Luttring v. American Fruit Growers, Inc.

49 S.W.2d 980, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 472
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 1932
DocketNo. 8850.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 980 (Luttring v. American Fruit Growers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luttring v. American Fruit Growers, Inc., 49 S.W.2d 980, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 472 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory order granting a temporary writ of injunction for the American Fruit Growers and L. B. Snavely, restraining George A. Luttring and 159 others, including 157 farmers, 2 lawyers, and the county judge of Willacy county, from instituting suit on any of, 157 claims remaining after the two suits already tried and now on file on'appeal in this court are deducted.

The grounds upon which the injunction was sought and obtained are:

“Plaintiffs further say that the same identical testimony, except as to acreage and the date of the contract and the amount of onions •or tomatoes shipped, will be introduced by the defendants herein, in each of their cases, involving the identical same facts and the identical same law questions. That all of «aid cases, as these plaintiffs believe, involve amounts within the jurisdiction, under the •constitution and statutes of this State, of the County or Justice Court of Willacy County. That said cases cannot be legally consolidated, because if they were consolidated in said County Court, then the aggregate of the amount thus involved in all of said cases would exceed the jurisdiction of said County •Court of Willacy County, as provided for under the Constitution and Laws of this State. * * *
“These plaintiffs further say that all of the defendants above named, with the exception of those who have filed suits, the two attorneys above named and the County Judge, aforesaid, are now threatening to file suits, .similar, on the exact same facts and involving the exact same questions of law as the ■cases above referred to. That some twelve ■or more petitions, in behalf of said respective ■defendants, have actually been prepared by said attorneys, and will, unless restrained by orders of this court, soon be filed in said County Court of Willacy County against these plaintiffs, for damages, which suits involve these plaintiffs charge, and will involve, when filed, the same identical facts and law questions as involved in all the other suits that have been filed. These plaintiffs, as hereinbefore alleged, have a valid defense jto each and every one of said suits and claims of said defendants, which defense involves the same identical facts and same identical questions of law.
“These plaintiffs further say that while the defendants, hereinbefore named, signed at different times identical contracts, yet they acted together and had a community interest in the facts and in the law involved in every case; that the source of their causes of action, as alleged, is exactly common as to each and every one of them; that the evidence to support the one required to be introduced, will, with the exception as to the dates and the amount of shipments, be exactly the same; that the evidence as to the negligence and bad faith of these plaintiffs and the local market, and -the damages resulting to them from the failure, as alleged by these plaintiffs to sell their products, will be exactly the same; and, in this connection these plaintiffs say that under the very terms of the defendants’ contracts with these plaintiffs, it is and was provided and expressly agreed that the defendants’ crops might be pooled in the marketing thereof by these plaintiffs, and, as a matter of fact, all of the products of all of the defendants were handled and shipped and sold during the months, or practically so, of April and the early part of May; that in the maj.ority of cases, the defendants’ or some of their products were pooled in shipping in order to make carload lots, and where the products were pooled they went in the same car and went to the same market and were handled in exactly the same identical way. That though said contracts between plaintiffs and defendants, as hereinbefore alleged, were signed at different dates, or at least many of them, 'they in fact constitute a general agreement between said farmers and defendants, and these plaintiffs, and represent in a general way one transaction involving and consisting of the separate contracts, but providing for the handling and pooling of all of their products, and, by reason thereof, each and all of the defendants have a community interest in each others contracts, and all the other defendants’ contracts, with these plaintiffs, as well as in the facts and legal questions involved, as well also, the remedies sought to be obtained .by them in seeking to recover damages of the same kind and character and nature and a single decree of this Court can settle the rights of all the parties, and such is the most practicable, convenient and less expensive to all of the parties for that purpose.”

Appellees prayed for an injunction restraining the multiplicity of suits against them, setting out the great amount of costs that would accrue in each suit. The allegations show that all the claims described in the bill seeking the injunction grew out of *982 the same or similar transactions, that practically the same evidence will be offered to sustain each of the threatened suits. Under the English bill of peace there was a greater strictness required of allegation and proof of numerous suits growing out of the same transaction in favor of numerous parties, but in modern times the doctrine has been widened and it is the policy of equity, as enforced in American courts, to frown upon and prevent a multiplicity of suits and relieve the citizen of the cost and harassment arising from such suits. The institution of such a multiplicity of suits as are threatened in this instance would be oppressive and unjust. It appears that over 150 men holding similar claims, founded on practically the same contract, obtained by the same fraud, if any, executed by the defendant in the same fraudulent or negligent manner, are threatening to file suits.

One of the best expositions of the rules governing in obtaining relief from the oppression of many suits, which should and could be disposed of with a minimum of cost, and with equal and exact relief to each of the parties through a single suit, is made by Professor Pomeroy in his great work on Equity Jurisprudence. Vol. 1, §§ 268-274. We ■quote from section 268, page 498: “In that particular family of suits, whether brought on behalf of a numerous body against a single party, or by a single party against a numerous body, which are strictly and technically ‘bills of peace’, in order that a court of equity may grant the relief and thus exercise its jurisdiction on the ground of preventing a multiplicity of suits, there does and must exist among the individuals composing the numerous body, or between each of them and their single adversary, a common right, a community of interest in the subject-matter of the controversy, or a common title from which all their separate claims and all the questions at issue arise; it is not enough that the claims of each individual being separate and distinct, there is a community of interest merely in the question of law or of fact involved, or in the kind and form of remedy demanded and obtained by or against each individual. ⅜ * ⅜ It must be admitted, as a clear historical fact, that at an early period the court of chancery confined this branch of its jurisdiction to these technical ‘bills of peace’. The' above rule, as laid down in them, was for a considerable time the limit beyond which the court would not exercise its jurisdiction in cases belonging to the third and fourth classes.

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

Related

Betty Henry v. Lillian Bowens Brooks
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2022
H. Rouw Co. v. Texas N. O. R. Co.
260 S.W.2d 69 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Repka v. American National Insurance
186 S.W.2d 977 (Texas Supreme Court, 1945)
American Nat. Ins. Co. v. Repka
184 S.W.2d 157 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1944)
American Lead Corp. v. Davis
38 N.E.2d 281 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 980, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luttring-v-american-fruit-growers-inc-texapp-1932.