45 A. 172 | Md. | 1900
This appeal is taken from a decree of the Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City, refusing a preliminary injunction. The facts of the case are few and simple, and we regard the law by which its disposition must be controlled as free *590 from serious doubt. The bill makes the following averments: That the appellant is a corporation of the State of West Virginia for the construction of railways, and that being engaged in the construction of the Queen Anne's railway, it sub-let a portion of the work to the appellee, William C. Merritt; that after performing in an unsatisfactory manner part of the work under his contract therefor, and after receiving from the appellant an amount largely in excess of what was justly due for the work performed, he abandoned his contract, which the appellant was obliged to complete to his great loss and injury, and that there is nothing whatever justly due to said Merritt under said contract; that the other defendants, thirty-seven in all, claiming to be creditors of Merritt, had instituted attachments, to all of which the appellant had been summoned as garnishee, and to all of which it had appeared and pleaded nulla bona; that since the institution of said attachment suits, Merritt had brought an action of assumpsit to recover $50,000. claimed to be due him for work and labor and materials under said agreement, to which action the appellant had appeared and pleaded nonassumpsit, that this suit and said thirty-seven attachments were still pending, and that the causes of action in both were the same, the attaching creditors seeking to fasten upon the same alleged indebtedness claimed by Merritt in his suit; that the effect of the situation thus stated was to subject the appellant to a multiplicity of vexatious suits, to unnecessary costs and charges, and to the danger of a double liability for the alleged indebtedness, and that it was therefore entitled to have all said suits determined through one proceeding in equity, by means of issues to be framed and tried as might be thereafter directed. The prayer of the bill was that all the controversies might be adjudicated in equity in one proceeding, and that in the meantime, the further prosecution at law of all said suits be restrained by injunction.
We are unable to discover in the Record any ground for invoking the equitable jurisdiction of the Court. There is *591
no proof that the appellant is threatened, as it alleges, with a multiplicity of vexatious suits and actions. The attachments which are pending, are indeed quite numerous, but each of them was instituted in an appropriate jurisdiction; each is based upon a distinct and independent cause of action, evidenced with the particularity required by the statute, and verified by affidavit. So far, therefore, as these attachments alone are concerned, we can conceive of no ground upon which we could declare them vexatious, and of no reason why the mere number of such suits should be made the occasion of divesting the Courts of law of their conceded jurisdiction. Certainly the Maryland cases cited by the appellant do not sustain its contention that "in this State equity has jurisdiction on the sole ground of preventing multiplicity of suits, without regard to any other consideration." In all of these cases, there will be found special grounds for the interposition of equity. In Lucas v.McBlair, 12 G. J. 1, the injunction was granted to preventthe Commissioners of Lotteries from granting Lottery Licenses andselling tickets, in violation of the rights of the Town HallCommissioners of Baltimore City, under an Act of Assembly, and to prevent the necessity of the bringing of a multiplicity of suits by the complainants to protect their franchise. So inSnowden v. The Dispensary,
It was contended, however, that the effort to force Merritt's suit to trial before the trial of the several attachment suits, exposed the appellant to the risk of a double liability, and that upon this ground the jurisdiction of equity was clear. But we cannot adopt this view. The appellant was not a stake-holder between contending parties, as was Beaston in the case ofFarmers' Bank v. Beaston, 7 G. J. 429, relied on by him to sustain this contention. Beaston admitted his indebtedness in aspecific sum to the Elkton Bank, and the Court intimated surprise that in the conflict of claims between the attaching creditors he had not brought them into chancery, where the rights and priorities of each might have been adjudicated without prejudice to him. But the appellant denies any indebedness whatever to Merritt, and there is no conflict of claim between the attaching creditors, so that the case cited can have no weight as authority in this case. Indeed, the denial of indebtedness alone is sufficient to show that the injunction cannot be granted, because, as stated in Worthington v. Lee,
If the appellant be now exposed to the risk of a double liability it is not the consequence of the institution of any of these suits, nor of anything done by the plaintiffs in the progress of such suits, but of its own election to plead to the merits in the principal suit, instead of pleading in abatement.
As the views we have expressed will require us to affirm the decree, we do not think it expedient to consider whether the damages claimed by Merritt from the appellant can be made the subject of attachment, or to express any view on the question oflaches in filing the bill. The decree will be affirmed, with costs above and below.
Decree affirmed.
(Decided January 11th, 1900). *594