62 F.2d 1018 | 5th Cir. | 1933
Wilson & Toomer Fertilizer Company on August 22, 1924, sued American Cyanamid Company at law to recover overcharges beginning in 1918 on a written contract for the sale of phosphate rock made with Amalgamated Phosphate Company, claiming that the Cyanamid Company had become bound by adoption, or by estoppel to deny adoption, of the Amalgamated Company’s contract. On the first trial the verdict was directed for the Cyanamid Company, and tho direction reversed. (C. C. A.) 33 F.(2d) 812. On a second trial the verdict was directed the other way, and again reversed. (C. C. A.) 51 F.(2d) 665. Prior to a third trial the Cyanamid Company without any action by the judge filed under 28 USCA § 398 an equitable plea with many exhibits, which alleges a fraud of which Wilson & Toomer Company ia seeking to he the beneficiary, and circumstances which are claimed to amount to estoppel and such laehes as would in equity prevent suit. The prayer is that the court sitting as chancellor will take jurisdiction, require a reply as provided by statute, and on final trial will annul and cancel tho plaintiff's claim and permanently enjoin prosecution of it; and pending such determination as chancellor that the proceedings on the law side of the cause be suspended as though enjoined by a bill in equity. At the time the ease stood for trial the equitable plea was first presented to the judge and a motion was made to stay the proceedings at law. In opposition it was urged that filing of the plea had not been allowed, that it set up no good matter of defense which is not good also at law, and was itself defeated by laches. The court thought the plea not timely filed, but more especially because the matter of it was plead-able at law, overruled the motion to stay the trial. The petition for appeal and the order allowing it recite that the equitable plea was dismissed in addition- to the refusal of the stay, but we find no such ruling in the record. The court, however, on allowing the appeal, did by way of supersedeas suspend further proceedings on the giving of a damage bond as a condition thereof.
Since the order appealed from is not a final judgment, nor in form one refusing an injunction, a doubt suggests itself as to our jurisdiction to review it before the case is ended in the trial court. In Liberty Oil Co. v. Condon, 260 U. S. 235, 43 S. Ct. 118, 67 L.
We see no point to the contention that the plea was bad because filed without the previous sanction of the court. It does not, however, by its mere filing operate to stay the proceedings at law. To have this effect an allowance by the court and an order of stay is needful, just as the mere filing of a bill to enjoin under the old practice would be without effect until an order of injunction was made. Nor do we think the fact that the plea was first presented to the court on the very eve of trial at law and after there had been previous trials prevents its due consideration. Under the old practice proceedings at law could be enjoined by a defendant in order to assert a good equitable defense at any stage, either to stay trial, to stay execution, or sometimes to stay the money in the sheriff’s hands or his execution of a writ of possession. Burnes v. Scott, 117 U. S. at page 588, 6 S. Ct. 865, 29 L. Ed. 991; Pollock v. Gilbert, 16 Ga. 398, 60 Am. Dec. 732. Under the statute allowing the filing of equitable defenses there.may be a duty to present them before the case is finally decided on pain of their being considered res judicata, but we have no doubt that this plea was presented in time to be considered. In its consideration, however, the lapse of time before its presentation may enter as an element of laches. Defensive equities are no better under the statute than they would have been before its passage. Laches is as good an ob-* jection to an equitable plea as it would have been to a bill to enjoin. And so is the objection founded on 28 USCA § 384 that there is a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law. The plaintiff suing at law is not to be deprived of his constitutional right to a jury trial and shifted into equity because of a defense which can be made fully effective as a defense at law. American Mills Co. v. American Surety Co., 260 U. S. 360, 43 S. Ct. 149, 67 L. Ed. 306, Henrietta Mills v. Rutherford County, N. C., 281 U. S. 121, 50 S. Ct. 270, 74 L. Ed. 737. We agree with the court below that the equitable defense sought to be made in this case falls before these two objections. On reading it and its exhibits, one familiar with the former trials is at once impressed that there is little in it that is new, and nothing that has by the last opinion of this court, which constitutes the law of the ease for its next trial, been denied effect at law because of its equitable nature. It was expressly held on authority cited (to which may be added Dickerson v. Colgrove, 100 U. S. 580, 25 L. Ed. 618), that law courts will enforce so-called equitable estoppels. The holding applies equally to an estoppel by conduct of either party. This amounts to saying that the jurisdiction over sueh estoppels at law and in equity is concurrent, as it is over questions of fraud. Equity is not over objection to assume jurisdiction because of
Judgment affirmed.