Cutter v. Iowa Water Co.

96 F. 777 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa | 1899

WOOLSON, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). 1. The first point to be considered relates to the nature of the bill. The demurrants insist it is, in part at least, a bill of review, and as such insufficient, in that it does not set out the decree attacked, and was filed without leave first liad. Plaintiff insists it is not a bill of review. Plaintiff, in his individual capacity, was not a party to the original suit. And this suit is not brought “to reverse or modify a decree, that has been signed and enrolled, for error in law apparent on the face of the decree, or on account of new facts discovered since publication was passed in the original case, and which could not by the exercise of due diligence have been discovered or used before the decree was made.” Fost. Fed. Prac. § 354; Story, Eq. § 403. Tiie pending bill attacks the decree because of matters outside of the decree itself. It makes no attempt either to show that plaintiff herein was not fully aware of the proceedings of which this bill makes complaint, or to set up newly-discovered facts impeaching the foreclosure proceedings.

2. Is the pending bill multifarious in its charges of fraud as to trustee and bondholders7 committee, and its charges of invalid action on the part of the court and those acting under its direction? “By 'multifariousness’ 'is meant the improperly joining in one bill distinct and independent matters, and thereby confounding them; as, for example, the uniting in one bill of several matters, perfectly distinct and unconnected, against one defendant, or the demand of several matters of a distinct and independent nature against several defendants'in the same bill.7 Story, Eq. Pl. § 271. In Daniell, Oh. Prac. 335, it is said in explanation of this that; 'it may be that the plaintiffs and defendants are parties to the whole of the transactions which form the subject of the suit, and nevertheless those transactions may be so dissimilar that the court will not allow them to he joined together, but will require distinct records.'" Walker v. Powers, 304 U. S. 245, 251. Yet “the principle of multifariousness is one very largely of convenience.” U. S. v. American Bell Tel. Co., 128 U. S. 315, 352, 9 Sup. Ct. 91. As a result naturally to be expected, “there is, perhaps, no rule established for the conduct of equity pleadings, with reference to which (whilst as a rule it is universally admilted) there has existed less of certainty and uniformity in its application than has attended this relating to multifariousness. This effect, flowing, perhaps inevitably, from the variety of modes and degrees of right and interest entering into the transactions of life, seems to have led to a conclusion rendering the rule almost as much of an exception as a rule, and that conclusion is that each case *780must be determined by its peculiar features.” Shields v. Thomas, 18 How. 253, 259, quoted and approved in Brown v. Deposit Co., 128 U. S. 403, 410, 9 Sup. Ct. 129.

With regard to the charge of multifariousness in the pending bill, so far as such bill relates to any one defendant, the remarks of the supreme court in Brown v. Deposit Co., 128 U. S. 412, 9 Sup. Ct. 130, are pertinent:

To support the objection of multifariousness, because the bill contains different causes of suit against the same person, two things must concur: First, the grounds of suit must be different; second, each ground must be sufficient, as stated, to sustain the bill.

And again:

The ease against one defendant may be so entire as to be incapable of being prosecuted in several suits, and yet some other defendant may be a necessary party to some portion only of the ease stated. In the latter case the objection of multifariousness cannot be allowed to prevail.

As to a bill .wherein many parties are made defendants, the supreme court, in the opinion from which I have just quoted, state:

It is not indispensable that all the parties shall have an interest in all the matters contained in the suit. It will be sufficient if each party has an interest in some material matters in the suit, and they are connected with the others.

‘ Applying these «clearly-stated principles to the pending bill, we find that the pleader has attempted to direct the bill primarily against the foreclosure decree, under his contention that such decree is null and void. In so doing, he felt compelled to make recital of the various steps leading up to such decree, whether these were taken in or out of court, by the bondholders’ committee or the trustee; but all relate to the attempted setting aside of the decree, and are claimed to Have entered into, and to be a part of, the matters because of which the decree is alleged to be void. In this view, the charges of fraud on the part of the trusted, in whose name the foreclosure proceedings were pending, are not antagonistic to the allegations of invalid action by the court, so that the two may not stand together in the one bill. The same parties must be defendants therein, if separate suits were instituted to have the decree declared null and void, — one suit based on said alleged fraudulent conduct of trustee, the other suit on alleged invalid action of court. If convenience is to be a largely controlling test, then the convenience of the parties is served, without injury to them, by having these matters litigated in the same suit. So, also, as to the matters attacked which occurred after entry of decree. Their alleged invalidity is based on the alleged invalidity of the decree, and the parties necessary to the bill attacking the decree are so interested in the attack on those subsequent matters as that they are not improperly made defendants to the latter attack. To this latter attack other parties are made defendants; that is, the reorganized water-plant owner, and the trustee of the bonds issued under such reorganization. I do not see any good reason for holding that these other parties are improperly joined in a suit which thus attacks the decree whereon their rights are so largely based. In other words, though all of the parties to this suit do not have the same interest in every material feature of *781the suit, yet each “has an interest in some material matters in the suit, and they are all connected with the others.” The main recitals of the bill relate to and affect the alleged invalidity of the decree, or are dependent thereon. There is little, if any, of the evidence which may be introduced to prove the allegations of the bill, as to the decree being void and the grounds thereof, which will not concern and affect the rights of each of the parties made defendants herein. Around the alleged invalidity of the decree are grouped the rights and interests of all the parties. That some of these parties were not immediately concerned in or parties to some of the transactions stated in the bill will not justify the court in declaring the bill to be multifarious, if they were concerned in and parties to some transactions stated, with which the other transactions are connected as a part of the general matters stated and relief prayed in the bill. Said Mr. Justice Harlan, at circuit, in Sheldon v. Packet Co., 8 Fed. 769, 770:

Asa general rule, the court will not compel parlies to incur the expense, vexation, anti delay of several suits, where the transactions constituting the subject of the litigation, or out of which the litigation arises, are so connected by their circumstances as to render it proper and convenient that they -should be examined in tlie same suit, and full relief given by one comprehensive decree. A (liit'erent rule would often prove to be both oppressive and mischievous, and could result in no possible benefit to any litigant whose object was not simply to harass his adversary.

And later in the opinion the learned justice approvingly quotes from the opinion of Chancellor Kent in Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 139, the following:

It thus appears 'from the hill that all the defendants were not jointly concerned in every injurious act charged. There was a series of acts on iho part of the persons concerned in the company, all produced by the same fraudulent' intent, and terminating in tlie deception and injury of the plaintiffs. The defendants performed different parts in the same drama, but it was still one piece, tlie entire performance, marked by different scenes; and the question now occurs whether the several matters charged are so distinct and unconnected as to render the joining of them in one bill a ground of demurrer. [Various authorities reviewed.] The principle is that a bill against several persons must relate to matters of the same nature, and having a connection with each other, and in which all the defendants are more or less concerned, though their rights in respect to the general subject of the case may be distinct.

It may be noted, in addition to what has before been stated as to the pending bill, that the stockholders in the reorganized water-plant company, the defendant City Water-Supply Company, and bondholders of bonds issued by it under the trust deed of which defendant Continental Trust Company is trustee, are largely and almost entirely the persons who held the bonds under the trust deed which was foreclosed in the suit whose decree is attacked herein.

3. In determining the question of multifariousness, I find greater difficulty with reference to matters involving the relief prayed. The prayers for relief are antagonistic; one being based on the theory of invalidity of the decree, and resulting, if successful in its entirety, in vacating sale thereunder, conveyance thereafter of the reorganized plant, and trust deed executed thereon. The other is based upon the theory of the decree as valid, and resulting, if successful in its entirety, in establishing on such valid decree the asserted rights and inter*782ests of plaintiff in tbe reorganized water-plant property, or proceeds of sale. If tbe latter prayer stood alone in tbe bill, a large part of tbe contents of tbe bill' would be immaterial and opposed to tbe prayer, and stricken out on exceptions, since it would in no wise be pertinent to or ’tending to establish tbe theory on which tbe relief is prayed. Tbe relief prayed in pending bill is in tbe alternative. If this relief were not antagonistic in tbe alternative, and were based on tbe same state of facts, tbe bill might not be multifarious (Story, Eq,. Pl. § 42); for then, tbe facts being proven, the relief granted would depend upon the conclusion which the court would draw from such proven facts. But no state of facts can maintain tbe decree as null and void and also as valid. In tbe pending bill, if tbe charges of fraud, collusion, etc.’, are proven (assuming tbe same to rise to tbe grade which might justify tbe court in declaring tbe alleged invalidity of the decree), tbe alternative or last-prayed relief could not be granted in any part, or in tbe direction it points, since that relief is antagonistic to such proven fraud, and is based on tbe decree being-valid.

Shields v. Barrow, 17 How. 130, was a suit to set aside an agreement for fraud. An amendment was filed to tbe bill, which prayed specific performance. Justice Curtis, in tbe opinion therein rendered, said:

So that the hill thereafter presented not only two aspects, but two diametrically opposite prayers for relief, resting upon necessarily inconsistent cases: the one declaring that the court would declare the. contract rescinded for imposition and other causes, and the other that the court would declare it so free from all exceptions as to be entitled to its aid by a decree for specific performance. * * * A bill may be originally framed with a double aspect, or it may be so amended as to be of that character, but the alternative case stated must be the foundation for precisely the same relief.

In St. Louis, V. & T. H. R. Co. v. Terre Haute & I. R. Co., 33 Fed. 440, 448, Circuit Judge Gresham applied this same general principle where the bill prayed that a lease be declared void, and also contained tbe alternative prayer for an accounting of tbe money due by tbe terms of the lease, should it be declared valid; and tbe court held, tbe bill to be multifarious.

Tbe circuit court of appeals, Seventh circuit, in Merriman v. Railroad Co., 12 C. C. A. 275, 64 Fed. 535, considered with much fullness, as applied to that case, the principle here under discussion. As found by that court, tbe bill included a prayer to redeem, and also a prayer to acquire bonds issued on tbe property sought to be redeemed in first alternative of tbe prayer. Thus tbe first relief prayed was on tbe theory that tbe plaintiff was entitled to acquire; and appropriate as its own, through such redemption, tbe property upon which were based tbe bonds, which in this latter prayer were recognized as validly issued, but which would have no security if such property were redeemed. Tbe court declare (page 290, 12 C. C. A., and page 550, 64 Fed.):

Thus construed, the bill states two inconsistent causes of action, and the right to recover upon one theory is destructive of the right to recover on the other. Such a bill cannot be maintained. It would be multifarious and self-contradictory. ⅜ * ⅜ It is urged by counsel for appellants that a bill is *783not multifarious, and may well be maintained, whore, upon, a given ease, there is a prayer for consistent alternative relief. The rule is undoubtedly well settled that upon a given case there may be prayer for consistent alternative relief. But we do not understand that alternative and inconsistent cases may be stated in the bill, coupled with prayers for alternative and inconsistent relief. If the appellants’ ease was solely that the Eastern Illinois Company has no title to the property of the Danville Company, .they might pray for various forms of alternative relief consistent with that case; but ihey cannot in the same bill make a ease that It has no title, and also a case that it has title, and then ask for inconsistent relief according to the different cases thus made. Such course of procedure we do not understand is warranted by the doctrine of alternative relief. Such are alternative cases, and not cases for alternative relief. They are inconsistent, for a decree of one of these forms of relief would proceed upon a theory fatal to the other form of relief.

If it be claimed that the facts as alleged in the pending bill support but the one theory or prayer for relief, viz. that the decree, deed, etc., attacked are null and void, then it must follow that the alternative relief, based on validity of decree, has no proper place in the bill, and should be stricken therefrom before defendants are required to answer. But if, as may he assumed from the recognized ability of counsel, and by his signature thereon approving same, and as counsel for plaintiff contends, the bill is so framed as that it will support the relief decreed, whichever of the alternative prayers may thus be granted, then it must follow that the bill is one “of alternative cases, and not a. case for alternative relief,” as the latter is commonly understood. In this regard the bill is multifarious, and defendants should not be required to plead thereto until it is purged of such multifariousness.

4. The queslion of laches on the part of plaintiff, so forcibly urged by defendants, may present controlling features. There is no statement or suggestion in the bill that plaintiff was ignorant of the matters as to which he now complains, while such matters were transpiring. While it is undoubtedly true that the plaintiff trustee in the foreclosure suit was, as such trustee, the representative therein of the present plaintiff, it cannot he that plaintiff herein was in any wise prohibited from making known to this court the alleged fraud of the trustee while it was in progress. Good faith towards the court should have prompted this plaintiff to have promptly made known to the court the bad faith of the trustee and his wrongful collusion with others, if such bad faith and collusion existed, as now charged. It is not necessary to state here what would have been the action of the court had such suggestions thus been made. It is sufficient chat this court possessed the power to arrest the further perpetration of such fraud as soon as the same became .manifest to the court, and to prevent its being carried to its consummation. The situation in which the bill presents the present plaintiff does not commend itself to the court; for, in the absence of any statement that lie was at the time ignorant thereof, the court must assume that, with the knowledge that what he now charges as fraud and collusion on the part of the trustee was then occurring, he permitted the same to proceed unchallenged, and the court by its action and decree to fasten this fraud upon the property, and confirm as valid the results of such fraud, and, further, permitted those actively and knowingly partici*784pating in such fraud to convey the water-plant property, and thereafter the execution of trust deeds and issuance of a large amount of bonds thereunder, without in any wise attempting to prevent the same. The.like general considerations apply to what plaintiff now alleges to be invalid action of the court, whereby he claims the decree in said foreclosure suit is null' and void. Where was plaintiff while such alleged invalid proceedings were in progress? Interested, as he now claims, because of his-being a bondholder under the trust deed then being foreclosed, why did he not promptly appear in court, and present, to the court the question of what he now insists was such invalid action, taken by the court at the instance of plaintiff’s trustee, as that the final result in the foreclosure suit is thereby made null and void? In any amendment to be made to the bill, plaintiff should state the facts avoiding what now constitute these laches on his part, if such facts exist.

5. I do not deem it necessary to attempt to decide the remaining point of demurrer, as to whether the bill sufficiently presents fraud, until the bill is shorn of its present objectionable features, which have just been considered and determined. Manifestly a far different' state of facts is necessary to support a decree which shall declare the former decree null and void, from those necessary to support a decree which shall declare such former decree valid, and establish the rights and interests of plaintiff thereunder. Until the relief prayed is distinctly set out, so that the court may be clearly advised, the task is useless to attempt to determine whether there is such equity in the bill as that it may be maintained. When the court is advised as to the relief which plaintiff demands, it may then examine the bill to ascertain whether the facts pleaded would sustain such relief. But the court must decline to examine the bill for the purpose of determining whether, under the facts pleaded, a decree for relief can in any wise be maintained in some portion of the broad realm of equity.

From, the foregoing it necessarily follows that the demurrers to the pending bill must be sustained. Ordered accordingly, and plaintiff excepts.

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