Janssen v. Shown

53 F.2d 608, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2713
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1931
DocketNo. 6372
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 F.2d 608 (Janssen v. Shown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janssen v. Shown, 53 F.2d 608, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2713 (9th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

WEBSTER, District Judge.

This action was instituted by appellant against the appellees to recover damages on an injunction bond executed by X. E. Hall as principal and the appellees as sureties in a suit brought by Hall and others against appellant and others in the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Wheeler county. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the amended complaint of appellant and entered a judgment dismissing the aetion. To review the record of this judgment, appellant brings the case here.

[609]*609The pertinent facts as disclosed by the amended complaint and its supporting exhibits are these: In November, 1928, appellant and ITall made an exchange of properties whereby appellant conveyed to Hall several ranches and valuable personal property in the states of Washington and Montana, in consideration of which Hall conveyed to appellant a ranch in Wheeler county, Or., together with certain valuable personal property, including 360 head of cattle. In January, 1929, Hall commenced an aetion at law against appellant in the superior court of the state of Washington for Yakima county to recover damages for fraud alleged to have been perpetrated upon him in the exchange transaction. Appellant filed an answer denying all fraud on Ms part, and by way of cross-complaint sued Hall for damages for fraud alleged to have been practiced by him on appellant in the same transaction. On February 15,1929, and while the Yakima county case was still pending, Hall brought a suit in equity in Wheeler county, Or., for a rescission of the exchange transaction because of the identical fraud alleged by him in the Yakima county case, and sued out an injunction restraining appellant from selling or otherwise disposing of any of the Oregon properties included in the exchange. The bond executed by Hall as principal and appellees as sureties to secure this injunction is the bond constituting the basis of appellant’s present action. The injunction remained in force from February 15, 1929, until May 28, 1929, on which latter date the Wheeler county suit and the injunction were dismissed. Oh May 28,1929, and immediately prior to the entry of the order dismissing the suit, the plaintiffs and the defendants therein entered into a compromise or an adjustment of their rights involved in the injunction proceeding, and signed a stipulation o£ far-reaching effect upon their’ respective interests. Among- other things, it was stipulated that the cause pending- in the circuit court for Wheeler county should be dismissed, with prejudice. The stipulation was not filed in the injunction case, but on the day of its execution, and shortly thereafter the court entered in the cause the following order: “Now on this 28 day of May, 1929, this cause came on to be heard upon an application of the plaintiffs and defendants both appearing in court, asking for an order dismissing this suit. It is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that this cause be and the same is hereby dismissed with prejudice.” This order bore the O. K. of counsel for appellant, who was the defendant in the injunction case, and who had appeared and filed an answer therein. Appellant contends that he is entitled to recover from the appellees as sureties on the injunction bond certain damages which he claims he sustained by reason of the injunction on the ground that the same was issued wrongfully and without sufficient eause. On the other hand, appellees insist that they are not liable on the bond because the dismissal of the injunction proceeding was pursuant to an agreement of the parties and was not the result of any trial on the merits nor of the voluntary act of the plaintiff alone. These contentions give rise to the only question for decision in the ease.

The injunction bond in question was drawn in strict conformity with section 6-102 of the Oregon Code Annotated 1930, which reads: “An injunction may be allowed by the court, or judge thereof, at any time after the commencement of the suit and before decree. Before allowing the same, the court or judge shall require of the plaintiff an undertaking, with one or more sureties, to the effect that ho will pay all costs and disbursements that may bo decreed to the defendant, and such damages, not exceeding an amount therein specified, as he may sustain by reason of the injunction if the same be wrongful or without sufficient cause.”

May the parties to an injunction suit where such a bond is executed enter into a voluntary agreement in the nature of a compromise of the litigation involved, and by their joint aetion, but without the consent or acquiescence of the sureties on the bond, bring about the dismissal of the suit, and thereby create a liability against the sureties on the bond without any judicial determination of the merits of the controversy or of the propriety of the injunction? Ordinarily, the question of whether an injunction is wrongfully or improvidently sued out is and must be determined in the injunction suit, and the judicial determination in this regard is the basis for the holding that the sureties on tile bond are bound thereby and may not, in an action against them on the bond, relitigate the rightfulness or wrongfulness of the injunction. In Oclrichs v. Williams, 15 Wall. 211, 229, 21 L. Ed. 43, the Supreme Court of the United States lays down this rule : “The appellants cannot go behind tlio decree in the case in which their bonds were given. The law and the facts of that ease, as settled by the court, are conclusive of their rights in this proceeding. They cannot be permitted to raise any question as to either.”

[610]*610In Fullerton v. Pool, 9 Wyo. 9 59 P. 431, 433, the Supreme Court of Wyoming declared: "It is a well settled principle that in an action upon an injunction bond the defendants are concluded by the decree upon the question whether or not there was any right to an injunction, and they are not at liberty to reopen the questions which were the subject-matter of the injunction suit. In such an action, matters which go to the merits of the injunction suit are not admissible as a defense.”

Numerous authorities to the same effect might be cited. The only ease cited by appellant in support of his position that the rightfulness or wrongfulness of the injunction may be litigated and determined independently in the action on the bond against the sureties is Olds v. Cary, 13 Or. 362, 10 P. 786, 787. This ease, as we read it, merely passes upon a question of pleading, and does not support the proposition that the rightfulness of the injunction may be litigated independently in an action on the bond. The gist of the holding in the ease is found in this language: "The fact that the injunction was wrongful, or without sufficient cause, should have been alleged. The dissolution of it by the court was evidence of its being wrongful, and should have been introduced as evidence, and not alleged as 'the substantive fact. A moment’s reflection will convince an attorney that this view is correct.”

In Large v. Steer, 121 Pa. 39, 15 A. 490, 491, it is said: "The sureties in an injunction bond assume certain obligations. At the same time they have rights which must be respected, and of which th&y cannot be deprived without their consent. They are entitled to have the case against their principal tried according to the forms of law, and a final decree or judgment entered against him in court. Their liability consists in satisfying' any judgment their principal may be condemned to pay.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

U.S. D.I.D. Corp. v. Windstream Communications, Inc.
916 F. Supp. 2d 501 (S.D. New York, 2013)
Khalsa v. Levinson
2003 NMCA 018 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2002)
Good v. Crowel
416 N.E.2d 899 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1981)
Swiss Baco Skyline Logging Co. v. Haliewicz
541 P.2d 1014 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1975)
American Bible Society v. Blount
446 F.2d 588 (Third Circuit, 1971)
American Bible Society, a Nonprofit Organization of the State of New York v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 46-69) American Book-Stratford Press, Inc. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 941-68) Montville Warehousing Company, Inc., a Mew Jersey Corp. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 1120-68) American Book Publishers Council, Inc. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 1194-68) Associated Book Service, Inc. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 1332-68) Scholastic Magazines, Inc. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 1407-68) the MacMillan Company v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 1408-68) Wayne Warehousing Corp. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, (d.c. Civil Action No. 1358-68) Prentice Hall Inc. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States, Joseph Thomas, Postmaster, Englewood, New Jersey, (d.c. Civil Action No. 102-69) Harper & Row Publishers, Incorporated v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States and Bernard J. Harding, Scranton, Pa., Postmaster, (d.c. Civil Action No. 469-69) Haddon Craftsmen, Inc. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States and Bernard J. Harding, Scranton, Pa., Postmaster, (d.c. Civil Action No. 470-69) Regensteiner Publishing Enterprises, Inc., and Chicago Book Manufacturing, Inc. v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States and Henry McGee Postmaster of the United States Post Office at Chicago, Illinois, (d.c. Civil Action No. 472-69) National Book Company of Scranton v. Winton M. Blount, Postmaster General of the United States and Bernard J. Harding, Scranton, Pa., Postmaster, (d.c. Civil Action No. 551-69)
446 F.2d 588 (Third Circuit, 1971)
M. Blatt Company v. Southwell
130 S.E.2d 859 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1963)
Meeker v. Stuart
188 F. Supp. 272 (District of Columbia, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 F.2d 608, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janssen-v-shown-ca9-1931.