76 Tenn. 1 | Tenn. | 1881
'said:
I adopt this opinion, except so far as it is predicated upon the fact that no injunction was in fact issued. This I do not think materia]; but the other reasons given for refusing the judgment are sufficient.
delivered the opinion of the court upon all the points decided except upon the point embodied in the last syllabus, and his dissenting opinion on. that point:
On May 2, 1870, the complainant, John Baxter, contracted to sell to M. C. Wilcox, E. K. Wilcox and others, a body of land, with the personal property thereon used for mining coal, lying on Emory river in Roane county, Tennessee,’ for $40,000, payable at a future day in instalments with interest. Afterwards, the purchasers obtained a charter of incorporation under the name of the Wilcox Mining Company, ’ and transferred this land and other lands to the company, and converted their interest in the-land into capital stock in the company. On June 1, 1871, the Wilcox Mining Company, by deed of that date, reciting that it needed “additional means to pay its debts and to extend and carry on its business, and had resolved to raise the same by the issuance and-sale of its bonds,” conveyed all its land, including the tract bought from Baxter, with the personal- property thereon used in mining and transporting coal, to W. P. Washburn in trust to secure the payment of the-
On the same day that this deed was executed, i\n agreement was entered into between John Baxter, the Exchange and Deposit Bank of Knoxville, and the Wilcox Mining Company, which was reduced to writing, and signed, the mining company signing by “M.
In April, 1872, the company having failed to pay the January coupons of that year, the trustee, at the .request of' Baxter, took possession of the property conveyed by the trust deed and advertised it for sale. The mining company sued out an injunction, and - the sale was postponed by the trustee to a given day, at which time, the injunction having been dissolved, he proceeded to sell, and the property was struck off to Baxter at the price of $42,000, who took possession and sold some of the personalty, but afterwards refused to comply with the terms of sale. The trustee again advertised, and, on the 12th of October, 1872, sold the property, when Baxter once more became the purchaser at' $20,000. He complied with the terms-of sale by giving his two notes in equal instalments at one and two years, with E. P. Bailey as his surety.
On the 21st of October, 1873, shortly after his first note fell due, Baxter filed the present bill, “for himself and all other bondholders and beneficiaries,” against the trustee, the mining company, its assignee in bankruptcy, the company having been declared bankrupt, M. C. and E. K. Wilcox, the Drake Brothers, the' Exchange and Deposit Bank, and the holders of the bonds without naming them. The main object of
The master made a report of the matters of reference, which was, with one modification in favor of
The depositions taken by the Drake Brother’s on their own behalf were, upon exceptions taken by the complainant- in advance of the hearing, excluded for defects specified, and no error has been assigned on the chancellor’s ruling in this regard. Excluding these depositions, there -is ample evidence that the eighteen bonds were placed in the hands of Drake Brothers by the Exchange and Deposit Bank for sale, and that the bank, for the benefit of the complainant, was entitled to recover from them the value of these bonds, waiving the tort, by bill and attachment in equity: Kirkman v. Phillips, 7 Heis., 222; Baker v. Huddleston, 3 Baxt., 1. And the weight of evidence would be in favor of' the finding of the • chancellor even if the excluded depositions are read. For, the witnesses for the Drake ’ Brothers, and the brothers themselves
The complainant in his bill asserts that his original contract of the 2d of May, 1870, with the Messrs. Wilcox and others was, at the request of the latter, cancelled, all the purchasers, except M. C. and E. K. Wilcox, surrendering all claim to the land and other property, and the two Wilcoxes, then' the sole parties in interest, entered into the new contract of the 1st of June, 1871. These allegations are admitted in the answer of the assignee in bankruptcy’ of the Wilcox
It is first insisted on behalf of the bondholder who appeals, that there is no proof that the mining company had anything to do with the transaction of the 1st of June, 1871 ; that it took the land conveyed by complainant and Bailey free from any lien for the purchase money; that it could not become security for the new purchase notes, and that the pledge of the bonds as collateral was a misapplication of the corporate funds, ultra vires and invalid. Upon the ■question of fact raised by this argument, the record is in conflict with the position assumed. The Wilcox Mining Company is a party to the agreement of the 1st of June, 1871, the same being signed by its president, and the conveyance of the land and other property is made on the same day to the company, and
It is suggested in the argument submitted on behalf of the appellants, that Baxter’s title to the land has failed, the property having been proceeded against and sold for purchase money due from him to his' vendor. The fact does not appear in this record, nor are there any pleadings on which to base any relief as between any of the parties on this ground.
The chancellor’s decree on the merits, and upon the report of the master based thereon, will be affirmed.
The only remaining question arises upon the motion made for a judgment against the surety of the complainant on his injunction bond for the unpaid balance of the judgment or decree against complainant on his purchase notes, execution having been returned thereon nulla bona. The facts bearing on this point are set out in the master’s report, to which no exceptions were filed. The main object of the original bill, as we have seen, was to obtain a credit on the complainant’s notes for the pro rata to which the bonds held by him would be entitled out of the trust fund, the trustee having declined to allow the credit. The bill prayed “for an injunction to restrain W. P. Washburn from taking any steps to collect your orator’s notes, or either of them, except in this court in this cause, unless authorized by order of this court.” The fiat obtained directed an injunction to issue as prayed, “ upon complainant’s entering into bond with
The bill sought to enjoin the trustee from taking any steps to collect complainant’s notes except in the court of chancery, and in the particular case. It proceeded upon the ground that the court of chancery
One special ground relied on is found in the fact that no injunction was ever actually issued. But the effect of an injunction ordered is the same before as after its issuánce upon those who have knowledge of the order, and mere delay in issuing the injunction will not prevent the effect: Farnsworth v. Fowler, 1 Swan, 1; Boils v. Boils, 1 Cold., 284. To entitle a party to damages upon the dissolution of an injunction, it is sufficient that he has rendered himself obedient to it, though the writ may never have been served upon him: Cumberland v. Hoffman, 39 Barb., 16. If the rule were otherwise, a party might be punished for disobeying an order for an injunction of which he had notice, and then deprived of the in-
The main ground relied on to take this case out of the rule is, that the complainant has successfully prosecuted his suit and there has been no breach of the condition of the bond. The condition is to prosecute the bill of injunction with effect, or in case he should fail therein, or the same be dismissed, to abide by, perform and fulfill the judgment or decree of the court, and pay all costs and damages that may be sustained for wrongfully suing out the injunction. The injunction was against proceeding on the notes or either of them at law, and the object of the bill is to have an equitable set-off. To the extent of that set-off so far as the debt enjoined is concerned, and in other respects unconnected with the debt, the complainant-
The decree below will be affirmed, and the appellants will pay the costs of this court.