Lawlor v. Merritt

72 A. 143, 81 Conn. 715, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 4, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 72 A. 143 (Lawlor v. Merritt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawlor v. Merritt, 72 A. 143, 81 Conn. 715, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 145 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Roraback, J.

The substantial allegations of the complaint are as follows: 1. On or about July 5th, 1904, the plaintiff, on behalf of an unincorporated association known as the United Hatters of North America, brought suit in the Superior Court in Fairfield County, against the defendants, to restrain them from the use of certain imitations of the registered label of said United Hatters. On or about July 11th, 1904, after a hearing at which both parties were represented and introduced evidence, it was ordered by the *717 Honorable George W. Wheeler, a judge of the Superior Court, that upon the plaintiff’s giving a bond in the sum of $5,000, within two weeks from the date of the order, in accordance with General Statutes, § 1004, a preliminary injunction be issued, pursuant to the prayer and complaint in that action. 2. That in conformity with that order the plaintiff, as principal, and the American Surety Company of New York, as surety, executed a bond with the following condition: “Now, therefore, if the said Martin Lawlor shall well and truly pay and account for all damages in case the plaintiff in said cause shall fail to prosecute said action to effect, then this obligation to be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.” The same was duly approved by said judge and filed with the clerk of the Superior Court in Fairfield County. 3. That, thereafter, the plaintiff prosecuted his action to effect, as fully appears from the file in the cause, and final judgment was entered that the defendants recover of the plaintiff their costs taxed at $387.61, which costs have been duly paid by the plaintiff. 4. That the defendants suffered no damage by reason of the issuance of the order of temporary injunction. 5. That the plaintiff, as collateral security for the execution of the bond by the American Surety Company, deposited with the Surety Company, at the time the bond was executed, a certified check for $5,000. 6. Although the condition of the bond had been fulfilled, the defendants, for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff from recovering this money from the American Surety Company, brought an action in the Supreme Court of New York, on June 11th, 1907, against the plaintiff and the American Surety Company, to recover alleged damages for a pretended breach of the condition of the bond, whereby the plaintiff is hindered and prevented from recovering back the collateral deposited with said American Surety Company. 7. That the bond was in the custody and under the control of this court, and all questions relating to the construction and performance *718 thereof are peculiarly within the jurisdiction of this court, and can be determined herein more speedily and conveniently than in the courts of New York State.

The plaintiff claimed (1) $1,000 damages and (2) an order that the bond be delivered up to the plaintiff for cancellation.

The trial court found that these allegations were true, with the following exceptions: in paragraph 3, the allegation that the plaintiff prosecuted to effect the action in which the temporary injunction was granted; so much of paragraph 6 as alleges that the New York action was brought for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff from recovering back the $5,000 from the American Surety Company; and the allegation that the defendant suffered no damage by complying with the order of temporary injunction. The court also found that some legal damage resulted from obedience to the temporary injunction.

The reasons of appeal, though fifteen in number, involve but three propositions: That the court erred (1) in holding that the condition of the injunction bond had not been fulfilled; (2) in holding that the defendants had suffered recoverable damages in consequence of the injunction order; and (3) in holding that upon the facts found the injunction bond should not be canceled.

The first question presented is the construction of the bond required and given under the provisions of § 1004 of the General Statutes, reading as follows: “No ternporary injunction shall issue in any case, except in favor of the state or of a public officer thereof in respect to any matter of a public nature, until the party making application therefor shall give bond, with surety satisfactory, to the court or judge granting the injunction, to the opposite party, to answer all damages in case the plaintiff in the action in which the injunction is applied for shall fail to prosecute the action to ¿effect; provided that a bond need not be required when, for good cause shown, the court .or *719 judge shall be of opinion that a temporary injunction ought to issue without bond.”

Construed in the light of the circumstances which require that protection should be given to the defendants, the fair interpretation of the words “prosecute ... to effect” must be that the plaintiff was to obtain a final decision that he was entitled to the injunction, or some order equivalent to such a decision. Otherwise this requirement would be senseless and of no effect. Perreau v. Bevan, 5 Barn. & Cr. 284; Legate v. Marr, 8 Blackf. (Ind.) 404; Gibbs v. Bartlett, 2 Watts & Serg. (Pa.) 29, 33; Berghoff v. Heckwolf, 26 Mo. 511; Kathaus v. Owings, 6 Har. & John. (Md.) 134, 138; Boom v. St. Paul Foundry & Mfg. Co., 33 Minn. 253, 22 N. W. 538; Trent v. Rhomberg, 66 Tex. 249, 18 S. W. 510; Smith v. Caldwell, 96 Mo. App. 632, 70 S. W. 926.

The record discloses that after the bond in question had been executed, the plaintiff tried his action in the Superior Court, where a judgment was rendered in his favor. Upon appeal this court found error, and remanded the cause to the Superior Court, which ultimately rendered judgment for the defendants, with costs.

The right to a temporary injunction depended upon the same facts as the relief sought in the action in which this injunction was issued. The plaintiff's contention, that the judgment by the Superior Court, vacated by the decision of the appeal, was a prosecution to effect within the meaning of the statute, calls for the application of that principle of law that when a judgment is set aside it is entirely destroyed, and the rights of the parties, as to the issues tried, are left as if no such judgment had ever been entered. Brennan v. Berlin Iron Bridge Co., 73 Conn. 412, 415, 47 Atl. 668; Olson v. Nunnally, 47 Kan. 391, 28 Pac. 149, 27 Amer. St. Rep. 296; 2 Black on Judg. (2d Ed.) § 511. There was no final determination upon the merits of the action as to the right of the plaintiff to the injunction order *720 at the time it was made. The liability of the obligors of the injunction bond was not affected by a judgment set aside under the circumstances indicated. Prosecution to a judgment afterward vacated, is not prosecution to effect which is necessary to satisfy the condition of the bond.

The question of the measure of damages was not the controlling issue for the determination of the Superior Court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 143, 81 Conn. 715, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawlor-v-merritt-conn-1909.