253 F. 328 | 4th Cir. | 1918
These two causes, although brought up, one by a writ of error, and the other by an appeal, yet as involving the same facts, and between the same parties, and dependent upon the same rule of law, were heard together. The facts are, that at the March term, 1916, the appellee, Sallie C. Repass, administratrix of the estate of Charles M. Repass, obtained a judgment in the Dis- • trict Court of the United States for the Western District of Virginia,
To this declaration the Maryland Casualty Company filed two special pleas. In the one plea it set up that it had requested the plaintiff Sallie C. Repass, administratrix, to issue her execution and levy the same on the property of the defendant the Big Vein Pocahontas Company, but that Sallie C. Repass had refused and continuously refuses to do so. The second plea was to the effect that the Maryland Casualty Company as surety on the supersedeas bond had theretofore tendered to Sallie C. Repass, administratrix, the amount of the judgment, interest, and costs, on condition that the judgment aforesaid and the lien thereof and all right of action thereunder by suit, execution, or otherwise be assigned to the Maryland Casualty Company without recourse against the said Sallie C. Repass, but that the said Sallie C. Repass had refused to make the assignment. On the 20th day of November, 1917, the cause having come on to he heard upon the declaration and these two pleas, the court below struck the pleas from the file, and adjudged that the plaintiff recover of the defendants jointly and severally the amount due under the supersedeas bond. In the meantime, viz. on the 28th of June, 1917, the appellant, the Maryland Casualty Company, filed its proceeding in equity against the said Sallie C. Repass, administratrix, to enjoin
When this bill was filed, an order was made in the court below on the same day' restraining the law action until the further order of the court. On the 19th of September, 1917, after a hearing, the District Court ordered that the bill of complaint be amended by making the Big Vein Pocahontas Company a party defendant, and the said bill was so amended, and the answer of Sallie C. Repass filed to the amended bill. Sallie C. Repass in her answer practically admits the facts stated in the bill, but alleges that she was informed that there was a contract of indemnity or insurance which existed and was in force between the Maryland Casualty Company and the Big Vein Pocahontas Company, by which the Maryland Casualty Company undertook to protect and insure the Big Vein Pocahontas Company against liability in actions against it seeking to recover damages for the injury or death of its employes, which was the cause of action sued on, and upon which the original judgment against the Big Vein Pocahontas Company was recovered; that there was a controversy existing between the Big Vein Pocahontas Company and the Maryland Casualty Company, in which the 'Big Vein Pocahontas Company contended that the Maryland Casualty Company ..was liable by virtue of the contract of indemnity between them for the payment of the whole of the judgment, and that those parties intended to litigate that matter between them, and that the plaintiff was advised that it was not proper for her to intervene in that controversy by giving an assignment of the judgment to one of the parties whereby, it might obtain a supposed advantage over the other. The Big Vein Pocahontas Company was duly served, and thereupon made a'motion to dismiss the bill of complaint upon the ground that it appeared up'on the face of it that the District Court for the Western District of Virginia was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the matters therein set forth, because the proceeding was not brought in the district of the residence of either the plaintiff or defendant, and next that it appeared upon the face of the bill that the Maryland Casualty Company was primarily bound or obligated to pay a portion of the judgment.
At the same time the defendant Sallie C. Repass, administratrix, also made a motion to dismiss the, bill of complaint, and upon hearing both motions the District Court on the 20th of November, 1917,
It is contended by the counsel for the appellee, Mrs. Repass, that she had her option to issue execution against the principal judgment
The Maryland Casualty Company, however, sets up as special reasons- why it needed a legal assignment that the judgment could only have the force of a lien if it was properly transcripted and entered in the county in which the property of the Big Vein Pocahontas Company was situate, and furthermore that, unless execution was issued under the law of Virginia within a limited time, no such lien could be procured; that in order that the Maryland Casualty Company should retain to itself the benefit of' the lien to which this judgment was entitled, and the power of issuing execution thereunder, it was necessary to have some legal right to transcript and record the judgment, and issue execution and obtain a lien, which could not be obtained within the time that would be required upon a bill filed in equity to compel assignment or obtain consequent subrogation. The assignment áslced of Mrs. Repass was an assignment which would leave the assignee without any right to recourse upon Mrs. Repass, and which in effect could only pass to the assignee
With this equitable controversy between these two Mrs. Repass had nothing to do; she avers that she is not willing to volunteer or take any part or be connected with the controversies between these parties, and yet her very action and the allegations contained both in her declaration in the law case and her answer in the equity case are- in result equivalent to an active participation in the matter on behalf of the Big Vein Pocahontas Company. Admittedly the original liability was that of the Big Vein Pocahontas Company, so far as Mrs. Repass was concerned. She sued for damages for the death of the deceased, Charles M. Repass, caused by the negligence of the Big Vein Pocahontas Company, and to that company, and to that company alone, until the giving of the supersedeas bond, she looked for payment. It is difficult to see how she could have failed to avail herself of her immediate, prompt, and ready remedy, by enforcing her execution to collect the amount due on her judgment, unless it was that she desired to force payment out of the Maryland Casually Company, to the ignoring of the principal judgment debt- or, the Big Vein Pocahontas Company.
The decree below is accordingly reversed in cause No. 1610, and the cause remanded to the District Court, to proceed in accordance with the principles of this opinion.
In cause No. 1611 the judgment entered up against the Maryland Casualty Company and the Big Vein Pocahontas Company is also reversed, as having been ordered when the action should have been stayed to await the decree in the equity cause under the principles herein announced, with direction that the action be stayed until the final action of the court in the equity cause.
Reversed.