If plaintiff’s contention that tbe cross demands set forth in the bill of complaint are to be deemed compensated is sustainable, then the injunction asked for against the collection of one of these demands — the assessment — ought to be granted. The first question, therefore, to which I have addressed myself, is whether or not said assessment has been compensated (i. e. paid off or discharged) by plaintiff’s claim for damages on account of defend
“When cross-demands have existed between persons under such circumstances that, if one had brought an action against the other, a counter-claim could have been set. up. the two demands shall be deemed compensated, so far as they equal each other,” etc.
The words last quoted, “so far as they equal each other,” necessarily imply limitation or exclusion. The compensation for which the section provides takes place just as soon as the cross demands co-exist; the greater demand being credited with the smaller, and the latter entirely discharged. Each of the demands therefore must he of such a character that they can be mutually applied in the manner indicated. If one of them is for unliquidated damages (that is, uncertain in amount), it is manifestly impossible for the application to take place. The operation of the statute now under consideration is quite a different thing from the judicial procedure by which a claim for unliquidated damages is set off against fixed indebtedness. If A. sues B. to recover on a promissory note, and B. counterclaims against A. for unliquidated damages, the court can ascertain Uie damages, and apply them to the note, rendering judgment for the party in whose favor a balance is thus made to appear. The doctrine of compensation declared in said section 440, however, cannot be applied in the supposititious case above stated, for the reason already indicated, - — that the statute operates upon the cross demands to which it refers the instant they co-exist, and at that time the cross demands in the case above supposed are incapable of mutual application, as one of them (the claim for unliquidated damages) is indeterminate.
Eliminating said section from further consideration, the situation is this: The defendant is proceeding in the statutory way to collect an assessment due from the plaintiff, and the latter files its bill in equity, setting up a claim against the defendant for unliquidated damages, and asks that the defendant be restrained in the pursuit of its legal remedy until said damages can be judicially determined and applied to the assessment. Plaintiff not only fails to allege insolvency of the defendant, but affirmatively shows defendant’s absolute financial responsibility. No precedent has been cited, nor do I believe any can be found, which will authorize an injunction under these circumstances. If there is any one question more thoroughly settled in the federal courts than others, it is that the distinction between common-law and equity procedure will be rigidly observed and enforced. This distinction is not only the result of constitutional requirements, hut congress has expressly declared, in section 723 of the