280 P. 1008 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *660 This is an appeal from a judgment in an action on an indemnity bond for damages resulting from an order temporarily restraining the owners from interfering with the harvesting and marketing of a grape crop.
Respondents are the owners of eleven acres of vineyard land in San Joaquin County, upon which there was growing, in 1926, a crop of grapes. E.G. Potter, as receiver of the Stewart Fruit Company, brought an action to foreclose a chattel mortgage on said crop. A temporary restraining order was granted prohibiting these respondents from interfering with the harvesting and marketing of the *661 crop by Potter. Upon the granting of this restraining order the appellant executed and filed in the former case an indemnity bond for $1,000 providing that "if the defendants, or either of them, recover judgment in said action, or if it be adjudged that said plaintiff is not entitled to said temporary restraining order, the said plaintiff will pay to said parties enjoined such damages not exceeding the sum of $1,000 and costs as said defendants may sustain by reason of said temporary restraining order, if the said Superior Court finally decides that the said plaintiff was not entitled thereto." Thereupon the said Potter picked and marketed a portion of said crop of grapes. Within about a week subsequent to the granting of said restraining order, these respondents employed counsel and moved the court in that action to vacate said restraining order, which motion was granted, and without further proceedings the action was subsequently dismissed by the said Potter. This action for damages for conversion of the crop of grapes, together with costs and counsel fees incurred in obtaining the release of the restraining order, was brought against this appellant. Judgment was rendered in favor of the respondents for the sum of $494.90. The court found that:
"By virtue of the restraining order issued in action No. 20273 in this Superior Court, E.G. Potter of The Stewart Fruit Company upon whose behalf defendant executed and delivered the bond referred to in the foregoing findings was permitted to seize and convert and injure a portion of said crop of grapes of the reasonable value of $365.90, and plaintiffs were restrained from interfering with said seizure, conversion and injury, and by reason of the issuance of said restraining order plaintiffs herein were damaged in said sum of $365.90.
"By reason of the issuance of said restraining order plaintiffs were obliged to incur and pay and did incur and pay reasonable costs of suit in the sum of $29.00 and reasonable attorneys' fees in the sum of $100.00, and were damaged in said sums."
The appellant claims that the surety on the bond is not liable for the reason that the damage resulting from the conversion of the grapes was not "by virtue of said restraining order"; that the record contains no evidence of the market value of the grapes which were taken; that the *662 record fails to show that the $100 attorneys' fee was incurred solely for services in dissolving the restraining order, and that the costs of suit were not incurred by reason of the restraining order.
[1] It is argued that the restraining order was not the cause of the conversion of the grapes, but, upon the contrary, that the damage to the crop was the result of the tort of Potter, who alone became liable therefor. Potter, however, was the principal upon the indemnity bond which is the basis of this action. At his instance the owners of the grapes were wrongfully enjoined from interfering with his custody or preventing Potter from "supervising, controlling, packing, cleaning, shipping, disposing of and selling the crop of grapes." In effect, by means of this restraining order, Potter was authorized to retain and dispose of the grapes and the respondents were prevented from exercising any right of ownership over them which might enable them to protect, preserve, harvest or market the crop. While the language of the order does not specifically restrain the picking of the grapes, it recognizes the authority of Potter to handle them, and this is clearly implied for respondents were precluded from handling or marketing the crop. Little aid in preserving the crop would accrue from merely picking the fruit to turn it over to Potter.[2] It would be a strained and unreasonable construction of the foregoing language to hold that the order left any authority in the respondents to control or preserve the crop. Even if the language were uncertain in this respect, the owners were justified in assuming that they were thereby deprived of the right to pick, preserve or market the fruit. If such construction of the language was not unreasonable, the sureties would be liable for damages resulting from a wrongful procuring of the injunction. In 14 Ruling Case Law, page 482, section 184, it is said: "In case an injunction which is wrongfully issued, is framed in ambiguous terms, the defendant therein is entitled to recover such damages as he has sustained in obeying it as he reasonably and in good faith understood it." (1 Joyce on Injunctions, p. 317, sec. 192.)
[3] It is well-settled law that when an injunction is wrongfully issued, and subsequently dissolved, the party enjoined will be entitled to such damages within the limit of the penalty of the bond as he may have sustained by *663
reason of the issuing of the injunction. (Sec. 529, Code Civ. Proc.; Asevado v. Orr,
[4] On motion of the respondents, the restraining order was vacated and an injunction denied. The subsequent dismissal of the action was equivalent to a determination that the applicant was not entitled to an injunction. In the Asevado case, supra, it is said: "The voluntary dismissal of the action by the plaintiffs had the same effect as a decision of the court that they were not entitled to the injunction." (Frahm v. Walton,
The case of Barton v. Fisk,
In a concurring opinion Mr. Justice Hogeboom in the same case said: "The damages in question are occasioned by the injunction. But for the injunction the defendants would not have lost their property. By the injunction the plaintiff was impliedly authorized to take it. . . . The loss which the defendants have sustained, was incurred by compliance *665 with the order of the Court. . . . The liberal rule of damages declared . . . sustains the claim of the defendants in this case."
The author of Sutherland on Damages, third edition, page 1443, section 527, quotes with approval the foregoing language of the last-mentioned authority.
[8] We conclude that where the damage is not remote, but may be reasonably anticipated and attributed to the effect of the injunction, as in the present case, the bond is liable.
The cases relied upon by appellant may be readily distinguished from the present action. In Cummings v. Mugge,
In the case of Gobbi v. Dileo,
In the case of Wood v. Hollander,
[9] It is true that counsel fees which are recoverable as damages upon dissolution of a temporary restraining order wrongfully procured must be confined solely to compensation for the reasonable value of the services actually performed in vacating the order alone. (Curtiss v. Bachman,
[10] In the present case the undertaking was given to secure damages which accrued by reason of a temporary restraining order which was granted in a suit to foreclose a crop lien, pending the hearing of an order to show cause, which was set for a definite date. The order to show cause and the petition to vacate the temporary restraining order were necessarily heard together. The disposition of the temporary restraining order, and the order to show cause, necessarily determined the pending petition for injunction, which was merely incident to the chief issues of the case. The merits of the cause, which was primarily a suit to foreclose a chattel mortgage upon the grape crop, were in nowise involved in this hearing for which counsel fees are claimed as an element of damages. The case was never *667 tried upon its merits. When the restraining order was denied the plaintiff dismissed his action. The record in the present case sufficiently supports the findings of the court and the pleadings to the effect that the legal services were all necessarily performed in procuring a dissolution of the temporary restraining order.
[11] The plaintiff, William Neil Moore, testified that he hired two lawyers to represent him in the injunction proceeding; that they were engaged three days in the performance of that service and that he paid them $100 therefor. "Q. How many days were you engaged in the hearing of the injunction proceedings? A. Three days, I think. Q. Were these attorneys acting for you in court during those days? A. Yes. Q. Did they do any work for you other than in an appearance in regard to this injunction . . .? A. No, sir. . . . Q. Did they make any charge for their services in this matter? A. Yes. Q. What was that charge? A. One hundred dollars. Q. Did you pay that one hundred dollars? A. Yes." Expert testimony of the reasonable value of the services was unnecessary. The extent, duration and nature of the services as shown by the record furnished the court with ample evidence upon which to determine the value of the services. (Spencer v.Collins,
[12] The appellant contends that the evidence fails to support the finding that he "picked, destroyed or converted to his own use," grapes of the reasonable value of $365.90. The evidence as to the quantity and value of the grapes which were appropriated might have been more definite and certain. However, we are of the opinion that the record sufficiently sustains the findings in this regard. The damage which was allowed, was small compared with the usual production of the eleven acres of vines, and the evidence indicates that the major portion of the crop was lost to respondents. While it is true that Mr. Burson, who was formerly the managing agent for the Stewart Fruit Company, and who directed the picking of the grapes in question for Potter, testified as a witness for respondents that they shipped only about 270 boxes, the shipping statements of *668 the company which were introduced in evidence show that 198 crates of Tokay grapes were shipped from the Moore ranch in 1926, and brought a net market price of over fifty cents per box.[13] In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the price which a portion of the same variety and crop of grapes actually brought in that market at the time of the conversion, furnishes ample proof of the reasonable market value thereof. (23 C.J., p. 57, sec. 1802.) Mr. Burson further testified: "The Stewart Fruit Company handled this property for several years. . . . Around sixteen to eighteen hundred [boxes], maybe two thousand Tokays were taken off the vineyard the year before, and I judge was something like that this year in question. Q. From sixteen hundred to two thousand? A. Something like that, I would say." The plaintiff, William Neil Moore, testified that they had picked not more than seventy-five boxes of grapes from the vineyard that year before they were stopped by the restraining order; that no other persons picked grapes in that vineyard that season except himself and men who were employed by the appellant and that after the restraining order was dissolved there remained unpicked only "415 lugs, consisting of 245 Black Prince, 152 Tokays," etc. For the purpose of supporting the judgment it may be assumed from the foregoing state of the record that the court disregarded the statement that only 270 boxes were shipped and accepted the same witness' statement that the vineyard that year produced 1600 to 2,000 boxes of Tokay grapes, and that appellant was responsible for the destruction or conversion of the entire crop, except the seventy-five boxes which plaintiff testified were picked before the restraining order was issued, together with the 152 boxes of Tokay grapes which were all that remained after the dissolution of the order. This would leave over 1300 boxes of Tokay grapes which were lost by the respondents. The actual sales of Tokay grapes from this crop that season netted over fifty cents a box. The record contains no other evidence of the value of the grapes. This is therefore prima facie evidence of their reasonable market value, amounting to a sum far in excess of the damages allowed on that account by the court. Furthermore, there is some evidence that the grapes were picked prematurely with the inference that the market price which was received was materially *669 less on that account. There was also evidence of loss sustained in permitting the grapes to mold and in upsetting and spilling a quantity of them. We are not apprised of the basis upon which the trial court computed the damages which were allowed and merely suggest the foregoing as a plausible theory which finds ample support in the record, sufficient upon which to warrant the upholding of judgment in that regard.
[14] The damages which were allowed by the court included an item of $29 which was incurred in the payment of court costs in the foreclosure proceeding. It does not appear what proportion of this sum, if any, was expended strictly on account of the issuing of the restraining order. Upon the authorities heretofore cited, this item was therefore improperly allowed, and the judgment should be modified to that extent.
Accordingly, the judgment is modified by striking therefrom the sum of $29, and as so modified the judgment is affirmed, the respondents to recover their costs.
Plummer, J., and Finch, P.J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on October 19, 1929, and a petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on November 18, 1929.
All the Justices present concurred.