96 Ala. 227 | Ala. | 1892
In Wadsworth’s answer is embodied a demurrer to the bill for want of equity. That demurrer was set down for hearing, and a decretal order was rendered September 11, 1889, overruling the demurrer, and declaring the bill contained equity. No appeal was taken from that interlocutory order. On September 10,1890, the chancellor rendered a final decree, granting relief to complainant, Go-ree, and perpetuating the injunction against Wadsworth. Wadsworth took the present appeal to this court December 8, 1890, more than twelve months after the decretal order was rendered overruling the demurrer to the bill. Appellant assigns as error, not only the decree granting relief to Goree, but the interlocutory decree overruling the demurrer to the bill. The appellee submits a motion to strike out the assignments which question the ruling on demurrer, “because it appears from the record that said decree upon which the same are based was rendered more than twelve months before the appeal was taken.”
It is very true that from the decretal order overruling de
The bill charges that Goree is the owner, by legal title, of a tract of land, which it described; that the land is heavily timbered, the timbers being suitable for sawing into lumber, and that with the exception of the timber, the land is of but little value; that he, complainant, is the owner of a saw-mill in the vicinity of the land, and that he purchased the land for the purpose of obtaining such timber, to be used by him in the operation of said saw-mill, the timber being necessary to complainant in the operation of his mill; and that, if lie is deprived of the same, he will suffer great loss and damage, not only in the value of said timber, but in the great expense and trouble to which he will be put in order to obtain the necessary timber to operate his said saw-mill. The bill further charges that Wadsworth, though notified of complainant’s claim and right, and warned not to cut or remove the timber, is in possession of the land, persists in cutting and removing large quantities of timber therefrom, and, unless restrained, will soon cut and remove therefrom all timber suitable for saw-mill purposes, to the irreparable injury of complainant. The bill then charges that complainant, Goree, has brought an action of ejectment against Wads-worth for the recovery of the land, but owing to the crowded state of the docket the case can not be tried before the next term of the court; “and if the said Wadsworth persists in cutting said timber and removing the same from said lands, all that is suitable for saw-mill purposes will be taken therefrom before orator will be able to obtain a trial of said ejectment cause.” We have now stated briefly the substance of the aver merits, on which the prayer for injunction was rested. It is not charged that Wadsworth was insolvent, or unable to respond in damages for any injury he might inflict. An injunction was granted, and one object of the demurrer, we presume, was to get rid of the injunction.
It will be noted that this case is not rested on the right of a reversioner or remainderman to have the freehold preserved against waste or spoliation for his ultimate enjoyment. The complainant avers that the legal title is in him, and states
The ground of demurrer was and is, that complainant’s alleged title being purely legal, and the wrong charged in the bill against defendant being a naked trespass, remediable by action at law, no reason is shown why the extraordinary process of injunction should be invoked and granted in this case. If the wrong charged' be only a naked trespass, containing no elements of damage which can not be redressed in an action at law, then this bill is without equity, and the demurrer should have been sustained. — High on Injunctions, §§ 713, 728; Thomas v. James, 32 Ala. 723; Brooks v. Diaz, 35 Ala. 599; Burnett v. Craig, 30 Ala. 135; Attaquin v. Fish, 5 Metc. (Miss.) 140. To justify injunction in such case, there must be something special in the case made, which a court of law can not adequately redress. — 3 Pom. Eq. § 1347; High on Injunctions, §§ 67-J, 699, 713; Lyon v. Hunt, 11 Ala. 295, 306.
The case made by the bill, as we have seen, is, that complainant is a mill owner, that the lands are in the vicinity of his mill, that there is an abundance of timber on the lands suitable for saw logs, and that the chief value of the land consists in its abundance of timber that may be sawn into lumber. The inference from the averments of the bill is irresistable that in acquiring said timber land complainant’s controlling motive and purpose were to obtain the timber that he might convert it into lumber. This charge necessarily implies the loss to him of the use and enjoyment of his mill and its machinery, and all the profit to be derived from converting the timber into lumber. Can he obtain compensation for this loss in an action at law ?
In an action at law for cutting and removing the timber, complainant, if he have the legal title to the land, can sue and recover. What would be the measure of his recovery? True, in an action of trespass he might, in the discretion of the jury, recover smart money, but the only actual damage hé could claim would be the actual vafue of the timber as timber. We speak not of the statutory action provided for by sections 3296-7 of the Code. The injury suffered in being deprived of the profit to be derived from the conversion of the timber into lumber, or any other prospective enhancement of its value, would be classed as speculative, and not recoverable in an action at law. — Pollock v. Gantt, 69 Ala. 373; City National Bank v. Jeffries, 73 Ala. 183; 3 Brick. Dig., 293, § 8. We think the
In tbe case we have in band tbe bill avers that Goree, tbe complainant, bad instituted an action of ejectment against Wadsworth for tbe recovery of tbe lands, which was still pending and undetermined. Tbe record no where informs us that any trial has been bad of that suit at law, and we must infer from its silence that when tbe final decree was rendered in this case, that action of ejectment had not been tried. It is shown in the record before us that each of tbe parties, Goree and Wadsworth, claims title to tbe land, and that whatever title either of them asserts is, in form, a legal title. Tbe bill does not seek to have tbe question of title determined in tbe Chancery Court, and if it did, it would probably, to that extent, be without equity. When opposing disputants each claims title which is legal in form, tbe general rule is that such issue can only be tried in a court of law; and to justify its trial and decision in a Chancery Court, special circumstances must be shown, or tbe question of title must arise as an incident to some other controversy of equitable cognizance. No such ease is shown in tbe present record. In fact the bill contains neither averments nor prayer to have tbe title passed on in tbe Chancery Court. Its whole scope and aim are to have Wadsworth restrained from wasting and destroying tbe timber, until tbe question of title is determined in tbe ejectment suit. A bill filed for such purpose is ancillary to tbe common law' action, and accomplishes tbe whole of its legitimate object when it prevents waste or spoliation pending tbe action at law. Tbe chancellor erred in making tbe injunction perpetual; at least, at that stage of tbe case. — Jerome v. Ross, 7 Johns. Ch. 315; 2 N. Y. Ch. Rep. 313; 10 Amer. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 820-1; Erhardt v. Boaro, 113 U. S. 337; Cornelius v. Post, 9 N. J. Eq. 196; Tainter v. Mayor, 19 N. J. Eq. 46; Ashurst v. McKenzie, 92-Ala. 484.
’ Tbe decree of the chancellor, making tbe injunction perpetual, is reversed. Let tbe injunction as first granted stand, until tbe final disposition of tbe ejectment suit, and let tbe appellee pay tbe costs of tbe appeal.
Beversed and rendered.