188 Ky. 841 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
The appellee and plaintiff below, Travelers’ Insurance Company, is an Arizona corporation, but its principal business office was located at all times' herein mentioned in Louisville, Kentucky. It entered into a contract with the Noyes Manufacturing Company (hereinafter called the Noyes Company), an Ohio corporation, to manufacture and deliver to plaintiff five hundred automatic insurance slot machines, and to guarantee the performance of its contract it executed a bond to plaintiff with the appellant, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (hereinafter called the Guaranty Company, or defendant), as its surety. The contract was made on August 3, 1911, and on October 4, 1913, plaintiff, claiming that the contract with the Noyes Company for the manufacture of the slot machines had been violated, filed a suit against it and its surety in the Jefferson circuit court to recover the sum of $100,000.00 damages for such breach. The court, upon trial of that case on March 21, 1914, rendered judgment against the defendants therein in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $91,585.20. An appeal was prosecuted to this court, and on December 17, 1915, the judgment was affirmed (167 Ky. 382) and ten per cent (10%) damages awarded, since the appellant, the Guaranty Company, had superseded the judgment,
After the petition for a rehearing filed by’the Guaranty Company was overruled (169 Ky. 158) a mandate was issued, and shortly thereafter it filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Arizona against the plaintiff and appellee herein, seeking to enjoin it from collecting any part of the Kentucky judgment upon the ground that after its rendition plaintiff had entered into a binding contract with the Noyes Company, for whom the Guaranty Company was surety, whereby plaintiff released that company from certain obligations imposed upon it by the judgment, and whereby the collection of the judgment as against it was suspended without its superseding the judgment and which was done without the knowledge of defendant. That suit in Arizona was filed in April, 1916, and a motion was made for a temporary injunction till the final hearing of the cause upon its merits, which motion was sustained, upon terms imposed by the court that the plaintiff therein, the Guaranty Company, would execute bond to the defendant therein (plaintiff herein) in the sum of $130,000.00, “conditioned that the said plaintiff will pay the said defendant any damages sustained by it by reason of said injunction, including the amount of the judgment enjoined, with interest thereon accrued and to accrue, and also its attorneys’ fees and costs herein incurred, if it shall be finally determined that the plaintiff was not entitled thereto.”
The bond was executed with the above conditions incorporated as a part of its obligatory terms, the surety thereon being the appellant and defendant below, the Maryland Casualty Company (herein referred to as the Casualty Company). The cause was heard upon its merits about six months after the suit was filed and the petition was dismissed. From that judgment the Guaranty Company prosecuted an appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the ninth circuit at San Francisco, California. That appeal was afterward dismissed without prejudice and another one was prosecuted from the judgment of the District Court to the Supreme Court of the United States, and in due time that court dismissed it.
This suit was filed by plaintiff against the Guaranty Company and its surety, the Casualty Company, on the
The fee recovered of $10,000.00 and for which judgment was rendered was fixed by a jury to whom its reasonableness was submitted by appropriate instructions. The item of expenses of plaintiff’s attorneys in defending the suit in Arizona, and the other courts to which it was taken, is not seriously objected to on this appeal, but it is vigorously insisted (1) that the court erred in permitting attorney’s fees to be recovered as an item of damage in this suit on the injunction bond executed in the Arizona suit because (a) under the federal practice, attorney’s fees are not allowed as an item of recovery in a suit in the usually conditioned bonds demanded, required and executed in the federal court as a prerequisite to the granting of a temporary injunction, and (b) that this rule disallowing the recovery of attorney’s fees upon the ordinarily conditioned bond is one based upon a federal public policy and that it was incompetent and illegal for the federal judge in Arizona to exact as a condition precedent to the issual of the injunction a stipulation in the bond for the payment of attorney’s fees, contrary to the rule in the federal courts disallowing them when not stipulated for, and that such requirement being beyond the jurisdiction of the court was void as was also the stipulation to that effect inserted in the bond.
Before entering upon a discussion of the concrete contentions, we deem it necessary to say that nowhere have we found in the federal district, or circuit courts does there exist, either by rule of court or by statute, any hard and fast prescribed form of bond which the court or the judge shall require of the plaintiff upon a motion for a temporary injunction. His action in this regard, in the absence of a mandatory rule or a statute, is governed by the practice of the High Court of Chancery in England and the rules governing equitable procedure. Bein v. Heath, 12 Howard 168; Russell v. Farley, 105 U. S. 433, and 14 R. C. L. 473. But from whatever source the authority is obtained the ordinary and usual language required to be inserted in a bond of this character is ‘ ‘ To pay all damages the defendant may sustain if the injunction is finally dissolved.”
It is well settled, and indeed conceded by counsel for plaintiff, that in a suit on a bond thus generally conditioned the special item of attorney’s fees are not recoverable, and further that where the bond was taken by ,a federal court in a proceeding pending therein its interpretation and construction, including the scope of the obligations imposed, must be governed by the federal law applicable to the subject, whether such law eminates from the opinions of the federal courts or consists in an act of Congress, or whether the. suit on the bond is brought in a state or federal court. Bein v. Heath, supra; Oelrichs v. Spain, 15 Wall. 211; Tullock v. Mulvane, 184 U. S. 497; Missouri, etc., Ry. Co. v. Elliott, 184 U. S. 530, 14 R. C. L. 486, and note to case of Littleton v. Burgess, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 50. It is therefore unnecessary to protract this opinion by a further discussion of point (a) in contention (1) made by defendant’s counsel, since its correctness neither is nor can be disputed.
“The 8th rule authorizes the circuit court, both judges concurring, to modify the process axxd practice in their respective districts. But this applies only to forms of proceedixxg axxd mode of practice, axxd certainly would not authorize the adoption of the Louisiaxxa law, defixxing the rights and obligations of pax-ties to an injuxxctioxx bond. Nor do we suppose axxy such rule has beexx adopted by the court. And if it has, it is unauthorized by law, axxd cannot regulate the rights or obligations of the parties” axxd ixisists that the last sexxtexxce is axx expression by the Supreme Court, dexxying the right of the court grant
That it is competent for federal judges, in the exercise-of a sound discretion, to impose terms and conditions upon the plaintiff in applying for temporary injunctions, provided the terms and conditions are not for any reason illegal, there can be no question.
Their discretion, in such cases, is to be exercised in the light of the facts of each case. 14 R. C. L. 473-4; Russell v. Farley, supra, and High on Injunctions, 3rd edition, sections 1620 and 1656. In the Russell case the court’s power in these respects is thus stated:
“It is a settled rule of the court of chancery, in acting on applications for injunctions, to regard the comparative injury which would be sustained by the defendant, if an injunction were granted, and by the complainant, if it were refused. Kerr on Injunctions, 209, 210. And if the legal right is doubtful, either in point of law or of fact, the court is always reluctant to take a course which may result in material injury to either party; for the damage arising from the act of the court itself is damnum absque injuria, for which there is no redress except a decree for the costs of the suit, or, in a proper case, an action for malicious prosecution. To remedy this difficulty, the court, in the exercise of its discretion, frequently resorts to the expedient of imposing terms and conditions upon the party at whose instance it proposes to act. The power to impose such conditions is founded upon, and arises from, the discretion which the court has in such cases, to grant, or not to grant, the injunction applied for. It is a power inherent in the court, as a court of equity, and has been exercised from time immemorial.”
“In balancing the comparative convenience or inconvenience from granting or withholding an injunction, the court will take into consideration what means it has of putting the party who may be ultimately successful in the position he would have stood if his legal rights had. not been interfered with. The court may often by imposing terms on the one party, as the condition of either granting or withholding the injunction, secure the other party from damage in the event of his proving ultimately to have the legal right. . . . The defendant may be required to do such acts, or execute such works, or otherwise deal with the same as the court shall direct; or to enter into an undertaking to refrain from doing in the meantime the acts complained of by the bill, or to abide the order the court may make as to damages or otherwise, in the event of the legal right being determined in favor of the plaintiff . . . So, on the other hand, as a condition of granting an injunction, the court may require the plaintiff to enter into an undertaking as to damages in the event of the right at law being determined in favor of the defendant, and the injunction proving to have been wrongly granted.”
In the subsequent case of Meyers v. Block, 120 U. S. 206, the same doctrine is thus announced:
“As to the power of a court of equity to impose any terms in its discretion as a condition of granting or continuing an injunction, there can be no question. This subject' is considered in the case of Russell v. Farley, 105 U. S. 433.”
In the Bein case, so much relied on by counsel, the power of the federal court in an injunction case to impose conditions and terms before granting the order is thus stated:
“And if, in the judgment of the court, the principles of equity require that a bond should be given, it (the court) prescribes the penalty and the condition also.”
Mr. Foster, in the 4th edition of his valuable work on Federal Practice, in section 236, states the same doctrine and in the following section, in discussing the elements of damage usually recoverable in a suit on an injunction bond, says that attorney’s fees are rejected under the federal practice but that “the court might direct the inser
After a most careful search we have found no authority nor have we been referred to any establishing the principle contended for, i. e., that the disallowance by federal courts of attorney’s fees as an element of damage in a suit on an injunction bond is in furtherance of a federal public policy. Nor have we found any authority or been referred to any disallowing such special damages when they are expressly stipulated for in the injunction bond executed pursuant to conditions imposed by the court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, requiring- their insertion. There was no objection or exception by defendant to the required stipulation by the Arizona court, which no doubt knew that the relief there being sought was available to the defendant in the local courts of Kentucky and that the choosing of that court, which the defendant had a right to select, imposed expensive burdens upon the plaintiff which were likely to continue (as they did) for some considerable time, and it is quite possible that these facts, and perhaps others, influenced the court in requiring the stipulation for attorney’s fees. We think the court was right in this matter and that in doing so there was no abuse of discretion. Civil law was created among men to enforce that which is right and to prevent that which is wrong. The mudsill of the entire structure is the administration of justice, and justice consists, in part, in requiring one who is sui juris in the absence of some form of fraud, to observe and abide by the obligations of his contracts. Of course, this must be done according to prescribed rules and forms, but before the central idea, as above outlined, will be denied in a particular case, it must clearly appear that some such rule or form, as relied on, has an actual existence and that the particular case comes clearly within its terms. Having found no such rule in this case we are constrained to the conclusion that defendant executed the bond sued on with its eyes open and under such circumstances as to demand of it the fulfillment of its obligations.
In disposing of ground (2) urged for a reversal, we are convinced that learned counsel misconceive the legal principles applicable to the facts in this case. The argument is made that the Arizona suit was only ancillary to the Kentucky one and that plaintiff’s attorneys, under their employment in the latter for a contingent fee,
The other points raised may be said to be insignificant and immaterial and upon the whole case we find no error prejudicial to the substantial rights of the defendants, and the judgment is affirmed.