after' making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
.1. As the bill iuThis case is based not only upon diversity of citizenship, but upon the alleged unconstitutionality of the municipal ordinances of November 25,1901, and March 3,1902, as impairing the obligation of Mrs. Dobbins’ contract with .the city under prior ordinances, an appeal lies directly to this court, and upon such appeal the whole case is opened for consideration.
Horner
v.
United States, No.
2,
2. The court below did not pass upon the validity of these ordinances, but came to the conclusion that a bill in equity would not lie to restrain their enforcement, and in this aspect we shall discuss the case. As the only method employed for the enforcement of these ordinances, was by criminal proceedings, it follows that the prayer of the bill to enjoin the city from enforcing these ordinances, or prevent plaintiff from carrying out its work, must be construed as demanding the discontinuance of such criminal proceedings as were already pending, and inhibiting the institution of others -of a similar character.
That a court of equity has no general power to enjoin or stay-criminal proceedings unless they are instituted by a party to a suit, already pending before it, and to try the same right that is in issue there, or to prohibit the invasion of the rights of property by the enforcement of an unconstitutional law, was so fully considered and settled in an elaborate opinion by Mr. Justice Gray,
In re Sawyer,
The general rule that a Circuit Court of the United States, sitting as a court of equity, cannot stay by injunction proceedings-pending in a state court .to enforce the criminal laws of such State, was applied in
Harkrader
v.
Wadley,
Plaintiff seeks to maintain its bill under the exception above noted, wherein, in a few cases, an injunction has been allowed to issue to restrain an invasion of rights of property by the enforcement of an unconstitutional law, where such enforcement would result.in irreparable damages to the plaintiff. It cites in that regard the case of
Reagan
v.
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.,
In order to determine the exact property rights at stake in the case under consideration it should be borne in mind that this is not a bill b}7 Mrs. Dobbins, the owner of the land and of the proposed gas works, to enjoin the city from interfering with carrying out the permit she had obtained to erect these gas works, nor by the Yalley Gas and Fuel Company, with which. she had made a contract to erect these works; but by a subcontractor, which had made a contract with the Gas and Fuel Company to erect for it, and upon premises to be designated by Mrs. Dobbins, a wat§r tank and gas holder; and, without even *219 alleging that'the Gas and Fuel Company had refused to carry out its contract, or pay to plaintiff damages, or that Mrs. Dobbins had refused to settle any claim the Gas and Fuel Company might have against her, seeks to enjoin the city of Los Angeles in the assumed right of Mrs. Dobbins from interfering with its servants and employes, and from preventing plaintiff from carrying out the work of erecting the water tank and gas holder, and also to desist and refrain from enforcing its ordinances, ít sets up no contract of its own with the city which the municipal ordinances have impaired, but a contract of the city with Mrs. Dobbins, to which it was no party, in which it had no direct interest, and that, too,, without averring that the Gas and Fuel Company was insolvent, or unable to respond to its claim for damages. It proceeds wholly upon the assumption that the revocation of Mrs. Dobbins’ license will operate injuriously to it, and that it cannot obtain a full and ádequate remedy at law by an action against the Gas and Fuel Company upon its contract to pay the price agreed upon between them.
It is true the bill is based upon the theory that plaintiff would suffer great and irreparable loss by tbe interference of the city and by the exposed condition of the works, and that the refusal of an injunction would result in innumerable actions at law and a multiplicity of suits, which would have to be instituted at great expense and without the possibility of recovering indemnity. We are not, however, bound by this allegation, when the facts set forth in the bill show that, if the plaintiff be entitled to a remedy at all, it has an action against the Gas and Fuel' Company, which is presumed at least to be able to respond in damages for all such as plaintiff may have suffered by the interruption of the contract. Whether the Gas and Fuel Company in such action could defend upon the ground that the municipality had forbidden the prosecution of the work, might depend somewhat upon the terms of the contract, and upon the right of the Gas and Fuel Company to take advantage of the interference of the city. As to this we express no opinion. It is true the employés of the plaintiff were arrested, but that fact alone wrought no legal injury to the plaintiff, since if it were prevented from any cause for which the Gas and Fuel Com *220 pany were chargeable, it might bring an action for damages against that company, with which alone its contract was made, and recover such damages as it could prove to have sustained.
It is true that in a number of cases bills have been sustained by one or more stockholders in a corporation against the corporation and other parties, to restrain the enforcement of an unconstitutional law against the corporation itself, but it has always been held, and general equity rule 94 requires, that such bill must contain an allegation under oath that the suit is not a collusive one to confer on a court of the United States jurisdiction, and must also contain an allegation that the directors of a corporation have refused to institute the proceedings themselves in the name of such corporation, and the efforts of the plaintiff to secure such action on the part of the directors, and the cause of his failure to obtain it.
Dodge
v. Woolsey,
In this connection, also, the appellant cites the case of
Reagan
v.
Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co.,
As the appellant has shown no legal interest m this litigation, and no lack of a complete and adequate remedy at law, it results that the bill was properly dismissed, ¿nd the decree of the court below is therefore
Affirmed.
