152 F. 22 | 9th Cir. | 1907
(after stating the facts). The single question urged here, in addition to those determined in the case of Rickey Land & Cattle Company v. Miller & Lux, 152 Fed. 11, is
The nature and purpose of a cross-bill in equity have been clearly determined. Says Mr. Justice Nelson, in Ayres v. Carver, 17 How. 591, 395, 15 L. Ed. 179:
“A. cross-bill is brought by a defendant in a suit against the plaintiff in the same suit, or against other defendants in the same suit, or against both, touching the matters in question in the original bill. It is brought either to 'obtain a discovery of facts, in aid of the defense to the original bill, or to obtain full and complete relief to all parties as to the matters charged in the original bill. It should not introduce new and distinct matters not embraced in the original bill, as they cannot be properly examined in that suit, but constitute the subject-matter of an original, independent suit. The cross-bill is auxiliary to the proceeding in the original suit, and a dependency upon it. It is said by Lord ÍTardwicke that both the original and cross-hill constitute but one suit, so intimately are they connected together.”
’ To the same purpose is Ex parte Railroad Co., 95 U. S. 221, 225, 24 L- Ed. 355, where it is said:
“A cross-bill must grow out of the matters alleged in the original bill, and is used to bring the whole dispute before the court, so that there may be a complete decree touching the subject-matter of the action.”
So Sanborn, Circuit Judge, says in Stuart v. Hayden, 72 Fed. 402, 410, 18 C. C. A. 618:
“A cross-bill is brought either to aid in the defense of the original suit, or to obtain a complete determination of the controversies between the original complainant and the cross-complainant over the subject-matter of the original bill. If its purpose is different from this, it is not a cross-bill, although it may have a connection with the general subject of the original bill. It may not interpose new controversies between codefendants to the original bill, the decision of which is unnecessary to a complete determination of the controversies between the complainant and the defendants over the subject-matter of the original bill. If it does so, it becomes an original bill, and must be dismissed, because there cannot be tw.o original bills in the same case.”
Cross v. De Valle, 1 Wall. 1, 17 L. Ed. 515; Rubber Co. v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. 807, 19 L. Ed. 587; Young v. Colt, 2 Blatchf. 373, Fed. Cas. No. 18,155; Stonemetz Printers’ Mach. Co. v. Brown Folding-Mach. Co. (C. C.) 46 Fed. 851.
Counsel for appellant expressly admit that, if the cross-hills are ancillary in purpose and character, they should be entertained regardless of the citizenship of the parties defendant. This reduces the inquiry simply to whether such cross-bills are, in legal contemplation, ancillary to the original bill, or whether they introduce matter foreign to, and disconnected with, the subject-matter of the original suit.
In the light of the foregoing authorities, it may well be premised that,
“Will not a court of equity take jurisdiction with respect to this property right as ancillary to its jurisdiction over the case between complainant and first defendant, and, having jurisdiction of the whole proceeding, will it not 'proceed to do justice between all the parties? Reflection leads me to answer the questions in the affirmative. It is true that, if complainant can secure protection of its own right, junior appropriators might be left to fight out their relative rights among themselves; but, as conditions frequently exist in litigation over usufruct of water, where it is practically impossible to make a just decree between complainant and one defendant without ascertaining rights of defendants as against one another, the court will permit cross-complaints to stand, to the end that a multiplicity of suits may be avoided, so that tedious, expensive, and unnecessary litigation may be saved.”
In Union Mill & Mining Co. v. Dangberg (C. C.) 81 Fed. 73, as against the objection that the defendants, of whom there were about 125, were not all jointly interested in their appropriations to the injury of complainant, and therefore should not have been made parties, Judge Hawley has this to say:
*25 “These conflicting rights, whatever they may be, can be determined by one suit. Complainant might not be able to maintain its suit against them singly, for it may be that no one of the respondents acting individually has deprived complainant of all the- water to which it is entitled. Complainant Is only entitled, if at all, to a certain amount of the water of the river, and it is by the action of all the respondents that it has been deprived of the water to which it claims to be entitled. Each respondent claims the right to divert a given quantity of water. The aggregate thus claimed so reduces the volume of the water in the river as to deprive complainant of the amount to which it is entitled. To this extent, even if there is no such unity or concert of action or common design in the use of the water to injure complainant, there is certainly such a result in the use of the water by the respondents as authorizes complainant to maintain this suit, upon the ground that the action of all the respondents has produced and brought about the injury of which it complains. Every one who contributes to such injury is properly made a party respondent.”
The reasoning is cogent in demonstration of the interdependent relations that exist among different appropriators from the same stream, and of the condition that one appropriator cannot always be fully protected against the injunctive process of another, unless- at the same time he has his own rights ascertained and determined with relation to still others who are also subject to the same process. And so we conclude that the order appealed from should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.