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Clark v. Clayton

Supreme Court of California
Nov 1, 1882
61 Cal. 634 (Cal. 1882)

Summary

In Clark v. Clayton, 61 Cal. 634, we held that an action brought upon an undertaking for an injunction after the dissolution of the injunction, but before the final determination of the action in which the injunction was obtained, was prematurely brought.

Summary of this case from Dougherty v. Dore

Opinion

[Syllabus Material] [Syllabus Material]          Department Two

         Appeal by plaintiff from the judgment of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco. Evans, J.

         Action upon an undertaking for injunction. The plaintiff's bill of exceptions shows the following facts: On the thirtieth day of January, 1872, an action was brought by John Nichol against John W. Littlefield and others, in the Fifteenth District Court, to enjoin them from the commission of certain acts, and on the execution of the undertaking sued on in this action a preliminary injunction was granted. The undertaking obligated the defendants to pay to the parties enjoined such damages * * * if the said District Court finally decided that the plaintiff (Nichol) was not entitled thereto. Prior to the commencement of this action an assignment was made to the plaintiff herein, by Littlefield, of the undertaking, and all rights of action thereon. On February 24, 1876, the following proceedings were had and orders made in the action of Nichol v. Littlefield:

         " This cause coming on in its order for trial--J. M. Sewell, Esq., appearing for the plaintiff, and B. S. Brooks, Esq., for defendants--and after hearing evidence, oral and documentary, the defendant's counsel moved the Court to dissolve the injunction heretofore issued herein; and plaintiff's counsel not opposing, the motion was granted. And it is ordered that the said injunction be and the same is hereby dissolved; and thereupon, by consent of counsel, the trial of this cause is continued for the term."

         In the present action counsel for plaintiff admitted to the Court that the suit of John Nichol v. John W. Littlefield et al. had not been finally disposed of, but was still pending. The plaintiff then rested.

         The counsel for defendant then moved that the plaintiff be nonsuited, and the cause dismissed, because the evidence introduced by plaintiff did not prove, or tend to prove, that the said District Court had finally decided that the said plaintiff in the said suit of Nichol v. Littlefield et al. was not entitled to the said injunction, and that said action in which said injunction issued was still pending and undetermined; and, after hearing counsel for plaintiff and defendants, the Court sustained the said motion and nonsuited the plaintiff, and ordered the cause to be dismissed; to which ruling and action of the said Court plaintiff duly excepted, and his exception was noted.

         COUNSEL

         We do not question that ordinarily the plaintiff in a suit upon an injunction undertaking must show a final judgment. But that is not the universal rule. The mere dissolution of the injunction upon special motion made upon answer or affidavits, where there is no opportunity to cross-examine witnesses or to introduce rebutting evidence, is not a final determination that the plaintiff was not entitled to his injunction. That is the condition of the undertaking, and, of course, it must be met. But when the case comes on for trial, and the plaintiff introduces his evidence, oral and documentary, and thereupon the defendants' counsel move that the injunction be dissolved, and the plaintiff's counsel does not oppose, but concedes the propriety of the motion, and the Court thereupon grants it, we submit, that in such a case, as the Supreme Court said in Fowler v. Frisbie , 37 Cal. 35, the evidence is sufficient to show prima facie that the Court had finally determined that question.

         In the case cited, the Supreme Court says: " But as we construe the order it is prima facie, at least, an adjudication that there was no foundation for the injunction, and that it ought not to have issued. If the fact was otherwise, it was incumbent on the defendants to see that the order contained proper recitals showing that the injunction was dissolved for other reasons, or to have made the fact appear in proper method. Standing alone, and without explanation, the order was an adjudication that the injunction ought not to have issued." (See also Dowling v. Polack , 18 Cal. 625.)

         A decree entered by consent of counsel is as binding upon the client as a decree entered after resistance. (Holmes v. Rogers , 13 Cal. 191; Gregory v. Haynes , 13 id. 591.) The order made by the Court dissolving the injunction, plaintiff's counsel consenting, is a bar to a renewal of the application, and renders the order conclusive and final. (Merritt v. Campbell , 47 id. 543.) After an injunction has been voluntarily dissolved, it can not be renewed without new and special reasons. (Levingston v. Gibbons, 5 Johns. Ch. 250.)

          B. S. Brooks, for Appellant.

          Flournoy, Mhoon & Flournoy, for Respondents.


         Can the plaintiffs sue until the final determination of the case of Nichol v. Littlefield? We think he clearly can not. The undertaking is statutory, and the liability is only on condition that " the Court finally decide that the plaintiff was not entitled thereto." ( C. C. P., § 529.)

         Now, was the interlocutory order made on the twenty-fourth of February, 1876, the final decision contemplated by the statute? Was it indeed more final than that portion of the same order continuing the cause for the term?

         Is there anything extraordinary in the case at bar which takes it out of the rule so correctly stated by appellant's counsel? If so, what is it? He further says inferentially, that there are exceptions to the rule, and the case at bar is such an exception, and cites Fowler v. Frisbie , 37 Cal. 35, in which the order dissolving the injunction was made at the trial, and though no judgment was offered, there was no showing that the case was not finally decided. There is not even a distant analogy between the two cases. And further to show that the case at bar is an exception to the rule above stated, and is subject to the extraordinary conditions where a final judgment may be dispensed with, he cites Dowling v. Polack , 18 id. 626. In this last case, there was a judgment of dismissal of the case before the suit on the undertaking was brought, and the question was whether such judgment was a final decision as to the injunction. Held: " In effect, a dismissal is a final judgment in favor of the defendants." (Id. 629.)

         Whatever reasons counsel may have given to sustain his claim that the case at bar is not within the rule stated by him, the only authorities he has cited on this point are the two cases, Dowling v. Polack, and Fowler v. Frisbie, in neither of which was the injunction suit pending at the time the action was brought on the undertaking.

         The order was not a judgment, final or otherwise. (Freeman on Judgments, § 15.) But was merely an interlocutory order. ( C. C. P., § 1003.) And subject, at any time before the case was finally disposed of, to be vacated or modified on motion. (Templeton v. Twelfth Dist. Ct. , 47 Cal. 70.)

         To have given the plaintiff a right of action on this bond " the Court must decide that the plaintiff was not entitled to the order (injunction). This must be a final decision; that is, made at the termination of the case by a decree or judgment therein, or by the voluntary discontinuance of the suit." (Shearman v. N. Y. Central Mills, 11 How. Pr. 269.) And this rule is quoted by the Court in Dowling v. Polack , 18 Cal. 628, of the opinion.

         With all his acknowledged learning and industry, counsel has not cited a single case where an obligee in an injunction bond has been permitted to sue on the bond before the final termination of the suit in which the bond was given. He can not, in our opinion, find such a case, and for the obvious reason that the Court, although it had dissolved an injunction by an interlocutory order, might renew it, and make it perpetual in the final judgment in the case. (Hicks v. Compton , 18 Cal. 206; Grinter v. Compton, id. 210; Bentley v. Joslin, Hempst. 218; Fanning v. Dunham, 4 Johns. Ch. 36; S. C., 9 Am. Dec. 283; James v. Downes, 18 Ves. Jr. 522.)

         An action on an undertaking given for an injunction, can not be maintained until the action in which the injunction issued is disposed of by a final decree or judgment. (2 High on Inj., § 1649; Bemis v. Gannett, 8 Neb. 236; Gray v. Veirs , 33 Md. 159; Penny v. Holberg , 53 Miss. 567; Thompson v. McNair , 64 N.C. 448; White v. Clay's Ex'rs, 7 Leigh., 68; Anderson v. Coleman , 56 Cal. 124, concurring opinion.)

         OPINION          The Court:

         In this cause we are of opinion that the action was prematurely brought, and the nonsuit was properly granted.

         Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Clark v. Clayton

Supreme Court of California
Nov 1, 1882
61 Cal. 634 (Cal. 1882)

In Clark v. Clayton, 61 Cal. 634, we held that an action brought upon an undertaking for an injunction after the dissolution of the injunction, but before the final determination of the action in which the injunction was obtained, was prematurely brought.

Summary of this case from Dougherty v. Dore
Case details for

Clark v. Clayton

Case Details

Full title:WILLIAM H. CLARK v. CHARLES CLAYTON et al.

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Nov 1, 1882

Citations

61 Cal. 634 (Cal. 1882)

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