Guthrie v. Biethan

139 P. 718, 25 Idaho 706, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 28
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 139 P. 718 (Guthrie v. Biethan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guthrie v. Biethan, 139 P. 718, 25 Idaho 706, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 28 (Idaho 1914).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

This action was brought on an injunction bond to recover damages alleged to have accrued by reason of the wrongful issuance of a writ of injunction. The action was tried by the court with a jury and verdict rendered and judgment entered for plaintiffs in the sum of $125. The appeal is from the judgment.

The following facts appear from the record:

On the 29th of October, 1910, the appellant Biethan brought an action to foreclose a crop mortgage, against J. D. Muir as mortgagor, joining also George A. Robethan, Willie B. Guthrie, Frank Andrews, Murl Burton, David France, William Hayes, Thomas Conroy and John T. Danilson, sheriff of Bingham county, as defendants. The defendant Robethan held a prior crop mortgage against Muir, in which foreclosure proceedings had been had. The other defendants, except the sheriff, were crop lien claimants against Muir. At the same time an injunction was issued enjoining the sheriff from paying over any money, goods or chattels then in his hands or that might come into his.hands by reason of the sale of any of the property of said Muir. In said action of Biethan v. Muir et al., said lien claimant defendants filed an answer and set up copies of farm laborers’ liens, and also averred in their .answer the confession of judgment by Muir and a decree of foreclosure, foreclosing said farm laborers’ liens, and alleged and claimed that said liens were superior to the lien of the mortgage which plaintiff Biethan was seeking to foreclose. This action was commenced October 29, 1910, and the answer thereto was filed November 12, 1910. On Novem[708]*708ber 15, 1910, a notice and motion was filed in that suit to dissolve the injunction. On November 18th or 19th, 1910, the same was heard and taken under advisement by the court, and on the 22d of November, 1910, the court made an order dissolving the injunction. It also appears that on the hearing on the motion to dissolve said injunction, two judgments had been entered upon the confession of judgment by Muir in favor of the lien claimants. One was an ordinary money judgment, and the other a decree of foreclosure and sale under said liens. Said two judgments purported to have been filed with the clerk on the 24th of October, 1910, but the evidence shows that the second, the decree of foreclosure, was not entered for several days after the first judgment and was filed sometime after the 28th of October, 1910, as of the 24th of that month.

Neither at the time said answer was filed and the motion to dissolve was made, nor until the motion was argued did the plaintiff in his foreclosure suit have knowledge that there had been entered by confession said two judgments. Immediately after the discovery that said judgments had been entered by confession, the appellant Biethan brought another suit in the district court against Muir, the plaintiffs in this action and others, charging fraud and irregularity in the procuring of said judgments by confession, and on the same day obtained another injunction enjoining and restraining the same parties from doing the same acts that they were enjoined from doing in the former suit, the foreclosure suit, and then paid no further attention to the injunction in the foreclosure suit. The foreclosure suit was postponed and continued until the second suit was tried, which trial was had after answer by the defendants setting up practically the same defense as in the first action, and on the trial of that case before a jury, the jury found that the defendants, who are the respondents here, were guilty of fraud and conspiracy in having said two judgments entered by confession. The court adopted the special verdict of the jury, whereby he found the respondents guilty of fraud and made the injunction in said suit perpetual.

[709]*709The foreclosure suit came on for trial and the respondents here made no defense thereto and the appellant Biethan’s mortgage was foreclosed and the property and money covered thereby was subjected to the payment of the debts secured by said mortgage. Said property and money were the same property and money in the hands of the sheriff that Muir and his eodefendants endeavored to secure in payment of said judgments of confession that the court afterward held were obtained by fraud and conspiracy of said parties.

It will thus be seen that the injunction on which this action was based was issued in a suit wherein Biethan was attempting to prevent Muir and others from procuring the payment of said property and money on the fraudulent judgments which they had obtained by confession. Had Muir and his co-conspirators been entitled to a judgment for the amount due as claimed by said laborers’ liens and the foreclosure of the same, a judgment for the amount due on the liens and the foreclosure of the liens should have been had in the same proceeding; but it appears that a money judgment was rendered first and then a decree of foreclosure was thereafter entered for the purpose of enforcing the collection of said money judgment.

As to the said judgment and decree, the court found, among other things, as follows: ‘ ‘ That the said liens so filed by the defendants, Willie E. Guthrie, Frank Andrews and William Hayes, were and are illegal, fraudulent and void, and that the judgment so confessed thereon by the said Muir, was obtained by the fraud and conspiracy of the defendants, J. D. Muir, Willie E. Guthrie, Frank Andrews and William Hayes, and that the said judgment and decree of foreclosure so obtained is fraudulent and void.”

Judgment was entered accordingly, setting aside the decree foreclosing said liens.

While counsel for appellant assigns seventeen specific errors, they are grouped and discussed under two heads in the brief of appellant. The first is that the court erred in refusing to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, and the second, that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict.

[710]*710From the foregoing statement it will be observed that the injunction on which this action is based was issued to restrain Muir and others from enforcing a judgment that had been obtained by fraud and conspiracy. It is a plain rule of law and common sense that one cannot be legally damaged for being restrained from doing an illegal act. A person cannot sustain legal injury unless he has been wrongfully restrained from doing something he had a legal right to do. Although the injunction in issue was dissolved, another and separate action had been brought attacking said fraudulent judgment, and an injunction issued in that case for the very purpose that the first injunction was issued. Under the law a person who has been damaged by reason of having been wrongfully restrained by injunction from doing something that he had a legal right, to do may recover what damages he has sustained; but the law does not contemplate that a person may be compensated in damages for being restrained from doing a thing he had no legal right to do; for if he had no legal right to do the act, he cannot be damaged and has no cause of action if he be enjoined from doing an illegal act. It is held by very respectable authority that a person restrained from doing what he had no legal right to do has no action for damages even though the injunction has been wrongfully issued. (22 Cyc. 1062; Parks v. O’Conner, 70 Tex. 377, 8 S. W. 104.)

In Summer v. Crawford (Tex. Civ. App.), 41 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
139 P. 718, 25 Idaho 706, 1914 Ida. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guthrie-v-biethan-idaho-1914.