Gliwa v. United States Steel Corp.

58 F.2d 920, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4797
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1932
DocketNo. 4819
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 920 (Gliwa v. United States Steel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gliwa v. United States Steel Corp., 58 F.2d 920, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4797 (3d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

In order to discover the nature of the pro- ■ eeeding below and determine precisely what is here on appeal, we shall endeavor to clear-this ease of some of its confusion. In doing-so it should be understood that nothing we-may say will be in criticism of plaintiffs’ counsel whose great industry and earnest belief in his case doubtless moved the trial court-to consider it with much labor and great patience.

We find ourselves confronted on the threshold by three questions: First, who are the-parties to the action; second, what decrees are here for review; and third, what is the-nature of the action ?

As to the original parties there is no difficulty. They consist of four non-resident-freehold plaintiffs, and one non-resident and two resident corporate defendants. Forty-eight other freeholders and one hundred and thirty-eight non-freeholders of undetermined citizenship petitioned to intervene. From the court’s order denying their petition some of' them have appealed.

The action was on a bill in equity for the wrongful use of the plaintiffs’ land in the reception of by-product coke- oven chimney-wastes afid for personal injuries to a large group of those claiming, the right to inter-[921]*921vene, praying relief of which we shall presently speak more at length.

The original bill was dismissed because it did not conform to equity rule 25 (28 USCA § 723). Three amended bills were filed, sometimes without leave. They also were dismissed for the same reason; and for the same reason the filing of a proposed fourth amend•ed bill was refused. Supplementing these or■ders were orders of the court against the plaintiffs on motions to open and vacate preceding orders. As the petitions to intervene ■contained the same infirmities as the bill and amended bills they, too, were refused. Being uncertain what decrees and orders are appealed from, we have examined and shall review all of them.

Of the five bills only the second and third amended bills appear in the récord. We shall therefore assume they state the plaintiffs’ case; and as the third is a mere rearrangement of the second, stating the ease with like elaboration or infirmity, we shall for convenience direct and limit our discussion to the second amended bill, keeping in mind the re•quirement of good pleading, long in force and emphasized by equity rule 25, that a bill shall contain “a short and simple statement of the ultimate facts upon which the plaintiff asks relief, omitting any mere statement of evidence.” Kelley v. Boettcher (C. C. A.) 85 F. 55; Crim v. Rice (C. C. A.) 232 F. 570; Bayley & Sons v. Braunstein Bros. Co. (D. C.) 237 F. 671; Anastasopoulos v. Steger & Sons Piano Mfg. Co. (C. C. A.) 16 F.(2d) 32.

This bill, now accompanied by a sixty page index of scientific and industrial facts ■of which the court is asked to take judicial notice, contains forty-one paragraphs, purports to set forth six separate causes of aetion in equity and, as to each eause of action, makes the same seven prayers for fifteen forms of relief.

The plaintiffs say their first eause of aetion is stated in the first fifteen paragraphs. These contain a long recital of the plaintiffs’ •ownership of undescribed tracts of land, aggregating two hundred and fifty-one acres, situate opposite lands of the defendants on which are built and operated by-product coke ovens, a long account of the defendants’ operations and a scientific statement of the chemical character of the waste chimney gases which, they aver, are, by the prevailing winds, blown toward and allowed to settle upon the plaintiffs’ lands, causing an annual damage many times greater than their present claimed value, reckoned on their possible future use for airport purposes. This statement of a claimed cause of aetion, whatever may be its nature, clearly violate equity rule 25, for it is far from “a short and simple statement of the ultimate f aets” but is on the contrary a lengthy recital of evidence, relevant or otherwise.

As to the character of the cause of action the plaintiffs are vague, but, we understand, they maintain it is a nuisance or trespass. Whatever it may be, the plaintiffs should have pleaded it in a way to leave no doubt, that is, by a simple statement of the ultimate facts relieved of the burden of evidence. They have, on the contrary, pleaded a mass of evidence, resulting in confusion and raising an impossible legal situation where, in an attempt to state a case by evidence, the eause of aetion, if one exists, is hidden in the evidence and, naturally, cannot be brought to light by evidence whose legal purport and admissibility cannot be determined without first showing a eause of aetion to which it applies. Moreover, the relief prayed should have been appropriate to the offense charged, whereas the relief sought here is inappropriate and, on its face, is difficult to understand. This relief, which is the same prayed for in the other five causes of aetion, is that the defendants be enjoined temporarily and permanently from interfering with the plaintiffs’ lands; that the cloud be removed from their title; that the defendants make discovery of all matters complained of and fully account therefor; that the defendants be declared trustees of their own wrong and account for damages and profits; that a receiver, temporary and permanent, be appointed over the “fund,” that is, a fund to be raised by the defendants and set aside to meet the plaintiffs’ present and future complaints; that a part of the fund be advanced to the plaintiffs to be expended in the prosecution of this litigation; that all claims to the fund (to be made by the 186 petitioning intervenors) be presented within one year, denying intervention, however, to all who would, because of their citizenship, oust the court of its jurisdiction; that the plaintiffs’ claim be declared a first lien on defendants’ real estate (which apparently includes that used for by-product coke oven purposes and their vast properties elsewhere used for other purposes, even if previously encumbered by liens of others); that the plaintiffs have judgment for $1,560,000 and for such other and further relief as may be necessary. Manifestly, if the cause of action were for a plain nuisance or trespass, these manifold prayers for relief could not be granted. If one or more were applicable in [922]*922such, case, the relief could he granted only on a showing of nuisance or trespass as understood at law or in equity. As such a ease is not made in the bill, the relief prayed for could not be granted.

In stating the second cause of action the plaintiffs “repeat and re-allege each and all allegations of” the first cause of action, and add allegations of damage to their domestic animals, farm machinery, buildings, etc., and pray for the same comprehensive relief. The only difference in form between the second and first causes of action is that the second is made to include the first. As neither is properly pleaded, their joinder cannot cure the legal defect.

The third cause of action includes, by a like reference, the first cause of action, charges the defendants with twelve distinct- acts of negligence in operating their by-product coke ovens and asks the same broad relief. This looks like a pleading on a cause of action at law by a bill in equity praying equitable relief. It is bad.

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Related

Gliwa v. United States Steel Corp.
98 F.2d 113 (Third Circuit, 1938)
Goldberg v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
3 F. Supp. 330 (D. Delaware, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 920, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gliwa-v-united-states-steel-corp-ca3-1932.