Fidelity Fire Ins. Co. v. Windham

133 S.E. 35, 134 S.C. 373, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 5, 1926
Docket11971
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 35 (Fidelity Fire Ins. Co. v. Windham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Fire Ins. Co. v. Windham, 133 S.E. 35, 134 S.C. 373, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 55 (S.C. 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice BlEasE.

Standard Oil Company, as plaintiff, instituted, in the Court of Common Pleas for Darlington County, an action at law against A. B. Windham and Fidelity Fire Insurance Company on a policy of fire insurance issued by the insurance company named to Windham, as owner, with loss, if any, payable to Standard Oil Company, as mortgagee. It seems that Windham did not answer.

Fidelity Fire Insurance Company, in its answer, set up both legal and equitable defenses. Amongst its defenses, it alleged that the Globe & Rutgers Fire Iñsurance Company and Peninsular Fire Insurance Company were necessary parties to the action, and demanded that they be made parties defendant therein, but no further steps were taken to bring these two corporations into the action. The plaintiff in that suit did not demur to any of Ihe defenses interposed, and did not endeavor to have any of them stricken out.

While the plaintiff was clearly entitled to a trial by jury of the legal issues involved in the cause, it agreed with the defendant, Fidelity Fire Insurance Company, to an order of reference, by which all the issues of law and fact were to be passed upon by Hon. J. S. Mclnnis, then Probate Judge of Darlington County. The parties agreed later that the Referee should only take and report the testimony. One ref *376 erence was held, in which attorneys for Fidelity Fire Insurance Company participated. Upon agreement, the reference was adjourned, to be resumed on some, future day, agreeable to the attorneys. This action is referred to hereinafter as the “Darlington Case.”

Thereafter Fidelity Fire Insurance Company, as plaintiff, brought an equitable action against A. B. Windham, Standard Oil Company, Globe & Rutgers Fire Insurance Company, and Peninsular Fire Insurance Company, as defendants, in the Court of Common Pleas for Sumter County. This action is the case at bar, and, for convenience, is termed the “Sumter Case.”.

The complaint in this cause alleges, inter alia, that the policy sued on in the “Darlington Case” should be can-celled; that the plaintiff therein has certain equitable defenses, which are set forth, but by reason of the technical rules of law these defenses cannot be properly preserved to its interest in the “Darlington Case”; and that Globe & Rutgers Fire Insurance Company and Peninsular Fire Insurance Company, proper parties to a complete determination of'all matters involved, could not be brought in as parties in the “Darlington Case.” The plaintiff in the “Sumter Case” prayed that the Standard Oil Company be enjoined from proceeding with its action at law, the “Darlington Case.”

Upon application of Fidelity Fire Insurance Company, his Honor, Circuit Judge John S. Wilson, granted the order of injunction asked for, but provided therein, if any party to the action considered himself injured by reason thereof, that it might move in a Court of competent jurisdiction to vacate or modify the order of injunction, upon proper notice. Standard Oil Company answered the complaint in the “Sumter Case,” and moved before Judge Wilson for a dissolution of the restraining order. The motion was refused, and Standard Oil Company has appealed to this Court from such refusal.

*377 It is not essential to state the grounds of appeal verbatim. The appellant has two contentions: (1) That the Court of Common Pleas of one county has no power to restrain proceedings in a suit previously commenced in a similar Court of another county, when the last mentioned Court has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter of the litigation, and is competent to administer adequate relief; and (2) that Fidelity Fire Insurance Company, defendant in the “Darlington Case,” can obtain therein all the relief to which it is entitled just as well as it can obtain such relief in the “Sumter Case,” wherein it is plaintiff.

The position of the respondent, with which the Circuit Judge agreed, is, briefly, this: The subject-matter of the two actions is essentially different and distinct, the “Darlington Case” being one at law to collect a policy of insurance, while the “Sumter Case” is an equitable action for cancellation of the said policy and for the prevention of an unlawful conspiracy between other parties to defraud the respondent; that the parties to the two actions are essentially different, and those who are necessary parties in the “Sumter Case” are not necessary nor proper parties in the “Darlington Case”; and equity can and will enjoin a party from proceeding at law, where to do so would result in such party being deprived of adequate relief.

When Courts of law and those of equity were entirely separate and distinct, parties were frequently enjoined by an equity Court from instituting or proceeding with actions at law. In the fight for supremacy between these two Courts, it was finally recognized that, while an equity Court could not deprive a law Court of its own peculiar jurisdiction, yet equity, with its power of injunction, could forbid a litigant, in many instances, from seeking a. legal remedy, and could even restrain the enforcement of a judgment obtained in a law Court. Mr. Justice Story, discussing the subject of injunctions of this character, said:

*378 “A writ of injunction is in no just sense a prohibition to those Courts in the exercise of their jurisdiction. It is not addressed to those Courts. It does not even affect to interfere with them. The process, when its object is to restrain proceedings at law, is directed only to the parties. It neither assumes any superiority over the Court in which those proceedings are had, nor denies its jurisdiction. It is granted on the sole ground that from certain equitable circumstances, of which the Court of Equity granting the process has cognizance, it is against conscience that the party inhibited should proceed in the cause. The object, therefore, really is to prevent an unfair use being made of the process of a Court of Law, in order to deprive another party of his just rights, or to subject him to some unjust vexation or injury which is wholly irremediable by a Court of Law.” 2 Story Eq. Jur. (13th Ed.), Par. 875.

Regarding the subject of the power and right of Courts of Equity to grant injunctions, in the old practice, Mr. Pomeroy stated these principles:

“Where a Court of Law can do as full justice to the parties and to the matter in dispute as can be done in equity, a Court of Equity will not stay proceedings at law. Equity will not restrain a legal action or judgment where the controversy would be decided by the Court of Equity upon a 'ground equally available at law, unless the party invoking the aid of equity can show some special equitable feature or ground of relief; and in the case assumed, this special feature or ground must necessarily be something connected with the mode of trying and deciding the legal action, and not with the cause of action or the defense themselves. It is not such a special equitable ground or interference that the party has, by his own act or omission, failed to effectually avail himself of a valid defense at law, nor that the Court of Law has decided a question of law or of fact erroneously.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 35, 134 S.C. 373, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-fire-ins-co-v-windham-sc-1926.