162 Mo. App. 594 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
(after stating the facts).— It is argued by counsel for appellants that plaintiff could not recover because of laches in bringing the suit; that is to say, the acts of severing the line occurring June 30-, 1908, and the suit not instituted until December 16', of that year, plaintiff had rested on his alleged rights too long to entitle him to come into a court of equity for redress. It is also argued that plaintiff having first undertaken to assert his own right by restoring the connection over the protest and in spite of the objections of defendants, does not come into court with clean hands. The further claim is made by appellants, that plaintiff has no right under the circumstances of the ease to maintain this suit in equity for an injunction as it was his duty first to establish his right at law; that the defendants were entitled to a trial by jury on this and that a court of equity should not use its powers in behalf of the defendants asserting this right until the right was clearly established.
In a suit in equity, this court, as an appellate tribunal, is charged with the duty of determining it, under the evidence, on the very right of the case, irrespective of the conclusion arrived at by the trial court. We have read all the testimony as abstracted with great care, aided also by the printed statements and oral argument of counsel. Apparently we have all the testimony before us that was before the trial court. Without attempting to set out the evidence at length, we have, as we think, given the essential facts.
At the outset we are compelled to say that the injunction granted on final hearing is entirely to broad within the case made by the petition and in proof. After finding that there was - a partnership and that neither of the defendants had any right to sever the main telephone line extending from Edina to Colony, the decree proceeds to enjoin defendants and each of them perpetually “from in any manner cutting and
Obviously the trial court disposed of the case on the theory that the plaintiff and defendants and other members of the association were partners, and the line partnership' property. That was error. The association of which plaintiff and defendants were original members, and which originally constructed the line, was of the kind which has been held by our court in Meinhart v. Draper, 133 Mo. App. 50, 112 S. W. 709, not to be a partnership. It is not pretended to be a corporation, although operated under what is ordinarily the name of an incorporated association. It was a mere voluntary association, originally formed for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating a line of telephone from Edina to Colony, not for profit but for the convenience of the individuals composing the association. Under such a state of facts the law applicable to the determination of the rights of partners has no place, even admitting that it was here correctly applied.
It is not clear just what part of the old line continued to be held in common but whatever there was of it was put up at auction by a vote of the members of the association who were present at a meeting held on the 29th of June, 1908, and at that same meeting the association, incorrectly designated as a partnership, was dissolved. That was the meeting of June 29, 1908'. The portion held in common was thereupon sold to T. R. White. At' a former meeting held on
In addition to this we hold that the plaintiff has been guilty of such laches as bars his right to appeal to a court of equity. He knew, on the 29th of June, 1908, that the members of the association — all present but one — had voted to dissolve. Pie was notified on the first day of July following that he would not be allowed to connect with the line as reconstructed and as taken possession of by other members of the association under that resolution of June 29, 1908. He delayed until the 16th of December, 1908, before commencing this action. Under the circumstances that delay was too long to entitle him to apply to a court of equity for relief.
Nor does plaintiff come into court with clean hands. He not only delayed to apply to a court for relief but in the meantime undertook, on numerous occasions, to right his own wrong and redress his own grievances. More than that, and not content with redressing his own wrongs, according to his own admissions and testimony, he did it at the expense of the connection of other members of the association with the line. One so acting does not come into a court of equity with clean hands and is not entitled to the relief of a court of equity. [Little v. Cunningham, 116 Mo. App. 545, l. c. 549 et seq., 92 S. W. 734.] These acts of his were acts directly connected with and relating to the subject-matter of this litigation-; that is to say, the maintenance of this telephone line. Hence the maxim is distinctly applicable in this case. [Hingston v. Montgomery, 121 Mo. App. 451, l. c. 462, 97 S. W. 202.]
Nor were these acts of plaintiff in disconnecting three of the defendants from the line,, cutting them
Our conclusion upon the whole case is that the learned trial court committed error in awarding the relief and granting the injunction. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to vacate both the temporary and permanent injunction and to dismiss the case at the cost of the plaintiff, respondent here.