Charleston Hardware Co. v. Warner Elevator Manufacturing Co.
This text of 90 S.E. 674 (Charleston Hardware Co. v. Warner Elevator Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The Warner Elevator Manufacturing Company, a corporation, appeals from an order of the circuit court of Kanawha county, made on the 14th of February, 1916, refusing to dissolve an injunction, awarded upon application of the Charleston Hardware Company, a corporation, enjoining it from further prosecuting an action of detinue which it had brought against the latter, and which was then pending in the circuit court of Kanawha county, to recover possession of a certain freight elevator and operating machinery, which it had conditionally sold to the Charleston Hardware Company and installed in its four story building in the city of Charleston. The contract of sale stipulated as 'follows, viz.:
“The Warner Elevator Manufacturing Co. retain the title to and possession of the entire apparatus under the fore[217]*217going contract and specifications. The same shall remain in said company until the final payment is made, and the said Warner Elevator Manufacturing Co. shall have the right to remove all of said material furnished by them and to retain possession of same upon, a failure to receive the payments as above stipulated.
"It is also understood that the taldng of any notes, judgment or decree shall not constitute a waiver of the vendor’s lien hereby retained until purchase price is fully paid. Also to retain the payments that have been made, as damages for the non-fulfillment of contract.”
The agreed price was $1,300, one-half of which was to be paid when the elevator was delivered at the building, and the balance when it was installed according to the specifications in the contract. The Charleston Hardware Company paid $770 and refused to pay the balance, on the alleged ground that the vendor had not complied with the following provision of the contract, viz.:
"We will furnish a 7% Horse Power motor to operate the within described elevator. If flat rate is $1 per horse power per month your monthly charge should be $7.50; if addition energy is consumed owner is to pay for same.”
Thereupon Warner Elevator Manufacturing Company brought an action of detinue to recover possession of the elevator and appliances, necessary in its operation, which it had installed, and plaintiff: then brought this injunction suit, averring that the Warner Elevator Manufacturing Company had broken its contract, in that it had installed a 10.81 horse power motor, instead of a 7% horse power motor, thereby increasing the quantity of electric current needed in operating the machine and increasing the cost of operation $3.31 per month beyond what it would have been, if it had furnished the kind of motor it had agreed to furnish. It avers that the cost of electric current in the city of Charleston is one dollar per horse power; that defendant is a foreign, nonresident corporation, having its- principal office in Hamilton County, Ohio; that the aforesaid breach of contract has damaged it to the extent of $1,000; that, recoupment of damages not being available as a defense in detinue, it is, therefore, remediless, unless a court of equity will enjoin the [218]*218prosecution of tbe detinue suit; and that its damages will be irreparable if defendant should remove the elevator from the building. It prays that its damages may be ascertained and the amount thereof decreed to it.
A number of motions were made by defendant in the lower court and overruled, and numerous errors are assigned. But the principal assignment relates to the overruling of defendant’s demurrer challenging equity jurisdiction. If equity has not jurisdiction in the premises, it is needless to consider the other assignments. Plaintiff can not elect to keep the elevator and refuse to comply with the only condition on which it agreed title and the right to the possession was to vest in it. No fraud is alleged either in the procurement or in the performance of the contract by defendant. It can not be said the removal of the elevator from the building ■would cause irreparable injury. That was a -thing contemplated and agreed upon, in case the purchase price was not fully paid.
It is a well settled rule of equity practice, in this state, that relief by injunction will not be granted where there is a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law. Burkhart v. Scott, 69 W. Va. 694; Shepherd v. Groff, 34 W. Va. 123; and Shay v. Nolan, 46 W. Va. 299. And while it is true recoupment is not a permissible defense in detinue, still defendant has an adequate legal remedy. Detinue lies only to recover possession of a specific ehattle, a tangible thing, and no such defense as a cross-demand, or recoupment, can be made in such a case; the party suing is entitled to all or none of it. Whitworth v. Thomas, 83 Ala. 308, and Brandon v. Montgomery Iron Works, 96 Ala. 506. Recoupment seems to be available only in a suit for money due on contract, either express or implied, or in an action for damages for its breach. Detinue involves the right to the possession of the thing sued for, and recoupment can, in no sense, make an issue affecting that right. Plaintiff had'a right of action at law for damages for the breach of the contract, and this right is not affected by defendant’s non-residence, neither is it a factor in determining general equity jurisdiction. Defendant’s being a non-resident gave plaintiff a right to proceed against it by at-[219]*219taehment; it could have attached the property, which was-sought to be recovered in the action of detinue, and could have prevented its removal, pending a determination of the suit. Plaintiff’s only demand is for unliquidated damages, which is peculiarly a jury question, cognizable only in a court of law, except in very rare cases where it is only incidental to the complete enforcement of an equity. The facts alleged in the bill do not show grounds for equitable interference, and the decree will be reversed and plaintiff’s bill dismissed.
Reversed, and bill dismissed.
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90 S.E. 674, 79 W. Va. 216, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charleston-hardware-co-v-warner-elevator-manufacturing-co-wva-1916.