Citizens' Pipe Line Co. v. Twin City Pipe Line Co.

39 S.W.2d 1017, 183 Ark. 1006, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 8, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 1017 (Citizens' Pipe Line Co. v. Twin City Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens' Pipe Line Co. v. Twin City Pipe Line Co., 39 S.W.2d 1017, 183 Ark. 1006, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 83 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

Butler, J.

The presenil litigation began in this manner. The Harding Class Company, a corporation engaged in the manufacture of glass, required and used a large quantity of gas as fuel which it had contracted to purchase from the Twin City Pipe Line Company, a corporation engaged in the business of distributing natural gas in and within the vicinity of Port Smith, Arkansas. The glass company had for a time used the gas delivered by the pipe line company until, through the means of a subsidiary company, it acquired the control of certain gas wells in the State of Oklahoma. The stockholders of the glass company and others organized the Citizens ’ Pipe Line Company for the purpose of conveying gas from the aforesaid wells to the plant of the glass company for its own use, and procured the passage of an ordinance from the city of Port Smith by which it was permitted the use of the streets and alleys of the city under which were laid its mains.

On the 15th day of August, 1928, the Twin City Pipe Line Company filed its complaint in the chancery court making the Citizens’ Pipe Line Company and the city of Port Smith defendants, in the prayer of which complaint it asked that the ordinance be declared void, and that the Citizens’ Pipe Line Company be enjoined from constructing its pipe lines in the streets of Port Smith. Soon after the filing of the complaint the Citizens’ Pipe Line Company made preparations to begin the work of laying its lines in Port Smith, whereupon the complainant served notice on August 24th that it would ásk for a temporary injunction restraining the defendant pipe line company from proceeding with its work until the cause could be heard on its merits in court. This petition was heard and granted on August 28th, conditioned upon the execution by the complainant of the bond required by statute. This bond was executed and the temporary injunction issued on the last date aforesaid which resulted in the Citizens’ Pipe Line Company ceasing its work in Fort Smith and transferring it to Oklahoma where work was begun on the pipe line and continued until it was completed from the wells to the limits of the city of Fort Smith on October 20, 1928.

On September 14th the cause came on for hearing on its merits, and on September 25 following* a decree was rendered as of September 18th by the terms of which the defendants were enjoined from proceeding* with the work as prayed for in the complaint. From that decree an appeal was prosecuted to this court, where the decree of the chancery court was reversed and remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint of the Twin City Pipe Line Company for want of equity, the opinion being delivered on November 12, 1928. Upon a remand of the cause the defendant, Citizens’ Pipe Line Company, filed a complaint in which it sought to recover damages occasioned to it by reason of its work having been stopped for seventy-three days because of the injunctions granted and issued. In this complaint it was alleged that the suit was brought without probable cause, and items of damage were set up amounting to a large sum. The chancellor in his judgment found “that there is no specific evidence fixing any damages resulting from the temporary restraining order from the date of its issuance to the date of the decree of the chancery court” and dismissed the claim for damages, from which order and judgment is the present appeal.

It is contended by the appellant, Citizens’ Pipe Line Company, that its damage was not limited to that accruing* from the date of the issuance of the temporary injunction until the decree rendered September 18th following, but also for such damage as it suffered between the entry of the permanent injunction and the decision of this court on appeal reversing the decree of the chancellor and remanding the cause with directions to dismiss the complaint of the Twin City Pipe Line Company for want of equity. If it was established that the suit out of which these in junctions grew was brought without probable cause or the injunctions maliciously obtained, it is not to be doubted that the contention of the appellant here is correct. In such case the party injured might have maintained his action at law for malicious prosecution, which relief may now by force of statute be granted by the court out of which the injunction was sued. The appellant introduced evidence of another suit having been brought 'in the United States Court by the appellee against the Harding Class Company for the purpose of showing that this suit was wantonly brought. It argued that the sole purpose of the suit in the United States court was to prevent the appellant here from supplying gas to the Harding Class Company, with which company it had a contract to take its entire output, and, as its privilege to lay pipes under the streets of Fort Smith was granted for the sole purpose of enabling it to carry out its contract with the glass company, the practical effect of the suit in the United States court would have been to make the franchises involved in this suit worthless.

It is our opinion that a consideration of the issues involved in the suit brought by the appellee company in the United States court against the appellant company does not warrant the inference of any malicious purpose or that it was brought without probable cause. From an examination of the questions determined in the cases of Citizens’ Pipe Line Co. v. Twin City Pipe Line Co., 178 Ark. 309, 10 S. W. (2d) 493, and Harding Glass Co. v. Twin City Pipe Line Co. decided by the Supreme Court of the United States May 4, 1931, it will be seen that these questions were important, on which learned lawyers and courts of high repute may and do differ, and therefore it cannot be said that the suit here involved was wantonly brought or without probable cause.

As there was no common-law liability of the party securing the injunction, although erroneously granted, unless it was maliciously obtained, or except as modified by statute, there would be no general liability for the injunction here issued, unless the common-law rule has been changed by statute or unless the obligation entered into in specific terms or by necessary intendment fixes such liability. The rule is thus stated in chapter on Injunctions, 32 C. J., § 744: “Complainant’s liability for the wrongful issuance of an injunction at his instance may, of course, be fixed by the bond that he was required to give as a condition to the granting of the injunction. But, although there is contrary authority, the general rule, unless changed by statute, is that, without a bond for the payment of damages or other obligations of like effect, a party against whom an injunction has been wrongfully issued can recover no damages unless he can make out a case of malicious prosecution by showing malice and want of probable cause on the part of the party who obtained the injunction.” The reason for this rule is stated in the case of Yonkers v. Federal Sugar Refining Co., 221 N. Y. 206, as follows: “Public policy was thought to demand that the free pursuit of remedies in the courts should not be obstructed by the menace of. liability for innocent mistakes”; and thus, in the case of Russell v. Farley, 105 U. S. 433

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 1017, 183 Ark. 1006, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-pipe-line-co-v-twin-city-pipe-line-co-ark-1931.