Jackson v. . Bunnell

21 N.E. 79, 113 N.Y. 216, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 975, 68 Sickels 216, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 937
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 79 (Jackson v. . Bunnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. . Bunnell, 21 N.E. 79, 113 N.Y. 216, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 975, 68 Sickels 216, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 937 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The plaintiffs in this case brought their action to foreclose a lien upon certain property belonging to one Myers, *218 and which consisted of six lots with .newly constructed buildings thereon, located oh the northerly side of Eighty-second street in the city of New York, and one hundred feet easterly of the north-east corner of that street and Tenth avenue. Their-notice of lien was filed on the 13th of November, 1886, and their complaint served on the eighth of the following December. The pleadings in that action are not returned, and we-cannot know their contents. The referee’s report and the final judgment rendered are before us, and from them and other papers we are enabled to ascertain,that the parties defendant-were, besides .Myers, his general assignee, Roberts, and seven other persons, among whom were Bunnell & McLaughlin, who are the present appellants. The latter were made defendants because of a prior lien or attempted lien made and filed by them. Their notice was filed October 30,1886, or about two weeks in advance of the plaintiffs, but described the property sought to be charged as six three-story houses on the north side-of west Eighty-second street commencing about 100 feet from the corner of Ninth avenue and Eighty-second street.” This-description was probably incorrect, and may not have covered the houses in question. But it was accompanied by a diagram upon which the six houses are indicated by the figures “ 100 ” placed between the west lot of the group and the corner of Tenth avenue. These figures were at first written in the diagram on the other side of the houses and between them and Ninth avenue, but were at some time erased and put where they now appear. Before the 13th of January, 1887, Bunnell & McLaughlin began an action in the District Court of the-city for a foreclosure of their lien, making no person defendant except Myers. This the lien law permitted, since their claim was less than $250. Meanwhile the present action, which was-in the Common Pleas, proceeded to its termination. Bunnell & McLaughlin interposed no answór. Their judgment in the District Court appears to have been entered on the 3d day of December, 1886, or three days before the plaintiffs’ complaint and notice-were filed, and contained a correct description which had been allowed by amendment. They had issued execution and the *219 sheriff was preparing to sell when the referee’s report in this action was filed. - The referee found that Bunnell & McLaughlin had no hen upon the premises, and awarded judgment of sale and foreclosure in favor of the other lienors, any surplus obtained to be paid to the general assignee of Myers. At this-stage of the difficulty the present plaintiffs obtained an order to show cause why Bunnell & McLaughlin should not be-restrained from enforcing their judgment. This order was founded upon affidavits. It came on to be heard on the same day of plaintiff’s application for judgment, and was accompanied by a stay of proceedings or preliminary injunction granted at the same time with the order. Judgment in the action was awarded in favor of the plaintiffs and duly entered. That judgment gave them no relief by way of injunction restraining the enforcement of the prior action. If in their complaint they set out the facts and asked for an injunction, that relief was refused them on the final judgment. If they did not set out the facts, and ask for the needed restraint, of course they could not have it in the judgment. • Undoubtedly they did not, for they claim to have discovered a fraudulent alteration of the notice of hen after their own action was commenced. Their judgment was entered on the fifteenth day of March, which was also the return day of the order, but the permanent injunction was not then awarded. The decision allowing it seems to have been made on the twenty-first of March, and the order was entered as having been granted at-a Special Term held on the thirtieth of March. On these facts, we are met by the question whether a final and permanent injunction can in toy case be granted on motion and by a mere order when no action between the parties is pending, but both actions covering the controversy have gone to final judgment.

Under the law of this state there is no authority for such an order. The Code has abolished the writ of injunction and substituted as a provisional remedy an injunction granted by an order. (Code of Civil Pro. § 602.) It can be awarded only in the cases and in the manner specifically prescribed,, and is impliedly forbidden in any others. (Fellows v. Heer *220 mans, 13 Abb. Pr. [N. S.] 9.) Even where, after judgment, there has been an appeal the previous temporary injunction is ■abrogated by the judgment, and any hew or further restraints must be contained in the final judgment or order, or cannot be .granted at all. (Gardner v. Gardner, 87 N. Y. 18; People ex rel. v. Randall, 73 id. 416; Spears v. Mathews, 66 id. 128.) The rule is easily justified on principle. An injunction by order is a provisional remedy and temporary in its character. It .assumes a pending litigation in which all questions are to be ■settled by a judgment, and operates only until that judgment is rendered. If by that a permanent injunction is granted, the temporary one is, of course, ended, and equally so if a permanent injunction is in the end denied. The order here appealed' from cannot be sustained as a provisional remedy under the ■Code, for it conforms to none of the necessary conditions.

But a permanent injunction is in no sense a provisional .remedy. It is always and must be final relief. A court of equity may grant it in an action where the pleadings show its necessity, and the remedy is asked as an element of the final relief sought; but after judgment which does not award it, and which judgment is a final disposition of the action, there- can he no permanent injunction granted upon affidavits and an •order. In High on Injunctions (§ 1591) it is said that there is no precedent for granting a permanent injunction upon affidavits. There may be exceptions to that rule, but, when -examined, most of them will appear to be cases in which the injunction was not final and permanent, or in which the action was still pending although an interlocutory judgment had been rendered. The case of Travis v. Myers (67 N. Y. 542) is an illustration. The action was against an assignee for the benefit of creditors to close up his trust. After a decree for an accounting, an injunction restraining suits at law was granted •on motion. The court described the decree as interlocutory, so that the action was still pending and not ended by a final judgment which itself granted no restraint. It is possible, ■also, that such an injunction should be regarded as rather pro■visional than permanent, and intended merely to protect *221 the court’s possession of the assets to be distributed until realized-and finally divided. (Thompson v. Brown, 4 Johns. Ch. 619; Atty. Gen. v. Guard. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 77 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 79, 113 N.Y. 216, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 975, 68 Sickels 216, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-bunnell-ny-1889.