Baker v. Craig

275 P. 216, 127 Kan. 811, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 222
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1929
DocketNo. 28,556
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 275 P. 216 (Baker v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Craig, 275 P. 216, 127 Kan. 811, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 222 (kan 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:'

The appeal in this case is by the plaintiff from the ruling of the trial court in sustaining a demurrer to his petition, [812]*812consisting of three counts. The first count is upon an oral contract and to recover damages resulting from the breach thereof by depriving the plaintiff of the use of certain well-drilling tools and the depreciation on the value of them and the loss of tools stolen and destroyed. The second count is based upon a tort, describing the same situation as plead in the first count in language necessary and appropriate to make the same general statement of facts a tort. The third count is for malicious prosecution, involving and concerning the same subject matter. Each cause of action concludes with an allegation of the same amount of damages. A careful distinction is made in the three separate counts to clearly present the same general matter, with the evident thought of having three different avenues to one recovery by determination of jury, or possibly by timely election.

The petition sets out the substance of the oral contract and the pleadings and decisions in three former suits between the same parties. Baker, the plaintiff herein, was an experienced oil-well driller, but without equipment or funds. The four defendants were associated together as partners composing the Wizard Oil Company, controlling a large acreage of oil and gas leases on which they desired to drill several wells. The oral contract was briefly to the effect that the oil company would purchase a complete string of tools to be used to drill wells on its leases; that Baker, after drilling the first well, was to get $3 per foot, to be applied on account of the purchase price of the tools, and when the purchase price was thus fully paid the tools were to become his. This arrangement was made November 25,1919. Shortly thereafter a similar oral contract was made for a second string of tools, the total original cost of both strings being $25,500. Under this arrangement work progressed until seven wells were finished; and a disagreement arose as to the settlement. The oil company ordered Baker off the leased property and denied him the use of the tools. On May 29, 1921, the oil company procured an order enjoining him from using the tools or interfering with the possession of them by the oil company. The injunction bond was in the sum of $2,500, which was later increased to $5,000. On June 7, 1921, the plaintiff commencéd a mechanic's lien action to recover what he claimed to be due him from the oil company in addition to the purchase price of both strings of tools, viz., the sum of $18,000. In the injunction suit Baker answered denying generally the allegations of the petition, and by way of cross peti[813]*813tion alleged that he was the owner of both strings' of tools, and was being greatly damaged by being deprived of the use and possession of them. In the mechanic’s lien suit the oil company denied generally the allegations of the petition, and by way of cross petition gave the details of the oral agreement, and alleged that Baker was to be charged with certain amounts expended on the wells and was to be credited with the difference between such expense and his earnings on the purchase price of the tools; that the expenses on the wells exceeded his earnings by $26,000.

On March 11,1926, the oil company filed a motion in the injunction suit asking that the petition and answer and cross petition in it be dismissed because the same matters and issues were involved in it as were in the mechanic’s lien case. The court never acted on this motion, but in the absence of both parties on November 20, 1926, dismissed the injunction action without prejudice for want of prosecution. On June 13,1927, the court approved the report of. the referee in the mechanic’s lien case, finding Baker to be the owner of both strings of tools, and rendering judgment in his favor for the possession of them and giving him a judgment against the oil company on his account for $2,800.

In August, 1927, Baker commenced an action on the injunction bond and recovered a judgment against the oil company and the sureties on the bond in the sum of $5,000 on November 25,1927. No appeal was taken from this judgment nor the one in the mechanic’s lien case, but both were promptly paid. This action was commenced December 19, 1927.

Our attention is called not only to the similarity but to the use of almost identical language in the action on the injunction bond and the first and second counts of the petition in this case with reference to the items of recovery, viz., damages for depreciation in value of the tools, loss of tools having been stolen and removed, and for the deprivation of the use of the tools. Plaintiff bases his loss and right to damages in the first count where a breach of contract is alleged, in the second where a tort or conversion is alleged, and in the third where malicious prosecution is alleged, not only on the procuring of the injunction by the oil company, depriving the plaintiff .of the possession and use of the tools, but also upon the answer and cross petition of the oil company in the mechanic’s lien suit. It is not usual that one is censurable or made subject to damages by reason of making a defense in an action brought against [814]*814him, even if unsuccessful in such defense, but whether the oil company is thus made liable in these transactions is not so important when we note that the injunction suit was instituted prior to the mechanic’s lien suit, and from the injunction suit the oil company cannot escape any of the liability incident thereto, whether recoverable on the bond, by action for breach of contract, tort, or malicious prosecution. We need not here decide whether the mechanic’s lien action involved the ownership of the tools or the liability of the oil company for the deprivation of the tools by reason of its motion to dismiss the injunction action because it presented the same issues as contained in the mechanic’s lien action. The fact remains that the injunction order deprived Baker of the use of the tools, and the injunction was in force when the mechanic’s lien action was commenced, so that the plaintiff’s causes of action are complete in this respect as based on the deprivation by reason of the injunction; and the averments as to answer and cross petition in the mechanic’s lien action could do no more at most than to intensify and augment the claims of the breach, tort and malicious prosecution.

The first question, therefore, for our consideration here is whether or not the first and second causes of action are sufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover an amount in addition to the amount already recovered by him on the injunction bond. We think not, on the theory that the injunction bond is designed to cover all damages the party enjoined can possibly sustain. Our own statute providing for an injunction bond (R. S. 60-1110) states that it is required to be given “to secure to the party injured the damages he may sustain if it be finally decided that 'the injunction ought not to have been granted.” In the case of Jacobs v. Greening, 109 Kan. 674, 202 Pac. 72, it was held:

“No action for the wrongful procurement of a restraining order (not brought upon a bond) will lie without a showing of malice.” (Syl. If 2.)

This seems to be the general rule, to which there appear to be exceptions made in some jurisdictions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 P. 216, 127 Kan. 811, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-craig-kan-1929.