Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co. v. Manhattan Elevated Railway Co.

11 Daly 367, 65 How. Pr. 319
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 3, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 Daly 367 (Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co. v. Manhattan Elevated Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co. v. Manhattan Elevated Railway Co., 11 Daly 367, 65 How. Pr. 319 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

My opinion upon the following matters, though substantially expressed upon the oral argument, I put in writing, that it may appear precisely what the decision has been in respect to them, especially as they are preliminary to the final question that has been argued; which is, the effect of the filing of the undertaking and the vacating of the injunction, as provided for in the recently enacted amendment of the Code, upon the previous motion for the injunction, which has been argued and not decided; a question upon which I have felt much embarrassment and doubt.

These are my conclusions upon the preliminary matters above referred to:

First. As the defendants were required by the order served upon them to show cause why the injunction therein granted provisionally or ad interim should not be continued during the pendency of the action; and as they appeared upon the return day of the order and opposed the application, their so appearing and opposing must, within the meaning of the provision in the recent amendment, be regarded as having the same force and effect as if they had applied upon notice to vacate the injunction.

Second. As the motion of the plaintiff to continue the ad interim injunction until the trial and judgment is, though argued, still under consideration, the application of. the defendants now to vacate the injunction upon filing the undertaking provided for by the statute, is, within the meaning of the new amendment, an application “ upon the hearing.”

Third. The alleged wrong and injury complained of is capable of being adequately compensated for in money, as it is the withholding from the Metropolitan road of the [369]*369quarterly payments provided for in the original lease made by the directors, with the approval of the stockholders, and consists in the difference between the amount payable quarterly under that lease and the reduced amount payable quarterly under the October agreements, which reduced amounts the Manhattan Company have so far offered to pay. The extent, therefore, of the injury which the plaintiffs can sustain by vacating the injunction is the amount of that difference from the time of the service of the injunction until the action can be tried and the rights of the parties finally determined by a judgment.

An. equity term will be held next October, and another in the following December, in either of which the cause can be tried. An undertaking, therefore, sufficient to cover the amount of this difference from the service of the injunction to the first of January next, which difference, it is agreed, would amount to $196,000, is the proper measure of the plaintiffs’ possible loss, up to that period; and sufficient within the provisions of the new amendment to secure to the plaintiffs adequate compensation in money for any injury they may sustain by the vacating the injunction.

At the equity term in October or in December the plaintiffs can compel the defendants to go to trial, or if the court should allow the trial, on the defendants’ application, to be postponed beyond these terms, it will be in the power of the court to exact as a condition that the plaintiffs should have such further security as would cover any possible loss or injury to them thereafter.

Fourth. The form of the undertaking and the amount of it is, according to the provisions of the amended section, to be such as the court or judge before whom the application is made shall direct. My direction is that the undertaking-shall be in such a form as to indemnify the plaintiffs against any loss or injury they may sustain from the time of the-vacating of the injunction to the trial and judgment; and that the amount of the undertaking shall be $196,000. The three sureties named by the defendants, who are to execute the undertaking, are satisfactory; and upon the filing of [370]*370such an undertaking the defendants will be entitled to an order vacating the injunction.

The undertaking being filed and the injunction vacated, the question arises as to the effect of the vacating of it upon the motion to continue the injunction during the pendency of the action, which has not been decided.

The plaintiffs claim that the only effect is that the ad interim injunction is vacated, which leaves the motion still to be decided ; that is, that it remains still to be decided, whether the ad interim injunction, which has been vacated, shall, in effect, be continued during the pendency of the action. They insist that the distinction must be recognized that the injunction ad interim is not an injunction restraining the execution of the agreement pendente lite, which is what they moved for; and that it is my duty, notwithstanding that the ad interim injunction is vacated, to go on and decide upon the motion rvhether or not the plaintiffs are entitled, during the pendency of the action, to have the restraint continued, the counsel for the plaintiffs conceding that if I should decide that they are, and grant such an injunction, then the defendants would have the right, under the recent amendment, to move to vacate that injunction, upon giving the undertaking provided for in the amendment; which is, in effect, that there may be two undertakings under the recent enactment — one upon vacating an injunction during the pendency of the motion, and another on vacating an injunction during the pendency of the action. In brief, they cjaim that, under this section, as the matter now stands, there is but one injunction which can be vacated.

I was much impressed with this objection, as the only injunction is the one I granted until the hearing of the motion; but, after a full consideration of this difficulty and a careful examination of the new provision in the Code, I am satisfied that the construction which the plaintiffs put upon it, and which, if they were entitled to a continuation of the injunction, would, if the defendants want the restraint wholly removed, involve the necessity of their giving two [371]*371undertakings, both of the like effect and amount, cannot foe correct. The amendment makes no distinction between injunctions ad interim and injunctions pendente lite. What this new provision obviously means is, that if the wrong and injury complained of is reparable and capable of being adequately compensated for in money, the partj- enjoined may be relieved from the restraint imposed by indemnifying the other party against any possible loss or injury he may sustain; and, this indemnity being given, it can make no difference whether the injunction was ad interim or to continue until there was a judgment.

The provision is mandatory, that the judge or court “ must,” unless the alleged wrong or injury is irreparable and incapable of being adequately compensated in money, vacate the injunction upon the filing of the undertaking provided for. It is therefore the duty of the judge, when an application is made to him under this new provision, to determine, first, whether the alleged wrong or injury which the injunction, provisional or otherwise, was granted to prevent, can be compensated in money. What the alleged wrong or injury is will appear by the complaint, or the exact nature or effect of it may appear more particularly by the affidavits upon which the preliminary injunction was granted, or by affidavits read by either party upon the application to vacate.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Daly 367, 65 How. Pr. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-elevated-railway-co-v-manhattan-elevated-railway-co-nyctcompl-1883.