44 S.E. 592 | N.C. | 1903
It appears from the proceedings, and especially from the facts found by his Honor in his order for the injunction, that the plaintiffs, in a court of a justice of the peace, proceeded to have the defendants dispossessed of a certain storehouse in Asheville and to recover rents therefor, under section 1766 of The Code; that the defendants resisted the plaintiffs' demand, setting up an averred unexpired lease of the premises and disputing the amount of monthly rent as claimed by the plaintiffs; that a judgment was had for the plaintiffs in the *563 justice's court and an appeal taken by the defendants to the Superior Court of Buncombe County; that the plaintiffs, since the appeal was taken, have procured thirteen judgments for the rent due monthly, from which judgments the defendants appealed to the Superior Court; that the plaintiffs threatened to continue these monthly suits for (801) the rents and have issued executions upon some of the judgments. His Honor further finds as a fact that all the matters and things in dispute between the parties arose out of the same state of facts and depend upon the same principles of law and can be fully settled in one action. The defendants, upon affidavits, made a motion in the case on appeal in summary ejectment for an injunction to restrain the plaintiffs from prosecuting any further suits against the defendants for and on account of the rents and from issuing executions on the judgments, or either one of them, for rent; and his Honor granted the injunction. It appears further in the proceedings that upon the taking of the appeal in the proceeding of summary ejectment under 1772 of The Code the defendant executed a bond in the sum of $1,350 to secure the plaintiffs the rent and damages during the pendency of the appeal, and that afterwards by an order made in the Superior Court an additional bond for the same purpose in the sum of $1,200 was executed and filed by the defendants.
We can see no error in the course pursued by his Honor. It was proper for the defendant to have made the motion for the injunction in the case then pending in the Superior Court, and a new action for that purpose could not have been maintained. Faison v. McIlwaine,
It clearly appears from the record that in the controversy pending between the parties all matters in dispute between them can be settled, and the plan adopted by the plaintiffs of a multiplicity of suits for the monthly payment of rents must be regarded, therefore, as vexatious, and equity will intervene by injunction process to prevent such litigation. The spirit of our present system of practice favors the adjustment and settlement of all matters in dispute between parties in one action as far as possible, and it discourages multiplicity of suits because of the vexatious delays and costs attendant upon them. Sparger v. (802)Moore,
No error.
Cited: S. c.,
(803)