47 F. 351 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey | 1891
Upon the 11th day of May, 1889, the complainant filed its' bill of complaint in this court against the Mexican Guadalupe Mining Company, the Villaldama Developing Company, the Mexican National Exploring & Mining Company, and the Yguana Smelting & Mining Company, alleging, inter alia, that the said defendant companies had made, entered into, and executed a certain contract in writing with the complainant to sell and deliver to it certain smelting ores mined by said contracting companies in Mexico, and necessary for the conduct of the business of the said complainant at its foundries in Kansas City, Mo.; that said defendants refused or neglected to perform such contract, or to keep and abide by its terms and conditions, but utterly failed so to do; that such course of conduct worked,irreparable injury to the complainant; and it therefore prayed that the said defendants might be decreed specifically to perform the said contract in all its terms, and, in aid of such performance, that they might be enjoined by a writ of injunction of this court from selling or disposing of any of the smelting ores produced or mined from the mines of the said defendants to any other persons than the complainant during the life of the contract; and, further, that a receiver for the said corporations and their respective properties should be appointed by this court for the better protection of the interests of all concernéd. Upon filing this bill an order to show cause why an injunction pendente lite should not issue against the defendant was granted. Incorporated in this was a temporary restraining order in the terms of the prayer of the bill. All of the defendants appeared and filed their respective answers to the bill of complaint, and upon the pleadings and accompanying affidavits this court, after thorough consideration, on the 7th day of August, 1889, made an order practically requiring the specific performance of the contract in question, and enjoining the defendants from disposing of their smelting ores to any other person or persons than the complainant, and from intermeddling with the product of their mines in any way or for any purpose, except as might be necessary for the due performance of the said contract; and ■while' the application for a receiver was not at that, time granted, yet a manager for said mines was appointed by the court, that through his supervision of said mines the said contract might the more surely be per
On the 17th day of May, 1890, the complainant filed its supplemental bill against the defendants in the original hill and against William M. Clayton, Severo Mallet Prevost, and William C. M. Jones, who were not defendants in the original bill, in which, after reciting the allegations and charges of the original bill, and the action of the court thereupon, and the contempt proceedings, the complainant alleged as new matter that Clayton, by Prevost, his attorney, had commenced, since the order of the 14th of April, 1890, hereinbefore mentioned, in the courts of Mexico, certain legal proceedings to enforce the collection of an alleged indebtedness of the defendant corporations to him, the said Clayton, individually, which indebtedness was said to be about $500,000; and that in said proceedings the said Clayton had procured — First, the appointment of Jones as a receiver for the said defendant companies and their property; and, secondly, an order of the court directing the said receiver to sell the mines and the property of the said defendant corporations in Mexico, to satisfy the said alleged indebtedness. That the said defendant companies against whom the said proceedings were pending were conniving in such action for the purpose of making it impossible for them to carry out the order of this court specifically to perform their contract with the complainant. And the bill prayed that the said defendants William M. Clayton, Severo Mallet Prevost, and William C. M. Jones, and their attorneys and agents, might be restrained and enjoined from prosecuting or proceeding with or taking any action whatsoever in any action or proceeding, of whatsoever nature, brought, commenced, taken, or had by them, or either ofthem, in the courts of Mexico, for the purpose or with the object of enforcing the said indebtedness alleged to be due to the said Clayton from the said defendant companies, and from selling or attempting to sell or in any way disposing of any of the mines or property of the defendant companies situate in Mexico or elsewhere, for the purpose of satisfying the said indebtedness alleged to be due to the said Clayton; and that they might be enjoined and restrained from interfering with or obstructing or preventing the carrying out of the order of this court dated July 10, 1889; and for such other and further relief in the premises as the nature of the ease
Under such circumstances, should a preliminary injunction be granted? I think not. The purpose of such an injunction is to preserve, until the final hearing of the cause, matters in statu quo. This is its only proper and legitimate object. The right to demand such an extraordinary exercise of the power of a court depends always upon the equitable position of the parties at the time the application is really made. What that condition was at any preliminary stage of the cause is not to be considered. The criterion by which the issue of the writ is to be allowed or refused is to be found in the question: Does the position of the parties, the status of the matters involved at this present moment, justify the ex-' ercise of the power? Writs of injunction are not to be scattered loosely by the court for a tentative purpose only, but there must appear an impending injury, which demands instant preventive action to justify their allowance. Now, in this case, this court is requested to issue a preliminary injunction to prevent a creditor of a corporation from prosecuting to judgment a claim against such corporation, and from enforcing such judgment by the sale of the defendants’ property situate in Mexico, 15 months after the judgment lias been not only obtained, but satisfied by a sale under the proper judicial process of the courts of Mexico, under which the defendants’ property has been seized and disposed of. Is it not perfectly clear that the time for such action by this court has long since elapsed ? If the act to be prevented has been done, would not the order enjoining the doing of such an act be an absurdity, — a mere brutwn fulmen of no possible power or effect? The only answer to this question must be in the affirmative; and it follows, therefore, that the court is asked to do an empty and utterly profitless act which cannot have any
But if it were proper, upon the facts disclosed in these proceedings, to grant the prayer of the bill in question at this time, there is still an insuperable objection to such action by the court. The bill states in express terms that the Mexican Ore Company, the complainant, is a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Missouri, 'and a citizen of the state of Missouri, having its place of business and abode at Kansas City, in said state of Missouri; and that it brings its supplemental bill against William M. Clayton, who, it declares, is a citizen of the state of Pennsylvania, doing business and having his abode at Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania. The act of congress of March 3, 1887, as amended by the act of August 13, 1888, touching the jurisdiction of this court, makes me following provision:
“Ho person shall be arrested in one district for trial in another in any civil action before the circuit or district court, and no civil suit shall be brought against any person by any original process or proceeding in any other district than that whereof he is an inhabitant; but where the jurisdiction is founded on the fact that the action is between citizens of different states, suit shall be brought only in the district of the residence of either the plaintiff or the defendant. ”
It seems clear upon the mere reading of this act that this court can have no jurisdiction of a suit commenced by a citizen of Missouri against a citizen of Pennsylvania. The sole ground of jurisdiction in this case is that the suit is between citizens of different states. The law is imperative that in such case the suit must be brought either in that district in which the plaintiff resides or in that district in which the defendant resides. That condition is not complied with, admittedly, in this cause. The complainant, to relieve itself of this embarrassing position, asserts that its supplemental bill, now filed, is ancillary to the original bill hereto lore filed in this court by the party complainant, and that it is a well-settled principle that the court will retain jurisdiction of the cause under such circumstances, although the parties that may be brought in by the ancillary bill arc citizens of the same district as the complainant. It is undoubtedly true that where the circuit court of the United States has acquired jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter of a suit, and ancillary proceedings are instituted, the court will retain the jurisdiction, although the parties upon the different sides of the controversy are citizens of the same state; but I think that such principle cannot be invoked in this case, to enable the complainant to maintain this bill. This supplemental bill introduces new parties, and an entirely new controversy, not at all necessary to be decided in order to have a final decree on the case presented by the original bill. That bill was to comjiel the specific performance of a contract. That contract was for the supplying to the complainant certain ores, after undergoing a process of manipulation and concentration. To carry out such contract it is apparent that it is not an absolute prerequisite that these very minos should be in the possession of the defendants. With or without
If, then, this' bill, although called an “ancillary bill,” is in its nature an original bill, so far as Clayton is concerned it is evident that this court is wholly without jurisdiction, and no order such as is prayed for, nor any other order, could be, by it, made in the cause.
At the same time the motion for an injunction was presented to the court' a motion to attach William M. Clayton for contempt in not obeying the order of July 10, 1889, was presented to the court. So much of the order of July 10, 1889, as applies to Mr. Clayton is to be found in the enjoining clauses of that order, which was directed not only to the companies defendant, but as well to their officers, directors, trustees, agents, employes, workmen, and servants; and it is admitted, that at that time and up to April 10, 1890, Mr. Clayton was a director and vice-president of one or all of the defendant corporations. By the'tender and by the acceptance of his resignation his connection with such corporations lawfully ceased on that day. It- is undoubtedly true that an injunction or an enjoining order against a corporation and its officers, although the officers are not named personally, and are not parties to the record in any way, is binding upon them; but the scope of such an injunction or enjoining order is to restrain the officers from doing the act prohibited in their official capacity as an officer of the corporation, or in their individual capacity, for the benefit or in the interest of the corporation enjoined. If after the service of such an order or such an injunction upon a corporation án officer thereof severs his connection bona fide with such corporation, his action thereafter as an individual in the enforcement of his own vested rights, and not in fraud of the order of the court, nor for
Acheson, J., concurs.