Halsey v. Murray

112 Ala. 185
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 112 Ala. 185 (Halsey v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halsey v. Murray, 112 Ala. 185 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

This case grows out of certain litigation between John Thomas Eason, on the one side, and the firm' of Baldridge, Murray & Halsey, and two members thereof, upon the other, one branch of which was decided by this court at a former term. — Baldridge v. Eason, 99 Ala. 516. After the affirmance by this court, in that case, of the decretal order dissolving the injunction, which had issued at the suit of W. F. Baldridge and C. H. Halsey, Eason caused proceedings to be taken for the collection of his claim which were based upon the theory that the obligors upon the injunction bond and upon the supersedeas bond — given to restore the injunction pending the appeal to this court. — had become liable to him for the amount of the judgment he had recovered against the firm of Baldridge, Murray & Halsey; and'whether or not this view was correct is the main question to be determined upon this appeal, the correct solution of which will require the consideration of several subsidiary propositions.

The bill proceeds upon the idea that the injunction which issued against Eason and the sheriff of Madison 'county, upon the complaint of W. F. Baldridge and C. H. Halsey, was an injunction of a judgment, or, what is the same thing, an injunction “to stay proceedings after judgment,” within the meaning of section 3522 of the Code, and that the main defendant in that suit, upon the dissolution of the writ, was entitled to summary process for the collection of his judgment against the firm of Baldridge, Murray & Halsey out of the prin- ■ cipal and sureties upon each of said bonds — :the original injunction bond and the bond given to restore the injunction pending the appeal.

1. We do not think this proposition can be successfully maintained. An examination of the prayer for the injunction and of the writ which actually issued •shows that the only effect of the injunction was to restrain the sheriff from levying upon the individual property of the complainants, under an execution which had issued on a judgment against the firm, and which was leviable only upon firm property. The writ of injunction which was prayed and obtained did not prevent the enforcement of the judgment — did not stay authorized proceedings to collect it; it did not even restrain a levy of the execution upon- firm property, which was the [197]*197only levy the sheriff was authorized to make. Notwithstanding the writ of injunction, Eason could have proceeded to collect his judgment out of the firm — the only party against whom he had recovered any judgment— and hence he was not entitled to a bond conditioned to pay a judgment which had not been enjoined. The sections of the Code, -relating to injunctions of judgments •and the bond required to be given in such cases, have reference to such restraining writs as interfere with and delay the collection of. a judgment — to writs operating such a stay of proceedings after judgment as is the equivalent of an injunction of the judgment. This construction of the nature and character of the prayer of the injunction bill, and of the writ issued in accordance therewith, is in entire harmony with, and the necessary result of, our decision in Baldridge v. Eason, supra. There, we pointed out, that, although the bill had been prepared under a misapprehension of counsel, yet in reality, it showed no more than a threatened trespass— an abuse of process — which the chancery court had no jurisdiction to redress. Hence’the bill was declared to be wanting in equity, and the injunction was dissolved. The conclusion we announce is in harmony with our own decisions, and those in other States, construing similar statutes. In the early case of Dunn v. Bank of Mobile, 2 Ala. 152, judgment had been obtained against one Dunn, and levies made thereunder upon property claimed to belong to his children. An injunction was procured to restrain the sale. After holding that the statute then in force, as to a dissolution of an injunction having the force and effect of a judgment, applied only to cases in which the judgment was enjoined, the court ■said: “In the case before us, the judgment remained ■in full force and the execution itself was only suspended as against the property levied on. The bond then did not operate as a judgment.” In Wiswell v. Munroe, 4 Ala. 9, this language was used: “It results from this, that the bond executed by Cullum and Munroe not operating as a supersedeas, whatever may be its effect as a bond at common law, cannot have the force and effect of a judgment upon a dissolution of the injunction, as that effect is only given to such bonds as enjoin the judgment, which was not- the fact in this case,”

[198]*198In Bartlett v. Gayle, 6 Ala. 305, an injunction was issued at the suit of a stranger to restrain the collection of an execution by the sale of certain property,' which had been levied on. The court remarked in the opinion, “that no execiition can be issued upon the bond, (1) because it does not enjoin the judgment but only proceedings thereon, as it respects the premises in controversy; (2) because the defendant at law is not the complainant in equity.”

The Supreme Court of Arkansas, in Stanley v. Bonham, 12 S. W. Rep. (Ark.) 706, makes the proposition clear in the following extract: ‘ ‘As to the assessment of damages, on dissolution of an injunction, the statute does not authorize an assessment except in cases where the proceedings have been stayed — that is when the enforcement of the judgment has been enjoined. An injunction preventing the sale of particular property does not prevent the execution of the judgment within -the meaning of the statute.”

And in Hardin v. White, (Iowa) 16 N. W. Rep. 580, it was held that where an action is brought to restrain the sale of a particular piece of property under an execution, issued on a judgment, and not to restrain the execution generally, the bond need not be double the amount of such judgment and conditioned for its payment, since the court was of opinion that the object of such action was not' to stay proceedings upon a judgment.

2. Nor do we think it can avail the appellee, as his counsel argue, that the bill of Baldridge and Halsey against Eason, was filed under the supposition that the judgment upon which the execution issued, was collectible out of the individual members of the firm, and hence that it had to be avoided by showing a good defense against it, and a want of opportunity to make that defense, before the complainants would be entitled to restrain the collection of the execution out of their individual property. Bills and writs must be construed according to their true legal effect, and not according to. what counsel may erroneously suppose to be their operation and meaning. Injunction bonds are intended to furnish suitable security for an injury resulting from improper resort to the extraordinary process of injunction, procured upon an ex parte application, and restraining in [199]*199terms some act upon the part of the defendant; and the inquiry to be made in determining what the condition of the bond should be, is not so much what relief upon final hearing the complainant seeks by his bill, as what does the preliminary writ prevent the defendant from doing — what interference does it present to a course he might otherwise pursue.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Ala. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halsey-v-murray-ala-1895.