Illinois Surety Co. v. Mattone

122 N.Y.S. 928 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910

Scott, J.:

The plaintiff appeals from an order denying its motion for an injunction pendente lite..

The appellant is a foreign corporation and tapón September 16, 1908, executed as. surety with one Albert M. Pesce as principal a bond or undertaking in the penal sum of $15,000, pursuant to chap^ ter 185 of the Laws of 1907, as amended by chapter 47ihof the Laws of 1908j conditioned upon the said Albert M. Pesce faithfully holding, transmitting and paying over all moneys received by him for transmission to foreign countries, and also faithfully keeping and paying over all moneys received by him upon deposit. Pesce defaulted and absconded-, and a large number of actions have been brought against *175plaintiff by persons who had deposited money with said Pesce. Some of these have gone to judgment and some are still pending. They have been brought in different courts, mainly in those having no equity jurisdiction. There is, however, an equitable action now pending in this court brought by one creditor of said Pesce, suing in behalf of himself and all others similarly situated, seeking to recover the amount of the bond from plaintiff and to secure, its equitable distribution among all those entitled to share therein. The plaintiff in this action, while denying all liability upon said bond to any creditor of said Pesce, seeks to have its liability determined in a single action, in which the amount of the liability, if it be liable at all, may be equitably distributed. It has, therefore, made all disclosed claimants parties defendants and seeks to restrain pendente lite their several actions against it.

The question of the liability of the plaintiff upon its bond may be said to have been finally decided against it so far as concerns the courts of this State. (Guffanti v. National Surety Co., 133 App. Div. 610; affd., 196 N. Y. 452; Musco v. United Surety Co., 132 App. Div. 300; affd., 196 N. Y. 459.) The plaintiff, however, is liable in the aggregate only to the amount of its undertaking, and that amount' constituted a fund for the payment of the creditors pro rata, and is to be distributed among them equitably according to their respective claims. Mere diligence in prosecuting a claim against such a fund will not entitle the procuring claimant to a priority of payment. The fund can, therefore, be reached only by an action in equity, prosecuted in a court possessing equitable jurisdiction'; for “ an action at law by one creditor solely on behalf of himself is entirely inconsistent with the purpose for which the bond was required or given.” (Guffanti v. National Surety Co., supra.) The several defendants in this action who have begun actions at law in courts possessing no equitable jurisdiction can, therefore, apparently take nothing by their actions, and will suffer no real prejudice if such actions are stayed until an action, properly brought in equity, can be prosecuted to final judgment. It is true that the Museo case, above cited, was an action at law by an individual claimant to recover his own loss and was not for the benefit of creditors generally, and it also appears by the complaint in this action that judgments have been obtained against plaintiff in courts having no *176equitable jurisdiction. It does not appear, however, that; the point was taken in any of these actions that an actioii at law would not' lie at 'the suit of a single creditor, and in the Musgo case it does appear that' no" such question was discussed or considered. But even if plaintiff can: successfully defend upon this technical ground the numerous actions brought against it at law, it is unrea-. sonable that it should be compelled to incur the expense of doing so when the claims of all parties can be equitably determined and ' adjusted in an action properly brought for that purpose. It is suggested that plaintiff can obtain all the relief necessary for its protection in the representative action in equity ■ brought by the defendant Imperato’ in behalf of himself and all others similarly situated. It is true that the complaint in ■ that action asks for an injunction restraining actions at law for the recovery of individual claims, but it does not appear that the plaintiff in that action has. applied for or obtained such an injunction, nor is it suggested how this plaintiff, as a defendant in that action, could procure an injunction against his codefendants. He can obtain such relief in that 'action only by the grace of the plaintiff therein, and should not be '.called upon to rely solely upon so slight a dependence. It is well settled that a court of equity has jurisdiction to entertain an action of this nature. In cases where many persons have claims and áre prosecuting or are about to. prosecute them at law against one defendant or class of defendants, or a fund liable in equal degree to all those persons and to others, a court of equity, to forestall á multiplicity of actions has "jurisdiction of an action for a general, accounting and adjustment' of all the rights, and to restrain separate, and' individual actions at law in the same or other, courts, thus, bringing all the litigation into one suit.” (Pfohl v. Simpson, 74 N. Y. 137.) There are numerous cases, sustaining the " rule above quoted. (Board of Supervisors v. Deyoe, 77 N. Y. 219; Kellogg v. Siple, 11 App. Div. 458, and authorities' cited in Musgo v. United Surety Co., supra) It has been, suggested that many of these authoritiés are not applicable, because the plaintiff denies all liability upon the bond. This, however, is not ■ necessarily fatal.' It' has been held that such an action can be maintained to determine a large "number of claims to a fund in court, although the plaintiff insists that none of the claimants are *177entitled to any share in the fund. (Kellogg v. Siple, supra.) Such an action as this is not in the nature of an action of inter-pleader wherein several parties make conflicting claims to the same fund, but is entertained for the purpose of preventing a multiplicity of actions. There should, however, be complete assurance that the claimants, whose affirmative actions have been restrained, will, if successful, find a fund applicable to their payment and which the court can.so apply in this action. The plaintiff is a foreign corporation, and though it is doubtless entirely solvent at the present time, and has made such provision as our statutes require for the protection of creditors in this' State, no one can foresee what the state of affairs may be when this action goes to final judgment. If the plaintiff, who seeks a favor at. the hands of the court, should deposit in court the sum represented by its bond to remain subject to final judgment in this action, an injunction pendente lite against all claimants who have brought or threatened' to bring individual actions at law could properly be granted. There is no reason, however in any.case for enjoining the prosecution of the representative action in equity already brought by the defendant Imperato for all the questions involved can be as satisfactorily and equitably settled in that action as in this. The motion as it was presented at Special Term was properly denied, but the order appealed from will be so modified as to reserve to plaintiff the right to ren.ew the motion upon compliance with the suggestions contained in this opinion, and as so modified will be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and- disbursements to each respondent who appeared and filed a separate brief.

Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Clarke and Dowling, JJ., concurred.

Order modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to each respondent who appeared and filed a separate brief. Settle order on notice.