87 N.Y. 527 | NY | 1882
The complaint alleged a right in the plaintiffs to maintain a boom across Grass river, with one end attached to defendant's premises, that the defendant interfered therewith, and asked that the right to maintain such boom and attach the same to said premises should be adjudged. At the beginning of the action the plaintiffs obtained a preliminary injunction, in effect restraining the defendant from interfering with the boom, and requiring him to show cause, at a time specified, why the injunction should not be continued. An order was then made that within ten days after written notice to do so by defendant, plaintiffs give an undertaking in the sum of $2,500 with condition in the usual form, and that being done the injunction should be retained until the further order of the court or a judge thereof. It was also ordered that the defendant might, on a notice of not less than five days, have a further hearing before another judge upon the order to show cause; and the question of continuing the injunction should then be treated as if the order to show cause had been originally returnable before him. The required security was given and the appellants became sureties thereon.
Upon trial of the issues the plaintiffs failed and the defendant *530 had judgment, dismissing the complaint with costs and restraining the plaintiffs from "putting a boom on defendant's land." On the 27th of May, 1878, a reference was ordered to ascertain the amount of damages sustained by the defendant "by reason of the preliminary injunction," and the referee was directed to allow as part of such damages counsel fees reasonably incurred by defendant "in the preparation for and trial of the action," and the sum of $50 was then agreed upon by the respective parties, "as the other damages sustained by reason of the injunction." The referee reported, as counsel fees incurred "in the preparation for and in connection with the trial of the action," $450, and (under the stipulation) all other damages, $50.
Exceptions were taken by the plaintiffs to the first item, and the report confirmed by the Special Term, May 24, 1880. In the meantime, the claim for damages having been assigned to Russell, he was substituted as party in interest in place of Cleveland. The sureties appealed to the General Term, from so much of the order of May 27, 1878, as directed the allowance of counsel fees, and from the whole of the order of May 24, 1880. After affirmance of both orders they appealed to this court.
Whether the plaintiffs had a right to attach a boom to the defendant's land whenever the convenient prosecution of their business required was the matter in controversy between the parties. It was asserted by the plaintiffs and denied by the defendant. The plaintiffs attached and the defendant detached the boom. Each act, if unauthorized, was a trespass, and from the commission of the act complained of, each party sought, in this action, to restrain the other. The pleadings are not set out at length, but it may be assumed that the case made by the complaint would entitle the plaintiffs to an injunction as ultimate relief, and that a preliminary injunction was necessary to prevent intervening injury. So with the defendant's case, as stated in his answer. It was established only after controversy and labor, which entailed upon him the expense stated in the first item of the referee's report, and the question upon this appeal is, whether it can properly be charged to the appellants. *531
They undertook, that the plaintiffs "will pay to the defendant," "any damages not exceeding" a sum named, "that he may sustain by reason of such injunction, if the court shall finally decide said plaintiffs not entitled thereto." It is well settled that fees of counsel for services in procuring a dissolution of an injunction, and in attending a reference to assess damages consequent thereon, are properly within the language of such an undertaking (Rose v. Post,
The finding of the referee deprives the respondent of the benefit of that exception. It is apparent, not only from that finding but the evidence by which it was justified, that the services for which compensation was sought were rendered in the regular conduct of the cause, and might have been included in the allowance which, in prescribed cases, is authorized by way of indemnity for the expenses of the action. They had no relation to any special or incidental damage occasioned by the issuing of the injunction. In Corcoran v. Judson (
It follows, that so much of the order of the Special Term of May 27, 1878, as is appealed from should be reversed, and the order of the Special Term of May 24, 1880, modified by striking out the sum of $450 (part of the $500 thereby allowed), as of February 10, 1879; and as the order of reference and subsequent litigation was made necessary by the allowance of counsel fees, the referee's fees, mentioned in said order, should also be disallowed as a charge against the appellants, but so far as it allows substitution and $50 damages it should be affirmed. As the appeal was too broad but in part successful, neither party should have costs against the other in the Special or General Term, or this court.
All concur.
Ordered accordingly. *533