Tompson v. Huron Lumber Co.

Citation32 P. 536,5 Wash. 527
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court of Washington
Decision Date18 January 1893
PartiesTOMPSON v. HURON LUMBER CO., (GARRETSON, WOODRUFF, PRATT CO. ET AL., INTERVENERS.

Appeal from superior court, King county; I. J. Lichtenberg, Judge.

Action by Stanley P. Tompson, trustee, against the Huron Lumber Company. The Garretson, Woodruff, Pratt Company et al intervened. Pending the action, F. A. Alexander was appointed receiver of the Huron Lumber Company. From a judgment entered on the report of a referee fixing the receiver's compensation, plaintiff appeals, and the receiver moves to strike out the statement of facts, and to dismiss the appeal. Motions denied. Judgment reversed.

John P. Gale, John P. Fay, C. H. Gest, and J. Park Henderson, for appellant.

Preston Albertson & Donworth, for appellee.

SCOTT J.

In January, 1891, the respondent Alexander was appointed receiver of all the property of the Huron Lumber Company in an action in which appellant was plaintiff and the Huron Lumber Company defendant. Respondent qualified, and entered upon his duties as such receiver, and has continued in the exercise thereof. In January, 1892, he petitioned the superior court of King county to settle and determine his compensation for services rendered up to that time. A referee was appointed by the court for the purpose of taking testimony, and finding therefrom the compensation to be paid and reporting his findings of fact and conclusions of law to the court. In accordance therewith testimony was taken, and findings made and reported, to which appellant excepted. The exceptions were overruled, and judgment entered in favor of the respondent for the amount found to be just compensation. It was fixed at the rate of $450 a month for the first month, $400 a month for the next five months, and $300 a month thereafter to the time of the referee's report. The respondent moves to strike the statement of facts upon the following grounds: First, because the notice of the application to settle the statement was made returnable in a shorter time than that prescribed by the statute, the notice having been served on May 20, 1892, and the time specified for the hearing being on May 31st. Respondent claims that he was not allowed 10 days, as the tenth day, May 30, 1892, was a legal holiday, and that he should have been allowed all of the 31st, and that the statement of facts could not be legally certified until June 1st. Second. Because no notice was given to the receiver of the application to settle said statement, the notice served being addressed to the parties to the action, and not to the receiver. Third. Because the judge's certificate does not state that the statement contains all the material facts in the cause. The certificate says it contains all the material facts in the proceeding to determine the compensation of the receiver. Fourth. Because the purported statement of facts does not contain all matters required by the statute in causes of equitable cognizance, and that it does not contain, or purport to contain, the exceptions taken to the reception or rejection of testimony.

As to the first objection, we are of the opinion that the notice was sufficient. The statute provides that the time shall be computed by excluding the first and including the last day, and that, if the last day is a holiday, then this is also excluded. This would allow 10 full days, excluding May 30th.

The fact that the notice was entitled in the original action seems to us unimportant. Respondent's attorneys were served, and it also appears that they joined without objection in certain stipulations entered into in connection with the statement of facts before and after the settlement of the statement. There was, in reality, no cause pending in the court to which the receiver was a party. The matter to be determined-the amount of his compensation-was a proceeding in the original action.

The third ground is embraced in a subsequent motion, wherein respondent moves to dismiss the appeal, and will be discussed there.

As to the fourth ground, the certificate that the statement contains all the material facts in a cause is sufficient when it does not appear that any material matter has been omitted from the statement.

The motion to dismiss the appeal is based upon the ground that this court has no jurisdiction of the matter appealed from because the order fixing the compensation of the receiver in said action is not a final judgment, order, or decree from which an appeal lies to this court, and because the fixing of the compensation of the receiver is a matter entirely within the discretion of the court by which he was appointed. While this is a proceeding in the original action, yet we are of the opinion that it is a distinct proceeding in itself, and that the order made with reference to the compensation of the receiver is a final one in so far as the amount allowed is involved. This precise point was decided in the case of ...

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