251 F. 345 | W.D. Tex. | 1918
(after stating the facts as above). The question raised by motion of the defendant is whether or not, by reason of conflict of jurisdiction between this court and the stale court, this case should be postponed until after a final decision therein in the state court.
This is not an action purely and simply in personam, as, for instance, an action for debt, in which both courts could properly proceed to judgment without conflict one with the other; but in both courts it involves specific property as its subject-matter. In both courts it calls for an adjudication of title and of the right of possession. In the state court, the plaintiff prays for a mandatory injunction, the effect of which would be to dispossess the defendant, and the defendant asks and has .already obtained a temporary injunction for the maintenance of its
This rule is founded upon comity and is essential to the orderly administration of justice, and to prevent unseemly conflict between courts. The wisdom and necessity of this rule is well illustrated in the instant case. The state court by writ of temporary injunction has restrained the plaintiff from going upon the property in controversy and from interfering with certain improvements thereon, pending the final determination of the case. The complainant in this court, substantially the same as the party plaintiff in the state court, is asking this court to issue a mandatory injunction against the defendant, requiring it to remove said improvements — to do the very thing complainant is enjoined from doing.
If this case should now be tried in this court, and the mandatory injunction granted as prayed for by complainant, a serious conflict of proceedings between the two courts would occur. These considerations, I think, are sufficient to authorize and require the court to sustain the defendant’s motion to postpone this case until the final determination of the case in the state court.
“The writ of injunction shall not he granted hy any court of the United States to stay proceedings in any court of a state, except in cases where such injunction may be authorized by any law relating to proceedings in bankruptcy.”
The prohibitions of this statute extend to the entire proceedings in the state court. Security Trust Co. v. Union Trust Co. (C. C.) 134 Fed. 301; Union Pacific Trust Co. v. Flynn (C. C.) 180 Fed. 565. And it applies to injunctions directed to parties engaged in proceedings in tire state court. Cœur d’Alene Ry. & Nav. Co. v. Spalding, 93 Fed. 280, 35 C. C. A. 295. And it was intended to give the force of positive law to the rule of comity, 'to preserve the essential and necessary comity between the federal and state courts and to maintain the independence of each. Dillon v. Kansas City S. B. Ry. Co. (C. C.) 43 Fed. 109. And the. prohibitions of the statute extend, not only to orders of the federal court directly restraining proceedings
The case last cited was a proceeding in state court to condemn right to construct a telegraph line along a railroad right of way. Injunction was granted by a federal court, restraining the telegraph company from entering on the right of way; on appeal this was held violative of said statute. Illustrative of the proper construction and applicability of said statute the following cases may he cited:
Tn the case of First National Bank v. Hughes (C. C.) 6 Fed. 737, the state court issued a compulsory order to compel a national bank to disclose the names of its depositors, and it was held that the federal court could not stay the proceedings by injunction.
In the case of Domestic & Foreign Missionary Society v. Hinman (C. C.) 13 Fed. 161, it was held that the federal court could not issue an injunction to restrain a party from claiming, using, occupying, incumbering, disposing of, or interfering, or in any manner intermeddling, with property which the state court had directed its officers to place in his hands.
In Green v. Porter (C. C.) 123 Fed. 351, where a party obtained from a state court an injunction forbidding the plaintiff in a patent infringement suit in the federal court to assign or release his claim, a counter injunction sought by plaintiff in the federal court was refused, on account of the comity existing between federal and state courts, and the confusion which would result from conflicting decrees.
In Dillon v. Kansas City S. B. Ry. Co, (C. C.) 43 Fed. 109, it was held that under U. S. Rev. Slat. §' 720, which forbids federal courts from staying proceedings in state courts, except in bankruptcy matters, a federal court will not, pending a condemnation suit in a state court, enjoin the petitioner from entering upon the land to be condemned.
In People’s Gaslight & Coke Co. v. Chicago (C. C.) 192 Fed. 398, the city had previously instituted a suit in a state court to enforce an ordinance fixing the price of gas, after which the complainant instituted its suit in the federal court to restrain the enforcement of the ordinance on the ground that its enforcement would deprive complainant of its property without due process of law, and it was held that complainant’s suit was not in personam, and hence the state court, having first acquired jurisdiction, and having full power to adjudicate the rights of the parties, complainant was not entitled to injunction, such injunction being prohibited by section 720, U. S. Rev. Stats,
In Orton v. Smith, 59 U. S. (18 How.) 263, 15 L. Ed. 393, it was held that the federal court would not take jurisdiction of a hill of peace for an injunction to quiet the title of an estate, where the title was already in litigation in a court of concurrent jurisdiction.
It seems clear that the question here for decision falls dearly within the prohibitions of said statute, as construed by the decisions which have been cited. One of the objects of this suit, really the main object, is to secure the issuance of a mandatory injunction requiring the defendant, the Fi Paso Land Improvement Company, to remove cer
The plaintiff in the state court, Crawford, claims the real estate in controversy as the trustee of the Amusement Syndicate Company, the complainant herein, who in this court claims the ownership of said real estate as cestui que trust, through its said trustee, Crawford. The}' represent identically the same interest, and therefore the party plaintiff in the state court is substantially the party complainant in this court, and vice versa.
The prime object of this suit, or at least its necessary effect, is therefore to restrain by counter injunction a valid injunction issued by the state court — a court of competent and concurrent jurisdiction ; and it is my opinion that this cannot be done without contravening the statute.
“The supplemental bill filed by the appellant prayed for an injunction restraining and enjoining the defendant, the appellee here, from maintaining and operating upon the rights o-f way of the appellant the poles, wires, and other telegraphic appliances which the appellee had constructed, maintained, and operated upon said rights of way under a contract with the appellant which it was alleged expired on August 17, 1&12. By writs of injunction issued under orders made in a suit between appellant and appellee ‘ in the United States District Court for the Western District of Kentucky, certified copies of which were made exhibits to the appellee’s answer to the supplemental bill, the appellant was enjoined and restrained from taking possession of or interrupting the appellee in the use of any of its poles, wires, or other apparatus situated upon the right of way of the defendant, which .was referred to in the original and supplemental bills in this case, and by the terms of the last of said orders the injunction issued thereunder was to be operative until the further order of the court from which it issued. We think it is apparent that the necessary effect of granting the relief which the supplemental bill prayed would be to enable the appellant to do, under the protection of the orders of one court, what it has been forbidden to do by a valid order of another court, which is in full force and effect. A bill, the object of which is to bring about such a result, is not maintainable.”
’It may be that the bill here before the court should be dismissed; but, as that question has not been submitted nor argued, it will not now be passed upon.
I am, however, 'clearly, of opinion that the motion to postpone should be granted; and it is accordingly so ordered.