Appeal by plaintiffs from an order refusing a temporary injunction. The facts in brief are these: On August 16, 1909, the county of Wabasha made a contract with plaintiffs Davis & Bedmon, partners, under which, for a stipulated price, the latter agreed to construct judicial ditch No. 1 in said county and the plaintiff surety company, a corporation, became the surety on the statutory bond given to the county by Davis & Bedmon for the faithful performance of the contract. Davis & Bedmon on March 11, 1911, sublet the construction of about one-half of the ditch to defendants Eorrestal & Eeyen, the defendant Title. Guaranty and Surety Company becoming surety for their performance of the subcontract, and the plaintiff corporation becoming surety on a bond given by Davis & Bedmon to Eorrestal & Eeyen to secure the payment of the moneys to be earned under' the subcontract. Some time prior to the commencement of this action Eorrestal & Eeyen began an action in the district court of Bamsey county to recover from the plaintiffs herein
The complaint sets forth the above facts and also that there would have been due Davis & Redmon from defendant county about $3,200-had Forrestal & Feyen completed the subcontract, which sum the county refuses to pay solely because of the failure of the subcontractors to complete their part of the ditch. It is also alleged that defendants Braun and Schurhammer each own tracts of land adjacent to the ditch which each claims to have been flooded by reason of the improper work of the subcontractors, and that these landowners threaten to sue plaintiffs for damages. Numerous and varied allegations abound in support of the conclusion that the rights and liabilities of the plaintiffs and the different defendants grow out of and depend on the single fact of the failure of the subcontractors to construct their part of the ditch according to their contract. The usual averments of irreparable injury, inadequate remedy at law, and a multiplicity of suits are found. The contract, subcontract, and the three bonds mentioned are made part of the complaint. In the prayer for relief, the court is asked to determine the claims of the respective parties and give judgment for or against them as the facts and the law shall be found to require for a determination of the entire controversy; to issue an injunction perpetually enjoining and restraining Forrestal & Feyen from proceeding in their Ramsey county action, except by a dismissal, and perpetually enjoining each and all of the defendants from beginning or maintaining any action against plaintiffs based upon the facts stated in the complaint; and to issue a temporary injunction of the same tenor during the pend-ency of the action. The court on plaintiff’s application ordered defendants to show cause why the temporary injunction as prayed for should not issue, and restrained Forrestal & Feyen from proceeding in the Ramsey .county action until the hearing upon the order to show cause. On the hearing the order to show cause was dis
It is plain that plaintiffs will suffer no irreparable injury from the acts of defendants, done or threatened, for which there is not an adequate remedy at law. The plaintiff surety is in no position to bring the action, for it has paid nothing on the bond and stands in no position to ask for contribution or release; it surely stands in no better position to ask equitable relief than do its principals Davis & Redmon. The latter confess that they have not fulfilled their contract with the county, hence have no cause of action against it and, what is more, their conduct towards the county with reference to this •ditch is so inequitable that that alone should bar them from equitable relief. With respect to the county plaintiffs were in duty bound to ■see to it that the ditch was dug according to contract. The failure of a servant o.r subcontractor of theirs to perform is no excuse. If these have gone wrong or failed in some respect, plaintiffs should rectify the same before troubling the county with a lawsuit. The county has no contractual relation with Forrestal & Feyen. Against Forrestal & Feyen plaintiffs have an adequate remedy at law if it be true that the subcontract is unfinished. Also, if Davis & Redmon have suffered any damages by the reason of the subcontractors’ default, such as expenditures for properly completing the subcontract and loss from payment of damages for delay, as stipulated in their contract with the county, proper counterclaims may be asserted in the action pending in Ramsey county or plaintiffs may bring separate action therefor. It is not alleged that either Forrestal & Feyen, or their surety company, is insolvent, or likely to be, and if, perchance, the two defendants who own lands adjacent to the ditch .should sue plaintiffs on their bond to the county, no reason is apparent why plaintiffs may not by appropriate steps protect them■selves against irreparable injury, if damages are awarded because of the subcontractors’ breach of contract or wrongs in the construction •of the ditch. The claim that a jury in one case may not find the determinative facts the same way as a. jury in another case is not a ground for equitable intervention and does not come under the definition of irreparable injury or inadequate remedy at law.
It is extremely difficult to classify all equity cases and define in general terms each class. Novel situations may give rise to equitable interference. If it be held that a plaintiff can maintain a suit in equity to restrain a number of defendants from bringing actions at law by simply alleging that in the pending, or threatened, actions the result in each will depend on the same questions of law and fact, actions at law with its right of jury trial will almost be abolished. In Mechanics Ins. Co. v. C. A. Hoover Distilling Co. 173 Fed. 888, 97 C. C. A. 400, 32 L.R.A.(N.S.) 940, plaintiff, a fire insurance company, brought suit against a policyholder which had sustained a loss, joining a large number of insurance companies which had issued concurrent policies,on the property destroyed, to enjoin the policyholder from proceeding in his actions at law. The court refused to entertain the suit, saying [at page 890] : “If the bill in this
It is perhaps needless to observe that a broad statement used by a textwriter is often limited by the cases cited and modified or explained by other portions of the work itself. Thus, Lockwood Co. v. Lawrence, 77 Me. 297, 52 Am. Rep. 763, (cited as supporting section 269), an action to enjoin defendants from doing acts which, though done by them independently, resulted in the nuisance complained of, appears to be a clear case of equity jurisdiction and does not assist plaintiffs in the case at bar. Corey v. Sherman, 96 Iowa, 114, 64 N. W. 828, 32 L.R.A. 514, involved the adjustment of at least 3,000 policyholders’ rights in an insolvent insurance company and comes plainly within equity jurisdiction both as generally understood and as provided by the Iowa statute. Board of Supervisors v. Deyoe, 77 N. Y. 219, concerned the application of an insufficient fund among a number of persons claiming the right thereto. Added or interpolated sections in the third edition of Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence limit and explain the rule in sections 269 and 274. Thus in section 251-J it is stated: “The equity suit must result in a simplification or consolidation of the issues; if, after the numerous parties are joined, there still remain separate issues to be tried between each of them and the single defendant or plaintiff,
Then again the right to jury trial should not be interfered with by an assertion of doubtful equity jurisdiction. Statutory provisions ■of interpleader, intervention, consolidation of suits and bringing in additional parties are all in aid of the efficiency of the remedy afforded by the ordinary action at law. These may be considered in determining whether a suit in equity to restrain actions at law should be entertained. We think this is well stated in section 2 5 If of the text-book referred to: “Since the existence or exercise of the jurisdiction, in classes third and fourth, depends on defects in the legal rules as to joinder of parties, where the legal remedy is not thus defective but permits the joinder of numerous parties or •consolidation of the numerous suits, equity will not take jurisdiction for the purpose of awarding substantially the same relief that may be •obtained at law.” The author of the note to Southern Steel Co. v. Hopkins in 20 L.R.A.(N.S.) 848, states, upon the authority of numerous cases cited, that the tendency of courts is to exercise discretion in assuming jurisdiction when it is invoked solely to avoid a multiplicity of suits. The convenience of parties and the injury to either by assuming or refusing jurisdiction is to be considered. And to a great extent the discretion is controlled by the question whether a party is deprived of his constitutional right to a jury trial. This is properly placed, we think, above any consideration of convenience or possible pecuniary loss.
In view of the situation of the parties, their legal remedies in actions at law, the undoubted right of each to a jury trial, the limited number of suits necessary to settle the controversies involved, and the different facts that would go to measure the damages between the different litigants even on plaintiff’s showing, to say nothing of the issues that might be anticipated from the defendants, all convince us that the court below was entirely right in refusing to take cognizance of the case. The following eases support this view: Vandalia Coal Co. v. Lawson, 43 Ind. App. 226, 87 N. E. 47, which contains an
That the rights of the parties do not depend upon the same state of facts and law appears clear when we consider that the county can look only to plaintiffs for completion of the ditch. Eorrestal & Feyen have no recourse to the county, even if they have fully performed the subcontract. The landowners if damaged may sue on plaintiffs’ bond, or may sue the one responsible for tort, but in no event could they sue the county, for in the construction of ditches it acts merely as a governmental agency. Certainly this situation involves the application of different legal principles to the rights of each litigant as well as the ascertainment of facts not common to all.
Of course what is said above has no application when a plaintiff has in part, at least, some equitable cause of action or ground upon which affirmative relief may be predicated, for, where equity jurisdiction once attaches, full and complete adjustment will be made of the rights of all parties properly in the suit, regardless of the fact that some of them may have the right to a jury trial as to their individual cause of action. The plaintiff contractors have certainly no equitable ground to relief, nor has the plaintiff surety company, for no facts are pleaded which entitle it to contribution, release or any other relief. In fact, the contractors and their surety, the plaintiffs herein, are in default, for it was their business to see that the ditch was finished if the subcontractors in any manner failed.
But the appellants rely on two decisions of this court: City of
If, when the equity jurisdiction is invoked solely on the ground that thereby a multiplicity of suits will be avoided, the court, as indicated in the foregoing, may to a certain extent exercise discretion in entertaining the suit, it is certainly well settled that on an appli
Order affirmed.