Shay v. Rinehart & Dennis Co., Inc.

Decision Date22 January 1935
Docket Number8082.
Citation178 S.E. 272,116 W.Va. 24
PartiesSHAY et al. v. RINEHART & DENNIS CO., Inc., et al.
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court

Submitted January 15, 1935.

Syllabus by the Court.

The action of a trial court in granting or refusing a change of venue, though reviewable when an appealable order has been entered, is not alone reviewable.

Error to Circuit Court, Fayette County.

Action by Donald J. Shay and others against the Rinehart & Dennis Company, Incorporated, and others. To review an order granting change of venue, defendants bring error.

Error proceedings dismissed.

Brown Jackson & Knight, of Charleston, and W. L. Lee and Dillon Mahan & White, all of Fayetteville, for plaintiffs in error.

T. C Townsend, E. S. Bock and Ben Moore, all of Charleston, for defendants in error.

MAXWELL Judge.

On writ of error awarded the defendants, there is attempted to be presented for review the action of the circuit court of Fayette County transferring certain law actions to Kanawha County for trial.

Sixty cases were transferred. About two hundred remain in Fayette. All are actions for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the respective plaintiffs on account of their contracting, through negligence of the defendants and their agents, the disease, silicosis, while they were employees of the defendant, Rinehart & Dennis Company, Inc. in the construction of a tunnel for the transportation of water incident to a power project in Fayette County of defendant, New-Kanawha Power Company, a corporation.

The order granting a change of venue was based on petition of Donald J. Shay and fifty-nine other plaintiffs alleging, first, great delay in reaching trial on account of the pendency of the large number of almost identical cases in the circuit court of Fayette County; and, second, disagreement of the juries in two of such cases already tried in said court.

The initial question is whether an order granting change of venue, standing alone, is reviewable by an appellate court. To this inquiry, for reasons to be stated, the answer must be negative.

Our statute on removal of causes authorizes change of venue "for good cause shown." Code, 56-9-1. Though the statute was amplified by the Code of 1931, it is basically the same as it had been for decades prior to the re-enactment. In granting or refusing change of venue, a trial court exercises a reviewable discretion. Such review has frequently been made by this court, but always in cases wherein there was final judgment. Ingersoll v. Wilson, 2 W. Va. 59; Pittsburgh, W. & K. Railroad Co. v. Applegate, 21 W.Va. 172; State v. Sheppard, 49 W.Va. 582, 39 S.E. 676; State v. Weisengoff, 85 W.Va. 271, 101 S.E. 450; State v. Powers, 91 W.Va. 737, 113 S.E. 912; Proudfoot v. Transportation Co., 100 W.Va. 733, 132 S.E. 746; Hatfield v. Hatfield, 109 W.Va. 212, 153 S.E. 493.

It is the general rule of other jurisdictions that the action of a trial court in granting or refusing a change of venue does not alone afford initial basis for review. 3 Corpus Juris, p. 473; Brust v. Bank, 176 Wis. 14, 186 N.W. 214; Barry v. District Court, 167 Iowa 306, 149 N.W. 449; Jones v. Ins. Co., 83 Kan. 682, 112 P. 826; Taylor v. Grand Lodge, 98 Minn. 36, 107 N.W. 545.

But we look not alone to the decisions of other jurisdictions in respect of this matter. Other considerations likewise are cogent in support of the view herein maintained.

The statute prescribing the appellate jurisdiction of this court limits the right of review (except in specified instances) to matters wherein there has been entered by the trial court "a final judgment, decree or order." Code, 58-5-1. An order granting or refusing a change of venue does not constitute a case coming...

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