143 Iowa 506 | Iowa | 1909
In December of the year 1904 Joseph Whitney, now deceased, brought an action against the plaintiff herein, whom we shall hereafter call the “Railway Company,” to enjoin it from prosecuting any proceedings for the collection of a tax voted in its aid by the electors of Boulder township, Linn County, Iowa. The action was against the railway company, and also against one Carroll, the county treasurer of Linn County, and the petition not only asked for an order restraining the collection of the tax, but also asked that the taxes so levied be 'declared null and void, and that he, on behalf of himself, as well as the other taxpayers of the township, be granted such other relief as in equity and good conscience they might he entitled to. A temporary writ of injunction was issued on this petition, and, the defendant having answered, the cause went to trial on the merits, resulting in a decree dismissing Whitney’s petition and dissolving the temporary writ of injunction. Thereupon the Railway Company brought an action of mandamus against the trustees of the
The case would not be difficult of solution under these rules were it the ordinary one'where an injunction issued by a trial court had been dissolved, and action had been brought upon the bond to recover the damages sustained. Here the case had been decided in the trial court resulting in a decree dismissing the petition and dissolving the temporary writ. Appeal was taken to this court, and a restraining order was issued by one of the judges in virtue of constitutional and statutory proceedings in aid of our ajipellate jurisdiction. True, the restraining order was the only original one issuing out of this court, but it was a mere incident of the litigation. Without the restraining order the ease could have been heard upon appeal, and a decree entered reversing the action of the trial court. Had such a reversal been secured, plaintiff in the main action would have secured the relief asked, and the restraining order would have been continued as a matter of course. The railway company was bound to present its case upon appeal in any event, and the issuance of the restraining order imposed no additional burden upon it. It had already secured counsel to present its case upon appeal, when the restraining order was issued, and no additional
But if the injunction is ancillary, or if the action is really for other relief then injunction, being ancillary, attorney’s fees are not allowed for defending the suit. As already indicated, the order in this case was issried under section 4, article 5, of- the Constitution, giving this court power to issue all writs and processes necessary to secure justice to the parties, or in virtue of section 4109 of the Code, giving us power to issue all writs and processes necessary for the exercise and enforcement of our appellate jurisdiction. The order issued was clearly ancillary to the appeal, and counsel fees should not be allowed for presenting the main case upon appeal. Ady v. Freeman, 90 Iowa, 402; Leonard v. Capital Ins. Co., 101 Iowa, 482; Carroll Co. v. Iowa R. L. Co., 53 Iowa, 685; Ellwood
In San Diego v. Pacific Co., 101 Cal. 216 (35 Pac. 651), the Supreme Court of California said with reference to this matter: “If the sureties^ could be held responsible, without reference to the terms of their contract, for a conspiracy to aid the plaintiff in the imposing of an illegal restraint upon the defendant, there would be some show of reason in such a rule; but, if ,the sureties are to be held only on their contract, the admission that the expenditures were not caused by the injunction is fatal to the argument. The sureties did not agree to pay the expense of getting rid of the restraint. Ordinarily such expense would be caused by the injunction; but it is not always so, and is not when a preliminary injunction is ended by a final judgment for defendant. Here the expenditure was caused by the suit and not by the injunction. The sureties are liable for expenditures caused by' the injunction, and not for those caused by the suit.” In Lambert v. Alcorn, 144 Ill. 313 (33 N. E. 53, 21 L. R. A. 611), the Supreme Court of Illinois said, with reference to this matter: “The relief sought by the bill was a perpetual injunction, restraining the defendant from laying his proposed tile drain, and an injunction pendente lite was a mere ancillary writ, which the complainants were at liberty to apply for or not, as they saw fit. Its only office was to preserve the status quo until a final hearing could be
The trial court was in error in fixing the amount of the verdict. The motion to direct should only have been sustained insofar as to hold that plaintiff was entitled to recover. The amount of its recovery should have been left to the jury under proper instructions.
Bor the errors pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.