Memphis Gayoso Gas Co. v. Williamson

56 Tenn. 314
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 56 Tenn. 314 (Memphis Gayoso Gas Co. v. Williamson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Memphis Gayoso Gas Co. v. Williamson, 56 Tenn. 314 (Tenn. 1872).

Opinion

Nicholson, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 18th of September, 1867, Thompson Dean, a citizen of New York, filed his bill in the Circuit Court of. the United States, for the District of West Tennessee, against the Memphis Gayoso Gas Co., the city of. Memphis, and the Memphis Gaslight Co., in which he alleges that he was a large stockholder in the Memphis Gaslight Co., which company, by the terms of its charter, was entitled to the exclusive franchise of manufacturing and ' selling gas to supply the city of Memphis and its inhabitants with gaslight.That this exclusive privilege was being infringed by the Gayoso Gas Co., which claimed* the right to manufacture and sell gas in the city, and was engaged in tearing up the streets and pavements, and in laying down its pipes preparatory to becoming a competitor of complainant in the sale of gas. That the city of Memphis has taken steps to perfect a subscription of ' $250,000 of stock in the Gayoso Gas Co. by submitting the proposition to a popular vote, in violation of the chartered rights of the company. That complainant has applied to the President and Directors of the Memphis Gaslight Co., of which he is the largest stockholder, and urged upon them to [317]*317proceed in the courts against the city of Memphis and the Gayoso Co., which they decline to do, alleging that they have already filed a bill in the Chancery Court at Memphis, and have obtained a partial injunction, and they do not see fit to proceed further in the premises, whereupon he prayed for and ob"tained an injunction, and executed bond in the penalty of $75,000, payable to the Gayoso Cas Co., with ' E. M. Cash, G. Falls, J. M. Tomeny, L. Hanaeur, and R. P. Walt, as sureties, conditioned to pay all costs and damages that may be recovered against him in consequence of the suing out of said injunction. .To the bill so filed the Gayoso Gas Co. filed pleas in abatement, denying that the Memphis Gaslight Co. have refused to take legal steps to assert and maintain the rights of complainant, and' all. other stockholders ; on the contrary, that they did file a bill in the Chancery Court at Memphis, wherein the same relief was sought, and the same matter of complaint urged as in complainant’s bill, making the record of the suit in the Chancery Court at Memphis a part of their plea, which cause was then pending and being prosecuted by the attorneys of the Memphis Gaslight Co., who are the same attorneys who are prosecuting complainant’s bill.

Upon the argument of the pleas in abatement, the Judge of the Circuit Court of the United States overruled the same, and took jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter, and determined that no prior suit is pending between the same parties, and for the same subject matter.

[318]*318The Gayoso Gas Co. thereupon answered the bill of complainant, denying that the Memphis Gaslight Co. have the exclusive franchise claimed, and setting up and relying upon the same matters set forth in their pleas, no abatement, and charging that the antagonism between complainant and the Gaslight Co. is pretended, and not real. The city of Memphis answered, adopting the answer of Gayoso Gas Co. Replications were filed by complainant to the answer. The cause was heard by consent on bill, answers, and exhibits, when the court decreed that complainant was entitled to the relief prayed for, and ordered that the injunction granted be made perpetual.

From this decree the Gayoso Gas Co. appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States. Upon application to that court, the complainant was required to execute an additional bond in the further sum of $75,000, which was done, with James M. Williamson and J. J. Murphy as his sureties, conditioned as the former bond. Upon the hearing of the cause in the Supreme Court of the United States, it was determined that the only question it was competent for the complainant, as a stockholder of the Memphis Gaslight Co., to compel the Directors to present to a court of justice, was that involving its exclusive right under the charter to furnish the city of Memphis with gas; and as that had been presented to a court of competent jurisdiction, in a suit then pending, he is disabled, according to the settled rule on this subject, from instituting a suit in his own name in another court. It was therefore ordered that the decree [319]*319below be reversed, and that the bill be dismissed by the court below, which was done on the 7th of January, 1870.

On the 24th of January, 1870, the case of the Memphis Gaslight Co. against the Gayoso Gas Co. was heard by Special Chancellor Isham G. Harris, when ,it was decreed that that part of complainant’s bill which claims that the privileges granted to complainant to manufacture and vend gas to the corporate authorities and inhabitants of the city of Memphis, and to use the streets, lanes, and alleys of the city for the purpose of laying down gas-pipes, conductors, etc., are exclusive, be dismissed. Thereupon, in January, 1870, the Gayoso Gas Co. commenced this suit against Thompson Dean, J. J. Murphy, J. M. Williamson, G. Falls, F. M. Cash, and J. M. Tomeny, in the Circuit Court of Shelby county, in which they claimed $400,000 as damages, consequent upon the suing out of the injunction in the Circuit Court of the United States. The declaration contained seven counts, four of which were based upon the two injunction bonds of $75,000 each, and the other two for maliciously prosecuting the suit in the Federal Court without probable cause.

Demurrers were sustained to all the counts in the declaration, whereupon an amended declaration, consisting of several counts, was filed against Thompson Dean alone, and one count against all of the. defendants, to which declaration the defendants pleaded the general issue. Whereupon Thompson Dean filed his petition, and procured an order transferring the case, [320]*320as to him, to the Circuit Court of the United States, and at the October Term, 1871, the cause as to the other defendants (except F. M. Cash, as to whom it was abated,) was tried before a special jury on the single amended count, when there was a verdict against J. J. Murphy, J. M. Williamson, and J.. M. Tomeny for $300,000, and a verdict in favor of defendants, G. Falls, L. Hanaeur, and R. P. Walt.

Defendants Williamson, Murphy, and Tomeny moved the court to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, and also to arrest the judgment as to them. The motion 'for a new trial was granted as to Murphy and Tomeny, and overruled as to Williamson. The motion in arrest of judgment was sustained as to Williamson. From this action of the court in arresting the judgment, and in refusing a new trial as to Falls, Hanaeur, and Walt, the plaintiff has appealed, and defendant Williamson appealed from the judgment refusing his motion for a new trial.

The first question arising on the motion in arrest of judgment is, whether, the declaration set out a sufficient cause of action? and néxt, if it does not, whether it is such a defect as is cured by a verdict?

The substantial averments in the declaration are as follows: That the defendants combining, confederating, conspiring and aiding and assisting the said defendant Dean, not having any reasonable or probable cause of action whatever but wrongfully intending to harrass, oppress, and injure the plaintiff, falsely and maliciously caused and procured to be sued out and prosecuted on the equity side of the Circuit Court of the United [321]

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Bluebook (online)
56 Tenn. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memphis-gayoso-gas-co-v-williamson-tenn-1872.