Fiedler v. Bambrick Bros. Construction

142 S.W. 1111, 162 Mo. App. 528, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 155
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 1111 (Fiedler v. Bambrick Bros. Construction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fiedler v. Bambrick Bros. Construction, 142 S.W. 1111, 162 Mo. App. 528, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 155 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

On the 9th of May, 1907, the defendant corporation, appellant here, in a suit in equity instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, in which it was defendant and. respondents plaintiffs, was perpetually enjoined from operating its quarry, located in a designated block in the city of St. Louis, o.r permitting it to be operated, so as to throw dirt, rocks or stones on any of the described premises of plaintiffs, or from so operating or permitting its quarry to be so operated, as to jar or shake any of the buildings on any of the premises of plaintiffs, or so as to cause them to shake and vibrate, or so as to impair the comfortable use and occupancy of the premises of plaintiffs for dwelling purposes by loud and deafening sounds and explosions in the quarry. Afterwards, on the 22nd of September, 1907, two of the plaintiffs in the original suit, filed their verified complaint, entitled in the original suit, wherein they charged that the defendant and John Bambrick, its president, and James Donovan, its superintendent, had violated and disobeyed' the injunction of the court in that on the 21st of September, 1907, they so operated the quarry as to throw large pieces of rock upon the land and improvements of those two plaintiffs, thereby injuring and damaging their prop[532]*532erty. Citation was duly issued out of the circuit court against and served upon the three defendants to appear in that court and show cause’ why they should, not be punished for contempt in having disobeyed the injunction.

It appears by the statement of counsel for appellant that defendant and its officers had been proceeded against in the same suit on three different occasions for violation of the injunction, the first occasion being in July, 1907, when the defendant company was fined fifty dollars. The second was on the 22nd of September, 1907, which is the present proceeding. Under the third, instituted and determined in the circuit court November 11, 1907, and after the present proceeding was instituted, Bambrick, the president of the defendant company, was adjudged in willful contempt of the order of court and' committed to jail for a term of five days, the defendant company and Donovan being discharged from that citation. An appeal was taken by Bambrick from that sentence to this court and the judgment of the circuit court affirmed. [See Fiedler et al., Respondents, v. Bambrick, Appellant, 135 Mo. App. 301, 115 S. W. 1033.]

In the proceeding under the complaint of September 22nd, which is the one now before us, citation having been issued against and served upon the company and upon Bambrick and Donovan, a judgment was entered October 10, 1907, in which after reciting the appearance of the parties and the hearing of the evidence and proof adduced, the court found, “that the defendant, Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, did after having on September 30, 1907, been fined by this court for violating the command of the decree of injunction in this cause, again willfully disobey and violate said command, and is again in contempt of this court.” We are not advised by anything in the record before us as to this previous violation referred to. Thereupon the court assessed a [533]*533fine of $3000' and costs against the defendant company and ordered that execution issue therefor. The court further ordered that the individual defendants John Bamhrick and James Donovan “he discharged from said citation.” From the judgment against it the defendant company appealed to the Supreme Court of this state, claiming, among other things, that in assessing the fine the court had violated section 30, of article 2, of the Constitution of this state, in that it had deprived defendant of its property without due process of law, and that it had violated the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in that defendant by the judgment of the court had been deprived of its property without due process of law and had been denied the equal protection of the law. While the case was pending in the Supreme Court, the defendant abandoned these claims, and on its motion the cause was transferred to this court by the Supreme Court.

In this court defendant makes four points as grounds for reversal of the judgment of the circuit court which we will consider, not in the order as made, but in our own order.

We have read the testimony in the case as presented by the abstract of the learned counsel for appellant. Without setting it out at length, it is sufficient to say that it fully sustains the finding of the learned trial court as to a violation of the terms of the injunction which the court had before then issued in the original case, and to the damage of the respondents. In fact, the learned counsel for appellant does not challenge this.

• I. It is argued by those counsel as their third proposition, that a punitive sentence could not be imposed on defendant because the proceedings herein were a part of the original cause in equity. The sole authority cited by them for this is G-ompers v. Buck [534]*534Stove & Range Co., 221 U. S. 418. Counsel misconstrue that opinion, as also what has been here done. This is not a proceeding by the state for the recovery of a fine and infliction of a penalty. The offense was a “constructive” contempt, as that word is defined, not a criminal contempt. [See In re Clark, 208 Mo. 121, l. c. 139, et seq., 106 S. W. 990.] As is said in the Gompers case, supra, l. c. 443 et seq., and this is quoted by counsel for appellant, so it can be said here, the alleged contempt did not consist in the defendant refusing to do any affirmative act required, “but rather in doing that which had been prohibited. The only possible remedial .relief for such disobedience would have been to impose a fine for the use of complainant, measured in some degree by the pecuniary injury caused by the act of disobedience.” The main points decided in the Gompers case are, first, a sentence of imprisonment such as was there imposed, could only stand when the proceeding was in its nature criminal; but that suit, in which the only sentence imposed was one of imprisonment, was a civil suit, in which the punishment could be by fine alone, the fine to go to the benefit of the complainants in the civil suit by way of compensation; second, by reason of the original cause having been settled, the case had become a moot case, and hence neither the lower courts nor the Supreme Court any longer had a case before them. It has been distinctly held by Our court in the case of Fiedler v. Bambrick, supra, as well as by the Supreme Court in State ex rel. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Bland, 189 Mo. 197, 88 S. W. 28, that a proceeding for violation of an injunction in a cause within the jurisdiction of the court was ancillary to the'main ease, and that it was within the power of the court issuing the injunction to punish by fine or imprisonment for violation of the terms of the injunction. Both of these cases, as also the Clark case, supra, which also see on the above point, were held to be cases of indirect contempts.

[535]*535II. It is argued by counsel for appellant as their second point, that it is absurd to hold the corporation guilty and absolve the individual officers. But the court did not absolve them; all it did was to discharge them from the citation. That was a matter within the discretion of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 1111, 162 Mo. App. 528, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fiedler-v-bambrick-bros-construction-moctapp-1912.