38 Ind. App. 634 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
The appellee sued the appellants, Elwood Natural Gas & Oil Company, Citizens Gas & Mining Company and Citizens Heat & Light Company. A demurrer of each of the appellants to the complaint for want of sufficient facts was overruled. In the complaint it was alleged that each of the appellants was a corporation and that
It is not attempted to state a cause of action for damages. The appellee is not shown to have suffered any loss or damage, and there is no demand for damages. It was sought only to prevent by injunction the threatened turning or shutting off from the appellee’s residence of gas then being supplied by the appellants or one or more of them, it being claimed that the appellee had the right to the continued use of gas by virtue of a certain written contract between him and the Elwood company. There. is much indefiniteness and uncertainty in the pleading, with some statements of conclusions of the pleader. It is manifest that it is sought to rely upon the written contract
It is for threatened failure to continue to perform this contract that an injunction is sought. The pleading being founded upon a written instrument, the original or a copy thereof should have been filed with the pleading or set out therein. §365 Burns 1901, §362 R. S. 1881. See Xenia Real Estate Co. v. Macy (1897), 147 Ind. 568; Ingle v. Bottoms (1903), 160 Ind. 73; Simpson v. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. (1902), 28 Ind. App. 343; Pickett v. Green (1889), 120 Ind. 581.
Without passing upon other matters sought to be presented as involved in the loosely-written pleading, we must hold the complaint insufficient on demurrer.
Judgment reversed.