State ex rel. Whitcomb v. Seaton
Decision Date | 03 October 1883 |
Citation | 16 N.W. 736,61 Iowa 560 |
Parties | STATE, EX REL. WHITCOMB, v. SEATON, SHERIFF |
Court | Iowa Supreme Court |
Appeal from a decision of Justice Rothrock, at Chambers.
MR JUSTICE ROTHROCK, of this court, issued a writ of habeas corpus directed to the defendant, the sheriff of Linn county who, it is alleged in the petition, illegally restrained the petitioner of his liberty in the jail of the county. Upon the return of the writ, the proceedings were dismissed, and the petitioner was remanded to the custody of the defendant. The petitioner appeals. The facts of the case are stated in the opinion.
AFFIRMED.
W. G Thompson and J. B. Youny, for appellant.
Geo. W. Wilson, for appellee.
OPINION
The record discloses the following facts: The relator, C. H. Whitcomb, brought an action in replevin in the district court of Linn county, against Gray & Beebe, to recover certain property levied upon by the sheriff of Linn county, under an execution issued upon a judgment in favor of Gray & Beebe, and against one Jaquith. It appears that the issues in that case involved the question of the ownership of the property, the question being as to whether it belonged to the relator in this case, or to Jaquith. While the action of replevin was pending, the defendants therein, Gray & Beebe, filed a petition with J. M. Gray, a justice of the peace of Linn county, who is the husband of Gray, one of the defendants in the action of replevin, reciting the pendency of that action, and alleging "that the petitioners, in order to prepare their answer as defendants, and properly prepare their defense in said action, desire the answer under oath of said C. H. Whitcomb to the following questions, and also answers to such further questions as such answers may suggest." Eighteen questions are given, which Whitcomb is desired to answer. They relate to his ownership of the property, his alleged purchase and payment, the manner in which he conducted his business, and other matters which would probably be admissible in evidence in an action wherein the title of property would be questioned on the ground of fraud. The petition was amended so as to show that it was intended by petitioners "for the further purpose of determining whether to abandon their defense or prosecute the same in the action in the district court, wherein the said C. H. Whitcomb is plaintiff and your petitioners are defendants, and, perhaps, to use the same as testimony in the trial of said cause." Upon the petition the justice of the peace issued a subpoena requiring Whitcomb to appear before him and "make his affidavit or give his deposition," as required in the petition. On the return day of the subpoena, Whitcomb appeared and made objections to the proceedings on the following grounds:
These objections were overruled, as well as an application for a change of venue, on the ground of the relation which the justice sustained to one of the parties, and an application for an adjournment of the case to a future day. Whitcomb refused to be sworn and give his affidavit or deposition as sought in the petition, and thereupon the justice held that he was in contempt, and ordered him to be committed to the jail of the county "until he should submit to be sworn and testify." A mittimus was issued upon this order, whereon Whitcomb was committed to the custody of the defendant, the sheriff of the county, and lodged in jail. The legality of this imprisonment is presented for our determination upon the record before us. We cannot, in a habeas corpus proceeding, review the order of imprisonment for contempt, and reverse, unless the act constituting the alleged contempt was such that we can pronounce as a matter of law that it was not a contempt. If, for instance, the justice had no authority to subpoena this plaintiff, and was acting without jurisdiction in doing so, then what he did was done merely as an individual, and whatever contempt there was, if it could be called such, not being for judicial authority, would not be such as the law recognizes and punishes. The relator claims that such is precisely this case. Whether he is correct depends upon the construction which should be put upon those sections of the Code under which the justice undertook to act. Those sections, 3692 and 3693, are in these words: etc. The foregoing provisions are contained under the "title of Evidence," and the plaintiff insists that they can have no application where it appears upon the face of the petition filed with the justice, as he says it does in this case, that the affidavit, if obtained, cannot be used as evidence. He urges upon our consideration the great and irreparable injury that might be done to individuals, if they could be made to disclose, under the form of an affidavit, all kinds of information, not proper as evidence in any matter, provided only some justice of the peace could be made to think that it was legal and proper, and whose error could be corrected only after all the injury had been done. Without denying that there is considerable force in this position, we have to say that it appears to us that the question is not an open one. If it were, the writer is in great doubt whether he would not be inclined to hold the plaintiff's position correct. But we are not able to see how we could so hold now, without substantially overruling Robb v. McDonald, 29 Iowa 330. It is true, it was not distinctly held in that case that the affidavit sought was useless in a legal point of view. But the decision is not less authoritative in the case at bar; because it was distinctly held that it was immaterial whether it was useless or not. The ruling is that the justice has full power to pass on the question of the legality and propriety of the affidavit sought, and was not without jurisdiction to issue the subpoena, though, as a matter of law, it appeared upon the face of the petition for the affidavit that it could not, when taken, have any legal use. That decision has stood for many years, and commitments have doubtless been made under it which would render the parties committing liable for false imprisonment, if the section does not express the law, and if the law is as the plaintiff contends.
BECK J., dissenting. I am unable to concur in the foregoing opinion, and will now present briefly the grounds of my dissent:
I. The decisive question in the case is this: Did the justice issuing the mittimus have jurisdiction in the case? A justice of the peace, it may be conceded, has jurisdiction to commit one guilty of a contempt by refusing to obey an order lawfully made in a case wherein he has jurisdiction of the subject matter in controversy, and of the...
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