State ex rel. Barnett v. Fifth Judicial District Court
State ex rel. Barnett v. Fifth Judicial District Court
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
Brennan recovered judgment against Raphael in the justice’s court for the sum of two hundred and twenty-eight dollars and fifty cents and costs, upon a moneyed demand. Raphael appealed to the district court. The case was called for trial upon the twenty-seventh day of July, whereupon counsel for appellant moved a stay of proceedings upon the ground that since the appeal had been taken his client had been adjudged an insolvent, under the insolvency laws of the state, by the seventh judicial district court. The motion was denied because of the incompetency of the evidence by which the fact was sought to have been established, the only evidence being a printed slip, presumably taken from the newspaper in which the order for the meeting of creditors was published, as provided in section eight of the act for the relief of insolvent debtors. (Stat. 1881, 125.) A motion to dismiss the appeal was then made and sustained, and the case dismissed. Subsequently the court took under advisement a motion for judgment for damages and costs, and two days thereafter sustained this motion, awarding plaintiff ten per cent, of the amount of the judgment rendered by the justice as damages. Judgment was accordingly entered dismissing the appeal, affirming the judgment of the justice, with the damages sustained by reason of the appeal, and costs. Certiorari is brought for the purpose of reviewing these proceedings.
1. The relator relies upon the order staying proceedings as divesting the district court of jurisdiction. The cases of
The object of-the provision requiring that all proceedings against the debtor shall be stayed, is to preserve the estate of the insolvent for proportionate distribution among his creditors, and to protect him against needless lawsuits. The court in which the insolvency proceedings are instituted has control of the estate, and will protect it against creditors seeking to enforce the collection of their claims in any manner calculated to interfere with the operation of the insolvency law. Litigation is therefore, in general,
2. After dismissing the appeal the court affirmed the judgment rendered by the justice, with damages and costs. The appeal alone had given the court jurisdiction of the case. By dismissing it, the court divested itself of authority to proceed further, except to include costs on dismissal, and left the judgment of the justice in full force, save as affected by the order staying px-oceedings.
The review upon certiorari is confined to the question of jurisdiction, and no other matter appearing in the record has been considered. It is proper to state, however, that district courts are not authorized to impose damages for frivolous appeals, nor to directly, and without trial, reverse or affirm judgments brought by appeal from justices’ courts. Such cases must be tried anew. (Section 1643, Comp. Laws.)
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE OF NEVADA, ex rel. THOMAS BARNETT, ASSIGNEE, Relator v. FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
- Status
- Published