State ex rel. Eder v. Searles

Decision Date20 December 1918
Docket NumberNo. 21,143.,21,143.
Citation141 Minn. 267
PartiesSTATE EX REL. JAKE EDER AND ANOTHER v. J. N. SEARLES AND ANOTHER.<SMALL><SUP>1</SUP></SMALL>
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

Clifford L. Hilton, Attorney General, Henry C. Flannery, Assistant Attorney General, and Edwin D. Buffington, for respondents.

DIBELL, J.

Certiorari to the district court of Washington county to review its order adjudging the relators guilty of contempt.

1. In a proceeding in mandamus on the relation of the Attorney General the Four Lakes Rural Telephone Company, a copartnership, was directed to furnish one Henry Sullwold the same telephone facilities and service that it furnished others similarly situated. See State v. Four Lakes R. Tel. Co. supra, page 124, 169 N. W. 480. The relators Jake Eder and Max Krause are members of the copartnership, the former being designated president and the latter secretary. The company did not furnish service as directed and upon an order to show cause the relators were adjudged in contempt and were fined $50 each and were ordered committed to the county jail until they furnished the service directed not exceeding six months.

This order is of a dual character. So far as it imposes imprisonment to coerce obedience to the writ and the furnishing of service it is a remedy for the benefit of a party; and so far as it imposes a fine it is in vindication of the authority of the court and is a punishment for a contempt criminal or quasi-criminal in character. In the first aspect it is reviewable on appeal; in the latter on certiorari, and there is therefore before us only the question of the propriety of the imposition of a fine. State v. Willis, 61 Minn. 120, 63 N. W. 169; State v. Leftwich, 41 Minn. 42, 42 N. W. 598; In re Fanning, 40 Minn. 4, 41 N. W. 1076; Deppe v. Ford, 89 Minn. 253, 94 N. W. 679; Red River P. G. Assn. v. Bernardy, 128 Minn. 153, 150 N. W. 383.

2. It is provided by G. S. 1913, § 8355, that before a constructive contempt can be punished by imprisonment or by a fine exceeding fifty dollars it must appear that the right or remedy of a party was defeated or prejudiced thereby; and by G. S. 1913, § 8365, it is provided that when the contempt consists in the omission to perform that which the party adjudged in contempt can yet perform he may be imprisoned until he performs.

As noted before the order gives a coercive remedy to the party wronged and punishment of the relators for their criminal or quasi-criminal contempt. The fine was the punishment, and without a showing that a right or remedy was defeated or prejudiced, and none was found, the amount of it could not exceed fifty dollars. State v. Miesen, 98 Minn. 19, 106 N. W. 1134, 108 N. W. 513. The imprisonment was for purposes of coercion and was authorized by section 8365. The act of the relators in disobeying the judgment in mandamus has resulted in two consequences: One the imposition of a fine as authorized by section 8355, and the other the imposition of imprisonment terminable upon compliance with the writ as authorized by section 8365. There has not been a fine nor an imprisonment forbidden by section 8355. See Hurd v. Hurd, 63 Minn. 443, 65 N. W. 728.

3. At the hearing the relators offered no testimony. It is their contention that their ability to comply with the writ must be shown affirmatively before they can be found in contempt. This contention we do not sustain.

It is not necessary to enter upon a discussion of the burden of proof and the presumption of innocence in the various classes of criminal or quasi-criminal contempt....

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