Spencer v. McStocker
Spencer v. McStocker
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
Petitioner applied for a writ of mandamns to compel respondent to grant a Hawaiian register for the ship “Star of France” which was alleged 'in th© petition to he npon the high seas and bound for the port of Honolulu. A.n alternative writ was issued directing respondent to grant the register or show canse to the contrary. Respondent answered alleging, among other things, that the ship was on the high seas and had not yet arrived at the port of Honolulu. Petitioner moved to quash the answer for insufficiency among other reasons. This motion was overruled on the ground that respondent could not he required to grant a register until the vessel arrived. Petitioner appealed
If it had appeared from the allegations of the answer alone that petitioner was not entitled to a peremptory writ-, the overruling of his motion to quash the answer would clearly be interlocutory and would not entitle respondent to a final decree, for petitioner would then be entitled to traverse the allegations of the answer. In such cases doubtless the judge might properly allow a discontinuance at that stage of the case. But in the present case it appears from the allegations of the petition itself that the petitioner is not entitled to the writ. He could not, therefore, make an issue of fact. He could not deny the truth of the remaining allegations of the answer and go to trial on them, for the single allegation that the ship was on the high seas had been held a sufficient bar, and he could not deny the truth of that for he had himself made the same allegation in his petition. The decision overruling the motion to quash the return was, it is true, interlocutory in a certain sense. -It was interlocutory in form. But it really disposed of the whole case. The decision was in effect that on the undisputed facts the writ ought not to be issued. The petitioner could not discontinue as of right at that stage. "Whether the judge in his discretion might properly allow a discontinuance is not so clear. On the one hand the result apparently would be the same whether a discontinuance were granted the petitioner or a decree of dismissal were granted the respondent. Bor in either case the petitioner might file another petition when the ship arrived, and perhaps therefore the respondent could not be said to be preju
The orders appealed from are reversed and the casei is remitted to the circuit judge for such further action as may be proper in accordance with the foregoing views.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF LINCOLN D. SPENCER FOR A WRIT OF MANDAMUS AGAINST F. B. McSTOCKER, Collector-General of Customs
- Status
- Published