1 Barb. 362 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
The defendant moves to set aside the injunction as having been irregularly issued, upon the ground that no bond was filed in pursuance of the 31st rule of the late court of chancery, and because the order allowing the injunction did not direct a provision to be inserted, giving the defendant liberty to proceed to judgment at law, without prejudice to the equitable rights of the plaintiff, notwithstanding the injunction; agreeably to the 33d rule.
Before proceeding to consider the motion to dissolve the injunction, I will dispose of the question of regularity.
The vice chancellor of the seventh circuit had jurisdiction of the stiit, on the ground that the defendant resided in the county of Wayne; and the bill was properly filed before him.
In allowing the injunction, therefore, the act would be regular, whether done by the person allowing it, as an injunction master at chambers, or as a judge of the court of chancery ; that is to say, it would be regular for him to receive, and act upon, the application, in either capacity. If he did not possess jurisdiction to entertain the suit, it was competent for him to hear the application as an injunction master, and if the bill contained sufficient matter for the allowance of an injunction, he could make his certificate that an injunction ought to issue, upon the plaintiff’s filing a bond according to the 31st rule of the court of chancery, and have directed a provision to be inserted in the injunction giving the defendant liberty to proceed to judgment at law without prejudice, &c., agreeably to the 33d
In my opinion, the injunction was regularly issued.
The defendant also moves to dissolve the injunction upon the matter of the bill and answer, on several grounds; which I will proceed to notice in detail. It is objected that the court of chancery had no jurisdiction to restrain a party by injunction from proceeding against his debtor, under the third and subsequent sections of the act to abolish imprisonment for debt and to punish fraudulent debtors. (Sess. Laws of 1831, p. 398.) This statute, as regards its provisions for compulsory process against contract debtors, is a mere civil remedy. The 1st section abolishes imprisonment for debts due upon contracts generally. Section 2d limits the operation of the first, or rather excepts from its operation, certain specified cases. The 3d, and a number of the sections following, substitutes a new remedy for the creditor against the person of his debtor, in the place of that which the 1st section, limited and qualified by the 2d, had taken away; in the cases specified in the four subdivisions of the 4th section. It is said to be a statute execution against choses in action and other effects of the debtor not tangible by the ordinary y?. fa. (Moak v. De Forrest, 5 Hill, 605. Ex parte Fleming and another, 4 Id. 581.)
The question, on this branch of the case, is whether the court of chancery, at the time the bill in this cause was filed, had,
The objection just considered is founded upon the assumption that the plaintiff had ample relief at .law, and the seventh
It is objected that the bill does not present a case for equitable relief, because it is founded upon an alleged agreement which impeaches a decree in another suit, upon matters arising prior to the entry of the decree. And it is urged, and authorities are cited to show, that a decree cannot be impeached after enrolment, except by a bill of review, or a bill in the nature of a bill of review, charging fraud. The general doctrine contended for by the defendant’s counsel is not denied. In the language of Chancellor Kent, in Davoue v. Fanning, (4 John. Ch. Rep. 203,) It would be most disorderly, and lead to great confusion and endless litigation, if a new and original bill between the same parties and concerning the same matters, could be sustained, while the former decree remained untouched. The decisions
It is also contended that the agreement set forth in the bill as the foundation of the relief prayed for, between the plaintiff and Swain, was a nudum pactum, being without sufficient consideration. The agreement was, in substance, that Swain would take the lands embraced in the mortgages, and discharge the plaintiff from personal liability; he (the plaintiff) to aid Swain in obtaining the foreclosures and the title to the lands without unnecessary delay, and at the least expense. The consideration of Swain’s promise to discharge the plaintiff from personal liability, was the promise of the plaintiff to aid in the foreclosures, and in vesting the title in Swain. It was a case of mutual promises, and the bill alleges a fulfilment by the plaintiff of his part of the agreement.
The question whether the plaintiff’s promise to Swain was a sufficient consideration to support the agreement of the latter, will depend upon whether the promise of the former, if performed, would be either a benefit to Swain, or an injury or inconvenience to the plaintiff. Could the plaintiff have aided Swain in the foreclosures and in obtaining the title, either as to the expense, or as respects expedition 1 It would be too much to say he could not. He could omit to appear in the suits, or to bid or procure bidders at the master’s sale, and thus save time
I do not feel authorized, in this stage of the suit, to hold the agreement void for want of consideration, and to dissolve the injunction on that ground. But I think it should be retained until the final hearing of the cause.
The defendant also contends, that if the agreement was valid, the plaintiff’s only remedy was by an action at law for the breach of it. I cannot agree to this proposition. I do not think the plaintiff was bound to wait until this deficiency was wrung out of him by execution upon the decree, or by proceedings under the Stilwell act, before his right to redress would attach.
The ground taken upon the argument that the whole equity of the bill is denied in the answer, cannot be sustained. Nearly all the material facts stated in the bill, as constituting the ground for equitable relief, are answered, and some of them are denied only upon information and belief of the defendant. This is not sufficient. (1 Barb. Ch. Pr. 640.)
But I am not able to perceive any sufficient reason why the defendant should not be permitted to proceed to judgment in the action commenced in the court of common pleas of Monroe county in the name of Swain, on the decree assigned to him by Swain; without prejudice to the equitable rights of the plaintiff in this suit. And I shall direct an order to be entered to that effect; without costs to either party as against the other.