182 Mo. App. 422 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is a proceeding under section 2524, Revised Statutes 1909, to assess damages on an injunction bond wherein defendant prevailed and plaintiff has- appealed. The original action, wherein a temporary restraining order was granted, was brought under section 95691, Revised Statutes 1909, authorizing persons and corporations, feeling themselves aggrieved, to bring an action to test the validity of ordinances enacted by cities fixing the rates to be charged by public service corporations, or other owners, operating public utilities under franchises or otherwise, including1 those supplying the inhabitants of cities with gas, electricity, heat or power, and to determine the reasonableness of the rates so fixed. The plaintiff is a distributing corporation only, receiving the natural gas furnished to its patrons from another corporation having pipe-line connection with the distant gas fields and wells constituting the source of supply. The burden of plaintiff’s complaint in the original suit is that the ordinance in question, enacted by the city of Joplin, required it to furnish natural gas to the consumers at a less rate than was possible for it to purchase same from any company bringing gas to or near Joplin from the source of supply. The original suit is primarily one to determine the validity of the ordinance fixing rates and the reasonableness
After consultation with the attorneys for the respective parties, the court set the case for hearing on a day certain. When the case was called for hearing a controversy arose as to whether the case had been set, with the attorneys’ consent, for hearing on the motion to dissolve only or on the whole case. Mr. Montgomery, the special counsel for the defendant, was insisting that only the motion to dissolve was for hearing and when, asked by the court if that would dispose of the whole matter, replied: “No; that is ancillary to this proceeding. The case itself, as I understand it, is not set down for trial, it is simply the motion to dissolve we are trying now;” and the Court replied,
Thereafter, on May 31, 1913, at the April term of court, the plaintiff dismissed its suit and a final judgment was entered discharging the defendant with recovery of costs. The motion to assess damages on the injunction bond, which is the subject-matter of this appeal, was then filed. On the hearing of this motion, the question was again raised as to whether the court had tried the case on the motion to dissolve alone or on the merits, and the court stated his own view of the matter thus: ‘ ‘ That is my recollection about it, that the motion to dissolve and the case was all heard here. If it had not been dismissed and the court had been called upon to pass on it, the court would have passed on both on the testimony that was introduced. I don’t think it was the intention or understanding of the court or the attorneys on either side that we were here trying this case and hearing all that testimony introduced here on the merits and then that we would later introduce testimony and have another hearing on the motion to dissolve. I think the whole thing was being tried together. I thing that was the understanding of all parties concerned.”
The defendant proved that it had paid C. H. Montgomery, as special counsel, for his work in connection with the case the sum of $500, having employed him under the following resolution: “That in the effort and actions of the Joplin Gas Company to establish rates for service in excess of those fixed by ordinance, the mayor be authorized to take such measures and institute such actions as may be proper to sustain said ordinances and prevent the imposition of excessive charges and abuse of the rights and privileges of such service; and that he be authorized to execute necessary bonds in aid of litigation in the premises, and to engage necessary sureties therefore, and employ additional counsel in the extra litigation
The plaintiff asked and the court refused to declare the law to the effect that if the motion to dissolve and the case on the merits, as to the validity of the ordinance and reasonableness of thé rates, were tried together and the expert evidence charged for was directed and pertinent to the issues of the main case and went to the motion to dissolve only to the extent that Such would result from a decision on the merits,
The plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in assessing as damages on the injunction bond expenses incurred and properly referable to the trial of the case on the merits. This* is the only point urged here for our consideration. This is not a new question in this State and the law is well settled. The whole difficulty is in its application to the facts of the particular case. The rule stated in the standard work of High on injunctions is the law of this State, as follows: “And the true test with regard to the allowance of counsel fees as damages would seem to be, that if they are necessarily incurred in procuring the dissolution of the injunction, when that is the sole relief sought by the action, they may be recovered; but if the injunction is only ancillary to the principal object of the action and the liability for counsel fees is incurred in defending the action generally, the dissolution of the injunction being only incidental to that result, then such fees can not be recovered.” [2 High on Injunctions (3 Ed.), sec. 1686.] “It is improper to allow as damages counsel fees for the expense incurred in trying the entire cause, irrespective of the injunction, and the fees should be limited to such as pertain to the dissolution.” [Idem, Sec. 1688.] This has been quoted as being the law of this State many times.
On the other hand, where the injunction is the only remedy sought — “the very life of the bill” — and its perpetuation or dissolution is the only matter to. be litigated, then the whole case is tried as on a motion to dissolve, whether one is actually filed or not, and all the expenses incurred for attorneys ’ fees, etc., are properly assessed as damages for procuring a dissolution of the injunction. [Elliott v. Railroad, 77 Mo. App. 653, 664; Hammerslough v. Building & Loan Association, 79 Mo. 80; Alliance Trust Co. v. Stewart, 115 Mo. 236, 21 S. W. 793; Akin v. Rice, 137 Mo. App. 147, 117 S. W. 655. See editorial notes in 33 L. R. A. (N. S.) 844, and 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 64.]
Where the injunction is only ancillary to the main case and there is a separate trial on the motion to dissolve, evidence may be introduced and costs incurred which are also pertinent to the merits of the case; but that is no objection to the allowance of same as damages for procuring the dissolution of the injunction.
There is no doubt but that in the present case the trial court refused to permit a separate trial on the motion to dissolve and, whether defendant consented or not, the motion to dissolve and the case on the merits were tried together and the court heard all the evidence offered, whether applicable to one, or the other, or both.
The defendant claims that the court had no power to do this against its consent; that a separate trial on the motion to dissolve is a matter of right, and cites State ex rel. v. Smith, 188. Mo. 167, 86 S. W. 867, as holding that, “the defendant has a right to have his motion to dissolve first passed upon separate from the case on the merits.” We do not find that case so holding. In that case there was a separate trial
In so holding, however, we do not think the court’s action in hearing the two together made the trial so essentially a trial on the merits of the case, with the. injunction as purely incidental, as to prévent any expenses of the trial being assessed as damages on the bond'. The court did not so hold in Wallace v. York, 45 Iowa, 81, but said: “The motion could not he determined without an inquiry into the merits, and in this respect the case is identical with Andrews v. Glenville Woolen Co., 50 N. Y. 282. It was right and proper to file the motion to dissolve, and make preparation to sustain it by affidavits, and if done in good faith for the purpose of procuring a dissolution, and the court declined to hear it, we are of the opinion, for the services of counsel in the preparation of the motion, separate and apart from the fees of the counsel in the preparation and trial of the main action, there may he a recovery in this action.”
Nor was the trial, as contended by defendant, a separate trial on the motion to dissolve, with the mer
The case will, therefore, be reversed and remanded.