60 W. Va. 55 | W. Va. | 1906
Under a contract with the Deepwater Railway Company D. H. Hotter & Co. did work in the construction of that company’s road, and brought an action of assumpsit in the circuit court of Fayette county against said company for recovery of their demand, the amount of which and the right to any amount, were in great dispute between them. A number of creditors of Hotter & Co. brought divers suits before justices and in court against them, sued out attachments and garnished the railroad company as a debtor for such construction work of Hotter & Co. ■ In this condition of things the railroad company filed a bill in chancery
Clearly the demand of Motter & Co. is legal in character triable by a jury in a law court in the action of assumpsit, and under the constitution Motter & Co., are entitled to sueh trial, unless we can see some plain reason why equity should deprive them of it. As between the railroad company and Motter & Co. a law court can give adequate and full remedy by testing whether any amount is due to Motter & Co., and if so, how much. They have right to have that amount determined by verdict and judgment, as such judgment would be conclusive, not only between the railroad company and them, but as between Motter & Co. and their creditors as to the fund liable for debt. Turner v. Stewart, 51W. Va. 493. Say that the railroad company could sue the conflicting creditors in equity to settle their rights as to the fund in its hands, (this is not decided) still that fact cannot disable Motter & Co. from sustaining a suit at law. The fact that these creditors on various claims are pursuing the railroad company is a matter between them, not between the company and Motter & Co., and cannot put it in the power of the company to exclude Motter & Co. from their proper chosen tribunal. It is this right of Motter & Co. to have their demand passed by a jury that must be the dominant factor. We must not ignore that right. The law forum’s relief, -as between the company and Motter & Co., is full and adequate to fix their rights. When we are met by the plea that it is not adequate between the company and the creditors
Avoidance of multiplicity of suits cannot give equity jurisdiction to stop the action against Motter & Co. The many suits against them would not give them a place in equity, as we held in National Tube Co. v. Smith, 50 S. E. 717, and under High on Injunction, 4th Ed. section 65, 3d Ed. section 57, that “the fact of different suits having been brought, each having a distinct object, founded on distinct and separate . grounds, brought by different persons, does not constitute such multiplicity of suits as to bring the case within the rule to warrant an injunction.'’ But there being one fund in the railroad company’s hands claimed by numerous conflicting creditors, I doubt the application of that law to prevent the company from assembling, in one injunction suit, those creditors; however, that cannot authorize the railroad company to shut out Motter & Co. from a jury trial. (The court does not decide as to that) and as between the company and Motter & Co. all questions of amount, fraud in the contract, estoppel by reason of the contract’s making the engineer’s estimate final, can be heard at law. The case of Nease v. Insurance Co., 32 W. Va. 283, is much relied upon by the railroad company. Jurisdiction in it was based on a statute. Besides,' that was a suit by a sheriff holding several executions claimed to be liens on a fund in the hands of an insurance company, to which there was a conflicting claim by an assignee of the party who was the execution debtor and the insured party. The sheriff sued for the execution creditors to settle conflicting claims on a common fund. Creditors are not suing here. The insured was not suing the insurance company to recover his demand. There was no question as to injunction against a prosecution of. an action at law. The injunction was to prevent payment of the fund to the insured party or his assignee until the conflicting claims could be adjudicated.-
As to the argument that the law court cannot give full relief. It may not by -way of trying numerous actions by creditors against Motter & Co.; but it can give full relief between the railroad company and Motter & Co. The question of jurisdiction is between them.
Affirmed.