223 Mass. 177 | Mass. | 1916
The motion of the defendant, that J. A. Bremner & Co. Incorporated be made a party claimant under R. L.
The claim was one for services rendered to the defendant in superintending the erection of a building. When the present action was brought, if the defendant admitted liability and if the amount due for the services was not disputed, but the money was claimed by the plaintiff and by J. A. Bremner & Co. Incorporated, the defendant might have availed himself of the interpleader statute, and allowed the plaintiff and claimant to litigate the controversy in which he, the defendant, had no interest. But he took no such position. On the contrary, in his answer he set up a general denial and a plea of payment. He further answered that if he ever made a contract as alleged, it was with the plaintiff as the agent or representative of the Bremner corporation. There was no admission of his liability to either of them for any amount. And with full knowledge of the facts he elected to go to trial, not as a mere stakeholder, but contesting his liability to the plaintiff.
The statute, authorizing this summary proceeding in actions at law, does not alter the settled doctrines applicable to bills of interpleader. “The statutory remedy is a mere substitute for the equitable remedy by suit, in the kinds of actions to which it applies, and is governed by the same rules.” 1 Pom. Eq. Rem. § 61. Worthington v. Waring, 157 Mass. 421, 428. Brierly v. Equitable Aid Union, 170 Mass. 218. The stakeholder must use reasonable diligence to bring the contending claimants into court. He cannot delay his application until after an unsuccessful trial against one of them. Provident Institution for Savings v. White, 115 Mass. 112. Moore v. Hill, 59 Ga. 760. Union Bank v. Kerr, 2 Md. Ch. 460. McKinney v. Kuhn, 59 Miss. 186. DeZouche v. Garrison, 140 Penn. St. 430. Haseltine v. Brichey, 16 Grat. 116. In the case at bar the defendant’s diffi
The defendant was not entitled as matter of law to have J. A. Bremner & Co. Incorporated made a party, and there was no error in the refusal of the presiding judge to give the rulings requested.
The “appeals” bring nothing before us for consideration.
Assuming, without deciding, that the statute authorizes a claimant to invoke interpleader proceedings upon its own motion, the considerations already stated dispose of the exceptions and' appeal of J. A. Bremner & Co. Incorporated. In each proceeding the entry must be
Exceptions overruled. Appeals dismissed.
J. A. Bremner & Co. Incorporated also, after the verdict for the plaintiff, moved to be made a party to this action. Both motions were heard by White, J., who refused to rule, as asked to do in numerous requests filed by the defendant and by J. A. Bremner & Co. Incorporated, in substance that as a matter of law the motions should be granted; and the defendant and J. A. Bremner & Co. Incorporated alleged exceptions and claimed appeals.