delivered the opinion of the court.
J. F. Williamson and three other parties each brought separate and independent suits against the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company. These were actions of tort, brought at law, for the recovery of damages, both actual and punitive. Each declaration alleged that the plaintiff therein was a subscriber to a local telephone company, doing business in Sardis, Panola county, known as the “Rural Telephone Company;” that the Cumberland Telephone Company purchased the plant of the Rural Telephone Company, and that then the Rural Company went into liquidation, and that subsequently the Cumberland Telephone Company continued to serve the plaintiff as before; that later it willfully, wantonly, oppressively, and in reckless disregard of the plaintiff’s rights, removed the telephone from the residence of the plaintiff, disconnected the plaintiff with the Sardis exchange, and has since refused to give the plaintiff telephone service. The Cumberland Telephone Company filed its bill of complaint in the chancery court of Panola county, praying for an injunction against the suits at law, on the ground that there was a community of interest in the principles of law and fact involved in the controversy, and that equity would take jurisdiction in order to prevent a multiplicity of suits. The injunction was granted, and thereafter, upon motion, the injunction was dissolved, and at
Within comparatively recent years there have grown up in this country what may be termed two schools upon the subject of the jurisdiction of equity relative to a multiplicity of suits. One may be termed the £ £ school of Pomeroy,” and, with great deference to Prof. Pomeroy and his disciples, it may be said that this school in many instances, while disclaiming, yet has confounded and confused-the doctrine of a 1 ‘multitude” with a “multiplicity” of suits. They have ignored entirely the fundamental principle that, in order for a court of equity to acquire jurisdiction in such cases, there must be something more than a community of interest in the questions of law and fact involved in the judicial controversy. The question has been so fully and ably discussed by the respective adherents that nothing new upon the subject can be added, and we will content-ourselves by simply referring to a few of the many leading decisions upon this question.
The leading case in America combating what may be termed the heresy of Prof. Pomeroy, is Tribette v. Railroad,
The opinion in Tribette’s case, supra, has received the unqualified approval of the leading text-writers, among them being High on Injunctions, Beach on Injunctions, and Bliss on Code Pleading, and of many courts of last resort, and it may justly be regarded as the leading case upon the subject, and is in accord with the weight of judicial authority, both ancient and modern. Owing to the great reputation of Prof. Pomeroy, and the profound impression which his work on Equity Jurisprudence produced upon the judiciary and the legal profession generally, it seemed at one time as if the doctrine which he advocates so ably and forcefully would be generally accepted; but the second sober thought of the profession was arrested by the masterful and unanswerable opinion of Chief Justice. Campbell in the Tribette case, supra, and, from the present trend of judicial thought, the judicial compass once more points in the right direction. In fact, in the third edition of Pomeroy’s Equity there are added two new sections, 251% and 251%, wherein there is quite a recession from the unqualified statements made in the former editions. A full discussion of this question may be found in the valuable notes in the following authorities: 14 L. .R. A.
It is certainly a very difficult question to decide when equity will enjoin actions at law, in order to prevent a multiplicity of suits. The rule seems to be well settled in the federal courts that there is no hard and fast rule upon the subject. Hale v. Allinson,
Our conclusion is that, in order for equity to take jurisdiction upon the ground of a multiplicity of suits, there must be some recognized ground of equable interference, or some community of interest in the sub
Where there is an injury continuing in its nature, which results in the bringing of numerous actions against a person, equity has intervened to prevent a multiplicity of suits. This is illustrated by the opinion of this court in Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Garrison,
One of the most illuminating decisions upon this question rendered in recent times is Turner v. Mobile,
The case of Crawford v. M., J. & K. C. R. Co., 83. Miss. 708,
The usurpation upon the part of the chancery court is too flagrant for further discussion.
Since the preparation of the foregoing opinion, we have read with profit the recent opinion of the supreme court of Alabama in Southern Steel Co. v. Hopkins,
Suggestion of error filed and overruled.
