Gooding v. Reid, Murdock & Co.

177 F. 684, 101 C.C.A. 310, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4413
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 1910
DocketNo. 1,550
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 F. 684 (Gooding v. Reid, Murdock & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gooding v. Reid, Murdock & Co., 177 F. 684, 101 C.C.A. 310, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4413 (7th Cir. 1910).

Opinion

GROSSCUP, Circuit Judge,

after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion.

nThe equity suit, in which the writ of ne exeat was issued, is still pending. The immediate question before us is whether, pending such suit in equity, an independent action at law for false imprisonment, growing out of the execution of the writ, can and ought to be enjoined; and this question depends largely on whether, as an appropriate process of furthering the jurisdiction and orders of the equity suit, the issuance of a writ of ne exeat is coram non judice.

The chief arguments made against the writ are, that it amounts to imprisonment for debt, and that there is no imprisonment for debt in Illinois; that it will be issued only when the demand sought to be enforced is certain in its nature, actually payable, and not contingent; and that it will not be issued in an action for an accounting, unless there is an admitted balance due by the defendant to the plaintiff; all of which arguments, except the first, challenge not the jurisdiction of the Court to issue, -but the sufficiency of the case made out in such Court to call for the exercise of its jurisdiction, and are therefore immaterial here, because this is not ah appeal from the order issuing the writ, nor from the order denying the motion to quash the writ, nor from any order involving appellant’s right to an assessment of damages in the equity suit, on account of the issuance of the writ, but an appeal from an order that forbids appellant from going into any Court, other than the Court from which the writ was issued, to determine these questions. And granted that the Court had jurisdiction to issue the writ, and that it had power to protect this jurisdiction so as to make it all inclusive of the questions-that might arise thereunder, including the question of damages; these questions are not questions that arise on this appeal.

(1) Did the equity court have power, as an appropriate process toward preserving the property brought by the bill within its jurisdiction, compelling a delivery to the receiver, ánd to prevent an evasion of its order, to issue the writ? We think it did. The constitutional provision regarding imprisonment for debt does not prohibit the exercise of equitable process for-the purposes named. Dean v. Smith, 23 Wis. 483, 99 Am. Dec. 198. The writ is one of right (2 Story’s Eq. Jurisp. [10th Ed.] § 1469), and as said in the preface to Warner’s 1st Am. Ed. of Beames’ Ne Exeat Regno, is little more than an order to hold to equitable bail, the party generally getting rid of it by giving security to abide the event of the litigation. And in a number of cases in this country, as an appropriate equitable process, the writ has been utilized and sustained. Patterson v. McLaughlin, 1 Cranch, C. C. 352, Fed. Cas. No. 10,828; Union Mutual Life Ins. Co. v.. Kellogg, 24 Fed. Cas. 611, No. 14,373; In re Rosser, 101 Fed. 562, 41 C. C. A. 497; Dean v. Smith, supra.

In Enos v. Hunter, 4 Gilman (Ill.) 211, it was said:

“Where the relief sought could he effected by acting directly upon the person of the defendant, the court of chancery has never hesitated to entertain the bill where the defendant is found within its jurisdiction, whether the subject-matter of the controversy be within its control or not. Of this character are those cases where the courts have compelled specific performance [687]*687of contracts for the conveyance! of, or relating to land which is situated beyond its jurisdiction. And in such cases the court will compel a conveyance to be executed, in such maimer and form as may be prescribed -by the law of the country where the land is situate. And if need be, in order to effect this, they will prevent, the defendant from leaving the jurisdiction of the court, pendente life, by a writ of ne exeat.”

In Mitford & Tyler’s PI. and Pr. in Equity, p. 144, it is said:

“For the purpose of preserving property in dispute pending a suit, or to prevent evasion of justice, t.he court either makes a special order on flie subject, or issues a provisional writ; as * * * the writ of ne exeat regno to restrain the defendant from avoiding the plaintiff’s demands by quitting the Kingdom.”

In a note to Section 805, Gibson’s Suits in Chancery (1907), it is said:

“It would seem that a ne exeat is a writ necessary for the purposes of jus!ice when the defendant, by leaving the state, can defeat the power of the court to grant effectual relief, or evade the relief granted; especially when the relief consists in compelling the defendant (1) to execute 1o the complainant a deed for land, or other properly, situate in another state, or * * * (4) to do some other act which the court could not effectually do by the direct and inherent operation of its own decree. The object of the writ is to enable the court to act upon tlie person of the defendant in such cases. I Barb. Oh. P. 047, 051, 652 ; 2 Dan. Oh. Pr. 1098, note; 2 Slo. Kq. Jur. SS§ 1471, 1472, note.”

That the writ was not coram non judice, seems clearly, by these authorities, to be established.

(2) Had the equity court, in pursuance of its power to issue the writ, power to enter the order appealed from, restraining the law court from proceeding with the action at law ? The question, as we have already said, is not, Shall a “Federal Court” restrain the “State Court,” but shall a Court of equity restrain a Court of law from taking jurisdiction of a complaint, by a party to the equity suit, that one of the processes of the Court of equity, issued, against him, was wrongfully issued, and undertaking to redress that wrong? The question has been up in England in Aston v. Heron, 2 My. & K. 390, 39 Eng. Reprint, 393, and in Erowd v. Lawrence, 1 Jac. & W. 656. In the first of these cases. Lord Brougham, Lord Chancellor presiding, speaking to the question above stated, says;

“The 'Court excludes all other jurisdiction in everything relating to its process, not only preventing any other Court from judging whether or not its orders were regular, but from examining into the regularity of their execution; and not only preventing such examination, but shutting out redress at any hands hut its own, where a wrongful act is admitted to have been done under color of obeying its commands. It assumes to be the only judge of all that regards the issuing and the execution of its own orders. Whether or not it be necessary that the Court should enjoy this jurisdiction, and have the power of enforcing it, exclusive of all interference, even where its orders cannot be said to have been obeyed, but rather have been colorably used as a pretext for wrong-doing, it it is now too late to inquire. The question has been settled long ago.”

And in the second of these cases, speaking to the same question, Eldon, Lord Chancellor, says:

“In this case an attachment, under which the defendant was taken up, issued regularly, and, upon his application, it was afterwards discharged, [688]*688with costs. No application was made to this court, to visit" the proceeding upon the parties concerned'; but the defendant, after the attachment is discharged, brings an action at law for damages, and a motion is now made to me for an injunction to restrain him, brevi manu, from going on with it. I need not point out the importance of the question, because it is one between this court and the right of the subject to ask of a jury, whether he is not entitled to damages for being deprived of his liberty.

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Bluebook (online)
177 F. 684, 101 C.C.A. 310, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gooding-v-reid-murdock-co-ca7-1910.