Miller v. South Hills Trust Co.

96 Pa. Super. 273, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 146
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 25, 1929
DocketAppeal 138
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 Pa. Super. 273 (Miller v. South Hills Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. South Hills Trust Co., 96 Pa. Super. 273, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 146 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

This appeal is from the refusal to take off a non-suit in an action on a bond given on obtaining a preliminary injunction. While the non-suit was entered for lack of proof of damage, we must consider two questions: (1) was there sufficient evidence of damage to go to the jury? (2) ean the plaintiff, as one of the obligees named in the bond, maintain the suit, or must all the obligees join as plaintiffs?

The preliminary injunction was obtained ex parte on the bill and injunction affidavits pursuant to equity rules 81 and 82 (since revised as rules 38 and 39). The restraint lasted until the bill was dismissed; the decree was affirmed July 2, 1924, and is reported as South Hills Trust Company v. Baker et al., 83 Pa. Superior Ct. 243. The defendants in equity were Harvey A. Miller (legal plaintiff in the present action), Harry W. Baker, the West Penn Vinegar Co., a corporation of Pennsylvania and three of its officers, Louis Skirboll, president, I. Skirboll, treasurer and *276 Louis Plung, secretary. All those defendants were named as obligees in the injunction bond. The bill prayed that Miller and Baker be enjoined “from assigning or transferring” a certificate for 135 shares of the capital stock of the vinegar company alleged to be owned by Baker and to be in possession of Miller; and also that the corporation and its three officers be enjoined “from transferring said certificates on the books of said corporation.” Complainant alleged that it had judgment against Baker and that he owned 135 shares of the stock of the vinegar company, having a market value of $15 a share, had issued an attachment execution and desired to subject the stock to sale for account of its judgment and therefore required the injunction prayed for and a receiver to take possession of the certificate, sell it and apply the proceeds on account. It will be observed that the defendants had neither a common interest nor the same interests in the certificates, or in the transaction which led to the injunction.

The purpose of a preliminary injunction, generally speaking, is to maintain a given status until there can be inquiry into the merits: Fredericks v. Huber, 180 Pa. 572; Keown v. Mallissee, 57 Pa. Superior Ct. 592, 599. On- final hearing the chancellor found that, though the certificate for the stock stood in Baker’s name, it had, some time before, been assigned and delivered for valuable consideration to Miller, who, with his law partner, owned it; that Baker did not own it; and accordingly, as has been stated, the bill was dismissed.

After that suit was disposed of, Miller brought the present action of assumpsit on the bond, suing to the use of himself and his law partner for damages resulting from the injunction restraining him from selling the stock. The defendants in this suit are the trust *277 company that was complainant in equity, and its surety on the bond.

1. After plaintiff’s motion to take off the non-suit had been argued in the court in banc, an opinion was filed stating that the non-suit was granted and sustained for want of proof of plaintiff’s damage. On that subject appellant calls attention to an inadvertence in the opinion filed below. The court states: “When the injunction issued the stock had a book value, according to testimony offered by the plaintiff, of $21 a share, and this book value steadily decreased until it finally reached nothing. There is no suggestion in the case that the partnership or plaintiff could have sold the stock at any time at a figure higher than $6, and there is not a word in the case to indicate that the stock would have been disposed of at that figure or at any price which could have been obtained for it. It does not appear that any offer was ever received for the stock, or that plaintiff was prevented from selling it by the injunction. The case is entirely bare of any facts which would indicate that plaintiff could and would have sold this stock for any amount if not restrained by the injunction. Under these circumstances we cannot see how Miller or the partnership has suffered any loss by reason of the injunction. There is not a thing in the case to show that a sale of the stock was prevented. ’ ’

That statement, appellees concede, is not wholly accurate, as the following quotation from the record shows. The plaintiff testified: “Q. Do you know, Mr. Miller, whether you could have sold this stock at any time between October 16, 1922, and June, 1923?

A. I don’t know whether I could. I made no effort to sell it. In June of 1923,1 was called by Mr. Lehman on the telephone, and he offered us six dollars a share. *278 I stated to Mm, at that time, I was not at liberty to' sell it.

Q. Mr. Miller, if it had not been for this injunction or this agreement, wouldn’t you have sold them to Mr. Lehman for six dollars a share?

A. I don’t know whether I would or not. I would have made some investigation before I made up my mind.

Q. Could you say whether, if it' had not been for this injunction, that you would have sold this stock at all? ■

A. I would have. I didn’t buy it as an investment.

Q. You didn’t buy the stock at all, did you?

A. Well, I obtained it, or we obtained it, Mr. Nesbitt and myself.

Q. Mr. Miller, I should have asked you how long you continued to obey the injunction?

A. Until the remittitur. ” [July, 1924.] There was, then, evidence of an offer, a statement of a good reason why he did not pursue the offer together with a statement that he would have sold, because he did not obtain the stock to hold as an investment.

There was other evidence of the value of the stock wMch we need not recite because the judgment below turned on lack of evidence of a probable sale of the stock, not on absence of evidence of value. When the decree dismissing the bill was affirmed, the stock had no value. From the testimony of the plaintiff, the jury might have found that he would have accepted the offer made, if they also find that the sum offered was a fair price. While he testified that he did not know whether he would have accepted the particular offer made, he stated to the party making it that he “was not at liberty to sell it,” presumably because of the injunction. But his testimony that “if it had not been for this injunction” he would have sold the stock, *279 with the statement that he “didn’t bny it as an investment” is entitled to consideration by the jury. We do not think that the evidence in this record now would permit a verdict on a basis of more than the offer, in view of the inactive character of the stock and the tottering condition of the company. Appellees contend that the evidence of probable sale and damage is too indefinite to support a verdict, that a verdict based on the evidence in the record would be merely speculative or conjectural, and they cite cases considering circumstances in which loss of profits in contract or tort actions could not be proved as elements of damage.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Pa. Super. 273, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-south-hills-trust-co-pasuperct-1929.