Louisville Banking Co. v. M. V. Monarch Co.
This text of 68 Mo. App. 603 (Louisville Banking Co. v. M. V. Monarch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an appeal by the plaintiff banking company and its sureties in an injunction bond, from the .judgment of the circuit court assessing damages after dissolution of said injunction. The only damages claimed, and which were allowed, were the fees of attorneys employed by the Monarch Company and Patterson in defeating the action.
In the prayer for relief plaintiff asked the court to declare said chattel mortgage null and void as to it, and that plaintiff’s claim be paid out- of the assets in defendants’ hands.
Along with the petition in equity plaintiff filed a motion for a temporary injunction, asking the court to enjoin and restrain the defendants from taking and using the firm name of Oliver & O’Bryan, and from using said trade-marks until the final hearing of the cause; and to this extent only a temporary injunction was granted, the plaintiff with his sureties entering into a bond to pay such damages as the defendants might sustain by reason of such temporary injunction.
Subsequently defendants filed demurrers to plaintiff’s bill in equity, 'stating as a ground therefor that said petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court sustained these demurrers; plaintiff failed to plead further and dismissed the suit, and thereupon defendants called on the court to assess their damages on the injunction bond. At the hearing of this motion defendants introduced evidence tending to prove that they had incurred a liability for attorneys’ fees in defending the entire cause, in the gross sum of $250; and for this amount the court entered judgment against plaintiff and its sureties on the injunction bond, and they appealed.
[606]*606
The evidence here shows that the attorneys’ fees for which these defendants became liable were for services in defending the • main case, the principal features of which relate to the attack made on the [607]*607chattel mortgages given by Oliver & O’Bryan. The legal services of defendants’ attorneys-, Messrs. Tichenor and Reiger, and for which it is sought to charge the injunction bond, consisted in taking depositions as to the good faith of said mortgages and preparing and arguing the demurrers to the petition. There was nothing done looking to the dissolution of the injunction, except as it would incidentally follow from a defeat of the main case. The injunction in fact had to do, it seems, with rather an insignificant interest; it involved only the right to use th„e so-called “good will” and trade-marks of a failing and insolvent concern.
We do not think the defendants incurred the liability for these legal services by reason of the temporary injunction, and it would be unjust to hold the plaintiff and his sureties therefor. Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
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68 Mo. App. 603, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-banking-co-v-m-v-monarch-co-moctapp-1897.