85 N.Y.S. 28 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1903
This action was commenced by the service of a summons and complaint in August, 1901, and an order to show cause containing a restraining clause was made returnable in eight days thereafter. The hearing thereon was continued to meet the convenience of counsel until October of that year, when the questions involved were finally submitted. The purpose of the action was to restrain the defendants during the Pan-American Exposition, held in the city of Buffalo, and ending October 31, 1901, from selling and dealing in special low rate tickets issued by the plaintiff to persons expressing a desire to attend the exposition. The decision of the motion at this time can serve no useful purpose to the parties herein involved; the question is purely academic. I have, however, been requested by counsel to indicate by formal expression my views of the law applicable to the question presented, and I have consented to do so in a memorandum. The defendants, something over sixty in number, are ticket'brokers, sometimes known as “scalpers,” permanently or temporarily transacting business in the city of Buffalo.
The complaint, after setting forth the formal allegations of incorporation, the issuing of the special rate non-transferable, tickets, alleges, and these allegations are supported in a
Do these allegations contain facts sufficient to justify the interposition of equity and the issuing of injunctive relief ? It is true, of course, that the complaint contained much of what has been described in one of the light operas as “ corroborative detail intended to give verisimilitude to a bald and unconvincing narrative,” but the gravamen of the action is to be found in the allegations above set forth, and unless they are sufficient the motion now before the court should be denied. It is important, therefore, to an intelligent understanding of the question that we analyze the averments and see what ground is afforded for the ultimate relief demanded. In the first place we are to have in mind that upwards of sixty gentlemen, each of them engaged in a lawful business (People ex rel. Tyroler v. Warden, 157 N. Y. 116), having no connection with each other so far as appears from any facts set forth in the complaint (for the conclusions of
It is not to be doubted that in a court of equity all of the parties interested in a given transaction may be brought in as defendants for the purpose of a complete disposition of the matters in controversy, but in the case now before us the plaintiff undertakes to bring in as defendants persons who may be interested in any one of thousands of separate and distinct transactions, and we are clearly of opinion that the complaint is open to the objection of multifariousness. • In the case of John Doe, purchasing a round trip ticket from New York' to Buffalo, there is a single transaction. Anyone who is connected with this transaction, who claims any rights or interests under this contract, or who is engaged in any fraudulent transaction in respect to the same, is, under the authority, a proper party to an equitable action. But where the subjects of the suit are in themselves perfectly distinct the plaintiff cannot bring into the compass of one suit such different objects, because it obliges each defendant to the unnecessary trouble and expense of a litigated question with which he has no concern. Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 156. Multifariousness, properly speaking, is where different matters, having no connection with each other, are joined in a bill against several defendants, a part of whom have no interest in, or connection with, some of the distinct matters for which the suit is brought, so that such defendants are put to the unnecessary trouble and expense of answering litigating matters stated in the bill, in which they are not interested and with which they have no connection. Note to Boyd v. Hoyt, 5 Paige, 79, citing Newland v. Rogers, 3 Barb. Ch. 432, 20 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) 1080. The cause of action attempted to be set forth in the complaint in the matter now before us does not relate to any specific trans
In Board of Supervisors v. Deyoe, 77 N. Y. 219, the ■county treasurer, had issued notes purporting to have been authorized by the board of supervisors. These notes aggregated a large amount in excess of the authority, and some thirty or more of the holders of these notes had commenced actions at law to collect the same. There were fifty or more of the holders of these notes, and on demurrer it was held that upon equitable principles it was proper to implead the
The same principle was involved in the case of National Park Bank v. Goddard, 131 N. Y. 494, 502, where the above-cases w'ere cited and approved, but in no case has it been suggested that the plaintiff might embrace within its complaint a large number of transactions, some of them not even in existence, and then bring in all of the parties who might in the future have some connection with these transactions, which might or might not he consummated, and enjoin them from-doing any act which might enable some party or party unknown to work a fraud upon the plaintiff. In Strobel v. Kerr-Salt Co., 164 N. Y. 303, it was held that different riparian owners of distinct parcels of riparian land, who have a common grievance for an injury of the same kind inflicted at the same time and by the same acts, though the injuries differ in-degree as to each owner, may unite in a common action to enjoin a higher riparian owner from diverting or polluting the stream, and many cases of a similar character are to be found, and the case of Bradley v. Bradley, 165 N. Y. 183, is conceded' to be a border line case, and affords no authority for an extension of a doctrine to reach the facts presented in the casé. The case is not brought within equitable principles by characterizing the acts of the defendants, or the acts which it is assumed they are going to commit, with reference to some transaction» yet to be, as “ maliciously, fraudulently and illegally done,” without stating facts from which this inference may be properly drawn, nor is the case strengthened by the allegation that defendants have “ engaged in a scheme and conspiracy to defraud the plaintiff,” where it is not made to appear by the facts stated in what this alleged conspiracy consists. To allege that the defendants have conspired and will conspire, is to allege but a conclusion of the pleader, which is not strengthened by being sworn to positively, and if we keep in mind the fact
It is in no part of the duty of a court of equity to assume evil; it has fulfilled its functions when it has found a remedy for actual or threatened wrong for which the law furnished no adequate redress, and it cannot properly take jurisdiction where it is not shown that the wrong which is feared will probably result from the wrongful acts of the parties who are before the court, without the intervention of persons to the court unknown. So far as may be gathered from the complaint, the plaintiff cannot suffer injury without the acts of parties who are strangers to this action, if indeed it may suffer damages at all, and where the plaintiff has reserved to itself the power of regulating the method of authenticating the ticket and of taking it up and collecting full fare where it is presented by a person other than the original purchaser, it takes a good deal of presumption against the current of law, to make out irreparable injury to the plaintiff through the acts of all of these defendants, some of whom may never have any relation to any given transaction.
We are unable to find facts which justify the interposition of equity as against a single defendant, and there is clearly no greater cause of action against all of them, because there is an entire lack of a single transaction in which all of them have an interest, or in which their rights are involved.
The motion to continue the injunction pending the trial of the action should be denied