Cohn v. Lehman

93 Mo. 574
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 93 Mo. 574 (Cohn v. Lehman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohn v. Lehman, 93 Mo. 574 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Brace, J.

—This suit was instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis to recover twenty-five thou[578]*578sand dollars, the penalty in an injunction bond alleged to have been executed by defendants in an equity suit commenced in the United States district court for the •western district of Arkansas, wherein Frederick Kraemer, assignee of Isaac Cohn, bankrupt, was plaintiff, and Isaac Cohn and Mark S. Cohn, plaintiff herein, were defendants. Joseph Wolf was the only defendant served. The condition of said bond, as set out in the petition, is. as follows : “ That, whereas the said Frederick Kraemer, as assignee of Isaac Cohn, a bankrupt, had sued out and procured a restraining order in the above entitled cause against said defendants. Now if the said restraining order or any part thereof, at the final hearing of such cause, should be set aside, or discharged, or in the event that said injunction should be dissolved, at any time prior to the final hearing of said cause, then they (the defendants in this present cause) undertake to ]pay said Isaac Cohn and M. S. Cohn, or either of them, such damages as they or either of them might sust ain in consequence of said restraining order, to the extent that the same might be discharged as aforesaid.”

A bre; icli of the condition of said bond is assigned as follows: “And the plaintiff, assigning a breach on said writing obligatory by defendants, executed and filed as aforesaid, in said cause, says, that the defendants and each of them hath not performed the conditions of said writing obligatory, in this: That, afterwards, to-wit, in the said district court of the United States for the western district of Arkansas, in said cause, wherein Frederick Kraemer, as assignee in bankruptcy of said Isaac Cohn, bankrupt, was complainant, and said Isaac Cohn, and M. S. Cohn, here plaintiff, were defendants,' and being the same cause wherein said restraining order and injunction hereinbefore mentioned were’obtained, and said writing obligatory executed by defendants was filed, was, by the [579]*579order of said court, on motion of said defendants, and on the twenty-fifth day of November, A. N., 1879, dissolved at the cost of the complainant, and it was further ordered that said Daniel P. Upham, receiver, appointed as aforesaid, surrender and turn over to said defendant, M. S. Cohn, here plaintiff, his solicitors and agents, the goods, wares, and merchandise, and other property of every nature and description, which were at the business-house claimed by said M. S. Cohn, on Garrison avenue, at the time of the service of the injunction aforesaid, and embraced in said order; and said receiver, upon filing of his report of what he might have done, under the order theretofore made therein, together with the receipt of said defendant, M. S. Colin, here plaintiff, his solicitors of record or agents, should be discharged from Ms receivership ; and such proceedings were in said cause further had, that an amended bill having therein been filed by the said Frederick Kraemer, as assignee, as aforesaid, against the defendants therein named, Isaac Cohn, and M. S. Cohn, here plaintiff, said bill therein was, as to plaintiff herein, M. S. Cohn, dismissed with costs, May 8, 1882, at the May term of said district court of the United States ; and such proceedings were further had therein, at the May term, 1883, that on June 7, 1883, on rehearing, the said bill was dismissed also as to said Isaac Cohn ; and the plaintiff saith the defendants, or either of them, hath not paid, though often requested, such damages as said M. S. Cohn, here plaintiff, did sustain in consequence of said restraining order, to the extent that the same was discharged, as aforesaid; that this plaintiff, there defendant, was greatly wronged and damaged in and by the said proceedings had in said cause in the United States district court, in obtaining said injunction and restrainingorder, and the enforcement against him in that,” etc., setting forth many and specific allegations of damage to plaintiff’s business, profits, credit, etc. “Where[580]*580fore plaintiff prays judgment against defendants for the amount of said bond, the sum of twenty-five thousand ($25,000) dollars, with interest and costs.” ,

The defendant, Wolf, in his answer to the petition, denies the execution of the bond, the condition as set out in the petition, the breach assigned, and all damages, and after admitting the institution of said suit, the appointment 0/ a receiver, and other proceedings therein, then proceeds to make the following admission and to set up the following defence to plaintiff’s cause of action : “Admits that such proceedings were had in such cause that an amended bill was filed therein by the plaintiff, Frederick Kraemer, as assignee aforesaid, against the defendants therein named, Isaac Cohn and M. S. Cohn, and that said bill was dismissed as to both the defendants therein, as in the petition alleged, but avers that said dismissal was had only after a full and final hearing on the bill, and the separate answers thereto of the respective defendants, and the proofs of the respective parties. And this defendant, further answering said petition, avers that the title and style of the suit described in the petition, and brought in (the) district court of the United States for the western district of Arkansas was, and is, Frederick Kraemer, assignee in bankruptcy of the estate of Isaac Cohn, bankrupt, complainant, v. Isaac Cohn and M. S. Cohn, defendants ; that said suit was a suit in equity, and was begun by a bill filed in said district court on the seventh day of October, 1879, and that an amended bill was filed therein on the twenty-ninth day of November, 1879 ; that the plaintiff in this action was one of the defendants in said suit; that the defendants in said suit filed separate answers therein, and the said cause was tried on the pleadings and proofs submitted by the respective parties, the said court having jurisdiction of both the parties therein and the subject-matter thereof ; that a final decree and judgment, dismissing said bill as [581]*581to both of the defendants therein, was entered in said cause on or about the--day of June, 1882, and the complainant in said cause thereupon, and in due time, filed his bill of exceptions, in due form, containing all the evidence in the cause, which bill of exceptions was duly allowed and sealed, and prayed an appeal from said final decree and judgment to the Supreme Court of theWnited States, which appeal was, in conformity with the practice of said court and the law governing the matter, and in due time, allowed and duly perfected, and said cause is now, and was, prior to the institution of this action in this court, pending on appeal in the Supreme Court of the United States, which last-named court has full and complete jurisdiction thereof, and will proceed, in due time, to hear and determine said cause on its merits, and affirm or reverse the judgment of the court below, according to the facts preserved in the bill of exceptions and the law applicable thereto. And this defendant avers that by said appeal, so made and perfected as aforesaid, and now pending in said Supreme Court, undetermined, the said decree and judgment and all orders made by said United States district court for the western district of Arkansas were and are superseded, by reason whereof the said plaintiff cannot have or maintain this action against this defendant.”

The answer then prays that this defendant be hence dismissed with his costs.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Mo. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohn-v-lehman-mo-1887.