194 Wis. 311 | Wis. | 1927
The trial court dismissed this case upon the theory that inasmuch as the plaintiff, in order to obtain
This position of the trial'court was evidently taken upon the view that the Western Company was an indispensable party rather than merely a proper party, and for that reason that a legislative mandate compelled him to order the Western Company brought in as a defendant, and then, because of the nonresidence of the Western Company and the impossibility of obtaining legal service upon it, this action as against the appearing defendants must go down.
The statute so considered (sub. (1), sec. 260.19, Stats.) provides, in substance, that controversies between parties then before the court may be'determined when it can be done without prejudice to the rights of others or by saving their rights; but that “when a complete determination of the controversy cannot be had without the presence of other parties, or any persons not parties to the action have such interests in the subject matter of the controversy as require them to be made parties for their due protection, the court shall order them to be brought in. . . .“
We are satisfied, however, that no such all-compelling effect should be given, under the circumstances disclosed in this record, to this statute, and furthermore that the Western Company, although the only party to any contract with the
On the first point we think that a statute such as the one here invoked, even though mandatorily and expressly requiring our courts to make some third person a party to a pending action, carries with it, by implication and by force of necessity, the limitation that it is intended to apply only to such third persons who are so situated as to be within the power of a then party to the action or of the court itself to bring within the court’s jurisdiction. Otherwise it would be requiring of parties or courts the performing of the impossible or the going through with an idle and futile formality.
It must be here conceded that by no process or proceedings by plaintiff or the court below could the Western Company, against its will, be made a party here, because of its absence from the state. Wisconsin legislation has no extraterritorial force, the presumption being, for purposes of statutory construction, that, unless the contrary clearly appears, a state statute is presumed to be for the regulation and control of property or persons within such state. Pries v. Ashland L., P. & St. R. Co. 143 Wis. 606, 608, 128 N. W. 281; New York Cent. R. Co. v. Chisholm, 268 U. S. 29, 31, 45 Sup. Ct. 402, 38 A. L. R. 1048; Frick v. Pennsylvania, 268 U. S. 473, 489, 45 Sup. Ct. 603; 25 Ruling Case Law, 781. The same subject was quite fully discussed in Anderson v. Miller Scrap Iron Co. 169 Wis. 106, 111, 170 N. W. 275, 171 N. W. 935.
In Grant v. Connecticut Mut. L. Ins. Co. 29 Wis. 125, the plaintiff sued as assignee of a life insurance policy; the defendant asserted the pendency of a suit on the policy in the District of Columbia by the administrator of the estate of the insured, and asked, in order to have a complete determination of the controversy here, that the administrator be made a
The question here is quite different from that in the cases of rival claimants to the same fund, where it has been held that equity must refuse to decide to give it to one unless all are before the court and that the plaintiff who cannot bring them into his action must be denied relief. Mahr v. Norwich U. F. Ins. Soc. 127 N. Y. 452, 459, 461, 28 N. E. 391; First Nat. Bank v. Shuler, 153 N. Y. 163, 170, 47 N. E. 262; Steinbach v. Prudential Ins. Co. 172 N. Y. 471, 477, 65 N. E. 281.
We therefore feel that such statute ought not to be construed, as the ruling below in effect does, to deny a plaintiff in our courts any relief whatsoever against defendants over whom the court has obtained jurisdiction solely because in passing upon the rights of the parties then before it there is necessarily involved a material question concerning the rights or liabilities of a third person who is not and who cannot be brought within the court’s jurisdiction.
' That the Western Company is not an indispensable party is also clear. If the appearing defendants in any way aided or participated with the-Western Company in an unlawful breach of the contract of January, 1917, or, knowing of the-existence of such contract and of a good-faith claim by plaintiff that it still had rights thereunder, thereafter maliciously aided the Western Company in any continued unlawful violation of the plaintiff’s rights, they were each and all parties to a tort or wrong against the plaintiff for which each, all, or any may be held responsible for the direct and consequent damages. Such proposition is not here challenged by defendants and could not well be under the following, out of many cases that may be found: Martens v. Reilly, 109
To what extent the relief by way of restraint asked here against the answering defendants (as distinguished from the demand for money damages against the Western Company) comes within the recognized exceptions to the general rule that equity declines to restrain tortfeasors, is not now directly before us, for no question is raised here by respondents but that plaintiff was entitled, upon his complaint if true, to some measure of relief, severally or jointly, against the named defendants, were the Western Company also an appearing party. One such exception, viz. that against threatened or continued injury to property rights the restraining power of equity may successfully be invoked, is as firmly established as is the general rule itself (Singer S. M. Co. v. Lang, 186 Wis. 530, 536, 203 N. W. 399, supra; Northern Wis. Co-op. Tobacco Pool v. Bekkedal, 182 Wis. 571, 583, 197 N. W. 936; Lawrence Trust Co. v. Sun-American Pub. Co. 245 Mass. 262, 269, 139 N. E. 655, enjoining the further publication of injurious statements affecting plaintiff’s business as distinguished from the refusal of an injunction as against continued libels amounting only to personal defamation, as held in Choate v. Logan, 240 Mass. 131, 135, 133 N. E. 582; Hitchman C. & C. Co. v. Mitchell, 245 U. S. 229, 260, 38 Sup. Ct. 65; Truax v. Corrigan, 257 U. S. 312, 340, 42 Sup. Ct. 124, 27 A. L. R. 375; Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U. S. 510, 536, 45 Sup. Ct. 571; Jefferson & I. C. Co. v. Marks, 287 Pa. St. 171, 134 Atl. 430, 47 A. L. R. 745; Parker P. & W. P. Co. v. Local Union, 87 W. Va. 631, 105 S. E. 911, 16 A. L. R. 222), such cases being based upon general equity principles as distinguished from those under
Among the facts necessary to be found in order that plaintiff may maintain its action are: a contract with the Western Company, and its unlawful breach. The first of these stands admitted; the second is disputed. But the Western Company would not have to be named or joined as a defendant in order to permit plaintiff to offer proper evidence as to either of these two separate facts. Any party hereto may have the benefit of the attendance as witnesses of officers or agents of the Western Company from without the state, and such wit-' nesses would be within the privilege against the commencement of civil actions against them or their company. Rix v. Sprague C. M. Co. 157 Wis. 572, 575, 147 N. W. 1001.
Any judgment here in plaintiff’s favor against any or all of the answering defendants would, the Western Company not being a party, in no sense be binding on that company so far as plaintiff is concerned, and vice versa. We see no more reason why the plaintiff should be prevented, as against the defendants here, from showing, if it can, in the absence, as a party, of the Western Company, the fact that the contract between plaintiff and it was unlawfully breached by the Western Company, than it could be prevented from showing that it had made such a contract in January, 1917, if such fact also were put in issue; and no valid reason why it should be barred from showing either.
The plaintiff has its election whether it will proceed against the Western Company for a breach of contract, for specific performance, or for damages for the breach of some obliga
The respondents on the argument here rely largely upon the asserted proposition that the dismissal of the action by the court below was but an exercise of judicial discretion and therefore not subject to reversal by this court. Such contention, however, is clearly but a begging of the question and therefore of no effect here.
The court below should have proceeded to a trial upon the issue presented in the plea of abatement, namely, whether the conceded contract of January, 1917, between plaintiff and the Western Company had been unlawfully breached by the Western Company.
By the Court.- — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings.