240 F. 106 | 9th Cir. | 1917
(after stating the facts as above). The appellant contends that the function of the injunction was to maintain the status quo pending the litigation, and that it bound the appellee who applied for it as much as it did the appellant against whom it was directed, citing, among other authorities and text-writers, 3 Lindley on Mines, p. 2193, where it is said:
*108 “It is a gross abuse of tbe process of tbe court for tbe complainant to disregard bis own injunction, having, by means thereof, tied tbe bands of bis adversary. Tbis is particularly true where tbe purpose of tbe injunction is to maintain tbe property in statu quo during tbe suit; but such an injunction is not binding on tbe complainant, so as to subject him to tbe summary criminal prodeeding for contempt, if be violates it. Tbe defendant can either move to have tbe complainant’s injunction dissolved because of tbe complainant’s abuse of tbe process of tbe court, or, better, petition, tbe court to force the cqmplainant to restore tbe property, if possible, and enjoin him from any further acts.”
To that text are cited Vanzandt v. Argentine Min. Co. (C. C.) 48 Fed. 770; Silver Peak Mines v. Planchett (C. C.) 93 Fed. 76; Mowrer v. State, 107 Ind. 539, 8 N. E. 561; Haight v. Eucia, 36 Wis. 355. In the Vanzandt Case the bill alleged that the plaintiff owned a certain mine then in the possession of the defendant. On the plaintiff’s application the defendant was enjoined from mining on the claim pending the suit. Thereafter the plaintiff ejected the defendant and took possession of the mine. Upon the defendant’s application, an order was made requiring the plaintiff to restore possession. Thereupon the defendant moved for an order requiring the plaintiff to show'cause why he should not be punished for contempt in violating his own injunction. The court, Judges McCrary and Plallett sitting, said:
“Tbe injunction did not by its terms, or of its own force, forbid tbe complainant to interfere with tbe possession of tbe mine pending tbe suit, and therefore be cannot be beld to answer in tbis proceeding. It does not follow, however, that a complainant, in such a case as tbe present, can with impunity do tbe acts which, at bis instance, tbe defendant has been restrained from doing. Where, as in tbis case, tbe evident purpose of tbe writ is to preserve tbe existing status of property in litigation until a final adjudicating can be bad, it is gross abuse of tbe process of tbe court for tbe complainant to disregard bis own injunction, after having by means thereof tied tbe bands of bis adversary, and no doubt tbe court has ample power to prevent or redress such abuse. In this case tbe court did redress it, by ordering tbe complainant to restore tbe property to defendant, and to abstain from any further interference with tbe possession thereof pending tbe suit. If defendant bad desired and asked a dissolution of tbe injunction, tbe court might have granted it, on tbe ground that complainant was no longer entitled to tbe exercise of tbe discretionary power of tbe court for bis protection.”
In Haight v. Lucia each party claimed to- own certain land and the timber thereon. The plaintiff, after' having obtained an injunction against the defendants, restraining them from cutting timber on the premises, entered upon the premises and felled a large quantity of the timber. The court said:
“At that time neither party had established a right thereto. In that respect they were on equal ground. If there were valid reasons for restraining tbe defendants from cutting tbe timber, it was 'proper, for tbe same reasons, to restrain tbe plaintiff also from doing tbe same act. Evidently tbe spirit of tbe injunction was to preserve tbe property in controversy, so that tbe prevailing party might have it unimpaired. Tbe plaintiff invoked tbe extraordinary powers of tbe court to accomplish that purpose, and then, in entire disregard of tbe spirit and object of tbe injunctional order which be bad obtained, attempted to seize and appropriate to bis own use tbe most valuable portion of tbe property in controversy, before bis right thereto bad been adjudicated. Tbis was a gross abuse by tbe plaintiff of tbe process of tbe court, which, to say tbe least, should have been severely censured by tbe court. Had an application therefor been made, tbe court would have been justified, bad- it*109 dissolved the injunction, and refused further to .exercise its discretionary powers for the protection of the plaintiff. Courts should see to it that their process.be not used as instruments of wrong and oppression.”
In Mowrer v. State, in a similar case, the court said:
“Strictly speaking, the writ of injunction does not restrain the plaintiff. By its terms the writ ordinarily enjoins only the defendant. It does not follow, however, that the plaintiff can with impunity do acts which, at his instance, the defendant has been restrained from doing; and, where the purpose of an injunction is to preserve the existing status of property in litigation until a final adjudication can be had, it is a gross abuse of the process of the court for the plaintiff to disregard his own injunction, and to disturb the existing status of such property. The court granting the injunction has doubtless ample power to redress such an abuse by ordering the plaintiff to restore the status which he has disturbed, and requiring him to abstain from further interfering improperly with such property; also by dissolving the injunction, upon the ground that the plaintiff had forfeited his claim to the equitable relief which the injunction afforded him, in the event that his misconduct has been so gross as to justify such a proceeding.”
In Maloney v. King, 30 Mont. 414, 76 Pac. 939, the court said:
“They [the defendants], being enjoined from working the disputed ground, desired that the plaintiffs should also be enjoined, so that the premises should remain in statu quo pending the litigation. However desirable such result would seem' to be, it could have been attained in the original suit by petition on part of defendants, setting forth the facts and the reasons for such relief. Upon a hearing, if the court concluded that a proper showing had been made, it would undoubtedly have granted the relief sought.”
In Johnson v. Hall, 83 Ga. 281, 9 S. E. 783, an injunction had been granted. Thereafter the plaintiff entered upon the land and commenced to cut the trees. The defendants filed a cross-petition, alleging title to the land, and alleged that the plaintiff was doing the very acts which they had been restrained from doing on his application. The court thereupon enjoined the plaintiff, but did not require the defendants to give a bond, as had been required of the plaintiff in the first injunction. The court said:
“Where both parties in good faith claim title to the same tract of land, and one of them is enjoined from entering or trespassing thereon upon the application of the other, the object of the injunction is to preserve the land in! statu quo until the title is settled by the proper proceedings. The plaintiff has no more right to disturb the status quo than the defendants had; and it follows, as a matter of course, that, when the plaintiff undertook to commit the same acts that the defendants had been enjoined from' committing, the court should have restrained him also, it appearing that both parties bona fide claimed the land.”
The court proceeded to say that both parties should have been placed upon equal terms, and that defendants should have been required to give a similar bond to that required of the plaintiff.
It will be seen, also, that the facts in the case at bar differ to a certain extent from the facts in the cases cited, and that-they present ground not found in those cases for the exercise of the discretion of the trial court to deny the motion to dissolve. In the Vanzandt Case the defendant was in possession. The plaintiff after enjoining it from mining, forcibly ejected it and proceeded to mine the ores. In the other cases cited the acts of the plaintiffs changed the existing status of the property in controversy. In the present case the court below, upon the complaint, the answer and the affidavits, found that, prima facie, it was shown that the vein on which both parties had been working had itsi apex in the appellee’s claim. It was shown also that tire appellee was working at a place remote from the place where the appellant was working and that it had an organization of miners, that if required to cease work on the vein it would have been compelled either to keep the miners employed at a considerable financial disadvantage or to discharge them, and that its loss in either event would be as great as that which the appellant might suffer from the injunction during the period of the litigation. It was further shown that from the time when it resumed work the appellee had kept accurate account of the tonnage and value of all ores extracted by it. Under these circumstances we would not be justified in holding that the trial court abused its discretion. On appeal to this court from an order of the trial court denying a motion to dissolve an interlocutory injunction the question is not whether this court, upon the showing made, would have allowed the motion, but it is whether it has been clearly shown that the trial court has abused its discretion and has plainly disregarded the facts, or has departed from the settled principles of equity established for its guidance in cases of this character. Vogel v. Warsing, 146 Fed. 949, 77 C. C. A. 199; American Grain Separator Co. v. Twin City Separator Co., 202 Fed. 202, 120 C. C. A. 644; Kansas City v. Sanitary Street Flushing Mach. Co., 224 Fed. 964, 140 C. C. A. 456;
The order is affirmed.