239 Mo. 116 | Mo. | 1912
— Petitioner seeks a writ to prohibit the respondent, one of the judges of the St. Louis Circuit Court, from entertaining jurisdiction of a cross-bill filed by one of the defendants against its codefendants and the plaintiff in an equity suit in that court. The petition alleges that the original suit has been dismissed by the plaintiff, but the court lias refused to dismiss the cross-bill and is assuming to exercise jurisdiction to hear and determine the issues presented by it. The petitioner in this proceeding is one of the defendants in the original equity suit, and is the one against whom the cross-bill is mainly aimed.
In order to determine whether the cross-bill went out of court with the dismissal of the original suit, it will be necessary to understand the relation it sustained to the original suit, whether it be considered as a cross-bill under the rules of equity pleading, or a counterclaim under our statute. The pleadings are very long and somewhat intricate but the general purpose of each is perhaps all that is necessary for our present use. The amended petition stated substantially as follows:
A written agreement was entered into between certain gentlemen, having for. its purpose the acquiring by purchase or building certain railroad properties and purchasing coal lands in the State of West Virginia. The parties.to the agreement were to furnish the money, necessary for the venture in the proportion each set opposite his name. The amount was estimated to be $6,000,000', but in fact more than that sum was afterwards subscribed. The plaintiff, Jones, though not one of the original parties, came in soon afterwards subscribing $100',000'. The association called itself the Little Kanawha Syndicate. Three of the original parties to the agreement, Gould, Ramsay and Guy were appointed managers of the business and were given plenary powers to do as they thought best. Large quantities of coal lands in West Virginia were
It is charged in the petition .that certain of the defendants (naming them), subscribers to the Syndicate agreement, purchased the stock of a small railroad in Pennsylvania, called the Green County Railroad, the property not exceeding in value $70,000, which they endeavored to sell to the Syndicate for $250,000, but on the objection of Mr. Gould that offer was rejected. But the petition goes on to say that afterwards when Mr. Ramsay, one of the managers, was selling the property of the Syndicate, he made it a condition of the sale that the purchaser should purchase the Green county railroad at an exorbitant price, thereby making a large profit to himself. It is also stated in the petition that the managers of the
We have not attempted in the above statement to give the substance of the contents of the petition in the equity case with the particularity that would be necessary if we were passing judgment on the merits of the controversy between the plaintiff and the defendants in that suit, but only to show the general nature and purpose of the plaintiff’s suit, in order to understand the relation which the cross-bill bears to that suit. The main, if not the only, purpose of that suit, was to require the members of the Syndicate to take title to those Ohio coal lands and reimburse the plaintiff for his outlay and pay him for his services. The charges of mismanagement, neglect of duty, etc., are. intended to show the necessity for the appointment of a receiver, but all the statements beyond those relating to the Ohio coal lands are of facts pointing to the necessity of equitable relief in the matter of those coal lands. Take out of the plaintiff’s petition what he says about, the obligation of the Syndicate managers to take the Ohio Coal lands off his hands and pay him for them and there would be nothing left; the other averments would then be without point or purpose.
Afterwards the plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, stating that the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad Company was the purchaser mentioned in the original petition of the property of the Syndicate and
In response to that supplemental petition the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad Company filed a cross-bill, and afterwards an amended cross-bill which is the subject of this proceeding*, the relator contending that the circuit court had ño jurisdiction to consider it after the original suit was dismissed.
The substance of the amended cross-bill, in so far as it is necessary to state it for the purpose of this suit, is as follows:
The Bittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad Company, the cross-petitioner, under a contract in writing with the managers of. the Syndicate,' purchased all the property of the Syndicate. A schedule of the property so purchased is contained in the contract, but the Ohio coal lands are not mentioned. The price to be paid was to be ascertained from data given, the whole not to exceed $8,500,000, whereof the railroad company has already paid $8,100,000, and stands ready to pay the balance when titles are conveyed to it as further specified in the cross-bill.
There is no distinct claim to the Ohio coal lands in the cross-bill, further than the' statement on information and belief that they of right belong to the Syndicate, and if so the Syndicate should perfect its title to the same and convey them to the cross-petitioner.
The main statements in the amended cross-bill are in reference to the coal lands and railroad properties in West Virginia. The titles to a large quantity of those coal lands were in the defendant Pulton, the relator in this proceeding. The complaint against him is that under the contract by which the cross-petitioner became the purchaser of the property, and at the instance of the managers of the Syndicate in order to pflirv out their agreement, Fulton undertook to convey
The amended cross-bill g’oes on to complain of other matters relating to property which the pleader claims under the contract of purchase, and for which it asks relief in equity against the Syndicate and Pulton as a member thereof, but those matters do not relate to the subject of the original suit in equity, to-wit, the Ohio coal lands. In pursuance of the prayer of the cross-bill the court issued a temporary injunction enjoining him from taking any further steps towards the prosecution of his suit in West Virginia.
* To this amended cross-bill Pulton filed a demurrer on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction of it, because it was really not a cross-bill to the original bill in equity; and it was not a counterclaim within the meaning of our statute. The demurrer was overruled, and Pulton filed answer.
The railroad company filed a supplemental cross-bill showing that Pulton had instituted a suit in West Virginia against the railroad company on the ground that he had just discovered that, by the terms of the contract whereby the railroad company purchased the assets of the Syndicate, the railroad company was to pay whatever the Syndicate owed on account of properties purchased by it, and that there was still a large balance due the Syndicate on that account out of which Pulton was entitled to have the railroad company pay him for his judgment against the Syndicate; the purpose of the suit was to obtain a decree in the West Virginia court holding the railroad company liable to the extent of its indebtedness to the Syndicate for the amount Pulton claimed was due him from the Syndicate; that Pulton was thereby claiming satisfaction out of the same fund that Jones, the plaintiff in the original equity suit, was seeking to reach for satisfaction for his claims in reference to the Ohio coal lands. The supplemental cross-bill went on to say that Pulton
Defendant Fulton made a full answer to the amended and supplemental bills vindicating his own conduct in reference to the conveyance of titles to the West Virginia coal lands to the St. Louis Union Trust Company, and showing his right to maintain his two suits in West Virginia, and praying that the railroad company be required to pay the amount of his claim
Answers of all the other defendants to the original suit and to the cross-bill, who 'were served with process, were filed, vindicating the rights of the Syndicate and its managers in the transactions involved. It is not deemed worth while, for the purpose of this proceeding, to state more particularly the contents of those answers. The cause was sent to a referee to try all the issues.
In the order referring the cause, the court directed the referee to first hear the testimony relating to the matters put in issue by the original bill and answers thereto and report with the evidence his findr ings of facts and conclusions of law relating to those matters, and to take no testimony on any other branch of the cause until he had made such report and the court had thereupon made an interlocutory decree with reference to the rights of the original plaintiff Jones, after which the referee should proceed to try the issues made by the answers and cross petitions and replies thereto and report as before. In accordance with that order the referee tried the issues relating to the original suit and filed his report recommending that the plaintiff’s petition be ■ dismissed. Plaintiff filed exceptions to the report and before it was acted on filed a motion to dismiss his suit. When that motion came on for hearing the court rendered judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s petition “without prejudice to the plaintiff or any of the parties to proceed with the trial of the issues framed upon the cross-bills herein.” Plaintiff moved to strike the cross-bill and answer from the files; defendant Pulton filed a like motion; those motions were overruled, then the relator Pulton came to this court asking that the circuit judge be prohibited from proceeding to try the issues raised by the cross-bill, •
Our statute does not use the term “cross-bill,” but the office of a cross-bill is as well recognized in our practice now as it was under the old chancery practice, and it means now what it meant then. Section 1806, Revised Statutes 1909, authorizes a defendant in his answer to make a “statement of any new matter constituting a defense or counterclaim.” Section 1807 defines a counterclaim; it is: “First, a cause of action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the petition as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or connected with the subject of the action; second, in an action arising on contract, any other cause of action arising also on contract and existing at the commencement of the action.” In either case it must be a claim “existing in favor of a defendant and against a plaintiff, between whom a several judgment may be had.” The statutory counterclaim embraces á cross-bill in equity, but is not limited to that, because, under the statute, in an action on a contract, the defendant may plead any other cause of action he may have against the plaintiff arising on a contract. The cross-bill now under discussion in so far as it relates to the West Virginia lands, cannot be sustained as a counterclaim under the clause of-the statute last mentioned, because the cause of action does not arise out of a contract between Jones and the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad Company; nor can it be sustained as a cross-bill or counterclaim under the first clause, be
A cross-bill in equity pleading is a matter of defense to the original bill, or an auxiliary suit by a defendant against the plaintiff or against other defendants, either to afford the cross-pleader a more adequate defense to the original bill than a mere answer would give, or to afford him affirmative relief concerning the same matter covered by the original bill. Whilst the cross-bill may go against a codefendant, yet it must go also against the plaintiff and relief can be had against a codefendant only when it is in aid of the cross-pleader’s defense to the original bill. In Joyce v. Growney, 154 Mo. 253, construing the statute, the court said: “It does not authorize a counterclaim or equitable cross action of one defendant against another, except as one defendant may be entitled to such relief against another as will enable him to make good his defense to the plaintiff’s suit. Whatever affirmative relief one defendant may have as against another must be of a character responsive to the plaintiff’s suit. . . . The statutes relating to pleadings do not authorize one defendant to inject into the plaintiff’s suit an independent suit, either at law or in equity, against his codefendant not necessary or germane to his defense to the plaintiff’s suit.” In the case now before us, the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad Company is seeking relief mainly against its codefendant Pulton to annul his judgment obtained in the West Virginia court against the managers of the Syndicate and his. lien thereunder to the West
A cross-bill must be germane to the original bill and defensive in its character, but it may go beyond a mere defense and show cause for affirmative equitable relief touching the subject of the original bill; if it is merely a defense to the original suit the dismissal of the original suit carries the cross-bill out of court— when the attach is withdrawn there is nothing to defend — -but if the cross-bill makes a case which entitles the cross-pleader to equitable relief against-the original plaintiff touching the subject of the original bill, then the dismissal of the original bill does not carry with it the cross-bill; the cross-pleader is entitled to his equitable relief. This distinction is recognized in Story’s Equity Pleading (10 Ed.), section 399, note a. But that rule will not help the cross-pleader in this
II. But it is contended that Fulton, having answered the cross-bill, having joined issue and prayed relief touching the same, has submitted himself and his rights to the judgment of the court in that suit and it is now too late to assert want of jurisdiction in the court.
The Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad Company first filed a cross-bill, to which Fulton filed answer; then the railroad company withdrew its cross-bill and filed an amended cross-bill, to which Fulton filed a demurrer, on the ground that the matters stated in the amended cross-bill do not constitute a cause of action arising out of the contract, or a transaction set forth in the petition as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, and they are not connected with the subject of that action. The court overruled the demurrer and after tjiat Fulton answered.
When the railroad company withdrew its original cross-bill it released Fulton from the consequence, whatever it was, of having answered it; with the cross-bill out, the answer was out. Therefore when the amended cross-bill was filed Fulton had a right to demur to it even if it covered the same facts as contained in the original cross-bill. [Beattie Mfg. Co. v. Gerardi, 166 Mo. 142, l. c. 156.]
After his demurrer was overruled did Fulton by answering waive his right to object to the jurisdiction of the court over the subject-matter of the cross-bill? This court has often decided that answering over after demurrer overruled waives every defect in the peti
Suits in equity are proceedings in personam, therefore when the court lawfully acquires jurisdiction of the persons it may adjudge their property rights regardless of where the property is situated. But it does not follow that because the court has acquired lawful jurisdiction of the person for one purpose it may, in that suit, hold him to answer for another matter. For example, Mr. Fulton, a resident of the State of Pennsylvania, is made a party defendant to the suit concerning certain coal lands in Ohio, in which suit he is interested only as a member of the Syndicate or as a creditor of that Syndicate; he comes from his home in Pennsylvania and enters his appearance, whether voluntarily or under stress of the order of publication it is immaterial, to defend his interest in that suit, then advantage is taken of his appearance here to serve him with a copy of a so called cross-bill that relates entirely to other matters involving large interests. Can ft be said the court has thus acquired jurisdiction of him for that purpose? He appealed to the court for relief, but the court overruled his demurrer, and he found himself in the position' where he must either let the cross pleader take judgment against him or answer, and so he answered. It does not clearly appear from the record whether Fulton was here in person or entered his appearance to Jones’s suit by attorney, probably the latter, because if he was here in person it would perhaps have resulted in an independent suit against him, which would have a different aspect. There was no new suit instituted no writ served, it was only an effort to tack on to Jones’s suit another entirely different suit. Of course the circuit court had general jurisdiction of subjects of that kind,
III. It is argued that the court should entertain the cross-bill in this case to prevent a multiplicity of suits. Equity sometimes entertains a bill for the purpose of preventing a multiplicity of suits, but in doing so it does not authorize a bill that is multifarious in character, in fact it forbids such a bill. Story’s Equity Pleading (10 Ed.), section 271, says: “By multifariousness in a bill is meant the improperly joining in one bill distinct and independent matters, and thereby confounding them; as, for example, the writing in one bill of several matters, perfectly distinct and unconnected, against one defendant, or the demand of several matters of a distinct and independent nature against several defendants in the same bill.” A bill aimed to avoid a multiplicity of suits should be between the/ same parties and relate to or grow out of the same subject.
The learned trial judge himself recognized that he had on his hands two entirely different suits, and therefore when he sent the cause to a referee he ordered that one suit should he tried first and nothing done in the other until the final report on the first. The report that came in in that case disposed of the whole of Jones’s original suit and that suit was then ready to progress to final hearing before the chancellor, hut the plaintiff arrested that progress by dismissing his suit.
We hold that the, dismissal of that ease carried the amended and supplemental cross-bill and all pleadings relating thereto out of court.
The writ of prohibition is awarded as prayed.