Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. L. Bucki & Son Lumber Co.

189 U.S. 135, 23 S. Ct. 582, 47 L. Ed. 744, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1336
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1903
Docket220
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 189 U.S. 135 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. L. Bucki & Son Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. L. Bucki & Son Lumber Co., 189 U.S. 135, 23 S. Ct. 582, 47 L. Ed. 744, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1336 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The principal question arises in the claim to recover counsel fees incurred in securing the dissolution of the attachments. The reasonable value of such fees was specially found by the jury to have been $7500. . The Circuit Court refused to include this in its judgment, but the Court of Appeals ruled otherwise, and ordered judgment for that sum in addition to the amount of the general verdict.

By the law of Florida counsel fees incurred in securing the dissolution of an attachment are recoverable in actions upon attachment bonds. This was distinctly ruled in Gonzales v. De Funiak Havana Tobacco Company, 41 Florida, 471, in which the second headnote. recites that “ attorney’s fees and other expenses incurred in relation to the attachment, or in procuring its dissolution, are properly allowed as elements of damage in actions upon attachment bonds.” And this is conclusive, for by McClellan’s Dig. 345, sec. 21, it is provided that “ the judges of the Supreme Court of this State shall, in deciding cases, prepare and make a syllabus or statement of the points and principles intended to be decided by the court, which shall be published in the reports in lieu of that usually prepared by the reporter.” Hart, Ex., et al. v. Stribling et ux., 25 Florida, 435. It is true, as .contended by counsel, that the case in-41 Florida, wa's not decided until after the bonds sued on in this case had been executed, but the. decision declares the law of the -State,, and-that, in. the absence of- statutes affecting the ques *137 tion, must be taken to have been always the law. And in its opinion the court refers as authority, among other cases, to Wittich v. O'Neal, 22 Florida, 592, 599, (decided in 1886,) in which it was held that “ in a suit on the bond given to obtain a temporary injunction, counsel fees incurred by the defendant in the suit to dissolve such injunction are damages that may be recovered if covered by language of the bond.” In the opinion in that case the court, while conceding that other appellate' courts had ruled differently, (among them this court in Oelrichs v. Spain, 15 Wall. 211,) declined to follow such ruling, and said:

“ It seems just and right that where a party asks the interposition of the power of the courts, in advance of a trial of the merits of the cause, to deprive the defendant of some right or. privilege claimed by him, even though temporarily, that if on investigation it is found that the plaintiff had no just right either in the law or the facts to justify him in asking and obtaining from the court such a harsh and drastic exercise of its authority, he should indemnify the defendant in the language of his bond for ‘all damages he might sustain,’ and that reasonable counsel fees necessary to the recovering of such injunction are properly a part of his damage.”

The promise in the bonds sued on here is like that referred to in the language just quoted, and was “to pay all costs and damages which the said L. Bucki .Lumber Company may sustain in consequence of it, the said Atlantic Company’s improperly suing out said attachment.” Liability for these counsel fees being, as declared by its highest court, a part of the obligation assumed by the obligor in an attachment bond given in the courts of Florida, should be enforced in every court in which an action on such a. bond is brought. This action was commenced in a Circuit Court of the State, and if it had proceeded there to judgment unquestionably a liability for counsel fees would have been sustained, and it cannot be that by removing the case to the Federal court such liability has been taken away. In Tullock v. Mulvane, 184 U. S. 497, 505, we held that when a bond had been given' in a case pending in the Federal court and an action was thereafter brought in the state court on such *138 bond, the rule of liability was that existing in the Federal court in which the bond was given, and' said :

“It is clear that if it be true that the bond given in a Federal court of equity on the granting of an injunction is not to be construed with reference to the rules of law applicable to such bonds in such court, then there can be no certain general rule by which to determine the liability of the obligors upon the bond. Their responsibility would be one thing in a court of the United States and a different thing in the courts of the various States, which would imply that the parties did not .contract with reference to any definite rule of liability.” See also Missouri, Kansas &c. Railway Company v. Elliott, 184 U. S. 530.

In reference to the other alleged errors, the Court of Appeals, without referring to them in particular, said, “ on the fullest consideration of the whole case we conclude that the record presents no error, on the part of the trial judge for which the judgment should be reversed.”

We do not wonder at this observation of the Court of Appeals, as we find from' the record that the plaintiff filed in that court thirty-seven assignments of error covering seventeen printed pages, and the defendant thirty-nine such assignments,. It may be true, as the Scriptures have it, that “ in the multitude of counsellors there is safety,” but it is also true that in a multitude of assignments of error there is danger. -

Perhaps it is well to first briefly outline the case and the testimony. Prior to October, 1897, the Atlantic Company had under contract been engaged in furnishing the Bucki Company with logs with which to operate its sawmills, at the rate of 2,000,000 feet per month. It canceled its contract on account of an alleged breach of the Bucki Company and brought the. two actions at law, one for $200,000 damages, resulting from such breach, and the other for $9980.80, claimed to be due for logs delivered, and in these actions sued out the two attachments. They were levied upon the mill plant, the logs, lumber, and all other personal property of the Bucki Company. While the personal property was taken into possession by the sheriff, -.the mill was a fixture, a part of the realty, and the writs did *139 not operate to dispossess the Bueki Company therefrom, but simply established a lien upon it. By forthcoming bonds the personal property was, after a few days, released, a;nd subsequently the attachments were dissolved. On the trial the plaintiff was permitted to show the extent of its' mill plant, the amount of business it had been doing in prior years, the net profits of such business during the nine or ten months preceding the levy of the attachments, the orders and contracts which it had on hand for timber and lumber, an alleged increase in the price of timber in the year succeeding the levy; there was testimony bearing upon the question of its ability, to get logs elsewhere, the means of transporting them to its plant, and the existence of negotations for a loan of money secured by the material it then had on hand.

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Bluebook (online)
189 U.S. 135, 23 S. Ct. 582, 47 L. Ed. 744, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-v-l-bucki-son-lumber-co-scotus-1903.