Appellee (hereinafter designated as plaintiff) brought suit on April 28, 193 0> in the United States District Court, District of Minnesota, against United Motors Service, Inc., appellant (hereinafter designated as defendant), for infringement of claims 6 and 7 of reissue letters patent No. 17,131, whieh was a reissue of a patent granted to one Caesar for improvements in heating apparatus for automobiles. With its bill of complaint plaintiff filed a motion for a preliminary injunction. Issue was raised by defendant as to the validity of- the letters patent; infringement was denied. No affirmative relief was asked, but it was prayed that the complaint be dismissed a-t plaintiff’s cost.
July 2-, 1980', District Judge Molyneaux granted a preliminary injunction upon plaintiff filing a bond in the sum of $25,000- conditioned to save defendant harmless from all loss and damage it might suffer from the issuance of the preliminary injunction if the same should later be held to have been improvidently granted.
July 2, 1930', defendant appealed from the order granting the preliminary injunction to this court.
July 17, 1930, defendant presented a motion to this court to increase the bond to an amount sufficient to adequately protect defendant for any losses it might suffer, which was denied. A motion to increase the bond made to the trial court had been previously denied.
At the time the District Court granted the temporary injunction, it had been held by District Judge Sanborn in the case of Tropic-Aire, Inc., v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
October 13, 1930, defendant dismissed its appeal.
On October 15, 1930, on motion of defendant in the District Court, unopposed by plaintiff, the preliminary injunction of July 2,1930, was dissolved.
November 26, 1930, plaintiff secured an order upon defendant to show cause why the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss its bill of complaint upon payment of costs should not be granted. The motion to dismiss set forth the various stages in the progress of the ease and stated that defendant had not prayed for any affirmative relief and would not be prejudiced in any substantial right by dismissal of plaintiff’s bill, and asked that the same be dismissed without prejudice, the costs to be taxed against the plaintiff.
Defendant responded to the order to show cause on December 22,1930', and alleged that on December 18, 1930, plaintiff filed a bill in equity in the United States. District Court of the Eastern District of New York against E. A. Wildermuth, charging infringement of the said Caesar reissue patent, No. 17,131, and that Wildermuth was an authorized agent of the defendant, and further alleged that by reason of the improvident issue of the preliminary injunction it had been caused great damage and loss in an amount which ought to be ascertained by the court- and directed to be paid over by plaintiff, and filed a number of affidavits in support of its position. One of the allegations of the response was: “X. That it is not right and proper in view of the above-recited facts that Plaintiff herein should be permitted to dismiss its bill without prejudice, or that said bill should be dismissed at all, until the loss and damage due the Defendant from the Plaintiff by reason of the improvident grant of said Preliminary Injunction shall be assessed and paid.”
Defendant presented a form of order in which it was asked: “That the Defendant recover of the Plaintiff and of. the Sureties on the Injunction Bond such damages as Defendant has suffered by reason of the issuance of said Injunction.” It was also asked therein that the cause be referred to a special master to consider the evidence of defendant’s damage and report to the court what the damage and loss to defendant was by reason of the improvident issuance of the injunction.
February 25-, 1931, the trial court made and entered the following decree:
*481 “(Decree, February 25, 1931.)
“United States District Court, District of Minnesota, Fourth Division.
“Iropie-Ait’e, Incorporated, Plaintiff, “No. 1679 vs. In Equity.
“United Motors Service, Inc., Defendant.
“This cause came on for hearing December 23, 1930, upon order directed to defendant to show cause why plaintiff’s motion to dismiss its hill ot complaint heroin without prejudice and upon payment of costs, should not be granted; and after argument of counsel for both sides, and consideration, it is
“Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed:
“1. That sa.id cause he and hereby is dismissed without prejudice.
“2. That plaintiff pay the taxable costs of this suit.
“Dated this 25th day of February, 1931.
“Joseph W. Molyneaux, U. S. District
Judge.”
And with this the court filed the following note: “Note. In this ease it is discretionary with the Court to either dismiss the case on the motion of the plaintiff and leave the defendant to recover in an action at law on the injunction bond such damage as he may be entitled to, or to dismiss the action and retain jurisdiction to determine the defendant’s damages under the bond,” citing a number of cases as sustaining his ruling. The appeal is from this decree.
Defendant contends that the trial court abused its discretion in dismissing plaintiff’s complaint without prejudice, and in not retaining jurisdiction until the amount of defendant’s damages was ascertained and settled, that in permitting dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint the District Court departed from well-established principles of equity, that the procuring of the preliminary injunction by the plaintiff and the procuring of a bond limitation, which plaintiff well knew was entirely inadequate, was unconscionable and ought not to preclude the right of defendant to recover from plaintiff in the equity case its actual damages.
The only question here is whether the District Court abused its discretion in dismissing the cause without prejudice.
The general rule of the federal courts undoubtedly is that ordinarily a plaintiff has a right to dismiss a bill in equity without prejudice before final hearing on payment of costs. There are well-established just ex- ceptions to this rule, to wit, where defendant asks on the pleadings affirmative relief or where he has acquired in the proceedings some substantial right or advantage that he would lose by virtue of the dismissal. There may eomo a point in a suit where a dismissal by plaintiff would work not a mere hardship hut su’ch an injustice to a defendant that a court should not permit it. The controlling case on the right to dismiss is In re Matter of Skinner
&
Eddy Corporation, Petitioner,
“'It is ordinarily the undisputed right of a plaintiff to dismiss a bill in equity before final healing. 9 * *
“The right to dismiss, if it exists, is abso-luto. It does not depend on the reasons which the plaintiff offers for his action. The fact that he may not have disclosed all his reasons, or may not have given the real one, earmot affect his right.
“The usual ground for denying a complainant in equity the right to dismiss his bill without prejudice at his own costs is that the cause has proceeded so far that the defendant is in a position to demand on the pleadings an opportunity to seek affirmative relief and he would he prejudiced by being remitted to a separate action. Having been put to the trouble of getting his counter caso properly pleaded and ready, he may insist that the cause proceed to a decree.”
The exceptions to the rule are clearly stated in Pennsylvania Globe Gaslight Co. v. Globe Gaslight Co. (C. C.)
In Greenville Banking & Trust Co. et al. v. Selcow et al.,
There may be gathered from the plethora of language employed in the eases in drawing fine distinctions a simple rule, viz., if it is inequitable to permit the dismissal of' an equity case it should not be done. Whether it is inequitable is to be determined by the trial court in the exercise of a sound discretion. That discretion is reviewable only if there has been an abuse thereof.
The question here is reduced to a rather narrow compass. No affirmative relief was asked in defendant’s pleading prior to the time of the motion to dismiss, so that proposition is out of the discussion, leaving the ■question: Did defendant lose any substantial right by the dismissal? If it did not there could be no legal prejudice. It claims it lost (1) an alleged right to have its damages assessed in the suit in equity; (2) the right to have the suit dismissed on its merits instead of being dismissed without prejudice. As to the first point defendant argues that its damages are far in excess of the amount of the bond, and that the District Court should have assessed in the equity action the full damages suffered by it even if they exceeded the amount of the bond, and that in being relegated to a suit on the bond defendant lost the right to recover its full damages.
We are unable to agree with the contention that the District Court could have assessed damages to defendant in excess of the amount of the bond. The rule is well settled otherwise in the courts of the United States. The original leading ease on this subject is Russell v. Farley,
In Meyers v. Block,
Lawrence et al. v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.,
Minneapolis, St. Paul
&
Sault Ste. Marie Railway Company v. Washburn Lignite Coal Company,
Mica Insulator Co. v. Commercial Mica Co. (C. C. A.)
Defendant, realizing undoubtedly tho unsoundness o-f its position as to recovery o*£
*484
damages in excess of the amount of the bond, rather ingeniously insists that the damages asked are in effect a restitution in kind and hence not limited by the amount of the bond, that the profits -which it would have had if the injunction had not been issued are in the hands of the plaintiff, and that regardless of the bond, it is entitled to- have such profits restored to it. It relies largely upon Northwestern Fuel Company v. Brock,
It is apparent the court was dealing both ■with damages and restitution, separate matters. In Lawrence et al. v. St. Louis-San Fancisco Railway Company, supra, where both damages and restitution were involved, the court, pointing out that if a bond had not been required no damages could have been recovered, said, page 233 of
In Tenth Ward Road Dist. No. 11 of Avoyelles Parish v. Texas
&
P. Ry. Co. et al. (C. C. A.)
See, also, Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company et al. v. United States et al.,
Defendant argues that it had tile
right
to have the trial court assess its damages in the equity action. While the
power
unques-
*485
fionably exists in the trial court to assess such damages, it was clearly discretionary with that court to retain the ease and in an ancillary proceeding as incident to the main case determine such damages or leave the parties to an aetion at law. There is no duly on the trial court to- wind up the matter of damages in the equity suit. In the leading case, Russell v. Farley, supra, the court said with reference to this, page 446 of
“But whilst the court may have (wo do not now undertake to decide that it has) the power to assess the damages, yet if it has that power, it is in its discretion to exercise it, or to leave the parties to an action at law. No' doubt in many cases the latter course would be the more suitable and convenient one. # iv ’*
“But the appellants contend that, even if the court had the power to pass upon the question at all, its decision was erroneous, and ought to he reversed on the merits. On this point, the judgment of the court approaches so near to an exercise of discretion, that we should require a. very clear case to be made in order to induce us to reverse it. The conduct of the parties and the course of litigation in the court below pass so directly under the inspection of that court, as to give it many advantages which no other court can possess, for forming a correct decision on the question, whether any extra damages should be allowed for the issuance of the injunction.”
In Baker
&
Bennett Co. v. N. D. Cass Co. et al.,
In Pease v. Rathbun-Jones Eng. Co.,
On the general question of the power of courts of equity to retain the ease and assess damages, see Lea et al. v. Deakin (C. C.)
Many courts of original jurisdiction have laid down rules with reference to this matter and have regarded it as the better practice for the court in the equity suit to determine the damages. For instance, in Owl Creek Coal Co. V. Big Horn Collieries Co. (D. C.)
Wo think there cun be no well-considered authorities cited holding that under the circumstances such as here presented there was no discretion in the trial court to hold the case and assess the damages or to relegate defendant to an action at law on the bond and *486 that it must prior to granting dismissal settle the question of damages. It makes no difference that certain courts have expressed their opinion that discretion should he ex- ' ercised in one direction rather than the other or that perhaps better reasons appear for choosing the alternative followed than may be available in the instant ease. There is no particular reason why defendant should have the right to have the damages assessed in the equity suit instead of in an action at law beeause be may consider one alternative better for it than the other. While a master in equity and a jury at law might differ as to the damages, the proceedings are supposedly equally effective. The argument that greater damages could be assessed in the equity suit proper we have shown to be unsound. The refusal of the District Court to assess damages under the injunction bond in the equity suit proper as requested by the defendant was not an abuse of discretion.
The other ground urged as showing an abuse of discretion is that defendant was entitled to have the case dismissed on the merits; that by the dismissal without prejudice plaintiff was given the right to a second day in court to the prejudice of defendant. What defendant really lost in this case was the advantage that would have eome from a dismissal on the merits, which would have given it a certain freedom from extended vexatious litigation.
Where a defendant is entitled to have a case dismissed on its merits and where it is apparent that another suit is to be brought in another jurisdiction, it would seem a dismissal without prejudice would cause a defendant to lose a possible freedom from subsequent action and the annoyanee of a second suit, and that such is a substantial right. Such situation ought to be considered by a court in exercising its discretion. It is the overwhelming voice of authority, however, that the mere annoyanee of another action cannot be considered such prejudice as to require a court to overrule a plaintiff’s request to dismiss the action. In Pullman’s Palace-Car Co. v. Central Transportation Co.,
We refer to a few eases where the courts discussed some of the reasons for refusing: dismissals. In Hines et al. v. Martin (C. C. A.)
There have been a great many patent eases where the attempt has been made to dismiss bills without prejudice, and one in particular which should appeal rather strongly io the Court exercising discretion — that is, A. C. Gilbert Co. v. United Electrical Mfg. Co. (D. C.)
Among these cases we find none of, particular comfort to defendant except Young et al. v. Southern Pac. Co.
There is danger of an appellate court substituting its judgment as'to what should have been done in a situation such as here presented instead of realizing that the exercise of the discretion is for the trial court. In American Grain Separator Co. et al v. Twin City Separator Co.,
If the court had refused to permit a dismissal without prejudice and had dismissed the case on the merits, we could not have said it abused its discretion. The question for this court is not whether discretion was wisely exercised, but whether it was abusively exercised. We should be very clear in our conviction that the trial court abused its discretion in order to reverse its action. We do not have that abiding conviction.
There should be some presumption in favor of the correctness of the trial court’s nation. Its decree is affirmed,-
