North Pacific Lumber Co. v. Lang

42 P. 799, 28 Or. 246, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 110
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 42 P. 799 (North Pacific Lumber Co. v. Lang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Pacific Lumber Co. v. Lang, 42 P. 799, 28 Or. 246, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 110 (Or. 1895).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Wolverton.

1. It is not attempted by the foregoing statement to set forth or take note of all papers filed or all orders of the court, but the endeavor has been to state sufficient of the record to enable this opinion to be understood. The record is encumbered with many papers which were perhaps unnecessary, and might have been omitted if the ordinary practice attending a bill of interpleader had been pursued. The complaint or [252]*252bill of interpleader filed by plaintiff seems on its face to state sufficient for the purposes of the suit. Such a bill will lie where twro of more persons claim the same thing or debt or duty from the complainant by different or separate interests, and he does not know to which of the claimants he ought of right to deliver the thing in his custody or render the debt or duty, and by reason thereof is in fear of damage or hurt from some of them; or, as defined by Lord Cottenham, “It is where the plaintiff says, ‘I have a fund in my possession in which I claim no personal interest, and in which you, the defendants, set up conflicting claims. Pay me my costs, and I will bring the money into court’”: Beach on Modern Equity Practice, § 114; Hoggart v. Cutts, Craig and P. 204; Wing v. Spaulding, 64 Vt. 83 (23 Atl. 615). The allegations such a bill should, contain are, in purport, (1) that two or more persons have preferred claims against the complainant; (2) that they claim the same thing; (3) that the complainant has no beneficial interest in the thing claimed; and (4) that he cannot determine without hazard to himself to which of the several defendants the thing belongs: Atkinson v. Manks, 1 Cowp. 703. Under the old equity practice it was usual to annex to the bill an affidavit of the plaintiff showing that there was no collusion between him and any of the defendants: Beach on Modern Equity Practice, § 145; but it is perhaps sufficient under our practice that the fact appear by appropriate allegations in the complaint: Jerome v. Jerome, 5 Conn. 352, and Nash v. Smith, 6 Conn. 421.

2. The more orderly practice seems to be to first determine whether the interpleader will lie or not. If not, it is unnecessary to go further; but if it will, then [253]*253the plaintiff should be discharged from liability, with his costs, upon bringing the money or thing in dispute into court, and the suit should thereafter proceed upon issues properly joined between the defendants. The plaintiff cannot claim relief against any of the defendants, but only that he be protected against the claims of all, and when he has shown sufficient to entitle him to this he is entitled to his interpleader, which fact being determined by the order of the court, he is thenceforth out of the suit: St. Louis Life Insurance Company v. Alliance Mutual Life Insurance Company, 23 Minn. 7; Cullen v. Dawson, 24 Minn. 66; First National Bank v. West River Railway Company, 46 Vt. 633; 2 Beach on Modern Equity Practice, § 637. If, however, at the hearing on the bill, it is made to appear that the defendants have by their several answers clearly and sufficiently presented the proper issues as between themselves, and that such issues are ripe for adjudication, the court may at the time it determines the question of interpleader upon the complaint and issues thereto tendered, also decide the questions at issue between the several defendants, and dispose of the case finally. But whichever course is adopted, the question as to whether the interpleader will lie is always preliminary to a trial of the issues between the defendants, as without. the establishment of t.his fact the defendants can have no contention as between themselves upon the record: 2 Beach on Equity Practice, § 638; Cullen v. Dawson, 24 Minn. 66; Farley v. Blood, 30 N. H. 354; Kirtland v. Moore, 40 N. J. Eq. 106 (2 Atl. 269); Hall v. Baldwin, 45 N. J. Eq. 858 (18 Atl. 976). ‘ It seems there is no settled practice as to the mode of proceeding after it is ascertained that the bill of interpleader will lie: City Bank v. Bangs, 2 Paige Ch. 570. Van Fleet, Vice Chancellor, in Kirtland v. Moore, says. [254]*254touching the case as among the defendants: “The court may then adopt such course as may seem best under the circumstances; as by directing that issues shall be raised by appropriate pleadings, or that an action at law shall be brought, or that such other course shall be taken as may seem best suited to the nature of the case.” See Angell v. Hadden, 16 Ves. Jr. 202. In City Bank v. Bangs, 2 Paige Ch. 570, the case' was referred to a master, and, as so many conflicting claims were involved, the court directed that any one of the parties should be allowed to file before the master a statement under, oath in the nature of a bill of discovery, which statement all the other defendants should be required to answer under oath. And so it appears competent, for the purpose of determining what are the issues as between and among the defendants, for the court to adopt any course or method of pleading which may seem appropriate or best suited for raising such issues, and, when once raised or settled, the court will pursue the prevailing equitable practice in trying them. Thus, it will appear that the orders of the court defaulting the defendants Bergman and Linkman, and declaring that the claims of Matthieson and Lang and Company were prior and superior to theirs, before determining whether the bill of interpleader could be properly entertained, were premature. See First National Bank v. West River Railway Company, 46 Vt. 633. Bergman and Linkman were con testing the right of plaintiff to proceed under its bill of interpleader, and until this contest was settled no issues as among the defendants could be determined.

The main discussion at the trial was directed to the question as to whether the defendants Bergman and Linkman had such an interest in the fund in the hands of the plaintiff as would warrant the court in [255]*255directing it to be paid to them regardless of the order in which the court may have proceeded. It is difficult to say from the answers and cross-complaints of Bergman and Linkman just what they intended t© accomplish thereby, whether to defeat the interpleader, and thereby to terminate the proceeding; or whether, if unsuccessful in this, they intended by their cross-bills to establish their right to the fund as between themselves and the other defendants^ and, if this latter, whether they designed to establish their right thereto under the right of action accorded by the statute of Washington against any person rendering difficult, uncertain, or impossible of identification any logs covered by the statutory lien, or by virtue of the lien itself. Their denials, which are mainly upon want of knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief, reach only- the allegations of the complaint showing that claims had been preferred by the other defendants against the fund in the hands of plaintiff. It is admitted that plaintiff has such fund, and that it owes for the saw logs in the identical amount. It is further admitted that plaintiff is unable to determine as to whom it ought to pay the fund without hazard to itself, that it claims no beneficial interest therein, and that there is no collusion between it and any of the defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 P. 799, 28 Or. 246, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-pacific-lumber-co-v-lang-or-1895.