Wynne v. Illinois Central Railroad
Wynne v. Illinois Central Railroad
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a petition presented by counsel for the Illinois Central Railroad Company to the judges of this court at chambers, for the issuance of a writ of supersedeas.
It appears from the petition that there is pending in the circuit court of Copiah county a cause wherein the Illinois Central Railroad Company is defendant, and L. B. Wynne el al. are plaintiffs; that on motion of plaintiffs, an order has been entered by that court, under section 1003 of the Code, requiring the defendant to have certain of its books, papers, documents, etc.; at ITazlehurst, Mississippi, on November 26, 1914, at-ten o’clock a. m., for the inspection of the plaintiffs, and to allow them a reasonable time within which to malte this inspection, and such copies thereof as they may desire. The petition then alleged that this order was void, for the reason that the circuit judge exceeded his authority in making it, setting- forth particularly wherein this authority had been exceeded, and prayed that this order be either superseded in whole or modified in part.
Moreover, the rule is that:
“A proceeding in supersedeas should be granted out of the court where the record upon which it is procured remains, or be returnable in the same court. It cannot be granted out of any court returnable in the same court where the record upon which it is returnable is not there. 37 Cyc. 600; 20 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 1276; Payne v. Thompson, 48 Ala. 536.
Petition denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Wynne v. Illinois Central Railroad Company
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- Syllabus
- 1. Supersedeas. Jurisdiction. Supreme court. Under Code 1906, section 992, so providing, the judges of the supreme court may severally issue writs of supersedeas when the same may be properly granted according to right and justice, returnable to any court, and under section 4908, authorizing them severally to grant appeals from interlocutory decrees in chancery, when the appeal is necessary to settle the principles of the case, and has been refused, and to allow an appeal or supersedeas from final judgment to any circuit court, or a final decree of a chancery court, the supreme court can only issue supersedeas •when necessary, in aid oí its appellate jurisdiction, and hence was without authority to issue supersedeas against an order of the circuit court, made under section 1003, requiring petitioner to produce its boohs, for inspection of plaintiff in an action against it, since the petition, in effect, was an indirect appeal from the order of the circuit court for which no direct appeal was provided by law. 2. Supersedeas. Jurisdiction. A proceeding in supersedeas should be granted out of the court where the record, upon which it is procured remains, or be returnable to the same court. It cannot be granted out of any court, returnable in the same court, where the record, upon which it is returnable, is not there.