16 Barb. 325 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1853
The justice before whom the demurrer in this cause was argued held the complaint good, and overruled the demurrer. This is an appeal from his decision. The first three causes of demurrer have not been much ‘ dwelt
L The complaint sets' forth the nature of the' suit, so far as to say that an injunction was granted in it by a justice of this court; and it states that it was not only commenced but that' issues were joined in it and a judgment rendered therein. This is a sufficient statement. If it were not, it is the better opinion that after the parties have obtained an injunction- and stayed their. adversaries’ proceedings,- who have suffered damages thereby, it is too late for the plaintiffs in the first suit to set up as a defense to the suit on the injunction bond, a want of jurisdiction to grant the injunction.- They are estopped from raising that question.
II. The complaint alleges a service of the injunction; which, under the liberal rule prescribed for the interpretation of pleadings under the code,- means a service that is legal, and sufficient in law.
III. It has been held that a dismissal of the bill on the final, hearing of the cause includes, by force of the term itself, and of the law applicable to it, a determination that the party was not equitably entitled to the injunction.
IY. But the fourth ground of demurrer is the one on which the defendant principally relies.' This is based on an erroneous joinder of plaintiffs,- on the ground that the claims are distinct and separate, arising out of the Separate nature of their interests. The covenant is joint, and when that is so, it is said that the covenantees may sue jointly. (People v. Holmes, 5 Wend. 197. 10 B. Monroe, 372. Platt on Covenants, 130.) However that may be, we are now to determine this question, as it arises under the code of procedure, which abolished all distinctions between the forms of proceeding' in actions at law and suits in equity. With the view of embracing all cases, whether of law or equity, and of making them conform to' one general rule, the code provides, in the 117th section, that “all persons having an interest in the subject of the action, and in obtaining the relief demanded, may be joined as plaintiffs, except as otherwise provided in this title.” This is now the rule in all cases,
It has recently been decided in a court of law in England, that, under a statute which makes railroads responsible for the damages sustained by the widow and children of a deceased husband and father, killed by the negligence of the corporation or its agents, a suit lies, by the several parties entitled under the act, jointly ; and a verdict was rendered in the suit separately, for the widow and the children. This was a case at law, and I cite it to show that the legislature can by implication exercise a control over the proceedings in a court of justice, and that it regulates even the verdict, in a way wholly foreign to the well known rules applicable to ordinary proceedings of juries, and their verdicts.
Gridley, W. F. Allen, Hubbard and Pratt, Justices.]
We think it was the manifest intent of the legislature to make a change in relation to parties in suits at law, and to assimilate the practice in that respect to the practice that had before then prevailed in courts of equity ; and we therefore affirm the decision of the justice at special term.