State ex rel. Commercial Electric Light & Power Co. v. Stallcup

46 P. 251, 15 Wash. 263, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 172
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1896
DocketNo. 2313
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 P. 251 (State ex rel. Commercial Electric Light & Power Co. v. Stallcup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Commercial Electric Light & Power Co. v. Stallcup, 46 P. 251, 15 Wash. 263, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 172 (Wash. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gordon, J.

An action was commenced by the city of Tacoma against the Commercial Electric Light and Power Company, defendant (relator herein), to obtain a perpetual injunction restraining and enjoining said light and power company from stringing electric wires on the streets of the plaintiff city. Upon hearing had the court issued a temporary injunction restraining the defendant therein from doing the acts threatened pending the litigation, and requiring the city to enter into a bond in the sum of $5,000, conditioned to pay any damages defendant might sustain by reason of the temporary injunction. Thereupon defendant (relator herein) gave notice of appeal to this court from the order granting the temporary injunction, and also filed its cost bond upon appeal. Thereafter the defendant light and power company moved the respondent, as judge of the superior court in which said action was pending, to fix the amount of bond for [264]*264a stay of proceedings pending the appeal. The court denied the motion and refused to fix the amount of such bond in so far as it might “suspend the operation of the temporary injunction.”

This is a proceeding for a writ of mandate directed to the respondent as judge, requiring him to forthwith fix the amount of said bond. A single question is presented, viz.: Is a temporary injunction operative during the pendency of an appeal from the order granting it? Upon behalf of the respondent it is insisted that the appeal was perfected by the giving of the cost bond; that “there are no proceedings on such order [an order granting a temporary injunction] and no process can-issue thereon, and that there is nothing to be stayed.” The general rule is thus stated in § 391 of Elliott’s Appellate Procedure :

Where a decree specifically forbids a party from doing a designated act he cannot by obtaining a supersedeas acquire a right to do the forbidden act. Thus, a supersedeas confers no right to do an act prohibited by a decree awarding an injunction forbidding the act. It is obvious that to assign to a supersedeas such force as would make it so operate as to give a party power to do what the decree prohibits would make it a remedy creating affirmative rights of a positive nature rather than a preventive order or writ. This would be to completely transform one remedy into another of an essentially different class. To adjudge that a supersedeas can create a positive and affirmative right would be, in effect, to annul the decree of the lower court before a hearing upon the merits is had, and this the policy of the law prohibits. The principles declared in analogous cases forbid that the merits of an appeal should be determined upon a preliminary application, and they forbid, also, that the judgment of the trial court should be nullified without a consideration of the merits in due course and upon full argument.”
[265]*265“ The general theory of injunctive relief, except so far as our code has changed the doctrine, is that some act is about to be done by the defendant which will result in such injury to the complaining party as cannot be compensated in damages that can be recovered in an ordinary action at law. If the party enjoined can, by appealing, go on and do the act which will result in the irreparable damage, compel the party who has obtained the injunction to seek his redress in an action for damages upon the appeal bond, there would seem to be no material advantage in obtaining an injunction in such case against such injurious act.” State v. Chase, 41 Ind. 856.

In Sixth Ave. R. R. Co. v. Gilbert E. R. Co., 71 N. Y. 430, it was held that :

“An appeal from a judgment restraining action on the part of defendant and a stay of proceedings thereon, does' not affect the validity or effect of the judgment pending the appeal; defendant is not absolved from the duty of" obedience to it, or permitted to do that which the judgment absolutely prohibits. The judgment, so far as it enjoins the defendant, needs no execution; it acts directly without process, and the stay only operates to prevent action on the part of plaintiff.”

At page 433 the court say :

It did not absolve them from the duty of obedience, and permit them to do that which the judgment absolutely prohibited, and the doing of which would, as adjudged by the court, cause irreparable mischief to the plaintiff, or an injury which could not certainly be compensated in damages.”

See, also, Klinck v. Black, 14 S. C. 241; Central Union Tel. Co. v. State, 110 Ind. 203 (10 N. E. 922); Slaughter House Cases, 10 Wall. 273; Merced Mining Co. v. Fremont, 7 Cal. 130 (68 Am. Dec. 262); 2 High, Injunctions, § 1698.

Counsel for the relator concedes that the general [266]*266rule is that supersedeas bonds do not suspend temporary injunction orders, but he plants himself upon the statute of this state governing appeals, §§ 6 and 7, act of March 8, 1893, (Laws 1893, p. 119), and the cases of State, ex rel. Reed, v. Jones, 2 Wash. 662 (27 Pac. 452), and State, ex rel. German-American, etc., Bank, v. Superior Court, 12 Wash. 677 (42 Pac. 123). We have in the course of investigation examined a great many statutes, but we think that the distinction for which counsel contends — and which contention is. supported to some extent by what is said in State v. Superior Court, supra,- is one of phraseology and not of principle. We have not been able to find any authority which supports the claim that an appeal from, an order awarding a temporary injunction annuls the order and leaves the parties against- whom it is directed as free to act as if the injunction had not been awarded.

Rule 93 of the supreme court of the United States provides :

When an appeal from a final decree, in an equity suit, granting or dissolving an injunction, is allowed by a justice or judge who took part in the decision of the cause, he may, in his 'discretion, at the time of such allowance, make an ordér suspending or modifying the injunction during the pendency of the appeal upon such terms as to bond or otherwise as he may consider proper for the security of the rights of the opposite party.”

It will be observed that this rule does not confer an arbitrary right, but reposes in the trial court a discretionary power. Here, it is asserted as an absolute right given by the statute. Were we to uphold the claim of relator it would be to read into the statute that “in all cases of appeal from orders awarding temporary injunctions, the appellant may upon giving [267]*267the general bond provided by §7, commit the acts forbidden by the order from which an appeal is taken.” And, as there are no exceptions in the statute, it follows that unless it would be the right of a defendant to give a bond suspending the injunction pending an appeal, in all cases, it is a right in no case. Did the statute warrant such construction its constitutionality might well be doubted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 P. 251, 15 Wash. 263, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-commercial-electric-light-power-co-v-stallcup-wash-1896.