupations in the category of dangerous agencies, and requires that the
losses shall be reckoned as a part of the cost of the industry, just like the pay-roll, the repair
account, or any other item of cost. The plan of assessment insurance is closely followed, and
none more just has been suggested as a means of distributing the risk and burden of losses
that inevitably must occur, in spite of any care that may be taken to prevent them.
We are clearly of the opinion that a state, in the exercise of its power to pass such
legislation as reasonably is deemed to be necessary to promote the health, safety, and general
welfare of its people, may regulate the carrying on of industrial occupations that frequently
and inevitably produce personal injuries and disability, with consequent loss of earning power
among the men and women employed, and occasionally loss of life of those who have wives
and children or other relations dependent upon them for support, and may require that these
human losses shall be charged against the industry, either directly, as is done in the case of
the act sustained in New York C. R. Co. v. White, 243 U. S. 188, 37 Sup. Ct. 247, 61 L. Ed.
667, L. R. A. 1917d, 1, Ann. Cas. 1917D, 629, or by publicly administering the compensation
and distributing the cost among the industries affected by means of a reasonable system of
occupation taxes. The act cannot be deemed oppressive to any class of occupation, provided
the scale of compensation is reasonable, unless the loss of human life and limb is found in
experience to be so great that, if charged to the industry, it leaves no sufficient margin for
reasonable profits.
41 Nev. 437, 447 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
limb is found in experience to be so great that, if charged to the industry, it leaves no
sufficient margin for reasonable profits. But certainly, if any industry involves so great a
human wastage as to leave no fair profit beyond it, the state is at liberty, in the interest of the
safety and welfare of its people, to prohibit such an industry altogether.
The Supreme Court of Washington, in State ex rel. Davis-Smith Co. v. Clausen, 65 Wash.
156, 117 Pac. 1101, 37 L. R. A. n. s. 466, held a compulsory insurance act to be
constitutional.
But we think there is another and very excellent theory upon which the law may be held to
be constitutional, namely, that the money required to be paid under the act by the counties of
the state goes for a public purpose which is a legitimate charge upon the people and the state
and the subdivisions thereof.
The case of State ex rel. Goodwin v. Nelson County, 1 N. D. 88, 45 N. W. 33, 8 L. R. A.
283, 26 Am. St. Rep. 609, was one in which the constitutionality of an act was involved
which provided that the counties of the state might issue bonds for the purpose of raising
money to purchase seed grain for farmers who were unable to purchase it for themselves. We
quote therefrom as follows:
The stubborn fact exists that a class of citizens, numbered by many thousands, is in such
present straits, from poverty, that unless succored by come comprehensive measure of relief
they will become a public burden, in other words, paupers, dependent upon counties where
they reside for support. It is to avert such a widespread disaster that the seed grain statute was
enacted, and it should be interpreted in the light of the public danger which was the occasion
of its passage. The support of paupers, and the giving of assistance to those who by reason of
age, infirmity, or disability are likely to become such, is, by the practice of the common
consent of civilized countries, a public purpose.' (Cooley, Taxn., 2d ed. pp. 124, 125.) The
relief of the poorthe care of those who are unable to care for themselvesis among the
unquestioned objects of public duty.' {Opinion of Brewer, J., in State v. Osawkee Twp., 14
Kan.
41 Nev. 437, 448 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
unquestioned objects of public duty.' (Opinion of Brewer, J., in State v. Osawkee Twp., 14
Kan. 424, 19 Am. Rep. 99.)
See, also, Matter of Jensen, 44 App. Div. 509, 60 N. Y. Supp. 933; Exempt Firemen's
Benev. Fund v. Roome, 93 N. Y. 313, 45 Am. Rep. 217.
It was said in Charlotte, etc., Railroad v. Gibbs, 143 U. S. 390, 12 Sup. Ct. 255, 35 L. Ed.
1051:
Where the interest of the public and its individuals are blended in any work or service
imposed by law, whether the cost shall be thrown entirely upon the individuals or upon the
state or be apportioned between them is a matter of legislative direction.
3. Counsel for appellant also contend that there are no funds in the county treasury
available for the payment of the demand pleaded in the complaint. As to this, we need only
say that, if we were to concede that such a state of facts would constitute a good defense
(which we do not), there is nothing upon which to base such a contention, since there is no
answer on file pleading such facts.
4. It is next contended that the act in question is void because it is discriminatory and is
not of general and uniform operation. As said in Ex Parte Pittman, 31 Nev. 43, 99 Pac. 700,
22 L. R. A. n. s. 266, 20 Ann. Cas. 1319:
This court has repeatedly held that the legislature may enact laws which apply only to
certain classes, if the basis for the classification is reasonable.
In the case of Gulf R. R. Co. v. Ellis, 165 U. S. 150, 17 Sup. Ct. 255, 41 L. Ed. 666, the
Supreme Court of the United States said:
It is not within the scope of the fourteenth amendment to withhold from the states the
power of classification, and that if the law deals alike with all of a certain class, it is not
obnoxious to the charge of a denial of equal protection.
Is the classification reasonable? We think it is. It is not only within the power, but, as we
have shown, it is the duty of the county and state to provide for its indigent, and to care
for those who are unable to care for themselves or who are likely to become dependent
upon public charity.
41 Nev. 437, 449 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
is not only within the power, but, as we have shown, it is the duty of the county and state to
provide for its indigent, and to care for those who are unable to care for themselves or who
are likely to become dependent upon public charity.
If there is any virtue in the old adage that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,
was it not a reasonable exercise of discretion on the part of the legislature to impose upon the
counties the duty of contributing to a fund which can be drawn upon to prevent those injured
in its employ from becoming paupers? We think it was.
Perceiving no prejudicial error, it is ordered that the judgment be affirmed.
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur.
In my judgment, the one question most vital here is that which refers to the constitutional
provision (sec. 17, art. 4):
Each law enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one subject, and matter properly
connected therewith, which subject shall be fully expressed in the title.
The title of our workmen's compensation act is thus couched:
An act relating to the compensation of injured workmen in the industries of this state and
the compensation to their dependents where such injuries result in death, creating an
industrial insurance commission, providing for the creation and disbursement of funds for the
compensation and care of workmen injured in the course of employment, and defining and
regulating the liability of employers to their employees; and repealing all acts and parts of
acts in conflict with this act.
Subdivision b of section 1 of the act provides:
Where the state, county, municipal corporation, school district, cities under special charter
or commission form of government is the employer, the limitations of two employees shall
not apply, and as to such employees and employers thereof the rights and remedies as by
this act provided to pay compensation for personal injury sustained by such employees
arising out of and in the course of the employment shall be exclusive, compulsory and
obligatory."
41 Nev. 437, 450 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
of two employees shall not apply, and as to such employees and employers thereof the rights
and remedies as by this act provided to pay compensation for personal injury sustained by
such employees arising out of and in the course of the employment shall be exclusive,
compulsory and obligatory.
As to this section the appellant county contends that, inasmuch as a county is not an
industry, the title of the act is not sufficiently broad to embrace counties within its scope
and operation.
Following the general proposition that the provision of the constitution here invoked
should be liberally construed (State v. Ah Sam, 15 Nev. 27; McBride v. Griswold, 38 Nev. 56,
146 Pac. 756; First National Bank v. Nye County, 38 Nev. 123, 145 Pac. 932, Ann. Cas.
1917c, 1195), I am of the opinion that the general language of the title is sufficient to
contemplate and give notice of the substance of subdivision b of section 1. The title declares
that the act is, among other things, one defining and regulating liability of employers to their
employees.
Unquestionably the county is an employer of workmen. In my judgment, the spirit, as well
as the letter, of the whole act manifests an intention to provide for a systematic arrangement
for compensation for injured or afflicted workmen in whatever capacity such might be
employed and to provide that where, as in counties and municipalities, the state is sovereign,
such arrangement should be compulsory. This is but following out the fundamental idea,
basic to all compensation acts; i.e., that the industry or employment which requires human
agency for its operation should look to the care and upkeep of that agency, no less than to
other elements of efficiency.
Again appellant urges that, as counties are not liable for tortious actions this statute
imposes a compulsory burden which was not formerly in existence. This contention rests on
the theory that workmen's compensation laws are enacted to meet the rule of the
employers' liability for injury to employees.
41 Nev. 437, 451 (1918) Nevada Industrial Commission v. Washoe County
laws are enacted to meet the rule of the employers' liability for injury to employees. The
premise is fallacious. The proper theory, and that on which the original Bismarckian
compensation acts were founded, and that which appears as the spirit underlying all such laws
subsequently created, is rather that the thing which requires human labor and consumes
human energy in its operation shall bear an equitable share by way of compensation to those
or the dependents of those who are deprived of the fruits of their labor, where such
deprivation grows out of or is sustained in the course of employment.
____________
41 Nev. 453, 453 (1918)
REPORTS OF CASES
DETERMINED BY
THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF NEVADA
____________
APRIL TERM, 1918
____________
41 Nev. 453, 453 (1918) State v. Snyder
[No. 2315]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. AL.
SNYDER, Appellant.
[172 Pac. 364]
1. RobberyAdministration of PoisonStatuteForce.
Where defendant administered poison to produce unconsciousness and took money from cash register in
saloon of which unconscious person had charge, he was guilty of robbery, defined by statute to be
unlawful taking of personal property from person of another or in his presence against his will by means of
force or violence or fear of injury, since the administration of the poison constituted force.
2. RobberyPoisonSufficiency of Evidence.
In a prosecution for robbery by administering chloral hydrate to produce unconsciousness, evidence held
not to show that the condition in which the person robbed was found could not have been so caused.
3. RobberySufficiency of Evidence.
In a prosecution for robbery by administering chloral hydrate to render unconscious the barkeeper whose
cash register was robbed, evidence connecting defendant with the crime, alleged to have been committed
by himself and two others, held to sustain conviction.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; E. J. L. Taber, Judge.
Al. Snyder was convicted of robbery, and appeals. Affirmed.
41 Nev. 453, 454 (1918) State v. Snyder
Withers & Withers, for Appellant:
The court erred in refusing to advise the jury to bring in a verdict acquitting the defendant,
when requested so to do. There was no proof that chloral had been administered; and if in fact
it had been administered, there was no proof that the defendant had been in any way
connected with such administration. The possession of chloral hydrate and opportunity of
administering it are of themselves no evidence to support the crime of robbery. The state must
show, or at least introduce evidence tending to prove, that the victim was actually suffering
from this specific drug. The state had it in its power to make all necessary tests.
Even though the court may find the evidence sufficient to show the administration of
chloralthe only force allegedthat finding would embrace two distinct presumptions,
which would be based on two grounds, each supported merely by circumstantial evidence.
First, the presumption that chloral was actually used, and, second, that it was used in such
quantity, quality and conditions that it caused insensibility in the victim. Even should this
finding be had, there can be no conviction, because the court will not uphold the still further
presumption that because this defendant was present at the time of the robbery he presumably
was connected with it, and presumably helped in the presumed administration of chloral
which presumably might have caused death. A complete chain of circumstances must be
proven. (Horgan v. Indart, 41 Nev. 228, 168 Pac. 953.)
The administration of chloral does not constitute the force and violence required under our
statute defining robbery. There is no evidence of fear in the case. Force is an essential element
of the crime of robbery. By force and violence is meant the physical application of force;
physical and muscular effort that will overcome the resistance of the victim. (24 Am. & Eng.
Ency. Law, 992; Nelson v. State, 145 Pac. 315; 2 Bishop, Crim. Law, 7th ed. 1166; 34 Cyc.
1796; Wharton, Crim. Law, 3d ed.; Brown v. Comm., 13 Am. St. Rep. 478; State v. McCune,
70 Am.
41 Nev. 453, 455 (1918) State v. Snyder
Am. Dec. 178; Reynolds v. State, 132 Pac. 434; Monaghan v. State, 134 Pac. 77.)
It has been decided by this court in numerous cases that the judgment will be reversed and the
verdict of guilty set aside if there is not sufficient evidence to support it, and that in order that
the evidence be sufficient there must be a substantial conflict. There is no substantial conflict
in this case. (State v. V. & T. Ry. Co., 23 Nev. 283; Horgan v. Indart, 168 Pac. 953; State v.
Thompson, 101 Pac. 557; State v. Whitaker, 39 Nev. 159.)
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, William
McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General, and E. F. Lunsford, District Attorney, for Respondent:
The administering of drugs and poisons constitutes assault and battery. (2 R. C. L. 539.) It
has always been regarded as permissible to charge the administering of poison as an assault,
and the same reasoning applies to the application of injurious drugs. (2 Wharton, Crim. Law,
sec. 1246.) The administering of croton oil was held to constitute assault and battery. (State v.
Monroe, 43 L. R. A. 861.) A man may be said to take by violence who deprived the other of
the power of resistance by whatever means he did it. (Russell on Crimes, 2d ed. vol. 1;
Commonwealth v. Stratton, 19 Am. Rep. 350.)
It has been decided in numerous cases that if there is any evidence tending to support the
verdict this court will not reverse the case. (State v. McGinnis, 6 Nev. 109; State v. Glovery,
10 Nev. 24; State v. Huff, 11 Nev. 17; State v. Raymond, 12 Nev. 98; State v. Crozier, 12 Nev.
300; State v. Mills, 12 Nev. 403; State v. Wong, 22 Nev. 336; State v. Buralli, 27 Nev. 41;
State v. Preston, 30 Nev. 301; State v. Thompson, 31 Nev. 209; State v. Whitaker, 39 Nev.
159.) The rule is that judgments will be reversed for alleged errors in instructions only when,
looking at the testimony, we can see that the jury may have been misled by them to the
prejudice of the defendant, or when, in the absence of testimony, it is apparent that the
instructions would be improper under any possible condition of the evidence."
41 Nev. 453, 456 (1918) State v. Snyder
defendant, or when, in the absence of testimony, it is apparent that the instructions would be
improper under any possible condition of the evidence. (State v. Loveless, 17 Nev. 424;
People v. Donahue, 45 Cal. 322; People v. Strong, 46 Cal. 303.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Appellant was convicted of the crime of robbery, and appeals.
Robbery is defined by our statute to be:
The unlawful taking of personal property from the person of another, or in his presence,
against his will, by means of force or violence or fear of injury, immediate or future, to his
person or property; * * * the degree of force is immaterial. (Rev. Laws, 6427.)
The state did not contend upon the trial that appellant used actual force in perpetrating the
crime, but constructive force, in that he administered poison to one Cooper with the intention
of producing unconsciousness, and while Cooper was in that condition took money from a
cash register in the saloon of which the latter had charge.
Appellant contends that under our statute defining robbery there can be no such thing as
constructive force. Force was an essential element in both robbery and rape at common law,
and is so by statute, except in rape where carnal knowledge is had of a female under the age
of consent; but it has been held in this state, in England, and in some of the other states, that
the force used in perpetrating the crime of rape may be constructive as well as actual. In the
case of Queen v. Camplin, 1 Cox, Crim. Law Cas. 220, 1 Car. & K. 746, 1 Denison, Crim.
Cas. 89, wherein the defendant gave a young girl liquor for the purpose of exciting her
passions, and not with the intention of causing intoxication, but from which she became
intoxicated, and while she was in that condition and insensible he had carnal intercourse with
her, the court said that:
The case therefore falls within the description of those cases in which force and
violence constitute the crime, but in which fraud is held to supply the want of both."
41 Nev. 453, 457 (1918) State v. Snyder
those cases in which force and violence constitute the crime, but in which fraud is held to
supply the want of both.
In Lewis v. State, 30 Ala. 54, 68 Am. Dec. 113, it was said:
It is settled by a chain of adjudication, too long and unbroken to be now shaken, that
force is a necessary ingredient in the crime of rape. (Bishop's Crim. Law, sec. 411.) The only
relaxation of this rule is that this force may be constructive. Under this relaxation, it has been
held that where a female was an idiot, or had been rendered insensible by the use of drugs or
intoxicating drinks, and, in one case, where she was under the age of ten years, she was
incapable of consenting, and the law implied force. (Rex v. Ryan, 2 Cox's C. C. 115;
Commonwealth v. Fields, 4 Leigh, Va. 649; State v. Shepard, 7 Conn. 54; Regina v. Camplin,
1 Car. & Kir. 746; Bishop's Cr. Law, sec. 343.)
In Pomeroy v. State, 94 Ind. 96, 48 Am. Rep. 146, wherein the defendant had been
convicted of rape, the court said:
In People v. Croswell [Crosswell v. People] 13 Mich. 427, 87 Am. Dec. 774, after citing
some decisions, both in England and in this country, to the effect that if the woman's consent
is obtained by fraud the crime of rape is not committed, Cooley, J., said: But there are some
cases in this country to the contrary, and they seem to us to stand upon much the better
reasons, and to be more in accordance with the general rules of criminal law. (People v.
Metcalf, 1 Whart. C. C. 378, and note 381; State v. Shepard, 7 Conn. 54.) And in England,
where a medical practitioner had knowledge of the person of a weak-minded patient, on
pretense of medical treatment, the offense was held to be rape. (Regina v. Stanton, 1 C. & K.
415, 1 Den. C. C.) The outrage upon the woman, and the injury to society, is just as great in
these cases as if actual force had been employed; and we have been unable to satisfy
ourselves that the act can be said to be any less against the will of the woman when her
consent is obtained by fraud than when it is extorted by threats or force.'"
41 Nev. 453, 458 (1918) State v. Snyder
when her consent is obtained by fraud than when it is extorted by threats or force.'
In another rape case the Supreme Court of Wisconsin says:
Under such circumstances, the assault with intent to commit rape is complete, and we
find no objection to the instruction because it did not require that some additional force must
be employed by the assailant to that involved constructively in the acts of giving her the
liquor with these intents in his mind. There is no dispute but that he took the actual steps of
giving her the liquor, and, since the jury found this was done with the criminal intent charged,
the essentials of the offense are present. (State v. Lung, 21 Nev. 209, 28 Pac. 235, 37 Am. St.
Rep. 505.) (Quinn v. State, 153 Wis. 573, 142 N. W. 510, 46 L. R. A. n. s. 422.)
This court, in considering a case wherein the defendant was convicted of an attempt to
commit rape, after reviewing the authorities wherein it had been held that the force necessary
to constitute rape might be constructive, said:
As an attempt to commit a crime can only be made under circumstances which, had the
attempt succeeded, would have constituted the entire substantive offense (1 Bish. Crim. Law,
secs. 731, 736; State v. Brooks, 76 N. C. 1), the result which we gather from these principles
is that, for a man to be guilty of the crime of an attempt to commit rape, he must have
intended to use the force necessary to accomplish his purpose, notwithstanding the woman's
resistance, or, in the case of constructive force, to either destroy her power to resist him by the
administration of liquors or drugs, or to take advantage of the fact that she was already in a
condition in which either the mental or physical ability to resist is wanting. (State v. Lung,
21 Nev. 209, 28 Pac. 235, 37 Am. St. Rep. 505.)
It will be seen that the court, in the last-mentioned case, held that one of two things would
constitute constructive force, namely (a) the destroying of the woman's power of resistance
by administering liquors or drugs, or {b) the taking advantage of the fact that the woman
was already in the condition in which the mental or physical ability to resist was wanting.
41 Nev. 453, 459 (1918) State v. Snyder
woman's power of resistance by administering liquors or drugs, or (b) the taking advantage of
the fact that the woman was already in the condition in which the mental or physical ability to
resist was wanting.
See, also, Hirdes v. Cross, Ottawa Circuit Judge, 174 Mich. 321, 146 N. W. 646, 52 L. R.
A. n. s. 373; Rahke v. State, 168 Ind. 615, 81 N. E. 584.
1. We are unable to see why a different rule should be established in a case wherein
robbery is charged and in which force is an essential element, than in a case wherein rape is
the charge, wherein force is likewise an essential element. If constructive force may be used
in the one case, why not in the other? No satisfactory reason has been advanced why a
different rule should exist, and we are unable to think of one worthy to be mentioned, and are
therefore of the opinion that the trial court did not err in holding that constructive force was
resorted to by appellant.
2. It is also contended in behalf of appellant that the evidence of the doctors shows that
the condition in which Cooper was found could not have been caused by chloral hydrate, as
contended by the state, for the reason that the witness Cooper testified that almost
immediately upon drinking the beer testified to he became unconscious, because, as
contended, chloral hydrate does not produce the condition of unconsciousness in which
Cooper was found in less than thirty minutes, unless a dose is taken which will cause certain
death. While one of the witnesses testified flatly that chloral hydrate would not produce
unconsciousness in less than thirty minutes, Dr. Kistler, who had been called to attend
Cooper, did not so testify; and, while his testimony was somewhat uncertain, he did state:
At the time that I was called to treat the man, I supposed he was suffering from chloral
poisoning. I have the same opinion now.
From an examination of the works of text-writers, it is apparent that what may be a
medicinal dose for one person is a poisonous dose for another. In some instances a dose of
thirty grains has proven fatal, while in other cases more than an ounce has been taken
without ill effect.
41 Nev. 453, 460 (1918) State v. Snyder
instances a dose of thirty grains has proven fatal, while in other cases more than an ounce has
been taken without ill effect. (Reese, Med. Juris. & Tox., 8th ed. 573; Herold's Man. of Legal
Medicine, p. 105.)
Taylor, in his Principles of Medical Jurisprudence, vol. 1, p. 387, speaking of this drug,
says:
It has been given in very large doses, sometimes with benefit, but at other times causing
dangerous symptoms, followed by death. * * * A patient under Dr. Habershon at Guy's took
half a drachm (30 grains) of the hydrate at night. He became unconscious almost immediately
after swallowing the draughtthe face and hands turned livid and cold, and breathing took
place only at long intervals, indeed for about five hours death seemed impending. He
recovered the next day. (Lancet, 1870, 2, 402.) A case is reported in the same journal in
which a dose of 160 grains was given by mistake to an hospital patient, a middle-aged man.
The man slept well and recovered, notwithstanding the large dose taken.
We do not think the contention of appellant can be sustained.
3. It is also contended that the evidence is not sufficient to connect appellant with the
crime. The defendant was jointly charged with Pat Bond and Sherman Owensby with the
crime of which he was convicted, but upon application he was granted a separate trial. The
testimony on the part of the defense shows that on the evening of June 26, 1917, the
defendant first met Pat Bond in Reno, and together they visited several saloons; that on the
following morning Owensby, who was then unknown to appellant, arrived from Sacramento
and met Bond, whom he had known in Southern California; that later they were met by
appellant, after which they visited several saloons together. Shortly after noon of that day they
all took the same street-car for Sparks, though, as they testified, appellant did not know that
Bond and Owensby were on the car, nor did they know that appellant was aboard. The car
passed through the town, and when it reached the end of the line they all got off; Bond and
Owensby going to the Rio Vista saloon, followed by appellant.
41 Nev. 453, 461 (1918) State v. Snyder
town, and when it reached the end of the line they all got off; Bond and Owensby going to the
Rio Vista saloon, followed by appellant. They had several drinks, after which a lunch was
ordered and served by Cooper, the bartender, on a table in the saloon. Cooper was invited to
join the party and got for himself a pint of beer, which he opened and placed on the table at
which the lunch was served. He then went to the kitchen for a moment, and upon his return
began to drink the beer, and soon became unconscious. While he was in this condition Bond
went to the cash register and took therefrom some money. Appellant testified that when Bond
went to the cash register he became scared and went outside of the saloon and stopped on the
sidewalk, and while standing there was passed by the other two men, who ran up the street.
Appellant then walked some distance from the saloon, turned around, and, as he claimed, was
on his way to the depot to take the train for Lovelock and while walking past the saloon was
arrested. Chloral hydrate was found in the possession of the other two men; and, while none
was found in the possession of appellant, a day or two after his arrest two small vials of the
drug were found about seventy-five feet from where appellant had been arrested. It further
appeared that it was impossible for the other two men to have been at the point at which the
vials mentioned were found between the time of their arrival in Sparks and the arrest.
The appellant at no time sought to render any assistance to Cooper or to notify any one of
his condition. In view of this chain of circumstances, would this court be justified in setting
aside the verdict of the jury? This court, in determining the sufficiency of circumstantial
evidence, has said:
If the circumstances, all taken together, exclude to a moral certainty every hypothesis but
the single one of guilt, and establish that one beyond a reasonable doubt, they are sufficient.
(State v. Mandich, 24 Nev. 336, 54 Pac. 516.)
41 Nev. 453, 462 (1918) State v. Snyder
Having held that the testimony of Dr. Kistler, who was called to attend Cooper, to the
effect that it was his opinion that Cooper's unsciousness was caused by a dose of chloral
hydrate, was sufficient to justify a conclusion on the part of the jury that Cooper's condition
was due to a dose of that medicine, let us, in the light of the rule just enunciated, ascertain if
the circumstantial evidence in the case is strong enough to warrant the jury in concluding that
appellant was a party to its administration to Cooper. If appellant was not a party to the crime,
he is the victim of a most remarkable chain of circumstances. Appellant's association with
Bond on the night of June 26 might have been a mere chance affair; his meeting Owensby the
next morning, shortly after his arrival from Sacramento, may have had no significance; his
going to Sparks on the same car might have been a mere coincidence, but his riding through
the town of Sparks to the end of the car line, as did Bond and Owensby, is a very suspicious
circumstance; his following Bond and Owensby into the Rio Vista saloon would not
necessarily signify anything; his drinking with them might have been merely the result of a
desire to quench his thirst; his partaking of lunch with them might have signified nothing
more than a desire to be sociable; the two vials of chloral hydrate may have been lost by some
one elsebut to what could appellant's failure to call for help when Cooper became
unconscious have been due? If he was blameless, why did he merely walk out of the saloon
and stand on the sidewalk, when the cash register was being robbed, without giving an alarm?
In our opinion, while none of the circumstances mentioned, considered alone, necessarily
signifies anything, it could hardly be possible for a chain of circumstances such as those
mentioned to have existed by mere chance, and we are of the opinion that they were sufficient
to justify the jury in bringing in a verdict of guilty.
It is ordered that the judgment be affirmed.
Sanders, J.: I concur.
41 Nev. 453, 463 (1918) State v. Snyder
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur.
In my judgment the very language of our statute opens the door to the reason and admits
the rule which recognizes constructive force. By the statute it is declared that:
Robbery is the unlawful taking of personal property from the person of another, or in his
presence, against his will, by means of force or violence or fear of injury * * * to obtain or
retain possession of the property, or to prevent or overcome resistance to the taking; in either
of which cases the degree of force is immaterial. (Rev. Laws, 6427.)
The agency of constructive force is recognized by authorities without number, where this
agency has appeared in the perpetration of the crime of rape. In such crimes, the
administering of liquor or drugs to an extent sufficient to destroy the power of resistance is
declared to meet the law's contemplation of force. (People v. Espanol, 16 Porto Rico Rep.
203; State v. Warren, 232 Mo. 185, 134 S. W. 522, Ann. Cas. 1912b, 1043.)
In considering the subject, Mr. Wharton, referring to the crime of robbery, recognizes
constructive force as sufficient to satisfy the law's requirement. (1 Wharton's Law of Crimes,
10th ed. p. 744, sec. 850.)
The reason which gave rise to the recognition of constructive force in cases of rape is
equally cogent in furtherance of a relaxation of the rule as to the element of force in the crime
of robbery to the extent that the necessary ingredient in that respect may be only constructive.
Force is the power or energy by which resistance is overcome. In the crime of robbery the
degree is immaterial, says the statute. When, to take the personal effects of another, a blow
is struck with a bludgeon, thereby paralyzing the victim's power of resistance, the taking will
constitute robbery. The same effect might be produced on the victim by the physical act of
administering a deadly potion. In either case resistance is involuntarily overcome.
41 Nev. 453, 464 (1918) State v. Snyder
resistance is involuntarily overcome. Great physical strength might be required to accomplish
the result in the first instance, while a mere turning of the hand might effect the consequence
in the second; force, however, is present in both. The agency through which the force operates
is immaterial. The result in either case is the overcoming of resistance without the voluntary
cooperation of the subject whose resistance is repressed; this is the test.
In the case at bar, resistance was overcome by force which operated through the agency of
chloral hydrate, administered to the party in charge of the saloon. Destruction of the power of
resistance was accomplished by the act of the defendant, operating through the force and
efficacy of the poison. A blow with a billy might have produced this same result. To say
that the one method would have been less forceful than the other in bringing about the
consequence is but to conjure with comparison.
____________
41 Nev. 465, 465 (1918) State v. Bond
[No. 2315a]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. PAT
BOND and SHERMAN OWENSBY, Appellants.
[172 Pac. 367]
1. Criminal LawAppealHarmless ErrorInstruction.
Where the information charging robbery did not allege the use of chloral hydrate or any drug to render
unconscious the person robbed, but alleged the robbery was committed by force and violence, and the
evidence showed that, while much chloral hydrate was found on defendants, some was in solution, and in
one bottle a foreign substance, as sugar or digitalis, had been mixed with chloral hydrate, defendants were
not prejudiced by an instruction that the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a drug was
actually administered to the person robbed, etc., instead of their request using the phrase such chloral
hydrate, instead of the phrase a drug.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; E. J. L. Taber, Judge.
Pat Bond and Sherman Owensby were convicted of robbery, and they appeal. Affirmed.
Withers & Withers, for Appellants:
The court erred in instructing the jury that the giving of drugs or poison constitutes the
force or violence necessary to support a charge of robbery as defined by our statute, and in
instructing that they might find the insensible condition of Cooper to have been due to the
administration of any drug or poison other than chloral hydrate, which was the only drug
testified to have been in the possession of the defendants. The case for the state was based
upon the hypothesis that chloral hydrate only had been administered, and there was no
evidence whatsoever that the defendants had any other drug in their possession, or had had
the opportunity to administer any other drug, or that the victim's condition could have been
caused by any other drug.
There is no competent evidence to show that Cooper was actually suffering from chloral
poisoning, but the evidence distinctly shows that in every way chloral would have caused
directly opposite symptoms. Therefore, the verdict of the jury should be set aside, on the
ground that there was no competent evidence to show that chloral was actually
administered.
41 Nev. 465, 466 (1918) State v. Bond
that there was no competent evidence to show that chloral was actually administered.
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, William
McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General, and E. S. Lunsford, District Attorney, for Respondent:
The expert witnesses did not seem to agree as to the effect which the administration of
chloral should have produced upon the victim of the robbery. It can make little difference in
law whether he was rendered unconscious by pure chloral or by chloral mixed with some
other poison. Medical writers do not agree with some of the expert testimony offered at the
trial. (1 Hamilton, Medicine, 469; Taylor, Medical Juris. 208; Reese, Medical Juris. 572;
Herold, Manual of Legal Med. 104; Holland, Med. Chem. & Tox. 384.)
It is difficult to understand why the facts of this case do not bring it squarely within the
definition of robbery. The poison administered to Cooper was certainly for the purpose of
obtaining possession of his property and to prevent or overcome resistance to the taking.
Experience has shown the most common abuse of poison to consist in its application as an
auxiliary to the commission of other crimes. And it is wonderfully adapted to the nefarious
purpose. Easily disguised in most kinds of food, capable of producing effects through small
quantities, subtle and overpowering in its operation, it may be administered with ease and
secrecy, and accomplish every villainous purpose, from producing sleep and stupor to
insanity and paralysis and death; and there are no agencies more difficult to detect. (People
v. Carmichael, 5 Mich. 20.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
The facts in this case are substantially the same as those in the case of State v. Snyder, 41
Nev. 453, 172 Pac. 364, this day decided. The only question which we deem it necessary to
consider is that raised by the assignment of error based upon the action of the court in
refusing to give, without modification, instruction D2, which reads as follows:
41 Nev. 465, 467 (1918) State v. Bond
assignment of error based upon the action of the court in refusing to give, without
modification, instruction D2, which reads as follows:
You are further instructed that although you may find from the evidence that the
defendants, or either of them, may have had in his possession chloral hydrate and may have
had the opportunity to use the same, such facts alone are insufficient to convict the defendants
of the offense charged, to wit, robbery; but the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that such chloral hydrate was actually administered to the said Cooper and was actually taken
by him, and that such drug, and not some other cause, made the said Cooper become
unconscious and insensible.
The court modified the instruction by substituting for the italicized words the following, a
drug, and as thus modified it was given.
The information charging the defendants with robbery did not allege the use of chloral
hydrate, or any drug, but alleged that robbery was committed by the use of force and violence;
and the evidence showed that, while a large quantity of chloral hydrate was found upon the
defendants, some of it was in solution, and the analysis of one bottle containing the solution
showed that a foreign substance, such as sugar or digitalis, had been mixed with chloral
hydrate. We are unable to see wherein the defendants were prejudiced by the instruction.
What does it matter whether the jury found from the evidence that the defendants
administered pure chloral hydrate or chloral hydrate in solution?
Hawley, C. J., in State v. Loveless, 17 Nev. 424, 30 Pac. 1080, quoted with approval as
follows:
The rule is that judgments will be reversed for alleged errors in instruction only when,
looking at the testimony, we can see that the jury may have been misled by them to the
prejudice of the defendant, or when, in the absence of the testimony, it is apparent that the
instructions would be improper under any possible condition of the evidence.
41 Nev. 465, 468 (1918) State v. Bond
We do not think the defendants were in any way prejudiced by the action of the court, and
the judgment is affirmed.
____________
41 Nev. 468, 468 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
[No. 2333]
DONALD MACLEAN, Respondent, v. GEORGE BRODIGAN, as Secretary of State, and
MAURICE SULLIVAN, as Lieutenant-Governor and Ex Officio Adjutant-General,
Appellants.
[172 Pac. 375]
1. StatutesRevivor of Statute by TitleElectionsElectors in Military
ServiceAmendmentRevisionRevive.
The provision of Const. art. 4, sec. 17, that no law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title
only, does not render invalid the provision of Stats. 1917, c. 197, that electors in the military service of the
United States may vote in accordance with Stats. 1899, c. 94, which was repealed by Stats. 1913, c. 284;
revival by title not being prohibited; for an amendment is an alteration effecting a change in the draft, or
form, or substance, of a law already enacted, or of a bill proposed for enactment, but, when the legislative
body attempts to revise, it thereby assumes to make additions or changes or corrections to alter or reform
something then in force and effect, and revision in a legislative sense applies only to a measure, bill, or
law then having existence, life, and force, and cannot, in the nature of things, apply to a nullified or
repealed act; and the term revive, as applied to legislative proceedings, signifies the reconference of
validity, force, and effect, at least the reconference of validity, force, and effect as the revived measure,
law, or bill formerly possessed.
2. StatutesIncorporation of Repealed ActEffect.
Where one act of the legislature specifically adopts the provisions of another act upon the same general
subject, the effect is to incorporate the adopted act, making it effective for the designated purpose, and that
the adopted act has been repealed is immaterial.
3. ElectionsVotingPersons Engaged in Military Service.
Stats. 1917, c. 197, providing for taking of votes of electors in the military service of the United States, is
a compliance with Const. art. 2, sec. 3, and is not void for discrimination against electors in the naval
service, or conscripted men in the military service, since military service includes every branch of service
in either the army or the navy of the United States.
Appeal from First Judicial District Court, Ormsby County; Frank P. Langan, Judge.
41 Nev. 468, 469 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
Action by Donald Maclean against George Brodigan, as Secretary of State of the State of
Nevada, and Maurice J. Sullivan, as Lieutenant-Governor and ex officio Adjutant-General of
the State of Nevada. From an order overruling a general demurrer to the complaint and
judgment, defendants appeal. Reversed.
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, E. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, and Wm.
McKnight, Deputy Attorney-General (Hoyt, Gibbons, French & Springmeyer, of Counsel),
for Appellants;
The statute of 1899 is in full force and effect, under the well-defined principle of law that
where one statute adopts the particular provisions of another by a specific and descriptive
reference to the statute or the provisions adopted, the effect is the same as though the statute
or provisions adopted had been incorporated bodily into the adopting statute. (2 Lewis's
Sutherland, Stat. Constr. 2d. ed. 405, 407; Phoenix Assurance Co. v. Fire Department, 117
Ala. 644; S. V. W. Works v. San Francisco, 22 Cal. 439; Schwenke v. Union Depot R. R. Co.,
7 Colo. 515; Jones v. Dexter, 8 Fla. 285; Turney v. Wilton, 36 Ill. 393; People v. Crossley,
261 Ill. 85; Furbish v. County Commissioners, 93 Me. 127; Haston v. Lamkin, 115 Mo. 33;
In Re Greenfield, 191 Pa. St. 295; Ex Parte Barry, 12 R. I. 51; Quinlin v. Railroad, 89 Tex.
372; Garland v. Hickey, 75 Wis. 183; Worthington v. District Court, 37 Nev. 225.)
Appellants are justified in performing or attempting to perform the acts complained of. The
demurrer should have been sustained. The decision of the lower court should be reversed.
H. V. Morehouse, Amicus Curiae:
The only inhibition against the power of the legislature as to the right form and manner of
legislation is contained in section 17, of article 4, of the constitution of Nevada, which reads:
Each law enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one subject, and matters properly
connected therewith, which subject shall be briefly expressed in the title; and no law shall
be revised or amended by reference to its title only; but in such case, the act as revised or
section as amended, shall be reenacted and published at length."
41 Nev. 468, 470 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
expressed in the title; and no law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title only; but
in such case, the act as revised or section as amended, shall be reenacted and published at
length. It will be observed that this provision of the constitution does not use the word
revive or revived, but the words revised or amended. The word revive is not
synonymous with amend or revise, and has an entirely different meaning. This being so,
there is no prohibition in our constitution against the legislature reviving an act by reference
to the act, and making such act a part of a new act, even if such act has been heretofore
repealed. In the absence of a constitutional provision to the contrary, revival of a repealed
statute by reference to its title only is valid. Where an act is revived by a subsequent act, it is
revived precisely in that form and with that effect which it had at the time when it expired.
(34 Cyc. 1724; 36 Cyc. 1102; In Re Woods, 31 Ch. Div. Eng. 607; Jones v. Dexter, 8 Fla.
276; Wright v. Overstreet, 50 S. E. 487; Gadkin v. Whitney, 63 S. W. 188.)
The word military is not limited solely to the army; it includes the navy. Military means
pertaining to war; concerned with war, and includes volunteers. By subdivision 2,
section 8, Federal Constitution, the President of the United States is made the
commander-in-chief of the army and navy. (Stocker v. United States, 39 Ct. Cl. 300.)
James Glynn, Amicus Curiae:
A repealed act may be revived, even upon the happening of a contingency. (The Brig
Aurora, 7 Cranch, 382.) Such an act may be revived either expressly or conditionally. (Field
v. Clark, 143 U. S. 682; Pollock v. Bridgeport, 29 L. Ed. 148; Flanders v. Town of
Merrimac, 48 Wis. 567; Stevens v. McCargo, 9 Wheat. 502; Potter's Dwarris, Stats. and
Constitutions, p. 159.)
The acts of 1915 and 1917 revived the act of March 14, 1899. (Cutting's Comp. Laws,
1737.)
The act in question provides for taking the vote of electors who may be in the military
service of the United States."
41 Nev. 468, 471 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
electors who may be in the military service of the United States. Soldiers in the navy are
certainly in the military service, the navy being a branch of that service. Considering the
purpose and intent of the act, this construction violates no rule. It is true, as a general rule,
that statutes have no extraterritorial effect, but personal statutes are not unknown to the law.
If the object be of a personal nature, * * * the statute is purely personal, and the quality
accompanies the person everywhere. (Potter's Dwarris, Stats. and Constitutions, pp. 90, 91,
92.)
Warren E. Baldy, District Attorney (R. A. McKay, of Counsel), for Respondents:
The appellants have relied solely upon the general proposition that where one statute
adopts the particular provisions of another statute by a specific and descriptive reference
thereto, the effect is the same as though the statute or provisions adopted have been
incorporated bodily into the adopting statute, and contend that by the provisions of the statute
of 1917 appellants are authorized to proceed under the provisions of the statute of 1899 with
reference to the taking of votes of electors in the military service of the United States. This
position is challenged as unconstitutional, in that it violates section 77, article 4, of the state
constitution, which provides that each law enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one
subject, and matters properly connected therewith, which subject shall be briefly expressed in
the title; and no law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title only; but, in such
case, the act as revised, or section as amended shall be reenacted and published at length.
The act of 1917 refers to the date of approval of the act of 1899 only, and does not even state
the title. It attempts to revive an act which has been repealed. (Stats. 1913, p. 568.)
The act of 1899 unduly and unjustly discriminates between volunteers in the military
service and volunteers in the naval service, and between volunteers and conscripted
men, being in violation of section 3, article 2, of the state constitution, which provides that
"the right of suffrage shall be enjoyed by all persons, otherwise entitled to the same, who
may be in the 'military or naval service' of the United States."
41 Nev. 468, 472 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
2, of the state constitution, which provides that the right of suffrage shall be enjoyed by all
persons, otherwise entitled to the same, who may be in the military or naval service' of the
United States.
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This action was commenced in the district court to enjoin the appellant Sullivan, as
adjutant-general, from certifying to the secretary of state any list or lists of electors now
engaged in the military service of the United States, and to enjoin the appellant Brodigan, as
secretary of state, from incurring any expense in the purchase of ballot paper or registration
supplies for the taking of the votes of the electors of the State of Nevada now engaged in the
military service of the United States, and from incurring any cost or expense therefor to the
State of Nevada, and to restrain both appellants in their official capacity from doing anything
whatever imposed upon them or either of them by the act of the legislature of Nevada of
March 14, 1899. From the order overruling a general demurrer, an appeal to this court is
taken.
1. One question only is here involved, to wit: Is the statute of March 14, 1899, entitled
An act to provide for taking the votes of electors of the State of Nevada, who may be in the
military service of the United States, now in force and effect as a mode by which citizens of
this state now in the military forces of the United States may vote in our state elections? The
act just referred to (Stats. 1899, p. 108) was one the original purpose of which was to take the
vote of the electors of the State of Nevada who might be in the service of the United States
and beyond the territorial limits of the state. It provided that the adjutant-general of the state
should in due time make and deliver to the secretary of state duly certified separate lists for
each county having soldiers in the service, giving the names of all qualified electors under the
law of this state at the time of their enlistment, etc. By the provisions of the act, the secretary
of state was required to immediately transmit duly certified copies of such lists to the
commanding officer of each of the organizations of which electors of this state might be
members.
41 Nev. 468, 473 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
certified copies of such lists to the commanding officer of each of the organizations of which
electors of this state might be members. The act then proceeds to prescribe for the holding of
an election at a place beyond the territorial limits of this state, where electors of this state
might be engaged in the military service. It designates who should be the officers of such
election, how the vote should be counted and canvassed, and how the same should be
returned or transmitted after the election was conducted.
By an act approved March 31, 1913, entitled An act relating to elections and removals
from office, the act of March 14, 1899, was specifically repealed. (Stats. 1913, p. 568.)
By section 149 of an act entitled An act relating to elections, approved March 29, 1915,
it is provided:
Electors of the State of Nevada in the military service of the United States may, when
called into such service, vote in accordance with the provisions of the act approved March 14,
1899. (Stats. 1915, p. 507.)
By section 101 of an act entitled An act relating to elections, approved March 24, 1917,
it is provided:
Electors of the State of Nevada in the military service of the United States may, when called
into such service, vote in accordance with the provisions of the act approved March 14,
1899. (Stats. 1917, p. 385.)
It is the contention of respondent here that section 101 of the act of 1917, just quoted, is
without force or effect, and that the act of March 14, 1899, is not revived. We have been
referred especially to our constitutional provision (section 17 of article 4), reading as follows:
Each law enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one subject, and matter properly
connected therewith, which subject shall be briefly expressed in the title; and no law shall be
revised or amended by reference to its title only; but, in such case, the act as revised, or
section as amended, shall be reenacted and published at length.
In furtherance of respondent's contention reference is made to decisions bearing upon
constitutional provisions somewhat similar to ours, but a studied difference may be noted
when comparing our constitutional provision with the provisions in states like Alabama,
New Jersey, and Kansas, in each of which it is provided:
41 Nev. 468, 474 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
somewhat similar to ours, but a studied difference may be noted when comparing our
constitutional provision with the provisions in states like Alabama, New Jersey, and Kansas,
in each of which it is provided:
No law shall be revived, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred, by
reference to its title only; but so much thereof as is revived, amended, extended, or conferred,
shall be reenacted and published at length. (const. Ala. art. 4, sec. 45.)
A like provision is found in the constitution of New Jersey (Const. N. J. art. 4, sec. 7), and
also in the constitution of Kansas (const. Kan. art. 2, sec. 16).
If by our constitutional provision the legislature was prohibited from reviving statutes by
title only, then the rule recognizing the effect of the constitutional inhibition might be relied
on by respondent here.
In Riter v. Douglass, 32 Nev. 400, 109 Pac. 444, we expressed the rule directly applicable
here:
Congress is authorized only to enact such laws as the national constitution expressly
grants it or is clearly implied with the grant; while the law-making power of the state is
authorized to enact legislation on all subjects which are not expressly prohibited by our state
constitution or in contravention of the federal constitution.
The legislature of 1917, steeped as it must have been in the atmosphere of contingency,
when the aurora borealis of war was all too visible, sought to make provision for the taking of
the votes of citizens of this state who might, at the time of the holding of the next election, be
in the military service of the country. The legislature of 1899 had enacted a law
comprehensive and effective at least for conditions then prevailing. A subsequent legislature
had repealed that statute, but the legislature of 1917 sought to make it operative, not as an
individual statute, but as a part of the working plan of the general election law.
Acts of the legislature which attempt to revive a statute formerly nullified are not to be
confused or confounded with acts attempting to amend or revise. An amendment is an
alteration effecting a change in the draft, or form, or substance of a law already enacted,
or of a bill proposed for enactment.
41 Nev. 468, 475 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
amendment is an alteration effecting a change in the draft, or form, or substance of a law
already enacted, or of a bill proposed for enactment. (State v. Wright and Harris, 14 Or. 365,
12 Pac.708.) When the legislative body attempts to revise, it thereby assumes to make
additions or changes or corrections to alter or to reform something then in force and effect.
Revision in a legislative sense can only apply to a measure, bill, or law then having existence,
life, and force, and cannot, in the very nature of things, apply to a nullified or repealed act.
The term revive, as applied to legislative proceedings, signifies the reconference of validity,
force, and effect; at least, the reconference of such validity, force, and effect as the revived
measure, law, or bill formerly possessed. While revision or amendment by title only is by our
constitution prohibited, such prohibition does not extend to revival by title, hence the
legislature of 1917, in enacting section 101 of the election law, did not run counter to the
constitutional provision.
2. Where one act of the legislature specifically adopts provisions of another act, the latter
being of the same general subject-matter, or being by nature or substance properly connected
therewith, the effect of the adopting act is to incorporate the adopted act and make the latter
effective in the policy and for the purpose designated. The fact that the adopted act may have
been at a former time repealed or nullified does not operate against its effectiveness when
revived by adoption into a valid and effective law. (Lewis's Sutherland, Stat. Const. 2d ed. p.
788; People v. Glassco, 203 Ill. 353, 67 N. E. 499.) The rule which we have applied here has
found sanction even under that strict rule of construction which applies to criminal statutes.
(State v. Caseday, 58 Or. 429, 115 Pac. 287.)
In reviving a statute by making the same a part of another and newer act, the revived or
adopted statute takes its new validity, or new life, so to speak, not from its former existence
or enactment, but rather by virtue of the force, effect, and life of the adopting statute. A
repeal of a reviving or adopting statute may repeal the revived or adopted provision if the
latter had been repealed prior to the time of adoption, but the repeal of an adopted
statute, where the same was in force and effect at the time of its adoption, will not affect
its validity or operation within the scope of its functions, as prescribed by the adopting
act.
41 Nev. 468, 476 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
repeal of a reviving or adopting statute may repeal the revived or adopted provision if the
latter had been repealed prior to the time of adoption, but the repeal of an adopted statute,
where the same was in force and effect at the time of its adoption, will not affect its validity
or operation within the scope of its functions, as prescribed by the adopting act. (Gaston v.
Lamkin, 115 Mo. 20 21 S. W. 1100.) In the last-cited case, the court voiced the rule thus:
The general rule governing in such case seems to be that, where one statute refers to
another for rules of procedure prescribed by the former, the former statute, if specifically
referred to, becomes a part of the referring statute, and the rules of procedure prescribed by
the earlier statute, so far as they form a part of the second enactment, continue in force,
although the earlier statute be afterwards modified or repealed.
This rule might, we think, be regarded in some instances as too general, but where the
language of adoption or revival is direct as to reference and specific as to intendment, as it is
in the reviving statute here involved, the rule is eminently applicable. (Ventura County v.
Clay, 112 Cal. 65, 44 Pac. 488.)
It might be noted that the Supreme Court of Washington (State v. Tausick, 64 Wash. 69,
116 Pac. 651, 35 L. R. A. n. s. 802) has said, under conditions not unlike those presented
here, that under a constitutional inhibition providing that no act shall be revised or
amended by mere reference to its title, an adopted statute, not being amendatory or revisory
in character, is not obnoxious to this constitutional provision.
In the case of Brig Aurora, 7 Cranch, 382, 3 L. Ed. 378, the Supreme Court of the United
States observed the rule. There provision was made for a revival of a statute by proclamation
of the President, contingent upon certain acts of a foreign nation. The court, in addressing
itself to the subject, said:
We can see no sufficient reason why the legislature should not exercise its discretion in
reviving the act of March 1, 1S09, either expressly or conditionally, as their judgment
should direct."
41 Nev. 468, 477 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
should not exercise its discretion in reviving the act of March 1, 1809, either expressly or
conditionally, as their judgment should direct.
In the case of Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649, 12 Sup. Ct. 495, 36 L. Ed. 294, the rule as
declared in the Aurora case was approved.
The Supreme Court of Florida, in the case of State ex rel. Attorney-General v. Green, 36
Fla. 154, 18 South. 334, met the identical question here under consideration, and under very
like circumstances as to repeal and revival, and under a constitutional provision identical to
ours. (Art. 3, sec. 16, Const. of Fla.) The views expressed and reasoning followed by the
court there is illuminative of the subject. There the court drew the distinction between
constitutional provisions prohibiting revival of statutes and those prohibiting revision of
statutes.
In the case of Quinlan v. Houston & T. C. Ry. Co., 89 Tex. 356, 34 S. W. 738, the
Supreme Court of Texas held likewise. To the same general effect is the application of the
rule in the case of Flanders v. Town of Merrimack, 48 Wis. 567, 4 N. W. 741.
3. Section 3 of article 2 of our constitution provides:
The right of suffrage shall be enjoyed by all persons, otherwise entitled to the same, who
may be in the military or naval service of the United States; provided, the votes so cast shall
be made to apply to the county and township of which said voters were bona-fide residents at
the time of their enlistment; and provided further, that the payment of a poll tax or a
registration of such voters shall not be required as a condition to the right of voting. Provision
shall be made by law regulating the manner of voting, holding elections, and making returns
of such elections, wherein other provisions are not contained in this constitution.
It is contended by respondent that the act of 1899, if the same was revived, is void because
it unduly and unjustly discriminates between volunteers in the United States army service
and volunteers in the naval service, and also discriminates between volunteers in the
United States service and conscripted men in the military service.
41 Nev. 468, 478 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
States army service and volunteers in the naval service, and also discriminates between
volunteers in the United States service and conscripted men in the military service. Their
contention in this respect is based on the fact that no mention is made of those electors of this
state who may be in the naval service of the United States. This entire contention is, in our
judgment, met by the fact that the term military is not limited in its application to the land
forces, but applies equally to the naval branch of the nation's offensive and defensive
machinery.
The Circuit Court of the United States, in Re Burns (C. C.) 87 Fed. 796, regarded the term
military service, as used in the third article of war, as applying as well to the volunteer army
as to the regular army of the United States. A statute prohibiting the enlistment or mustering
into the military service of any person under the age of 21 years without the written consent
of his parents or guardian, was there held to apply to the volunteer forces as well as to the
regular army.
The military force of the government is seated in its army and navy. these are coordinate
factors, and an individual belonging to either is properly in the military service of the country.
The case of Stocker v. United States, 39 Ct. Cl. 300, is authority for the assertion that the
army and navy constitute the military forces of the government.
It may be noted in passing that by the recent enactment of Congress to extend protection to
the civil rights of members of the military and naval establishments of the United States
engaged in the present war (approved March 8, 1918), the term person in military service as
used in the act is declared to include all officers and enlisted men of the regular army, the
regular army reserve, the officers' reserve corps, the enlisted reserve corps, all officers and
enlisted men of the national guard and the national guard reserve, and all officers and enlisted
men of the navy and marine corps and the coast guard; also all officers and enlisted men of
the naval militia, naval reserve force, marine corps reserve, and national naval volunteers.
41 Nev. 468, 479 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
guard; also all officers and enlisted men of the naval militia, naval reserve force, marine corps
reserve, and national naval volunteers.
It is conclusive of the question to say that it must be assumed that the legislature of 1899,
when it enacted the statute revived by our act of 1917, did so with a view to complying with
the declared policy of the state as enunciated in section 3 of article 2 of the constitution. It
must be inferred that the legislature took cognizance of the terms and provisions of that
section of the constitution, and that when, in the act of March 14, 1899, it used the term
military service, it did so advisedly and for the purpose of extending the right of suffrage to
all persons who might be in the land or naval or other forces of the United States. Hence the
logical inference may be drawn in favor of the intendment of the legislature that the term
military service was used in contemplation of all branches of the maintained fighting forces
of the country. The same reasoning must apply as to the legislative intent when section 101 of
the act of 1917 was incorporated into our statute relating to elections.
By section 101 of the 1917 act relating to elections the legislature sought to establish a
method or mode by which electors of the State of Nevada in the military service of the United
States might cast their vote at elections. Section 101 of the act of 1917 does not limit its force
or effect to either volunteers or conscripted men. It is to all electors of the State of Nevada
who may be in the military service of the United States, regardless of how they may have
entered that service, that section 101 of the law seeks to accord a way by which their votes
may be taken, counted and canvassed. Hence, if the act of 1899 applied only to those who
might have been in the military service of the United States as volunteers, nevertheless the
provisions of the act of 1899, whereby the votes of such volunteers might be taken, counted,
and canvassed, are by the act of 1917 made applicable, not alone to volunteers, but to all in
the military service of the United States who may be qualified electors of the State of
Nevada.
41 Nev. 468, 480 (1918) Maclean v. Brodigan
made applicable, not alone to volunteers, but to all in the military service of the United States
who may be qualified electors of the State of Nevada.
It must be understood that we do not assume to deal with the question of expediency, or as
to whether or not the policy of the act of March 14, 1899, is such as would be considered in
keeping with conditions that confront this state today; nor would we assume to determine the
effectiveness of the statute of March 14, 1899, or as to its being sufficiently comprehensive to
accomplish the result desired under the present conditions. Of this we may entertain a doubt;
indeed, if we were called to pass upon the question under different conditions it might be
found necessary to express different views; but this is an appeal from an order overruling a
general demurrer, and we assume to determine one question only.
The legislature of 1917 sought to establish a method by which electors of this state who
might be in any branch of military service could cast their vote at elections held in this state
during such service. With that object in view, the legislature adopted and incorporated into
the general election laws the method by which a similar object had been carried out by a
former legislature. The method in the former instance may have applied only to those electors
who were then in the military service under the volunteer system, but if the legislature of
1917 intended, and we assume it did, that this method should now apply to all electors in the
military service, regardless of the manner of their induction into that service, such intendment
must be carried out so far as possible. The result intended may be incapable of
accomplishment under the method prescribed, but questions involving such, if they arise, are
for the future.
The order and judgment appealed from are reversed.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 481, 481 (1918) Mazade v. Justice's Court
[No. 2285]
LOUIS MAZADE, Appellant, v. JUSTICE'S COURT OF GOLDFIELD TOWNSHIP,
and MARVIN ARNOLD, Justice of the Peace Thereof, Respondents.
[172 Pac. 378]
1. Justices of the PeaceJudgments ReviewableOrder on CertiorariAppeal from
Justice's Court.
The district court has final appellate jurisdiction over justice's court, so that where defendant, having
suffered adverse judgment in justice's court, brought certiorari to the district court, which dismissed the
writ, the supreme court had no jurisdiction over an appeal under the title of the cause followed in the
justice's court; a different title having been used in the district court.
2. Appeal and ErrorJudgments ReviewableOrder on CertiorariAppeal from Justice's
CourtBond.
Where judgment in justice's court went against defendant, and he brought certiorari against the justice to
review the judgment in the district court which dismissed the writ, a bond on appeal to the supreme court,
bearing the title of the cause in the justice's court, gave no jurisdiction of the appeal in view of Rev. Laws,
5325, 5330, prescribing method of appeal.
3. Appeal and ErrorJudgments ReviewableOrder on CertiorariAppeal from Justice's
CourtBond.
A bond on appeal from order dismissing writ of certiorari to review judgment of justice's court, which
was never filed in the district court as required by Rev. Laws, 5346, nor approved by the justices of the
supreme court under section 5358, conferred no jurisdiction of the appeal.
Certiorari by Louis Mazade to review a judgment of the Justice's Court of Goldfield
Township, Esmeralda County, in an action by M. C. Peterman against Louis Mazade. From
the judgment of the district court dismissing the writ of certiorari and order on motion for
new trial adhering to the former ruling, Mazade appeals, and defendant moves to dismiss the
appeal. Appeal dismissed.
E. Carter Edwards, for Appellant.
M. A. Diskin, for Respondent:
The appeal should be dismissed. The supreme court has no jurisdiction to hear or
determine the appeal, for the reason (a) that no notice of appeal was ever filed or served upon
respondent, and {b) no appeal was ever taken or perfected by the appellant.
41 Nev. 481, 482 (1918) Mazade v. Justice's Court
or served upon respondent, and (b) no appeal was ever taken or perfected by the appellant.
The record on appeal shows that in this action Louis Mazade is petitioner and the justice's
court of Goldfield township is respondent, and that no notice of appeal or undertaking for
costs was ever filed.
No assignment of errors was ever served upon respondent or filed with the clerk of the
supreme court. (Stats. 1915, sec. 164, p. 13; Coffin v. Coffin, 40 Nev. 345.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
An action was commenced in the justice court of Goldfield township in which one M. C.
Peterman was plaintiff and Louis Mazade was defendant. Judgment was entered against
defendant in that court and he sued out a writ of certiorari in the district court. The
proceedings in the district court were all had under the entitlement, Louis Mazade v.
Justice's Court of Goldfield Township, in the County of Esmeralda, State of Nevada, and
Marvin Arnold, Justice of the Peace of said Justice's Court.
In the district court the writ of certiorari was dismissed. On motion for new trial, the court
adhered to its former ruling. Petitioner in the district court, who was defendant in the justice
court, has attempted to appeal to this court from the ruling and order of the district court. A
motion to dismiss the appeal is earnestly prosecuted here, and we regard at least one point
raised as conclusive.
1. As we have already noted, all the proceedings in furtherance of the writ of certiorari in
the district court were in a matter entitled as above set forth. In attempting to come to this
court, however, the entire proceeding on appeal, as instituted within the time allowed (if it
was within time), is entitled Peterman v. Louis Mazade. This was the entitlement of the
action in the justice court, and an appeal from that could at most only be taken to the district
court; the latter having final appellate jurisdiction {Leonard v. Peacock, S Nev. 157;
Bancroft v. Pike, 33 Nev. S0, 110 Pac. 1.)
2. It is insisted by respondent here that this appeal should be dismissed, as no bond or
undertaking on appeal was ever filed.
41 Nev. 481, 483 (1918) Mazade v. Justice's Court
having final appellate jurisdiction (Leonard v. Peacock, 8 Nev. 157; Bancroft v. Pike, 33
Nev. 80, 110 Pac. 1.)
2. It is insisted by respondent here that this appeal should be dismissed, as no bond or
undertaking on appeal was ever filed. In the record we find an instrument purporting to be a
Bond on Appeal from Judgment and Stay of Execution. this instrument is entitled M. C.
Peterman v. Louis Mazade. There is no appeal to this court and no notice of appeal from the
judgment or to stay execution in the case of M. C. Peterman v. Louis Mazade. The
judgment in that case was and is in the justice court of Goldfield township. The execution, if
any were to issue, could only issue from the justice's court. The matter in the district court
was a proceeding in certiorari, and the order of the court was one dismissing the proceeding
under the writ. The certiorari proceedings and the order dismissing the same were in an
entirely separate and distinct matter entitled, whether properly or otherwise, Louis Mazade
v. Justice's Court of Goldfield Township, etc., and Marvin Arnold, Justice of the Peace
Thereof.
Section 5325, Revised Laws, provides:
A judgment or order in a civil action, except when expressly made final by this act, may
be reviewed as prescribed by this title, and not otherwise.
Section 5330, Revised Laws, provides:
An appeal is taken by filing with the clerk of the court in which the judgment or order
appealed from is entered, a notice stating the appeal from the same or some specific part
thereof, and within three days thereafter serving a similiar notice or copy thereof on the
adverse party or his attorney. * * * The order of service is immaterial, but the appeal is
ineffectual for any purpose unless within five days after service of the notice of appeal an
undertaking be filed, or a deposit of money be made with the clerk, as hereinafter provided, or
the undertaking be waived by the adverse party in writing.
41 Nev. 481, 484 (1918) Mazade v. Justice's Court
In this case the only proceeding in which an order or judgment was entered by the district
court was in the case of Louis Mazade v. The Justice Court of Goldfield Township, etc.
The case of Peterman v. Louis Mazade was never in the district court, either by appeal or
otherwise. Hence there could be no order or judgment entered in that case in the district court
from which appeal could be taken to this court. A bond or undertaking on appeal filed in one
case or under one entitlement can certainly not be effectual as a bond or undertaking on
appeal in another and entirely different proceeding. Hence there was no bond on appeal filed
in the district court in this case as required by the statute.
3. Appellant here practically admits that his first effort in attempting to perfect an appeal
to this court amounted to a nullity, for at a later date he filed an instrument called Amended
Bond on Appeal, changing the entitlement of the case to Mazade v. Justice's Court, etc.
This instrument, however, although purporting to effect appeal from the certiorari
proceedings as entertained by the district court, was never filed in that court as prescribed by
statute (Rev. Laws, 5346). While it appears in the files of this court, no attempt has been
made to comply with the provision of the statute (Rev. Laws, 5358), which provides:
No appeal shall be dismissed for insufficiency of the notice of appeal or undertaking
thereon; provided, that a good and sufficient undertaking approved by the justices of the
supreme court, or a majority thereof, be filed in the supreme court before the hearing upon
motion to dismiss the appeal; provided, that the respondent shall not be delayed, but may
move, when the cause is regularly called, for the disposition of the same, if such undertaking
be not given, etc.
The instrument styled Amended Bond on Appeal, and purporting to be in the case of
Mazade v. Justice's Court, has never been approved by the justices of this court nor by a
majority thereof, nor has it ever been presented for approval.
41 Nev. 481, 485 (1918) Mazade v. Justice's Court
court nor by a majority thereof, nor has it ever been presented for approval.
We may repeat our assertion as set forth in Shute v. Big Meadow Investment Co., 41 Nev.
361, 170 Pac. 1049;
By the terms of the statute the approval by the court is made indispensable to the efficacy
of the undertaking.
Here, as in that case, the instrument styled Amended Bond on Appeal is without force or
effect so far as this appeal is concerned.
The motion to dismiss might prevail on other grounds; for instance, the notice of appeal is
entitled in the case of M. C. Peterman v. Louis Mazade, and is addressed, To the Plaintiff,
M. C. Peterman, Above Named, and to His Attorney, M. A. Diskin. This notice of appeal,
signed by the attorney for the petitioner in the certiorari proceedings, declares:
That the defendant in the above-entitled action hereby appeals to the Supreme Court of
the State of Nevada from the judgment herein entered, etc.
No judgment was entered by the district court in the case of M. C. Peterman v. Louis
Mazade, because no such case was before the court for the entry of judgment. The only
matter in the district court was a proceeding in certiorari by Louis Mazade v. Justice's Court
of Goldfield Township and the Justice Thereof.
It is unnecessary for us to dwell on the effect of such a notice. We deem it sufficient to
conclude the matter on the sufficiency of the undertaking, which is fatal. (Shute v. Big
Meadow Investment Co., supra.)
For the foregoing reasons, it is ordered that the appeal be dismissed.
____________
41 Nev. 486, 486 (1918) State v. McFarlin
[No. 2291]
STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent, v. GEORGE
B. McFARLIN, Appellant.
[172 Pac. 371]
1. Indictment and InformationElements.
Embezzlement is a statutory crime, and all that is necessary in charging the offense is to follow the
statute.
2. EmbezzlementElementsStatutory Provisions.
An information alleging that defendant was manager of a county-owned telephone system, and as such
manager came into possession of certain money for transmission to the county treasurer, and feloniously
converted it to his own use, sufficiently charged embezzlement under Rev. Laws, 6653, as to
misappropriation of corporation money by agent, manager, or clerk thereof.
3. EmbezzlementEvidenceBooks of Account.
In prosecution of manager of county-owned telephone system for embezzlement, it was improper to
introduce books of account of the system, where defendant was not familiar with the books and his
attention had not been called to the particular accounts introduced.
4. EmbezzlementEvidenceGambling.
In prosecution of county official for embezzlement, it was improper to admit evidence that he played slot
machines for trade checks to a limited extent.
5. Criminal LawEvidence of Other OffensesInstructions.
In prosecution for embezzlement of certain money, the court should instruct as to the purpose for which
other shortages might be considered by the jury.
6. Criminal LawEvidence of Other Offenses.
Evidence of other crimes can generally be considered only when it tends to establish motive, intent,
absence of mistake or accident, a common plan or scheme, or identity.
Appeal from Eighth Judicial District Court, Churchill County; T. C. Hart, Judge.
George B. McFarlin was convicted of embezzlement, and from the judgment, and denial
of his motion for new trial, he appeals. Reversed, and new trial granted.
E. E. Winters and Frame, Brown & Burrows, for Appellant:
The facts stated in the information do not constitute a public offense. The information
attempts to bring the case within the provisions of section 6653, Revised Laws, but lacks the
necessary allegations for that purpose.
41 Nev. 486, 487 (1918) State v. McFarlin
but lacks the necessary allegations for that purpose. The gist of the offense, in so far as
agents, managers, and employees are concerned, is the unlawful conversion to their own use
of money entrusted to them by their employer. It is absolutely essential, under the provisions
of our statute, that the trust relation exist between employer and employee; that is, first, that
the employee be authorized to receive the money of his employer; second, that the employee
actually receive the money as manager, agent, or clerk; and, third, that the money was
entrusted to such employee by his master, or that the master had empowered him to collect
such money, and that the same was received by the employee by virtue of the authority of the
master. It is not sufficient that the manager, clerk, or servant be merely in the employ of the
master, and while so employed receive the money. (Ricord v. C. P. R. R. Co., 15 Nev. 167;
Ex Parte Ricord, 11 Nev. 287; People v. Bailey, 23 Cal. 577; People v. Shearer, 143 Cal. 66.)
Inferences, suppositions, or conclusions cannot be indulged in to aid an information or to take
the place of direct and positive allegations required to be made either in the language of the
statute or in equivalent language. (State v. Logan, 1 Nev. 110.) An indictment or information
for embezzlement should allege the trust relation. (People v. Shearer, 143 Cal. 66.)
There is a clear distinction between the statement of a trial judge as to what the testimony
of a certain witness was and his statement of his conclusion as to the ultimate fact established
by the evidence. The trial court assumed the truth of all the facts stated by him in his reasons
for admitting evidence. This is not permissible, and constitutes prejudicial error. (People v.
Bonds, 1 Nev. 33; State v. Hawkins, 7 Nev. 377; State v. Tickel, 13 Nev. 511; State v.
Warren, 18 Nev. 459; Allen v. United States, 115 Fed. 10; Hawkins v. United States, 3 Okl.
Crim. 61; People v. White, 251 Ill. 75; State v. Scott, 37 Nev. 431.)
The lower court erred in admitting in evidence the books of the telephone company. The mere
fact that defendant was manager of the company did not make the books admissible in
evidence against him, without proof first being made that the books were kept by him, or
that they were in his handwriting, or that his attention was called to the portion of the
books offered in evidence. "But entries in his books by others are not admissible, unless
there is preliminary proof that his attention was called to them." {Underhill, Crim. Ev. sec.
41 Nev. 486, 488 (1918) State v. McFarlin
books admissible in evidence against him, without proof first being made that the books were
kept by him, or that they were in his handwriting, or that his attention was called to the
portion of the books offered in evidence. But entries in his books by others are not
admissible, unless there is preliminary proof that his attention was called to them.
(Underhill, Crim. Ev. sec. 291; People v. Burnham, 104 N. Y. Supp. 725; Haynes v. Brown,
36 N. H. 545; Wheeler v. Walker, 45 N. H. 355; Rudd v. Robinson, 26 N. E. 1046; People v.
Blackman, 59 Pac. 573.)
It was error to admit evidence of alleged gambling by the defendant. Such evidence was
irrelevant. (People v. Vidal, 53 Pac. 558; People v. Rowland, 12 Cal. App. 6.)
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, and G. J. Kenny, District Attorney, for Respondent:
The information is sufficient, covers the requirements of the statute, and is sustained by
recognized text-writers and by decisions of appellate courts. When, therefore, the
information charged the defendant with embezzling money of the company, received by him
as its agent, and by virtue of his said employment, it did, in legal effect, charge him with
embezzling money of the company intrusted to him as bailee by the company, which was
precisely the crime described in the original complaint, and for which he was committed.
(Bishop's New Crim. Proc., vol. 3, sec. 315; People v. Walker, 77 Pac. 705.)
It is a well-settled principle of law that books, and entries therein, made by third parties,
are binding on the accused, if made under his direction. (15 Cyc. 531; People v. Rowlands,
106 Pac. 428.)
It was not error to admit the evidence as to appellant's propensity for gambling. Intent in
embezzlement is always difficult to prove, and courts have properly and justly granted a
broad and liberal scope in the matter. Since from its nature intent is incapable of direct
proof, great latitude is necessarily allowed in proving this element of the offense. Broadly
speaking, any evidence is admissible which has a tendency, even the slightest, to establish
fraudulent intent on the one hand, or on the other hand to show the bona fides of the
accused."
41 Nev. 486, 489 (1918) State v. McFarlin
slightest, to establish fraudulent intent on the one hand, or on the other hand to show the bona
fides of the accused. (15 Cyc. 592.)
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Appellant was convicted in the district court upon the charge of embezzlement, and
appeals from the judgment, and from the order denying a motion for a new trial.
It was urged in the trial court that the information does not charge an offense, and the same
objection is presented for our consideration. It is said that the information is bad, because (1)
there is no allegation that the defendant was authorized to receive the money; (2) there is no
allegation that the defendant was intrusted with the money by virtue of his employment; and
(3) there is no allegation that defendant was, by virtue of his employment, charged with the
duty of receiving the money. To sustain these contentions our attention is called to Ex Parte
Ricord, 11 Nev. 287; Ricord v. C. P. R. R. Co., 15 Nev. 167; People v. Bailey, 23 Cal. 577;
People v. Shearer, 143 Cal. 66, 76 Pac. 813.
1, 2. Without undertaking to specifically point out wherein the cases mentioned are not in
point, we think it sufficient to say that they were instituted under statutes unlike our present
statute. Embezzlement is a statutory crime, and all that is necessary in charging the offense is
to follow the statute. The statute under which the case was instituted is section 6653, Revised
Laws, and that portion which is of importance in considering the objections urged reads as
follows:
Any agent, manager or clerk of any * * * corporation * * * with whom any money * * *
shall have been deposited or intrusted, who shall use or appropriate such money * * * or any
part thereof in any manner or for any other purpose than that for which the same was
deposited or intrusted, shall be guilty of embezzlement. * * *
Omitting the formal parts of the information in question, it charges that the defendant
while then and there an employee of the county of Churchill, a political subdivision of the
State of Nevada, to wit, the duly appointed and acting manager of the Churchill County
Telephone and Telegraph System, which said system being then and there exclusively
owned and operated by the said county of Churchill, State of Nevada, and then and there,
by virtue of said employment, as manager aforesaid, there came into the possession and
under the control of said defendant, for transmission to the county treasurer of the said
county of Churchill, State of Nevada, the sum of $556.02, lawful money of the United
States, of the personal property of the said county of Churchill, State of Nevada, said sum,
$556.02, lawful money, being public money received by said defendant for said county of
Churchill, State of Nevada, during the month of March, A. D. 1916, while said public
money and personal property were so in his possession and under his control by virtue of
said employment as aforesaid, then and there, to wit, on the 31st day of March, A. D.
1916, or thereabout, said defendant did wilfully, feloniously, and unlawfully use,
embezzle, and convert said sum of public money and personal property, received by him
as aforesaid, for his own private purposes and for a purpose other than one duly
authorized by law."
41 Nev. 486, 490 (1918) State v. McFarlin
Churchill, a political subdivision of the State of Nevada, to wit, the duly appointed and acting
manager of the Churchill County Telephone and Telegraph System, which said system being
then and there exclusively owned and operated by the said county of Churchill, State of
Nevada, and then and there, by virtue of said employment, as manager aforesaid, there came
into the possession and under the control of said defendant, for transmission to the county
treasurer of the said county of Churchill, State of Nevada, the sum of $556.02, lawful money
of the United States, of the personal property of the said county of Churchill, State of Nevada,
said sum, $556.02, lawful money, being public money received by said defendant for said
county of Churchill, State of Nevada, during the month of March, A. D. 1916, while said
public money and personal property were so in his possession and under his control by virtue
of said employment as aforesaid, then and there, to wit, on the 31st day of March, A. D. 1916,
or thereabout, said defendant did wilfully, feloniously, and unlawfully use, embezzle, and
convert said sum of public money and personal property, received by him as aforesaid, for his
own private purposes and for a purpose other than one duly authorized by law.
It will be seen that the information charges that the defendant was manager of the
telephone system; that as such manager there came into his possession and under his control
certain money, the property of Churchill County; that it came into his hands for a specific
purpose, viz, for transmission to the county treasurer; that while the money was in his
possession for that purpose he feloniously and unlawfully converted it to his own use. These
allegations seem to fully comply with the requirements of the statute. We think that the
information is good.
3. It is also urged that the trial court erred in overruling an objection to certain pages in the
books of account of the telephone system, offered in evidence by the state. This objection
should have been sustained, and the failure to do so was prejudicial to the defendant.
41 Nev. 486, 491 (1918) State v. McFarlin
and the failure to do so was prejudicial to the defendant. The defendant was not the
bookkeeper, did not understand bookkeeping, was not familiar with the books, and his
attention was never directed to the items on the pages introduced in evidence. It is a general
rule that where an employee of a concern is on trial for embezzlement neither the books, nor
portions of the books of the concern, which are not in the defendant's handwriting, are legal
evidence against him, unless there be testimony tending to show that his attention was called
to them and that he made some admission in regard to the portion offered in evidence. (Lang
v. State, 97 Ala. 46, 12 South. 183.) In People v. Burnham, 119 App. Div. 302, 104 N. Y.
Supp. 725, which was a case similar to the one at bar, it was said:
There was also evidence admitted, against the objection and exception of the defendant,
in relation to the entry in the books of the corporation respecting this payment, which was
incompetent as against the defendant. He was not shown to have had anything to do with
these books, or any knowledge of their contents, or any connection with the entries. The
books of a corporation are not evidence as against an officer of the corporation in a criminal
prosecution against him.
In People v. Blackman, 127 Cal. 248, 59 PAC. 573, where this identical question was
before the court, it was said:
A great many entries made in a great many books were offered and received, over the
objection of defendant. It appeared that some of the entries were in the handwriting of
defendant, and others were not. They were introduced, not only to show the receipt of money
by the defendant, but also to show forced balances, and thereby to raise the presumption of
guilt. The bookkeeper was not sworn as a witness, but they were merely shown to be books
kept by the company. Bolton, the bookkeeper, at about the time the shortage was discovered,
had committed suicide. The position of the learned judge of the trial court was stated by him:
'This is one of the books of the company.
41 Nev. 486, 492 (1918) State v. McFarlin
This is one of the books of the company. He is charged by the by-laws and the custom of the
company with the keeping of the books. This book was presumably in his custody and under
his control. I don't care who kept it. If there is anything wrong about it, that is for the defense.'
As a matter of course, this view is not insisted upon here. The presumption of innocence
would overcome all the presumptions of knowledge and control, if they existed; and it was
for the prosecution to show that the defendant was responsible for the condition of the books,
and in a criminal proceeding it is not enough that it was his duty to know of their contents,
and that in a civil action they would be competent evidence against him on that ground. He
cannot be held for the crime of embezzlement because he has negligently performed his duty
as secretary of the corporation, but such consequence might result under the rulings of the
court. Most of the books were in the handwriting of Bolton. It was not shown that defendant
examined them to see that they were correct, or, save by the presumption mentioned, that he
knew anything about them.
See, also, Rudd v. Robinson, 126 N. Y. 113, 26 N. E. 1046, 12 L. R. A. 473, 22 Am. St.
Rep. 816; State v. Carmean, 126 Iowa, 291, 102 N. W. 97, 106 Am. St. Rep. 352; People v.
Rowland, 12 Cal. App. 6, 106 Pac. 428.
4. It is next contended that the trial court should have excluded the evidence offered
relative to the defendant's playing slot machines. The testimony shows no gambling on the
part of the defendant, other than by playing slot machines for bingles, which were good in
trade only, and the extent to which he is shown to have indulged in the practice was not
excessive. Under the circumstances, we think the objection to this testimony should have
been sustained.
5, 6. Evidence of other shortages than that charged in the information was admitted upon
the trial of this case, and in instructing the jury, before the case was submitted, the court gave,
at the request of the counsel for the defendant, the following instruction: "The particular
offense charged against the defendant is an alleged shortage occurring on or about the
31st day of March, 1916, and it is for that offense, and for that offense alone, that the
defendant is on trial.
41 Nev. 486, 493 (1918) State v. McFarlin
The particular offense charged against the defendant is an alleged shortage occurring on
or about the 31st day of March, 1916, and it is for that offense, and for that offense alone, that
the defendant is on trial. While the testimony of other alleged shortages in the year 1916 have
been admitted in evidence, it is only proper for you to consider such testimony in so far as the
same tends to throw light upon the transactions of the month of March, 1916, as alleged in the
information, and before you can convict the defendant of the offense charged in the
information you must find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense
alleged in the information was committed on or about the 31st day of March, 1916.
Some hours after the case had been submitted, the jury returned into court and made it
clear that they did not fully understand the purposes for which they might consider the
evidence of other shortages than that charged in the information. After some discussion, the
court instructed the jury orally as follows:
Then, gentlemen of the jury, I will further instruct you, as to the instructions already
given, that it is proper for you to consider all of the testimony, certainly, which is before you,
and that you may and should take into consideration all of the testimony as submitted,
whether it be concerning transactions that took place in 1916 or the year previous, in
determining whether or not defendant is guilty of the charge contained in the information, but
that you only take those things into consideration for the purpose of considering and
determining whether the defendant is guilty of the charge as contained in the information and
for no other purpose.
I will say further, gentlemen, by way of instruction, that you cannot find the defendant
guilty of any other charge than that contained in the information, but that, in determining
whether or not he is guilty of the charge in the information, you are permitted and should take
into consideration all of the evidence as to the circumstances and transactions during the time
covered by the testimony during the time not only of 1917, all of 1916, during the year
1916."
41 Nev. 486, 494 (1918) State v. McFarlin
testimony during the time not only of 1917, all of 1916, during the year 1916.
It is contended that the oral instructions given by the court, as quoted, were erroneous and
misleading. We are of the opinion that the court should have instructed as to the purposes for
which other shortages than that charged in the information might have been considered by the
jury. It is the general rule that evidence of the perpetration of distinct crimes from those for
which a defendant is being tried will not be considered. There are, however, exceptions to
this general rule. In the well-known case of People v. Molineux, 168 N. Y. 264, 61 N. E. 286,
62 L. R. A. 193, this question was considered at length, and it was held that, generally
speaking, evidence of other crimes might be considered only when it tends to establish either
(1) motive; (2) intent; (3) absence of mistake or accident; (4) a common scheme or plan,
embracing the commission of two or more crimes so related to each other that proof of one
tends to establish the others; or (5) the identity of the person charged with the commission of
the crime for which the defendant is being tried. Such is, we think, the correct rule. (Horn v.
State, 12 Wyo. 80, 73 Pac. 705; Bond v. State, 9 Okl. Cr. 696, 129 Pac. 666; People v. Ruef,
14 Cal. App. 576, 114 Pac. 54; Williams v. State, 4 Okl. Cr. 523, 114 Pac. 1114; Rice v.
People, 55 Colo. 506, 136 Pac. 74; People v. Rowland, 12 Cal. App. 6, 106 Pac. 433.) No
doubt, upon another trial of this case, the jury will be fully instructed as to the purpose for
which evidence of other shortages than the one charged in the information may be considered.
The errors assigned to the refusal of the court to grant a new trial because of newly
discovered evidence and the failure of the state to prove the venue we do not deem it
necessary to consider, as these questions will not arise upon another trial.
For the errors pointed out, it is ordered that the judgment and order appealed from be
reversed, and that a new trial be granted the defendant.
41 Nev. 486, 495 (1918) State v. McFarlin
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur.
In my judgment this case must be reversed for reasons in addition to those dwelt upon in
the opinion of Mr. Justice Coleman. The force and effect of the error to which I refer is best
understood when the record is made clear. The indictment charges:
That said defendant, on the 31st day of March, A. D. 1916, or thereabouts, * * * at and
within the county of Churchill, State of Nevada, while then and there an employee of the
county of Churchill, a political subdivision of the State of Nevada, to wit, the duly appointed
and acting manager of the Churchill County Telephone and Telegraph System, which said
system being then and there exclusively owned and operated by the said county of Churchill,
State of Nevada, and then and there, by virtue of said employment, as manager aforesaid,
there came into the possession and under the control of said defendant, for transmission to the
county treasurer of the said county of Churchill, State of Nevada, the sum of $556.02, lawful
money of the United States, of the personal property of the said county of Churchill, State of
Nevada, said sum, $556.02, lawful money, being public money received by said defendant for
the said county of Churchill, State of Nevada, during the month of March, A. D. 1916, while
said public money and personal property were so in his possession and under his control by
virtue of said employment aforesaid, then and there, to wit, on the 31st day of March, A. D.
1916, or thereabouts, said defendant did wilfully, feloniously, and unlawfully use, embezzle,
and convert said sum of public money and personal property, received by him as aforesaid,
for his own private purposes and for a purpose other than one duly authorized by law.
During the course of the trial testimony was admitted of other shortages, as such were
made to appear in the books of the telephone office. It must be presumed that the court
admitted this testimony only under the wellknown exception to the rule excluding proof of
crimes other than that of which the defendant stands accused.
41 Nev. 486, 496 (1918) State v. McFarlin
known exception to the rule excluding proof of crimes other than that of which the defendant
stands accused.
The court, at the request of the defendant, gave the following instruction:
The particular offense charged against the defendant is an alleged shortage occurring on
or about the 31st day of March, 1916, and it is for that offense, and for that offense, alone,
that the defendant is on trial. While the testimony of other alleged shortages in the year 1916
have been admitted in evidence, it is only proper for you to consider such testimony in so far
as the same tends to throw light upon the transactions of the month of March, 1916, as
alleged in the information, and before you can convict the defendant of the offense charged in
the information you must find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense
alleged in the information was committed on or about the 31st day of March, 1916.
The case having been submitted to the jury, the record discloses that they appeared in court
some hours later, at which time a colloquy took place between members of the jury and the
court. In part it appears as follows:
Forman of the JuryOne or two members want to ask a few questions.
The CourtDo you mean as to some feature of the testimony, or do you want additional
instructions?
JurymanOn instructions.
The CourtAs to some feature of the instructions?
JurymanIn regard to using the evidence as introduced in the book, whether we should
go to the last of the year or not in that book. I don't understand the instructions, whether we
are to use the testimony as introduced by the books up to the last of the year. Perhaps I can
make it a little plainer yetwhether the shortage claims to be monthly or just March; whether
that can be traced up from month to month to tend to connect the shortage for the month of
March; whether it can be traced up to the end of the year or not.
41 Nev. 486, 497 (1918) State v. McFarlin
it can be traced up to the end of the year or not. That is the misunderstanding, is it not?
JuryYes.
Mr. Frame (counsel for defendant)I would suggest that the court call their attention to
the instruction that covers that point.
The CourtOf course, if the jury does not feel clear as to what the law is concerning any
features, I think they should be given additional instructions; however, the court cannot give
any further instructions, except in writing, except desired by counsel. If the plaintiff or
defendant wishes to submit any additional instruction to the jury, I think the thing to do
would be to pass upon those as presented, and then submit additional instructions if the jury
does not feel clear. Of course, I am willing to follow the instructions of counsel.
Mr. FrameI was going to suggest that the court read to the jury the instructions already
given on that point, and if not satisfactory, or the jury wants further information or any
member of it, and indicates that, then we will know just what point, particular point, to
address an instruction to.
Here it appears that the court read the instruction bearing upon this phase of the evidence,
and then the colloquy continued:
JurymanThat particular place that the difficulty arises in the minds of the jurors is
whether that can be connected with any shortage during the month of March, can be traced
from month to month up to the end of the year. Some of them are not cleardon't feel
satisfied that they can go beyond the month of March.
The CourtIf counsel consents that any additional instruction can be given verbally or in
writing as the law permits, you may insist on that.
Mr. FrameHowever, I would have no objection to the court orally explaining this
instruction to the jury.
Whereupon the court proceeded as follows:
Then, gentlemen of the jury, I will further instruct you, as to the instructions already
given, that it is proper for you to consider all of the testimony, certainly, which is before
you, and that you may and should take into consideration all of the testimony as
submitted, whether it be concerning transactions that took place in 1916 or the year
previous, in determining whether or not the defendant is guilty of the charge contained in
the information, but that you only take those things into consideration for the purpose of
considering and determining whether the defendant is guilty of the charge as contained in
the information and for no other purpose.
41 Nev. 486, 498 (1918) State v. McFarlin
you, as to the instructions already given, that it is proper for you to consider all of the
testimony, certainly, which is before you, and that you may and should take into consideration
all of the testimony as submitted, whether it be concerning transactions that took place in
1916 or the year previous, in determining whether or not the defendant is guilty of the charge
contained in the information, but that you only take those things into consideration for the
purpose of considering and determining whether the defendant is guilty of the charge as
contained in the information and for no other purpose.
Mr. FrameAnd, if the court please, I desire to request the court at this time to add the
further instruction to the one already given to the effect that the jury would not be justified in
convicting the defendant of anyupon any shortage which is alleged to have occurred within
some other month, or at some other time than March 31, 1916.
The CourtI will say further, gentlemen, by way of instruction, that you cannot find the
defendant guilty of any other charge than that contained in the information, but that in
determining whether or not he is guilty of the charge in the information that you are permitted
and should take into consideration all of the evidence as to the circumstances and transactions
during the time covered by the testimony during the time not only of 1917, all of 1916, during
the year 1916. Does that cover the point, gentlemen?
JurymanThat covers the point, I think.
Undoubtedly this was the turning-point in the case, for it is disclosed that the jury returned
in but a few minutes with a verdict of guilty. The oral instruction given by the court as to the
evidence of other shortages was erroneous. the court used the significant language:
You may and should take into consideration all of the testimony as submitted, whether it
be concerning transactions that took place in 1916 or the year previous, in determining
whether or not the defendant is guilty of the charge contained in the information.
41 Nev. 486, 499 (1918) State v. McFarlin
And again the court said:
In determining whether or not he is guilty of the charge in the information, * * * you are
permitted and should take into consideration all of the evidence as to the circumstances and
transactions during the time covered by the testimony, during the time not only of 1917, all of
1916, during the year 1916.
There is no rule of criminal jurisprudence to which the authorities have more tenaciously
adhered than that which applies to proof of other crimes than that for which the defendant
stands accused. The general rule in this respect, and that which has constituted an unalterable
rule in American jurisprudence, is that, when one is put upon trial for an offense, if he is to be
convicted at all, it must be only upon evidence which shows his guilt of the offense. To this
rule there is a well-defined exception. This exception, it may well be stated, permits the
prosecution to put in evidence all relevant facts and circumstances which tend to establish any
of the constituent elements of the crime of which the defendant is accused in the case on trial,
even though such facts and circumstances tend to prove that the defendant has committed
other crimes. The application of the exception of the admissibility of evidence must depend
largely on the crime charged and the circumstances under which the same was committed.
Evidence of this character, when the same is admitted by the trial court, calls for an
instruction to the jury emphatically limiting the purpose for which such evidence may be
considered by them. Evidence of other offenses than that charged in an indictment has been in
all jurisdictions guarded against, and courts and text-writers have warned against the
introduction of such, drawing attention to the havoc that may be wrought unless safeguarded
by instruction clear and unequivocal.
By the language of the trial court here the jury was instructed, and that, too, at a point in
their consideration when a misguiding word meant the fixing of the verdict, that in
determining whether or not the defendant was guilty of the charge in the information they
should take into consideration all of the evidence as to the circumstances and
transactions during the time covered by the testimony, during the years 1916 and 1917.
41 Nev. 486, 500 (1918) State v. McFarlin
dant was guilty of the charge in the information they should take into consideration all of the
evidence as to the circumstances and transactions during the time covered by the testimony,
during the years 1916 and 1917. The jury was told by the court that they should only take
those things into consideration for the purpose of considering and determining whether the
defendant was guilty of the charge as contained in the information, and for no other purpose.
Here was a direction from the court that the jury should consider the evidence of other
shortages to establish the shortagehence the crimeof March 31, 1916. This instruction
had a direct bearing upon a peculiar element of evidence, namely, the books of the telephone
office; and here the observation in the opinion of Mr. Justice Coleman is most pertinent:
The defendant was not the bookkeeper, did not understand bookkeeping, was not familiar
with the books, and his attention was never directed to the items on the pages introduced in
evidence.
Had the evidence been admissible at all, and we have held to the contrary in the opinion of
Mr. Justice Coleman, it was proper that it should be accomplished by instructions designating
and limiting the purpose for which it should be considered. In this respect it may be observed
that such evidence is admissible, as I have already stated, and may be considered by the jury,
for the purpose of establishing motive or purpose, or as proving a general plan or scheme
followed or carried out by the accused.
When such testimony is received, says the Supreme Court of Colorado, the trial judge
should then limit it to the purpose for which it is admitted. (Jaynes v. People, 44 Colo. 535,
99 Pac. 325, 16 Ann. Cas. 787.)
____________
41 Nev. 501, 501 (1918) State v. Pacific Wallpaper and Paint Co.
[No. 2294]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Ex Rel. ALLEN CLARK COMPANY (a Corporation), Relator,
v. PACIFIC WALL PAPER AND PAINT COMPANY (a Corporation); THE
JUSTICE'S COURT OF RENO TOWNSHIP, WASHOE COUNTY, NEVADA, and F.
K. UNSWORTH, Justice of the Peace of Said Township, and E. H. BEEMER, Clerk of
the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of
Washoe, and Ex Officio County Clerk of Said Washoe County, Respondents.
[172 Pac. 380]
1. CertiorariJudgments ReviewableOrder on CertiorariJustice's CourtsScope of
Review.
Where, on defendant's appeal from adverse judgment in justice's court to the district court on questions of
law only the judgment was affirmed, defendant's right to certiorari was limited to review of the district
court judgment, from which no appeal lies; and certiorari would not lie from the supreme court to review
the judgment of the justice.
Original proceeding in certiorari by the State, on the relation of the Allen Clark Company,
against the Pacific Wall Paper and Paint Company and others. Writ discharged.
O. H. Mack, for Petitioner.
Charles H. Burritt, for Respondents.
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
This is an original proceeding in certiorari.
Upon the verified application of the Allen Clark Company, a corporation, this court issued
a writ of certiorari, directed to the justice's court of Reno township, county of Washoe, State
of Nevada, F. K. Unsworth, justice thereof, and to E. H. Beemer, clerk of the district court of
the Second judicial district of the State of Nevada in and for the county of Washoe, and ex
officio county clerk of said county, commanding said parties to certify to this court the
transcript of the proceedings in said justice's court and in the district court on appeal in the
two cases of the Pacific Wall Paper and Paint Company, a corporation, against the
petitioner.
41 Nev. 501, 502 (1918) State v. Pacific Wallpaper and Paint Co.
court and in the district court on appeal in the two cases of the Pacific Wall Paper and Paint
Company, a corporation, against the petitioner. From the returns to the writ it is made to
appear that the petitioner appealed from the judgment rendered against it in the said justice's
court, to the said district court upon questions of law only. The primary purpose of the actions
was to foreclose two claims of lien for labor and material supplied by plaintiff in the
alteration and repair of certain premises of the petitioner, situate in said Reno township.
Jurisdiction is conferred by statute upon justices' courts in such cases when the amount of the
lien does not exceed $300. (Rev. Laws, 5714; Phillips v. Snowden Placer Co., 40 Nev. 66,
160 Pac. 786.)
The petitioner seeks to review the judgment, not of the district court, but of the said
justice's court. The question for our determination is whether the petitioner's right to
certiorari, if certiorari should be issued at all, is not limited to a review of the judgment of
the district court. The questions of law presented to the latter court for its determination on
appeal were:
FirstDid the justice's court have jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the suit?
SecondDid the complaint state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action?
ThirdHad the justice the power and jurisdiction to render a judgment in personam in an
action brought primarily to enforce a mechanic's lien where the claim of lien fails?
The district court decided these questions adversely to the contention of the petitioner and
affirmed the judgment of the justice's court. Having jurisdiction to determine the questions of
law thus presented, its judgment affirming the judgment of the justice's court operates to
estop the petitioner from proceeding in this court to review by certiorari the judgment of the
justice's court.
The petitioner's proper method of redress is an application to this court for a writ of
certiorari to review the judgment of the district court, from which the law has provided no
appeal.
41 Nev. 501, 503 (1918) State v. Pacific Wallpaper and Paint Co.
provided no appeal. The judgment of the district court is in all respects a judgment by a
competent court and one of general jurisdiction. So long as its judgment stands unassailed, it
cannot be ignored or swept aside by this proceeding. (Olcese v. Justice's Court, 156 Cal. 82,
103 Pac. 317.)
The writ is discharged.
It is so ordered.
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur in the order.
The writ of certiorari, if it sought to review the order in the district court, should have
been directed to that court, and not to the clerk thereof, a ministerial officer.
Section 5686, Revised Laws, prescribes:
The writ may be directed to the inferior tribunal, board, or officer, or to any other person
having the custody of the record or proceedings to be certified. When directed to a tribunal,
the clerk, if there be one, shall return the writ with the transcript required.
In a case where the petitioner in certiorari seeks to cause a review of the proceedings of a
court, the writ issues against the tribunal rather than against the clerk thereof. (Onesti v.
Freelon, 61 Cal. 625.)
As I view it, the dismissal of the writ on the grounds and for the reason stated in the
opinion of Mr. Justice Sanders, or for the reason which I here state, does not preclude the
bringing of a proper proceeding, and the issuance of a proper writ following this dismissal.
The question paramount in the merits of the proceedings involves the right of a court to issue
a personal judgment against a defendant where the action was instituted to foreclose a
mechanic's lien in accordance with our statutory provisions governing such matters. This
question has been dealt with by the courts with varying results. It should be finally settled and
determined by this court, in order that the rule may be fixed, and the question put at rest.
____________
41 Nev. 504, 504 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
[No. 2300]
P. L. FLANIGAN, Respondent, v. CHARLES H.
BURRITT, Appellant.
[173 Pac. 352]
1. MandamusDemurrerRight to Answer to Merits.
In view of civil practice act, c. 73 (Rev. Laws, 5694-5707), prescribing the proceedings and practice in
mandamus, and making the code provisions relative to civil actions applicable thereto, where a demurrer to
a petition for mandamus is overruled, defendant may answer to the merits.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; R. C. Stoddard, Judge.
Suit by P. L. Flanigan against Charles H. Burritt for a peremptory writ of mandamus. A
demurrer to the complaint was overruled, and from a denial of leave to answer to the merits,
and a judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals. Revised and remanded, with instructions.
Mack & Green, for Appellant:
In all cases in regard to writs of certiorari, mandamus, and prohibition, the practice act is
applicable to and governs proceedings in those matters.
Section 5712, Revised Laws, provides:
Except as otherwise provided in the three chapters next preceding, the provisions of this
code relative to civil actions in the district courts are applicable to and constitute the rules of
practice in the proceedings mentioned in those chapters.
Defendant had a right to test the complaint in this case by demurrer, and after the demurrer
was overruled, under the civil practice act, he had a perfect right to file his answer and to be
heard on the issues raised by the answer. (Rev. Laws, 5040-5045; State ex rel. Gleason v.
Jumbo Extension M. Co., 30 Nev. 192.)
All forms of pleading in civil actions, and the rules by which a sufficiency of the pleadings
shall be determined, shall be those prescribed by this act,' manifestly refers to the pleadings in
cases of mandamus as well as to pleadings in other actions or proceedings provided for by the
act. (State v. Gracey, 11 Nev. 231; State v. McCullough, 3 Nev. 210
41 Nev. 504, 505 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
3 Nev. 210; State v. Lady Bryan M. Co., 4 Nev. 400; Ency. Pl. & Pr., vol. 13, p. 667.)
James T. Boyd, for Respondent:
The appellant had the privilege and the right of making whatever return he thought
sufficient, but he was concluded by the return made. Hence if he admitted the facts of the
plaintiff's complaint, but denied their legal effect, he could not afterwards be heard to
complain or to present a different issue of fact. The court determined the matter upon the
pleadings before it; that is, upon the complaint and the demurrer. (Rev. Laws, 5704, 5705;
Sutherland on Pleadings, vol. 4, sec. 7101; Town of Hayward v. Pimental, 107 Cal. 386.) On
demurrer to a declaration the judgment for plaintiff is peremptory. (Hooper v. Chosen
Freeholders, 52 N. J. Law, 313.) The application for the writ and the answer are the only
pleadings allowed in applications for mandamus; and if the respondent files a demurrer,
which is overruled, the writ will issue and no further pleadings will be considered. (People
v. Hamilton Co., 3 Neb. 244.) A general demurrer to the petition relieves the case of
controversy by admitting the truth of the allegations, and on overruling such demurrer a
peremptory writ will issue. (Sansome v. Nercer, 68 Tex. 488.)
By the Court, McCarran, C. J.:
This action was instituted in the district court by and on behalf of respondent for a
peremptory writ of mandamus. On the day designated for the return, the appellant here
appeared and filed a demurrer to the complaint. On the hearing the court made an order
overruling the demurrer. Immediately after the entry of the order, and in open court, it appears
that appellant attempted to file an answer to the merits of the complaint or petition for
mandamus. Respondent objected to the filing of the instrument, and the court sustained the
objection, and refused to permit appellant to file any answer or take further steps in the
proceedings, and then and there directed the clerk to enter judgment for the respondent,
plaintiff and petitioner in the court below, in accordance with the relief prayed for.
41 Nev. 504, 506 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
then and there directed the clerk to enter judgment for the respondent, plaintiff and petitioner
in the court below, in accordance with the relief prayed for. The refusal of the court to permit
the filing of an answer to the petition for mandamus is assigned as error, and together with
other assignments comes here in the specification of errors. We shall conclude the matter
with a consideration of this assignment, inasmuch as we deem the action of the trial court in
refusing to permit appellant to file an answer to be error.
Chapter 73 of our civil practice act, being section 752 to section 771 of the act, inclusive
(Rev. Laws, 5694-5713) is devoted entirely to proceedings and practice in mandamus. The
statute declares the writ of mandamus may be denominated a writ of mandate. Section 753
designates in what cases the writ may issue.
Section 756 prescribes:
When the application to the court or district judge is made without notice to the adverse
party, and the writ is allowed, the alternative shall be first issued; but if the application be
upon due notice, and the writ is allowed, the peremptory may be issued in the first instance.
The notice of the application, when given, shall be at least ten days. The writ shall not be
granted by default. The case shall be heard by the court whether the adverse party appear or
not.
Section 757 prescribes:
On the return day of the alternative, or the day on which the application of the writ is
noticed, or such further day as the court or district judge issuing the writ may allow, the party
on whom the writ or notice shall have been served may show cause by answer under oath,
made in the same manner as an answer to a complaint in a civil action.
Section 758 provides:
If an answer is made, which raises a question as to matter of fact essential to the
determination of the motion, and affecting the substantial rights of the parties, and upon the
supposed truth of the allegation of which the application for a writ is based, the court may, in
its discretion, order the question to be tried before a jury, and postpone the argument
until such trial can be had and the verdict certified to the court.
41 Nev. 504, 507 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
may, in its discretion, order the question to be tried before a jury, and postpone the argument
until such trial can be had and the verdict certified to the court. The question to be tried shall
be distinctly stated in the order for trial, and the county shall be designated in which the same
shall be had. The order may also direct the jury to assess any damages which the applicant
may have sustained, in case they find for him.
Section 762 provides:
If no answer be made, the case shall be heard on the papers of the applicant. If an answer
be made which does not raise a question such as is mentioned in section 758, but only such
matters as may be explained or avoided by a reply, the court may, in its discretion, grant time
for replying. If the answer, or answer and reply, raise only questions of law, or put in issue
immaterial statements, not affecting the substantial rights of the parties, the court shall
proceed to hear, or fix a day for hearing, the argument of the case.
Section 770 of the civil practice act provides:
Except as otherwise provided in the three chapters next preceding [chapter 72, Certiorari;
chapter 73, Mandamus; chapter 74, Prohibition], the provisions of this code relative to civil
actions in the district courts are applicable to and constitute the rules of practice in the
proceedings mentioned in those chapters.
It will be seen that the proceedings in mandamus constitute a part of our civil practice act.
Thus the whole proceeding, in so far as there are statutory provisions, is removed from the
rule of practice known to the common law and takes its initiatory and every successive step
directly from statutory mandate and prescription.
In the case of State of Nevada ex rel. Curtis v. McCullough, 3 Nev. 202, this court took
cognizance of the civil practice act as being applicable to proceedings in mandamus. In the
case of State of Nevada v. Gracey, 11 Nev. 223, referring to the case of Curtis v.
McCullough, this court said:
But whether it is the affidavit or the writ which the statute requires to be answered,
there can be no doubt that, for the purposes of this motion, the affidavit performs the
office of a complaint, and the sufficiency thereof is alone to be considered."
41 Nev. 504, 508 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
statute requires to be answered, there can be no doubt that, for the purposes of this motion,
the affidavit performs the office of a complaint, and the sufficiency thereof is alone to be
considered.
The court in that instance regarded the question before it as turning on the affidavit, the
same to be considered in the nature of a complaint in an ordinary civil action and tested by
the rule prescribed by the practice act.
In some jurisdictions, proceedings in mandamus have been regarded as of a criminal
nature; indeed, such was the central thought of those upon whom the administration of the
writ devolved in the early making of the common law. In other jurisdictions, it has been
regarded as a special proceeding; but this court, in the case of State v. Gracey, supra, laid
down the emphatic declaration that proceedings by mandamus is a civil remedy, and has all
the qualities and attributes of a civil action, and applies solely for the protection of civil
action, and applies solely for the protection of civil rights. In the case of State v. Jumbo Ext.
M. Co., 30 Nev. 192, 94 Pac. 74, 133 Am. St. Rep. 715, 16 Ann. Cas. 896, this court,
referring to the practice to which it gave sanction here, held that while there may be little
difference as to the manner or mode of raising the issues, the better practice was to raise
objections to the petition by way of demurrer or answer.
The proceedings in mandamus, whatever they may have been at common law, have
become more expeditious and uniform, and are now in keeping with the ordinary personal
actions and the prescribed civil practice, and in most jurisdictions we observe that mandamus
proceedings are governed by the same general principles, in so far as pleadings are concerned,
or the manner or mode of joining issue, as those prescribed for civil actions generally. In
High's Extraordinary Legal Remedies, p. 329, it is stated:
In this country, as well as in England, proceedings in mandamus are now usually regarded
as in the nature of an action, to which the parties may plead as in other actions.
41 Nev. 504, 509 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
A petition for an alternative writ of mandamus, or a complaint on which such writ is
issued, is in most instances an ex parte proceeding. To say that the party to whom the writ is
directed should be deprived of a right to test by demurrer the sufficiency of the petition or
complaint upon which the writ was issued would be in our judgment to adopt a rather
arbitrary view of the whole proceeding governing mandamus. Courts generally have adopted
the broader and more liberal view.
In the case of Swan v. Gray, 44 Miss. 393, the court had before it the identical question
here presented. There, however, no statutory provisions appear for the regulation of
proceeding in mandamus. The court, after commenting on the force and effect of the several
legal steps in a mandamus proceeding, held that it was error to deny the respondent the right
to answer after his demurrer to the sufficiency of the petition had been overruled. There, even
in the absence of statutory provision, the court held:
But, if the demurrer be overruled, then the defendant must make return, denying the
allegations of the writ, or setting up new matter constituting a defense to the relator's claim.
In the case of State ex rel. Commissioners of Jefferson County, 11 Kan. 66, the Supreme
Court of Kansas, after referring to the practice at common law and under the English statute
(9 Anne, c. 20), held that the alternative writ is now not merely a writ as formerly, but is a
pleading, and the return is also a pleading, the issues being made up of the writ and the return,
and the trial may be had on such issues, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff or for the
defendant, the same as in any other civil action. There the court held, as did this court in the
case of Curtis v. McCullough, supra, that the whole proceeding was in the nature of a civil
action.
In the case of State ex rel. Kelly v. Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Peterson, 35 N. J.
Law, 196, the Supreme Court of New Jersey, in viewing the question there presented under
conditions not unlike those in the matter at bar, laid stress on the view that the object of
the return was to give the opposing party a full hearing on the merits before a judgment
should be pronounced, which judgment would be peremptory in its nature.
41 Nev. 504, 510 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
matter at bar, laid stress on the view that the object of the return was to give the opposing
party a full hearing on the merits before a judgment should be pronounced, which judgment
would be peremptory in its nature.
In the case of State ex rel. Green Bay & M. R. R. Co., v. Jennings, 56 Wis. 113, 14 N. W.
28, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin held that a proceeding in mandamus was to all intents
and purposes a civil action within the meaning of the statute of Wisconsin, and being such,
the petition, as well as the return, was to be tested as to form and sufficiency by the same
rules which prevail in other civil actions.
In the case of Union Oil Co. v. Campbell, 48 La. Ann. 1350, 20 South. 1007, the
conditions under which the proceedings came to the supreme court were identical to those
presented in the case at bar. There, a demurrer having been overruled, the respondent filed his
answer. The relators contended there, as here, that, the respondent having filed an exception
(tantamount to the demurrer here), they were precluded from setting up any ground of defense
on the merits. The court held the position untenable.
With a view to establishing a proper practice, the Supreme Court of New Jersey, in the
case of State ex rel. Hopper et al. v. Board of Freeholders, 52 N. J. Law, 313, 19 Atl. 383,
said:
As the alternative mandamus takes the place of a declaration in these proceedings, the
same practice should be followed. If a demurring defendant shows a real ground on which the
command of the alternative writ ought not to be made peremptory,which he can only set up
by return, he ought to be permitted to withdraw his demurrer, and make return on like terms
as to costs.
In the case of Bear v. Commissioners, 124 N. C. 204, 32 S. E. 558, 70 Am. St. Rep. 586, it
was held that mandamus being in the nature of a civil action, the pleadings and practice
should be the same as those prescribed for in conducting civil actions.
41 Nev. 504, 511 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
In the case of Wheeler v. Northern Colorado Irrigation Co., 10 Colo. 582, 17 Pac. 487, 3
Am. St. Rep. 603, the court, referring incidentally at least to the question here presented, held
in effect that an alternative writ of mandamus performed the office of a complaint in the
ordinary civil action. It must therefore state a cause of action, and, failing to do so, will not
support a judgment. Its legal sufficiency, said the court, may, by the return or answer
provided for in the civil code, be challenged as upon demurrer and tested under the rules of
pleading applicable to the ordinary complaint, when assailed by demurrer.
The Supreme Court of Oregon, in considering the question as to the right of a respondent
in a mandamus proceeding to demur and answer, held that, upon the return, the respondent,
under the provisions of the code, might demur or answer in the same manner as to a
complaint in an action. In that jurisdiction the doctrine has been established that the petition
in mandamus proceedings is no part of the pleading, and the writ itself serves the same
purpose as the complaint in other actions, and must state all material facts showing a clear
right to the relief demanded.
While the doctrine in this jurisdiction, having been established by decisions of this court,
holds (Curtis v. McCullough, supra) that it is to the petition that the respondent must plead or
reply, the principle is, however, the same as to the right of respondent to demur, thereby
testing the sufficiency of the pleading by reason of which he is to be compelled to act. But, if
the court overrules the demurrer, we conclude, as did the Oregon court, that in justice he
should be permitted to interpose a meritorious defense. (Elliott v. Oliver County Clerk, 22 Or.
44, 29 Pac. 1.)
Respondent here refers us to the case of People ex rel. v. Hamilton County, 3 Neb. 244,
where the court, in response to an inquiry, stated without extended consideration that in cases
of mandamus the only pleading allowed would be the application for the writ and the answer
as contemplated by the code.
41 Nev. 504, 512 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
answer as contemplated by the code. The court there held that parties might file a demurrer,
but, if the same was overruled, the writ would issue, and no further pleadings be allowed.
Whatever may have been in the mind of the court at the time of the rendition of this assertion,
it is very apparent that the rule there declared was not followed, and has never been the
accepted doctrine, in Nebraska.
In Long v. State, 17 Neb. 60, 22 N. W. 120, the court said:
Where an alternative writ of mandamus fails to state facts sufficient to entitle the relator
to the performance of the duty sought to be enforced, such defect may be taken advantage of
by a demurrer, the same as in any other action, and the same right to answer, in case the
demurrer is overruled, will exist in favor of a respondent as in any other proceeding.
And again, in the case of State ex rel. Moore v. Chicago, St. Paul, Minn. & Omaha R. R.
Co., 19 Neb. 476, 27 N. W. 434, the court said:
Where it is sought to test the sufficiency of a petition for a mandamus, the proper course
is to demur to the petition upon the ground that the facts stated herein do not entitle the
relator to the relief sought.
To the same effect was the rule asserted in the case of State ex rel. Levy v. Spicer, 36 Neb.
469, 54 N. W. 849, and State ex rel. Haberlan v. Love, 89 Neb. 149, 131 N. W. 196, 34 L. R.
A. n. s. 607, Ann. Cas. 1912c, 542.
The question was again raised and passed upon in the case of State ex rel. Kelley v.
Ferguson, 95 Neb. 63, 144 N. W. 1039, 50 L. R. A. n. s. 266, where the whole question was
reviewed in the light of former decisions.
The right of a respondent in a mandamus proceeding to demur, and thereafter to answer,
was passed upon by the Supreme Court of Washington in the case of State ex rel. Hawes v.
Brewer et al., 39 Wash. 65, 80 Pac. 1001, 109 Am. St. Rep. 858, 4 Ann. Cas. 197, where it
was held that, in a jurisdiction where the code system of pleading obtains, the defendant in
mandamus proceedings may demur to the complaint; the demurrer in such an instance
performing the office of a motion to quash the writ.
41 Nev. 504, 513 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
instance performing the office of a motion to quash the writ. Section 1418 of the code of civil
procedure of the State of Washington (Pierce's Code), bearing upon hearing demurrer and
answer, is substantially the same as section 762 of the code of civil procedure of this state
(Rev. Laws, 5704).
In Ruling Case Law, the text lays down the general proposition that the same right to
answer in case a demurrer to an alternative writ is overruled will exist in favor of the
respondent as in any other proceedings, and the text in this respect is supported by the
following decisions: Ill. Cent. R. R. Co. v. People, 143 Ill. 434, 33 N. E. 173, 19 L. R. A. 119;
State v. Ferguson, supra. (See 18 R. C. L. 351.)
The question here dealt with was before the Court of Appeals of Colorado in the case of
Board of Public Works v. Hayden, 13 Colo. App. 36, 56 Pac. 201. That court was confronted
with this question under code provisions which are in nearly all respects identical to ours; and
in view of the lucid manner in which the question was there discussed, we have no hesitancy
in following the reason and conclusion there reached. In that case, as in the matter at bar, it
was contended that, inasmuch as the provision of the code declared that the writ of
mandamus might be issued in the manner provided in that chapter, and not otherwise, a
demurrer interposed to a petition for mandamus constituted an answer within the meaning of
the chapter, and, as the demurrer raised only questions of law, the case was one for
determination by the court upon the argument, and, as there was no discretion in the court to
allow an amendment, a decision upon the demurrer interposed would conclude the case. The
court, in dealing with this contention, held that the language of the law contemplates a
petition which calls for an answer, saying:
Surely a petition which may result in a peremptory writ must be a good petition; and the
manner prescribed for the issuance of a peremptory writ necessarily supposes preliminary
papers, which on their face would authorize the writ. If compliance by the applicant with the
requirements of the chapter involves the presentation of a sufficient petition, and he fails
in this respect, then the provisions regulating the subsequent proceedings have no
application.
41 Nev. 504, 514 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
the requirements of the chapter involves the presentation of a sufficient petition, and he fails
in this respect, then the provisions regulating the subsequent proceedings have no application.
It follows, therefore, that the respondent is entitled to the judgment of the court upon the
sufficiency of the petition, and that when it is finally determined that a sufficient petition has
been presented, and not before, it is incumbent upon him to make answer.
By the terms of section 770, the provisions of our code relative to civil actions in the
district court are made applicable to and constitute the rules of practice in the proceedings
mentioned in the chapter dealing with mandamus. Hence as we view it, in mandamus
proceedings the relator or petitioner is to be regarded as the plaintiff, and the respondent, or
party to whom the writ is addressed, is to be regarded as the defendant, as those terms apply
and are applied in our civil practice act. The form of the application may, as we view it, be
that of a verified complaint, as in other proceedings, or in personal actions, or it may be that
of an affidavit made by the applicant under oath. If the provisions of section 770 mean
anything, they confer upon the parties to a proceeding in mandamus the same rights and
privileges as are conferred to parties in any other civil action, except as the same may be
curtailed or extended by the provisions of the code dealing explicitly with mandamus.
We are referred by respondent here to the case of Hayward v. Pimental, 107 Cal. 386, 40
Pac. 545, in support of their contention that under our code, which is the same as that of
California, a respondent in a mandamus proceeding, whose demurrer is overruled, is
precluded from filing further answer. We do not understand the Supreme Court of California
to have so held in the Hayward case; but, if such be the holding of that court, we refuse to
adhere to that position. We take it, however, that the question here presented is quite different
from that presented in the Hayward case. We note there the court says: "Appellant, in
response to the complaint or affidavit on which respondent founded its application for a
mandamus, filed an answer wherein he set up the circumstances of said motion to quash
the writ of execution, and that he had 'fully heard, all and singular the evidence and
argument offered by the respective parties upon such motion in the said action, and as
such recorder, and as such recorder's court,' after full consideration, determined said
motion, and ordered that the writ of execution be quashed.
41 Nev. 504, 515 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
Appellant, in response to the complaint or affidavit on which respondent founded its
application for a mandamus, filed an answer wherein he set up the circumstances of said
motion to quash the writ of execution, and that he had fully heard, all and singular the
evidence and argument offered by the respective parties upon such motion in the said action,
and as such recorder, and as such recorder's court,' after full consideration, determined said
motion, and ordered that the writ of execution be quashed. He made no other defense. The
superior court sustained a demurrer to the answer, and at the same time rendered judgment
directing that the writ of mandate issue as prayed for.
There it appears that the respondent filed an answer, to which the petitioner or relator
demurred. The demurrer was sustained. In a strict sense, there is no analogy between the
Hayward case and that at bar. We find further in the reported decision it is stated:
And it sufficiently appears from the recitals referred to that there was a hearing and a
submission, not merely of the demurrer, but of the cause on the pleadings. [We italicize.] If
this were not so, appellant should have shown the incorrectness of the recitals by a bill of
exceptions or otherwise, which he has not done. Such a hearing was a sufficient compliance
with the requirements of said section 1088 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The whole spirit of the law, as well as the letter of our code, seems to revolt at a rule
which would deprive a party of the right to interpose a meritorious defense where, acting with
due diligence and with apparent regard for the rights of others, the party seeks to interpose
such defense. It would, we think, do violence to our system of jurisprudence to say that,
because a party sought to challenge by demurrer the sufficiency and validity of a proceeding
by which he is summoned into court or is to be peremptorily ordered to perform an act, he
must thereby hazard his rights to interpose a defense, when by the interposition of such
defense the court would be better able to render justice and fair dealing between the
parties.
41 Nev. 504, 516 (1918) Flanigan v. Burritt
would be better able to render justice and fair dealing between the parties.
The order appealed from is reversed. The case is remanded, with instructions to the lower
court to permit the defendant, appellant here, to file his answer.
It is so ordered.
____________
41 Nev. 516, 516 (1918) State v. Breen
[No. 2298]
THE STATE OF NEVADA, Ex Rel. GEORGE W. ABEL, Petitioner and Relator, v. HON.
PETER BREEN, as District Judge of the District Court of the Third Judicial District of
the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Lander, and THE DISTRICT COURT OF
THE THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, IN AND FOR
THE COUNTY OF LANDER, Respondents.
[173 Pac. 555]
1. CertiorariOriginal ProceedingScope.
On original petition for certiorari to review a judgment of the district court, review is limited to whether
the district court had jurisdiction to render any judgment, and whether it had jurisdiction to render the
particular judgment rendered.
2. Justices of the PeaceRecordRequisites and Sufficiency.
Justice courts being of special, limited, and inferior jurisdiction, proceedings therein must show such
facts as constitute a case within the jurisdiction, and otherwise the law regards the whole proceeding as
coram non judice and void.
3. Justices of the PeaceAppealsJurisdiction on Appeal.
The jurisdiction of an appellate court on appeal from a justice's court is entirely derivative, and such court
acquires no jurisdiction to try a case on appeal from a justice's court where the latter is without jurisdiction
to entertain the case and render judgment therein.
4. Justices of the PeaceCertification.
In the absence of a statute, a justice of the peace cannot certify a case to another court.
5. Mechanics' LiensPersonal Judgment.
In view of Rev. Laws, 2226, providing that the mechanics' lien statutes shall not affect the right to a
personal judgment, in an action brought to enforce a mechanics' lien, a personal judgment may be
rendered against a person, personally liable if the complaint contains all necessary
facts constituting both grounds of relief, and all the necessary allegations of an action
in assumpsit.
41 Nev. 516, 517 (1918) State v. Breen
judgment may be rendered against a person, personally liable if the complaint contains
all necessary facts constituting both grounds of relief, and all the necessary allegations of
an action in assumpsit.
Original proceeding in certiorari by the State, on relation of George W. Abel, against Hon.
Peter Breen, as Judge of the District Court of the Third Judicial District in and for the County
of Lander, and the District Court of the Third Judicial District in and for the County of
Lander. Proceedings dismissed on condition; otherwise writ made peremptory.
Cantwell & Carville, for Petitioner:
The jurisdiction of the justice's court is limited by the constitution and the statutes. The
justice's court was without jurisdiction in the three cases filed therein, for the reason that the
amount involved exceeds three hundred dollars. The legislative authority to confer
jurisdiction upon the justice's court is limited by the provisions of the constitution. (Const.
Nev., sec. 8, art. 8.) This limitation is effective to restrict the language of the legislative act
passed under its authority. (Phillips v. Snowden, 40 Nev. 66, 160 Pac. 786.)
The law contemplates that but one action shall be prosecuted for the foreclosure of the
liens that may exist against a particular piece of property. (Phillips v. Snowden, supra; Rev.
Laws, 2227, 2229.) It is the duty of the trial court to endeavor within all reasonable
limitations to protect the rights of all lien claimants in one judgment in actions to foreclose
one or more liens, where it appears that there are other lien claimants, and especially where
it appears that other suits are pending for the foreclosure of all or a portion of such other
liens. (Daly v. Lahontan Mines Co., 39 Nev. 14, 158 Pac. 285.)
The judgment foreclosing the liens in the justice's court being void for lack of jurisdiction,
it follows that the district court had no jurisdiction on appeal. (Fitchett v. Henley, 31 Nev.
341; Phillips v. Snowden, supra.)
The fact that the district court had original jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and tried the
actions de novo, does not render the judgments of the district court valid as being based
upon jurisdiction conferred by waiver or consent.
41 Nev. 516, 518 (1918) State v. Breen
not render the judgments of the district court valid as being based upon jurisdiction conferred
by waiver or consent. (Phillips v. Snowden, supra.)
The action of the justice's court in erroneously determining that it had jurisdiction to
proceed, and thereafter proceeding to the trial of the cases and entering judgments therein,
was more than a mere error within jurisdiction. (Fitchett v. Henley, supra; Floyd v. District
Court, 39 Nev. 369; Phillips v. Snowden, supra; Yowell v. District Court, 159 Pac. 692.) And
where jurisdiction is exceeded in such a manner by a justice of the peace, there is no right of
appeal to the district court, and certiorari is the proper remedy to be pursued. (Fitchett v.
Henley, supra.)
Salter & Robins, for Respondents:
If any error has been made by either the justice's court or the district court, it certainly was
within jurisdiction. (Florence-Goldfield M. Co. v. District Court, 30 Nev. 391.)
The fact that the questions could have been reviewed by appeal, and that the petitioner did not
avail himself of the right of appeal, but suffered the time to elapse, does not make available
the writ of certiorari. (Chapman v. Justice Court, 29 Nev. 154.)
A collateral attack upon a judgment can be sustained only when a judgment is absolutely
void for want of jurisdiction, and not when the court has erred in some ruling. (Daly v.
Lahontan Mines Co., 39 Nev. 14, 151 Pac. 516.)
There being no consolidation of the suits, the justice had jurisdiction of the persons and of
the subject-matter, and inquiry on certiorari extends no further. (Kapp v. District Court, 31
Nev. 444.)
Even though the justice should have made an order of consolidation, and thereby ousted
himself of jurisdiction, still the district court assumed jurisdiction; and whether its
jurisdiction came by appeal or as original jurisdiction, its judgment is valid and will stand in
the presence of any collateral attack. (Phillips v. Snowden, 40 Nev.66, 160 Pac. 790.)
41 Nev. 516, 519 (1918) State v. Breen
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
A writ of certiorari issued out of this court upon the application of George W. Abel to
review the proceedings had in the Third judicial district court of the State of Nevada in and
for the county of Lander in three separate actions commenced in the justice's court of Argenta
township, in said county, and appealed to the district court by the relator upon questions of
law and fact.
1. The procedure adopted for the review of the matters complained of limits this inquiry to
the discussion of the questions: Had the district court jurisdiction to render any judgment in
the actions, or either of them? Had the said court authority to render a personal judgment in
the actions, or either of them, in favor of the plaintiff and against the relator, except as
incidental to a decree foreclosing the mechanic's lien against the property described in each of
the complaints in said separate actions?
2, 3. Justice courts being of special, limited, and inferior jurisdiction, it is generally
recognized that proceedings therein must show or set forth such facts as constitute a case
within their jurisdiction; otherwise the law regards the whole proceeding as coram non judice
and void. It is also well established that the jurisdiction of an appellate court on appeal from a
justice's court is entirely derivative, and it acquires no jurisdiction to try a case on appeal from
a justice's court where the latter is without jurisdiction to entertain the case and render
judgment therein. (Fitchett v. Henley, 31 Nev. 341, 102 Pac. 865, 104 Pac. 1060.)
4. An appeal in a case rising in a justice's court does not convert the appellate court into a
court of original jurisdiction. (Martin v. District Court, 13 Nev. 90.) It has exactly the same
jurisdiction as the justice of the peace from whose court the appeal is taken. (Peacock v.
Leonard, 8 Nev. 84.) In the absence of some provision to the contrary, the same rule applies
to actions in justice courts for the enforcement of a mechanic's lien. The dictum in the case of
Phillips v. Snowden Placer Co., 40 Nev. 66, 160, Pac. 786, to the effect that an appeal in such
case, where it appears that the justice's court is without jurisdiction of the amounts of the
liens involved in the action, operates to certify the cause to the district court, is
disaffirmed.
41 Nev. 516, 520 (1918) State v. Breen
jurisdiction of the amounts of the liens involved in the action, operates to certify the cause to
the district court, is disaffirmed. In the absence of a statute a justice of the peace cannot
certify a case to another court. (24 Cyc. 510; 11 Cyc. 992.)
5. If we correctly interpret the position of the learned counsel for relator, it is their
contention, based upon the authority of Phillips v. Snowden Placer Co., supra, that as the
three separate actions were commenced in the justice's court for enforcement of separate
mechanic's liens, and that the aggregate amount of the money demanded exceeds the sum of
$300, the justice's court was without jurisdiction to entertain the cases, and the proceedings
therein are void. Therefore the district court had no authority on appeal but to dismiss the
actions. It is conceded that the complaint in each of the actions, in connection with or in
addition to the allegations therein made in relation to the foreclosure of the lien, contained all
the necessary facts and allegations to constitute a cause of action against the relator for the
recovery of a money judgment. The relator denied by his answers that he was indebted to the
plaintiff in the sums demanded, or in any sum, and upon this issue the causes were tried
before a single jury, and, in accordance with the verdict, the justice rendered separate
judgments for the plaintiff and against the relator in each action, and in addition thereto
declared the sums found due to be a lien upon the property described in the complaints and
ordered it sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the judgment, costs, and attorneys'
fees, and ordered execution to issue for any deficiency. The pleadings, as well as the
procedure in both courts, show a clear intent on the part of the plaintiff to pursue and rely
upon a money judgment against the person liable, and the demand for the foreclosure of the
liens was regarded by the plaintiff as ancillary and supplementary to his action for the
recovery of a money judgment. This intent is further manifested by the waiver on the part of
the plaintiff of his claim of lien on the trials de novo in the district court.
41 Nev. 516, 521 (1918) State v. Breen
in the district court. It is argumentatively conceded that this waiver eliminated the question of
the foreclosure of the lien from each of the cases, and the only issue tried in the district court
was the plaintiff's causes of action for a money judgment. We are now asked to hold that both
courts were without jurisdiction to render any judgment in the actions, or either of them, for
the reason that the cumulated amounts demanded exceeded the sum of $300. By the act
giving the mechanics and others a lien the debt is the principal thing, and the lien an incident
and security which follows the debt or obligation. (Skyrme v. Occidental M. & M. Co., 8 Nev.
231; Phillips, Mechanics' Liens, 3d ed. sec. 9.)
The lien, as an appropriation of a specific thing, has been superadded to the remedy
afforded by an ordinary action for the debt, but has not interfered with its enforcement.
(Phillips, Mechanics' Liens, 3d ed. sec. 311.)
It is provided by the act giving mechanics and others a lien that nothing in it is to be
construed to impair or affect the right of any person to whom any debt shall be due for labor,
to maintain a personal action to recover such debt against the person liable therefor. (Rev.
Laws, 2226.) This act also provides that all liens are assignable as any other chose in action.
(Rev. Laws, 2229.) It is to be borne in mind that the plaintiff was the holder and owner of the
liens by assignments that carried the debt and were the only liens lodged against the property.
No provision in the act purports to restrict the right to recover the debt and resort to the
enforcement of the lien in the same action.
The rule is general, in the absence of some provision to the contrary, that the remedy
upon a * * * lien and the remedy upon the debt are distinct and concurrent, and may be
pursued at the same time or in succession. (Hatcher v. H. & B. Mfg. Supply Co., 133 Fed.
271, 68 C. C. A. 19.)
Our practice act permits the union or combination of legal and equitable remedies in the
same action.
The question as to the lien claimant's right to a personal judgment was not involved in
the case of Phillips v. Snowden Placer Co., supra.
41 Nev. 516, 522 (1918) State v. Breen
judgment was not involved in the case of Phillips v. Snowden Placer Co., supra. Had these
cases been commenced for the foreclosure of a lien only, a different question would be
presented. Under the averments of the complaints the plaintiff was entitled to some relief. If
the justice exceeded his jurisdiction in giving judgment for the foreclosure of the lien, that
fact would not oust him of jurisdiction to render a personal judgment against the person liable
for the debt. By the greater weight of authority, we are of the opinion that a personal
judgment may be rendered against a person personally liable in an action brought to enforce a
mechanic's lien (18 R. C. L. 991), provided the complaint contains all the necessary facts
constituting both grounds for relief and all the necessary allegations of an action in assumpsit.
(Volker-Scowcroft Lumber Co. v. Vance, 36 Utah, 348, 103 Pac. 971, 24 L. R. A. n. s. 321,
Ann. Cas. 1912a, 124.)
Under the views here expressed the district court had jurisdiction on appeal to render a
personal judgment in each of the cases mentioned, together with a judgment for costs and
attorneys' fees for services rendered in obtaining such personal judgment, but that it had no
jurisdiction to include in its judgment, as a part of the costs, the amount paid for recording the
mechanic's lien statements or costs or attorneys' fees incident to the foreclosure of said liens
in either the justice's court or the district court. If an order be entered at the next session of the
respondent district court modifying the judgments mentioned in accordance with the views
expressed herein, the order will be that these proceedings be dismissed; otherwise the writ
will be made peremptory.
____________
41 Nev. 523, 523 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
[No. 2342]
In the Matter of the Application of HENRY J. JONES and JAMES G. GREGORY to Prohibit
the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Nevada, in and for the
County of Elko, and E. J. L. TABER, the Judge Thereof, from Proceeding with the Cause
Entitled The State of Nevada, Plaintiff, v. Henry J. Jones, Defendant (No. 2561) and
The State of Nevada, Plaintiff, v. James G. Gregory, Defendant (No. 2562) on Charges
of Malfeasance in Office.
[173 Pac. 885]
1. CountiesCommissionerRemovalCharacter of Proceedings.
Complaint on behalf of state for benefit of a county, stating that the complainant is a citizen, resident and
taxpayer of the county, and is foreman of the grand jury and at the request of the grand jury petitions for
removal of county commissioner, was a proper petition under Rev. Laws, 2851, et seq., providing for
removal, and not under section 6894, et seq., providing for removal after jury trial, since the allegations as
to action on the grand jury's request were surplusage; the complaint being sufficient without them.
Application for writ of prohibition by Henry J. Jones and another against the District Court
of the Fourth Judicial District in and for the County of Elko and another. Application
denied.
Carey Van Fleet, for Petitioner:
The only proposition before the court is the construction of the complaints filed in the
district court of the Fourth judicial district on the 24th day of April, 1918. These complaints
are either accusations by the grand jury for malfeasance in office or private complaints for
removal from office. They cannot constitute quo warranto proceedings, for the reason that
they do not come under section 5656, et seq., of the Revised Laws. The only proceedings in
which the name of the state may be used are proceedings in quo warranto or criminal
proceedings and accusations by the grand jury. In quo warranto proceedings in this state the
party is entitled to a jury. (Rev.
41 Nev. 523, 524 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
Laws, 5681.) Our constitution provides that all process shall be in the name of the State of
Nevada, and all prosecutions shall be conducted in the name and by the authority thereof. (Ex
Parte Clark, 141 Pac. 831.)
Inasmuch as the State of Nevada has been invoked to prosecute the cases at bar, the
defendants should be given all the rights which such prosecution entails. Both the people of
the state and the defendants are adequately protected by continuing the prosecutions under
section 6894, Revised Laws. (Kerr v. Superior Court, 62 Pac. 479.) It was the duty of the
grand jury to investigate wilful misconduct in office. (Rev. Laws, 7028.)
From the testimony it appears that the grand jury by its action, amounting to a vote,
determined that the defendants should be charged with malfeasance in office. It was then the
duty of the grand jury to file accusations against the defendants, and not to proceed in any
other way. (Pasten v. Railroad, 32 L. R. A. n. s. 785; Rector v. Smith, 11 L. R. A. 302; 20
Cyc. 1294, 1336; 12 R. C. L., sec. 20, p. 1036.)
It appears that the complaints were adopted by the grand jury. The grand jury could act
only through its foreman in filing accusations, as appears to have been done. Counsel in
charge of the prosecution, by injecting into the complaint words which might have some
meaning of individual action, could not take away from the defendants their rights in any
such manner or by any such device. (Thurston v. Clark, 40 Pac. 435; Boyd v. United States,
116 U. S. 616.) It was not necessary that the accusations be presented in the presence of the
grand jury. (In Re Burleigh, 78 Pac. 242.)
The only portion of the complaint which would at all seem to point to a prosecution by a
private citizen is the prayer, or rather that part of the prayer which waives the fine of five
hundred dollars. The prayer is no part of the complaint. The portions which bring the
complaint within the provisions of section 6894, Revised Laws, are the substantial portions of
the complaint. The complaint being brought by the State of Nevada, presented at the
request of the grand jury, signed by the foreman, as appears from the face of the
complaint itself, charges the defendants with malfeasance in office.
41 Nev. 523, 525 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
Nevada, presented at the request of the grand jury, signed by the foreman, as appears from the
face of the complaint itself, charges the defendants with malfeasance in office. There should
be little doubt as to the meaning of the complaint, but if there is any doubt it should be
resolved in favor of the defendants. (Fitch v. Board of Supervisors, 54 Pac. 902.)
Geo. B. Thatcher, Attorney-General, Edw. T. Patrick, Deputy Attorney-General, and
George F. Talbot, for Respondent:
Any complainant is authorized to institute the proceedings for removal in the name of the
state. (Rev. Laws, 2852.) Analagous proceedings for removal from and to determine the right
to office have been sustained when brought in the name of the state on the relation of an
official or citizen. (State ex rel. McMillan v. Sadler, 25 Nev. 165.) Quo warranto and actions
for removal from office are civil proceedings. (Ames v. Kansas, 111 U. S. 449.)
The proceedings are not in conflict with the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of
the United States. If effort were being made to convict these county officers of any crime, it is
conceded they would be entitled to a jury trial under the state constitution, but the
proceedings for removal are not for the purpose of convicting of crime, and do not involve
any question of life, liberty, or right of property. The guaranty of right of trial by jury in the
federal constitution secures that right in the federal courts; it does not prevent the restriction
of trial by jury in the state courts. (Walker v. Savoinet, 92 U. S. 90; In Re King, 51 Fed. 434;
Kansas v. Bradley, 26 Fed. 289; Ex Parte McNealy, 36 W. Va. 84.)
By the Court, Sanders, J.:
This is an application for a writ of prohibition made on the following state of facts:
Henry J. Jones and James G. Gregory, since the 1st day of January, 1916, are the duly
qualified, commissioned, and acting members of the board of county commissioners of
Elko County.
41 Nev. 523, 526 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
and acting members of the board of county commissioners of Elko County. As the result of
investigations made by the grand jury of said county selected for the year 1917, John H.
Cazier, the foreman thereof, with the knowledge and approval of its members, and upon the
advice and direction of the attorneys acting for the county of Elko and the State of Nevada, on
the 26th day of October, 1917, filed two separate complaints in the district court of the Fourth
judicial district of the State of Nevada, in and for the county of Elko, under sections 2851 to
2854, inclusive, of Revised Laws, which provide for the summary removal from office of any
person who shall refuse or neglect to perform any official act in the manner and form as now
prescribed by law, or who shall be guilty of any malpractice or malfeasance in office. One
complaint is entitled The State of Nevada, Plaintiff, against Henry J. Jones, Defendant, and
the other The State of Nevada against James G. Gregory, Defendant. The complaints make
general charges for the removal of the defendants from office for malfeasance in office, and
demand that the defendants be cited to appear before the said court on a day certain and that
the court proceed to hear, in a summary manner, the complaints and the evidence, and if on
the hearing it shall appear that the charges are sustained, that the court enter a decree that the
defendants be deprived of their office. Thereafter the complaints, on motion of the attorneys
for the plaintiff, were dismissed without prejudice. Thereupon, with the leave of court, two
separate complaints were filed, one entitled The State of Nevada, Plaintiff, on the Relation
of John H. Cazier, Complainant, against Henry J. Jones, Defendant, and the other against
James G. Gregory, defendant. The complaint against Jones specifies 134 charges of alleged
misconduct in office, and that against Gregory specifies 136 alleged charges of misconduct,
and demand that the defendants be removed from office in the summary manner as prescribed
by section 2851, et seq., Revised Laws. The caption of each complaint is in part as follows:
"In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Nevada, in and for the
County of Elko.
41 Nev. 523, 527 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Nevada, in and for the
County of Elko. The State of Nevada, Plaintiff, on Relation of John H. Cazier,
Complainant, v. Henry J. Jones, Defendant.
Complaint.
On behalf of the State of Nevada and pursuant to her laws, and for the benefit of Elko
County, Nevada, hereinafter designated as the county, John H. Cazier, herein designated as
complainant, for cause of removal from the office of county commissioner of Elko County,
State of Nevada, of Henry J. Jones, incumbent of that office, hereinafter designated as the
defendant, on oath complains and alleges: That complainant is a citizen of the United States,
over the age of 21 years, is a resident and taxpayer of Elko County, in the State of Nevada, is
foreman of the last called grand jury of Elko county, impaneled on the 18th day of September,
1917, in the above-entitled court, which grand jury has not yet been discharged; and this
complaint is made at the request of the members of this grand jury; that defendant is, and ever
since the first Monday in January, 1915, has been, a duly elected, qualified, and acting county
commissioner and as such county commissioner is, and ever since the first Monday in
January, 1915, has been, a member of the board of county highway commissioners of Elko
County, Nevada; that defendant is, and ever since the first Monday in January, 1917, has
been, the chairman of the board of county highway commissioners of Elko County, Nevada; *
* * that as such county commissioners and as such member of the board of county highway
commissioners, the defendant has been guilty of malpractice and malfeasance in office and
has refused and neglected to perform the official duties pertaining to his office, as prescribed
by law, at various times, including the instances hereinafter stated. * * *
Each of the defendants, by their attorney, moved to quash the citations issued on these
complaints, upon the grounds that the citations were issued under section 2851, et seq., and
that the plaintiff was attempting to proceed under said sections, whereas the alleged
charges therein made are based upon written accusations presented by the grand jury of
the county of Elko and filed in said court, and that the court is without jurisdiction to
proceed against the defendants under section 2S51, et seq., and that the proceedings, if
any be had, should be under section 6S94, et seq., of Revised Laws, which provide for the
removal of civil officers otherwise than by impeachment, and provide for a trial by jury,
and that the trial be conducted in the same manner as a trial upon an indictment.
41 Nev. 523, 528 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
et seq., and that the plaintiff was attempting to proceed under said sections, whereas the
alleged charges therein made are based upon written accusations presented by the grand jury
of the county of Elko and filed in said court, and that the court is without jurisdiction to
proceed against the defendants under section 2851, et seq., and that the proceedings, if any be
had, should be under section 6894, et seq., of Revised Laws, which provide for the removal
of civil officers otherwise than by impeachment, and provide for a trial by jury, and that the
trial be conducted in the same manner as a trial upon an indictment. (Rev. Laws, 6903.) The
motions to quash were denied, and the causes set for trial in said court on the 13th day of
May, 1918.
On the 10th day of May, 1918, the defendants made a joint application to this court for an
order restraining the district court of the Fourth judicial district of the State of Nevada, in and
for the county of Elko, and E. J. L. Taber, the judge thereof, or any judge, from proceeding to
try the said complaints, or take any steps in said causes under section 2851, et seq., upon the
grounds that the proceedings are in fact written accusations duly made, presented, and filed
by a grand jury of Elko County, and that unless restrained said court will proceed in a
summary manner to hear the complaints without a jury and contrary to the proceedings
prescribed by section 6894, et seq. In view of the positive averments contained in the petition,
this court, for the purpose of inquiring into the jurisdiction of the said district court thus
challenged, issued a show-cause order directed to the respondent, and staying the proceedings
in said county until the further order of this court.
After a hearing of the issue joined upon the application for the writ, and the answer and
traverse of the respondent, and upon due consideration of the testimony of John H. Cazier,
the complainant in each of said actions, we are satisfied that the proceedings instituted against
the defendants, and each of them, are commenced under section 2851, et seq., and not under
section 6894, et seq., and that upon the authority of the case of Gay v. District Court,
recently decided in this court {41 Nev. 330
41 Nev. 523, 529 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
upon the authority of the case of Gay v. District Court, recently decided in this court (41 Nev.
330), the said district court has jurisdiction and is vested with full power and authority to hear
the complaints and the evidence and render a decree. The application for the writ of
prohibition must therefore be denied.
The fact that it is made to appear from the complaints and the testimony that John H.
Cazier made the complaints at the request of the grand jury of Elko County, and on behalf of
the State of Nevada and for the benefit of Elko County, does not have the effect to change the
procedure to that of formal accusations presented by the grand jury of Elko County against
the defendants. We regard the language as being surplusage. It adds nothing in substance or
form. The complaints are the complaints of John H. Cazier, duly verified by his oath, and
duly presented to the said district court of Elko County, which is all that is required to set in
motion the procedure prescribed by the statute. (Rev. Laws, 2851-2854.) Whether the state
may be a complainant under said sections, or that a complainant is authorized to use its name
in bringing and carrying on a proceeding under said sections, it is not necessary to determine.
The application for the writ is denied.
It is so ordered.
McCarran, C. J., concurring:
I concur in the order.
In the case of Gay v. District Court, 41 Nev. 330, 171 Pac. 156, I took occasion to express
my views on phases of the question here presented.
In this proceeding, petitioner contends that because the grand jury, as an inquisitorial body,
investigated the acts and conduct of the board of county commissioners and recommended
that proceedings be instituted against petitioners under the provisions of sections 2851-2854,
Revised Laws, hence the complaint here in question is an accusation by that body. Regardless
of whatever investigation the grand jury may have entertained, regardless of whatever
unofficial recommendations that body may have made, the fact remains that this
complaint was filed by J. H. Cazier as an individual.
41 Nev. 523, 530 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
of whatever unofficial recommendations that body may have made, the fact remains that this
complaint was filed by J. H. Cazier as an individual. The complaint here was not filed by the
grand jury, nor by its foreman as such, and whatever declarations there may be in the
complaint as to Cazier being the foreman of the grand jury, the same neither adds to nor
detracts from the significance of the instrument.
It is contended that because the complaint is entitled The State of Nevada, Plaintiff, on
Relation of John H. Cazier, Complainant, therefore it is a complaint filed by the state and is
a criminal proceeding. In this respect our attention is directed to the provisions of our
constitution (sec. 13, art. 6) to the effect that all process shall be in the name of the state and
all proceedings shall be conducted in the name and by the authority of the state. In my
concurring expression in the case of Gay v. District Court, supra, I took the position which I
here reassert. Proceedings under sections 2851-2854, Revised Laws, are not criminal in
nature. These code provisions permit and authorize a special proceeding for the sole purpose
of removal from office. A determination by the district court that the charges in the complaint
were well founded would entail no effect save removal. Such would not constitute a bar to
criminal prosecution. Section 13, article 6, of the constitution is specific as to the authority
under which criminal actions may be instituted. Such are to be conducted in the name of the
state only, and are to be instituted by the authority of the state only. But does this provision
preclude the state from acting on relation of one of its citizens in a special proceeding for a
special purpose other than criminal proceeding where a matter of public concern is raised
under statutory authority? The commonwealth, and not the individual, is the interested party,
and such proceedings are created not as an instrument for individual concern but as a public
plan of expediency. As in proceedings for the prosecution of crime the individual must set the
machinery of the law in motion, whether by a prosecuting officer or a private citizen, so
here, under the provisions of the statute {Rev. Laws, 2S51-2S54), it is by individual
complaint that the special proceeding is instituted to remove from office.
41 Nev. 523, 531 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
whether by a prosecuting officer or a private citizen, so here, under the provisions of the
statute (Rev. Laws, 2851-2854), it is by individual complaint that the special proceeding is
instituted to remove from office.
In the matter at bar we have a complaint in writing, verified by the oath of a complainant,
not for the purpose of instituting a prosecution, for removal from office is in no sense a
prosecution for crime, but to institute a special inquiry provided for by statute to be conducted
by a designated authority. One of two results can follownot conviction of crime, not
deprivation of propertyremoval from office, or dismissal of the proceedings.
Much of the argument of counsel would be most convincing were we dealing with a law
that contemplated criminal proceedings, or a complaint instituting a criminal prosecution. The
recent case of Ex Parte Clark, 24 Cal. App. 389, 141 Pac. 831, cited by counsel for
petitioners, receives my unqualified concurrence. In Kilburn et al. v. Law, 111 Cal. 237, 43
Pac. 615, cited in Ex Parte Clark, supra, the court held that the proceedings to remove the
bank examiners were intended by the legislature to be in the nature of a criminal prosecution.
There the court laid as the major premise of the decision that the statute providing for the
removal from office of the bank examiners was a proceeding for the punishment of an offense
in its nature criminal. This conclusive assertion, which I deem wholly inapplicable to our
procedure for removal from office (Rev. Laws, 2851-2854), furnishes the turning-point for
the whole question as it is dealt with by the California courts. If by our removal statute here in
question criminal proceedings were instituted, or if a judgment of conviction of crime were
entailed, then the conclusions of the California courts in the many cases referred to would be
most applicable.
Petitioners' counsel dwells on the action of the grand jury as such was disclosed by the
testimony taken here. In this respect he contends that it was the duty of that body, after its
investigation, to file accusations against these defendants.
41 Nev. 523, 532 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
body, after its investigation, to file accusations against these defendants. Indeed, it is declared
by most eminent authority that the purpose for which a grand jury is granted such latitude in
inquisitorial matters is in order that it may find indictments against all public offenders, and
when instead of returning an indictment after inquiry it merely expresses its views on the
existence of crime, declaratively connecting persons therewith, it exceeds its authority. (12 R.
C. L. 1035.) The grand jury of Elko County is not before this court; I unhesitatingly subscribe
to the doctrine as enunciated in Ruling Case Law; but whether or not the grand jury has
exceeded its authority in acting as it did in this case is beyond the scope of our inquiry.If the
grand jury of Elko County had filed this complaint, or if J. H. Cazier had filed the complaint
as foreman of the grand jury rather than as an individual, then the instrument would constitute
an accusation, and proceedings under sections 2851-2854, Revised Laws, could not follow.
Counsel contends that the grand jury could only act through its foreman. That fact may be
conceded. But in this instance it does not appear that the grand jury even attempted to act. It
was Cazier, as an individual, who acted in the way of filing these complaints.
The statute which gives rise to this proceeding is one for the removal of certain officers. It
is a part of our law, made so by legislative will. The whole procedure is denominated as being
summary; hence it precludes the right to jury trial. Into the hands of the district judge this
statute lays one of the most sacred duties, that of removing an individual from the enjoyment
of public position of trust and honor. The law, in my judgment, contains nothing which
recommends itself to the spirit of democracy. It partakes of none of the progressive
inspiration which gave rise to the historic scene at Runnymede. It is an extreme and
extraordinary measure, intended only for extreme and extraordinary occasions. It is fraught
with seriousness and a demand for extreme caution both from the standpoint of him who
prefers the charge and him who listens and pronounces judgment.
41 Nev. 523, 533 (1918) Ex Parte Jones and Gregory
charge and him who listens and pronounces judgment. On both it places that high degree of
responsibility which is always attendant when the reputation and good name of men are in the
balance. It clothes the district judge with a responsibility sacred and potential, and exacts
from that officer the highest degree of unbiased judgment, in the formation of which it
appears to me proof of the accusations should attain the dignity of exceeding a reasonable
doubt.
____________
41 Nev. 533, 533 (1918) Wade v. Wade
[No. 2321]
MARGARET WADE, Appellant, v. BEN WADE, EMMA JONES, ALBERT WADE, and J.
O. SESSIONS, as Administrator of the Estate of JAMES WADE, Deceased,
Respondents.
[173 Pac. 553]
1. DivorceSuits to Set Aside DecreeComplaintSufficiency.
In a suit to set aside a divorce decree, a complaint alleging that the decree was void, because plaintiff
therein was not a bona-fide resident of the county wherein the decree was granted, was insufficient, since
under Stats. 1915, c. 28, relating to jurisdiction of divorce actions, jurisdiction might have been obtained
on another ground than that of the residence of the plaintiff, and it was not alleged that jurisdiction was not
dependent on such other grounds.
2. DivorceSuits to Set Aside DecreeComplaintSufficiency.
In a suit to set aside a decree of divorce, on the ground that it was obtained by a conspiracy between
plaintiff's husband and her attorney, a complaint, alleging such conspiracy by way of conclusion merely,
and failing to set out facts showing that by reason of such conspiracy the plaintiff was prevented from
making her defense, is insufficient.
Appeal from Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County; R. C. Stoddard, Judge.
Suit by Margaret Wade against Ben Wade and others, to set aside a divorce decree. From a
decree for defendants, plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.
George Springmeyer, for Appellant:
The complaint in the action states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. A good
cause of action is stated where it is alleged that the attorney for plaintiff, in collusion and
conspiracy with the attorney for the defendant, fraudulently agreed to let judgment go
against the plaintiff by consent, as the court did not have jurisdiction.
41 Nev. 533, 534 (1918) Wade v. Wade
in collusion and conspiracy with the attorney for the defendant, fraudulently agreed to let
judgment go against the plaintiff by consent, as the court did not have jurisdiction. (Chadron
Bank v. Anderson, 48 pac. 197.) Under the allegations, appellants may not have shown
proper diligence in failing to discover the fraud in two years, but it sufficiently appears that
they were not chargeable with notice of the acts of their attorneys in time to have applied for a
new trial at the term the judgment was rendered. (Watson v. Texas R. Co., 73 S. W. 830.)
Where an attorney, in whom trust and confidence are reposed by a client, misleads the client
by false statements, or by fraudulent concealment of material matters, the transaction will be
annulled. (McLeod v. Applegate, 26 N. E. 830.)
H. D. Danforth, for Respondents:
The only question before this court is whether or not the complaint in the case states facts
sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The complaint falls far short of stating such facts.
The first alleged cause of action fails entirely to show a lack of jurisdiction in the lower court
to hear and determine the divorce suit in question, and therefore entirely fails to state facts
sufficient to constitute a cause of action. (Rev. Laws, 5838; Tiedemann v. Tiedemann, 36
Nev. 494, 137 Pac. 824.)
Even if it should be held that the first alleged cause of action is sufficiently stated as to the
matter of jurisdiction, it must be alleged also that a meritorious defense exists to the action
for divorce, and that the decree of divorce attacked is groundless or unjust. (23 Cyc. 994,
1031-1033.)
As a fundamental and elementary principle of law, in cases of this kind, and as stated in
Ency. Pl. & Pr., vol. 2, p. 1192: The bill must allege facts which constitute a legal defense to
the original cause of action, and one of such a nature that it would be likely to change the
result upon a new trial of the issues. (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 498, p. 874.)
41 Nev. 533, 535 (1918) Wade v. Wade
By the Court, Coleman, J.:
Margaret Wade brought suit in the district court of Washoe County to set aside a decree of
divorce theretofore entered against her and in favor of her husband, James Wade. In her
complaint she joined the administrator of the estate of her deceased husband (he having died
after the decree of divorce had been entered) and the three children of the deceased. When the
case was called for trial counsel for defendants objected to the introduction of any testimony
in behalf of the plaintiff, upon the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to
constitute a cause of action. The objection was sustained by the court, and an order was
entered dismissing the action. The sole question urged for our consideration is that the
complaint states a cause of action, and hence the court erred.
1. Two theories are urged to sustain the assertion that the complaint is good. It is first
insisted that, as it is alleged that James Wade was not a bona-fide resident of Washoe County,
Nevada, at the time he brought the divorce action, the complaint contained a sufficient
showing to sustain the contention that the court had no jurisdiction in the divorce
proceedings, and hence the decree of divorce is null and void. We are unable to agree with
this contention. The section of our statute upon which this question turns reads as follows:
Divorce from the bonds of matrimony may be obtained, by complaint under oath, to the
district court of the county in which the cause therefor shall have accrued, or in which the
defendant shall reside or be found, or in which the plaintiff shall reside, if the latter be either
the county in which the parties last cohabited, or in which the plaintiff shall have resided six
months before suit be brought. * * * (Stats. 1915, p. 26, sec.1.)
From a reading of this section, it is apparent that the district court of a county may acquire
jurisdiction of divorce actions, as said in Tiedemann v. Tiedemann, 36 Nev. 494, 137 Pac.
824: "When either of five different states of fact is shown to exist, to wit: {a) In which the
cause therefor shall have accrued; {b) in which the defendant shall reside; {c) in which
the defendant shall be found; {d) in which the plaintiff shall reside and the parties last
cohabited; {e) in which the plaintiff shall have resided six months before the suit was
brought"
41 Nev. 533, 536 (1918) Wade v. Wade
When either of five different states of fact is shown to exist, to wit: (a) In which the cause
therefor shall have accrued; (b) in which the defendant shall reside; (c) in which the
defendant shall be found; (d) in which the plaintiff shall reside and the parties last cohabited;
(e) in which the plaintiff shall have resided six months before the suit was brought
subject, however, to the objection that collusion between the parties existed, as pointed out
in the Tiedemann case. It nowhere appears from the complaint in the case at bar that Margaret
Wade, the plaintiff, who was the defendant in the divorce suit, was not a resident of Washoe
County, and was not found and served with a summons therein in the divorce action. Of
course, where residence on the part of the plaintiff is relied upon to give the court
jurisdiction, such residence, in good faith, must be shown to exist; but under our statue the
jurisdiction of the court may be made to depend upon other facts; and, as it is not shown by
the allegations of the complaint that the jurisdiction of the court in the divorce action was not
dependent upon some other fact than the residence of the plaintiff, James Wade, the
complaint in this action failed to state a cause of action.
2. But it is said that, conceding that the contention that the court in the divorce action was
without jurisdiction is without merit, the judgment should be reversed for the reason that the
complaint is good, in that it charges a conspiracy on the part of James Wade, the plaintiff in
the divorce action, and the attorney who acted for appellant in that action, to prevent
appellant from making her defense in that suit, and that pursuant to that conspiracy the
plaintiff in this suit was prevented from making her defense in the divorce suit. That portion
of the complaint which undertakes to allege such conspiracy charges:
On information and belief that said James Wade and one , an attorney at law of Reno,
Nevada, entered into a fraudulent and collusive arrangement, whereby said attorney was
to obtain authority from said Margaret Wade to act as her attorney in said divorce suit
and was to fail to make proper defense to the suit and permit said plaintiff, James Wade,
now deceased, to obtain a decree as sought in his complaint; that in pursuance of said
fraudulent and collusive agreement between said attorney and said James Wade, now
deceased, said attorney, on November 15, 1915, wrote this plaintiff at Port Ontario, New
York, advising her that her husband, James Wade, had brought a divorce suit against her
in the district court of Washoe County, State of Nevada, and offering her his services as
an attorney in said case, free of charge, although the said attorney had not been asked for
advice or opinion by said Margaret Wade, or by any one acting for her or in her behalf;
that said attorney fraudulently conducted the defense of the defendant Margaret Wade, in
the case of James Wade, plaintiff, v. Margaret Wade, defendant, in the Second judicial
district court of the State of Nevada, in and for Washoe County, in this, that he did not in
good faith present defendant's case to the court, and did not arrange for the appearance
in court of defendant nor give her an opportunity to testify personally in court; that he
misrepresented to the said defendant and to her attorney, Freelon J.
41 Nev. 533, 537 (1918) Wade v. Wade
into a fraudulent and collusive arrangement, whereby said attorney was to obtain authority
from said Margaret Wade to act as her attorney in said divorce suit and was to fail to make
proper defense to the suit and permit said plaintiff, James Wade, now deceased, to obtain a
decree as sought in his complaint; that in pursuance of said fraudulent and collusive
agreement between said attorney and said James Wade, now deceased, said attorney, on
November 15, 1915, wrote this plaintiff at Port Ontario, New York, advising her that her
husband, James Wade, had brought a divorce suit against her in the district court of Washoe
County, State of Nevada, and offering her his services as an attorney in said case, free of
charge, although the said attorney had not been asked for advice or opinion by said Margaret
Wade, or by any one acting for her or in her behalf; that said attorney fraudulently conducted
the defense of the defendant Margaret Wade, in the case of James Wade, plaintiff, v.
Margaret Wade, defendant, in the Second judicial district court of the State of Nevada, in and
for Washoe County, in this, that he did not in good faith present defendant's case to the court,
and did not arrange for the appearance in court of defendant nor give her an opportunity to
testify personally in court; that he misrepresented to the said defendant and to her attorney,
Freelon J. Davis, of Pulaski, Oswego County, New York, the situation with regard to the
divorce and what should be done or not done; that he connived and acted in collusion with
the said James Wade, now deceased, for the obtaining of the said decree of divorce, and that
he suppressed material evidence on behalf of this plaintiff, who was defendant in said divorce
proceedings, and neglected, failed, and refused to present the motion for a new trial and take
an appeal from the judgment of the court in said case, although he was expressly instructed to
do so by the said defendant and by her said attorney, Freelon J. Davis, and although he
advised the said defendant and the said Freelon J.
41 Nev. 533, 538 (1918) Wade v. Wade
Freelon J. Davis that the defendant's rights on motion for a new trial and on appeal were fully
protected by him, and that all necessary steps regarding the motion for a new trial and on
appeal had been taken by him; that in pursuance of said fraudulent and collusive agreement,
said attorney has failed to account to Margaret Wade, defendant in the said case of James
Wade v. Margaret Wade, brought in the Second judicial district court of the State of Nevada,
in and for Washoe County, or to here attorney, Freelon J. Davis, for $50 deposited and paid
by the plaintiff for depositions in said action taken in the State of New York, and for various
sums of alimony paid by the plaintiff to the said attorney, and by him to be paid to the said
defendant, or to her attorney, Freelon J. Davis; that this plaintiff acted in reliance upon the
advice given by said attorney, and fully trusted and believed him, and if she had been properly
represented and had been able to present her case before the court in proper fashion, and if
she had received the necessary funds to travel from her home in Port Ontario, N. Y., to the
City of Reno, Nevada, to testify in person in said case, a decree of divorce would not have
been granted the plaintiff; that it was solely on account of the said fraudulent and collusive
agreement between the said attorney and said James Wade and of the advice of said attorney
that his plaintiff was prevented from coming to Reno to testify in person in said divorce
proceedings; that this plaintiff is informed and believes, and therefore on such information
and belief alleges the fact to be, that if due diligence had been taken for the prosecution and
protection of her rights on motion for a new trial and on appeal, the said decree of divorce
would have been set aside and reversed by the Supreme Court of the State of Nevada; that the
plaintiff herein, defendant in said divorce proceedings, authorized and directed said attorney
to make a motion for a new trial in said case, and to take an appeal therein, and he informed
her that he was doing so, but that he did not take the proper or necessary steps, and on that
account she lost her right of motion for a new trial and her right of appeal."
41 Nev. 533, 539 (1918) Wade v. Wade
or necessary steps, and on that account she lost her right of motion for a new trial and her
right of appeal.
We do not think a cause of action is alleged in the complaint in the case at bar. That a
cause of action be alleged, it is not only necessary that facts be pleaded showing a conspiracy,
but in addition thereto facts must be pleaded showing that pursuant to such conspiracy
plaintiff was in fact prevented from making her defense in the divorce action. It is a universal
rule under the code system of pleading that facts must be alleged, and not conclusions, and
there is no exception to the rule in this kind of a case. (15 R. C. L. sec. 220, p. 768.)
Conceding, for the purposes of the case, that a conspiracy is sufficiently pleaded, there is no
allegation of facts showing that pursuant to such conspiracy the plaintiff was prevented from
making her defense. The statements in the complaint whereby it is sought to allege facts
showing that the plaintiff was prevented from making her defense because of such conspiracy
are:
That he (the attorney) suppressed material evidence on behalf of this plaintiff, who was
defendant in said divorce proceedings. * * * That if she had been properly represented and
had been able to present her case before the court in proper fashion, and if she had received
the necessary funds to travel from her home in Port Ontario, N. Y., to the city of Reno,
Nevada, to testify in person in said cause, a decree of divorce would not have been granted to
the plaintiff. * * * That it was solely on account of the said fraudulent and collusive
agreement between said attorney and said James Wade and of the advice of the said attorney
that this plaintiff was prevented from coming to Reno to testify in person in said divorce
proceeding.
These are all mere statements of conclusions. It takes no analysis of them to show that they
fall far short of allegations of fact. To say that material evidence was suppressed contains two
conclusions: (1) That of suppression; and (2) that the evidence was material. If the facts
were alleged, the court might conclude that the evidence in question was not material,
and that it was not suppressed.
41 Nev. 533, 540 (1918) Wade v. Wade
the facts were alleged, the court might conclude that the evidence in question was not
material, and that it was not suppressed. To say that it was solely on account of a fraudulent
and collusive agreement that plaintiff was prevented from coming to Reno to testify is equally
bad. The other statement, to the effect that plaintiff would not have been granted a divorce
could plaintiff have testified in person, does not deserve to be raised to the dignity of a
conclusion. It would be safer to say that it is a guess at what the jury and court would have
done in case of her presence.
Of course, if there were sufficient allegations in the complaint to constitute a cause of
action, notwithstanding the presence of the bad ones, the complaint would be good; but such
is not the fact.
Being of the opinion that the complaint fails to state a cause of action, it is ordered that the
judgment appealed from be affirmed.
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