3 N.W.2d 639 | Neb. | 1942
This is an application by plaintiff, appellant herein, for a temporary and permanent .injunction, and appears to have been prosecuted by it under and pursuant to sections 20-1062 to 20-1080, Comp. St. 1929, a part of our Civil Code.
It further appears that thereafter on May 25, 1938, Carl F. Belk, and his attorney Frank A. Dutton, “did file a petition for compensation alleging the same injuries referred to in his original petition” filed in the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court on July 23, 1935. Issue was joined in that cause by the plaintiff herein by its answer in writing which raised, “among other things, the defense of the statute of limitations,” and challenged the jurisdiction of the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court to now hear and determine said cause. But the defendants, Nebraska workmen’s compensation court and the judges thereof, ordered a hearing on the above last mentioned petition and answer, to be held at the court house in Nebraska City, Otoe county, Nebraska, on January 5,1939, commencing at 9 o’clock a. m. Further, the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court and
“Wherefore, plaintiff prays that the court restrain and enjoin and prohibit said defendants, and each of them, from proceeding with the purported rehearing in the case of Carl F. Belk vs. this plaintiff, in the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court, and from proceeding to hear the second case on the second action for reasons herein, as threatened by said defendants, and as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and that pending hearing on a temporary injunction that a restraining order issue and be entered herein restraining and prohibiting defendants herein, and each of them, from proceeding further on any purported rehearing until this injunction case can be heard upon its merits, and that upon a restraining order issuing herein that there be a rule fixed for hearing and to show cause why a temporary injunction*274 should not issue and at and within the time provided by law, and that during such time the defendants be restrained from any rehearing, and hearing the second action filed in said compensation case, and that upon final hearing, a writ of prohibition issue against defendants and that said defendants be perpetually enjoined and prohibited from such acts, and for such other and further relief as to this court may seem just and equitable.”
Upon this petition, and affidavit in support thereof,- and a bond conditioned as required by order of the district court for Otoe county, that court on January 4, 1939, made and entered a restraining order “restraining the defendants from proceeding on any rehearing in the case of Carl F. Belk vs. Massman Construction Company, a corporation, in the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court.”
Thereafter demurrers were filed to said petition, and motions to dissolve the restraining order were made, all of which were overruled by the district court, and the restraining order was continued in force. Thereupon answers were filed by all defendants, all of which, among other defenses, challenged the contention that the plaintiff possessed no adequate remedy at law. To these separate answers the plaintiff filed replies putting the allegations thereof in issue. On April 28, 1941, the district court for Otoe county entered its final judgment herein finding “generally upon the record, pleadings and evidence for the defendants,” and further “ordered that the writ of prohibition be and hereby is denied, the restraining order is dissolved and this suit is dismissed at plaintiff’s costs.” From the order of the district court overruling its motion for a new trial, the plaintiff, Massman Construction Company, appeals.
The action instituted and prosecuted by the- plaintiff, especially in view of the issues presented for trial therein, is clearly an equitable action for injunctive relief. The addition to the prayer of a request for granting the issuance of a “writ of prohibition” is wholly ineffectual to alter or change the fundamental character of the proceeding.
True, in Nebraska, we have held that “The district courts
It is quite the general rule that, “An injunction will not be granted when relief may be obtained * * * by a writ of prohibition.” 32 C. J. 66.
The general rule also obtains that, “Courts of equity do not issue writs of prohibition.” 21 Standard Ency. of Procedure, 814.
The plaintiff having instituted and prosecuted this case in the district court as an equitable action, and, after a complete hearing as such was had thereon, now seeks strictly a common-law relief therein, which a court of equity in the exercise of its equitable powers may not grant, and which, if originally presented as a case for original relief, such court, as a court of equity, would have no jurisdiction to entertain. It would seem within the reasons of the rule announced by the supreme appellate court of New York, as follows: “ ‘The opinion in this court, in Mann v. Fairchild (2 Keyes, 106, 111 et seq.), is that, “if a party brings an equitable action, even now, when the same court administers both systems of law and equity, the party must maintain his equitable action upon equitable grounds, or fail, even though he may prove a good cause of action at law on the trial.” See, also, Heywood v. Buffalo, 14 N. Y. 534, 540.’ ” Loeb v.
It follows, in view of the nature of the litigation then before it, that the action of the district court in refusing the issuance of a writ of prohibition in this cause is approved.
There remains for our consideration the denial by the district court of plaintiff’s prayer for an injunction and the dismissal of that action. In the instant case the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court and the several judges thereof were made defendants officially, and the relief sought was that they might be enjoined as a tribunal created by law and as individual members thereof. Belk and his attorney were also made parties defendant, but no action was as to them enjoined save and except participation in the proceedings which the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court was enjoined from holding. This constituted an error. The general rule in equity, applicable and controlling, is: “It is well understood that injunction to stay proceedings in courts of law is not directed against the court itself, but against the parties to the proceeding.” Lewis & Spelling, Law of Injunctions, 184, sec. 86.
A more extended statement of the principles involved in and controlling the instant litigation is the following:
“In injunction, as in other suits, equity acts in personam. In the exercise of its power to restrain judicial proceedings in other courts or tribunals, courts of equity proceed not upon any claim of right to interfere with or control the course of proceedings in other tribunals or to prevent them from adjudicating on the rights of parties when drawn in controversy and duly presented for their determination, but upon the theory that having jurisdiction off the persons of those involved, it may compel them to do or to refrain from doing whatever the equities of the case may require. An injunction decree or order restraining actions or proceedings in another court or quasi-judicial body is directed only to the parties. It is not addressed to the court or other tribunal and is in no sense a prohibition on it in the exercise of its jurisdiction.” 28 Am. Jur. 381, sec. 191.
“Since the injunction acts upon the parties to the cause and not the court, neither the judge of the court in which the cause is pending, nor the attorneys, should be made parties defendant to a suit to enjoin an action at law, though all the parties interested in the action at law are necessary parties.” 13 Standard Ency. of Procedure, 31. See, also, Shaw v. Goodman, 135 Ga. 230, 69 S. E. 173; Ely v. Lowenstein, 9 Abb. Pr. n. s. (N. Y.) 37; Kircher v. Pederson, 117 Wis. 68, 93 N. W. 813; Hastings v. Belden, 55 Vt. 273.
Again, “An injunction will not be granted to restrain an official in the exercise of his official functions; the writ lies only against suitors in the proceedings before him.” Stone v. King-Hodgson Co., 140 Ga. 487, 79 S. E. 122.
It is obvious that the plaintiff is entitled to no relief against the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court, or against the official members thereof or any of them; and that Frank A. Dutton as attorney for Carl Belk, defendant, was improperly made a party defendant in said cause, and the plaintiff is not entitled to receive and recover any relief against him. While, under the peculiar facts in this case, it may be a serious question whether an equitable cause of action is pleaded against defendant Belk,' still we prefer to put our decision of that issue on the basis that, in the application of the rule that equity will withhold its injunctive relief where it appears that the remedy at law is plain, adequate and complete, it may where such is the case refuse to grant an injunction to. restrain judicial proceedings. There is no occasion for equity’s interference where the Nebraska workmen’s compensation court in the action before it does, and is empowered to do, as full justice to the parties and to the matter in dispute as can be done in equity. If the controversy is such as would be decided by a court of equity upon grounds equally available at law, or before the compensation court, the usual legal action will not be enjoined when the ground upon which the injunction is sought may be interposed as a defense to such legal action.
It follows that the judgment of the district court in this cause refusing the issuance of the injunction by plaintiff prayed for, and dismissing its equitable action, was in all respects correct, and is
Affirmed.