Tribette v. Illinois Central Railroad

70 Miss. 182
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 70 Miss. 182 (Tribette v. Illinois Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tribette v. Illinois Central Railroad, 70 Miss. 182 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

Campbell, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A number of different owners of property in the town of Terry, destroyed by fire from sparks emitted by an engine of the appellee, severally sued in the circuit court to recover of the appellee damages for their respective losses by said fire, alleged to have resulted .from the negligence of the defendant. While these actions were pending, the appellee exhibited its bill against the several plaintiffs, averring that no liability, as to it, arose by reason of the fire, which arose, not from any negligence or wrong of it or its servants, but from the fault of others, for which it is not responsible; and that the plaintiffs ‘in the different actions are wrongfully seeking to recover damages by their several actions, all of which grew out of the same occurrence, and depend for their solution upon the same questions of fact and of law. Wherefore, to avoid multiplicity of suits, and the consequent harrassment and vexation, all of the said several plaintiffs are sought to be enjoined from prosecuting their different actions, and to be brought.in, and have the controversies settled in this one suit in equity. There is no common interest between these different plaintiffs, except in the questions of fact and law involved.

The injunction sought was granted, and the defendants served with process, when they appeared, and demurred to the bill, and moved to dissolve the injunction on the face of the bill. The case was heard on motion to dissolve the injunction, and it was overruled, and an appeal granted.

The question presented is as to the rightfulness of the suit against the defendants, on the sole ground that their several' actions at law involve the very same matters of fact and law, without any other community of interest between them. The granting aiid maintaining the injunction are fully sustained by Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 1, § 255, et seq., and [187]*187it is probable that any judge authorized would have granted the injunction upon the text cited. But we affirm, after careful examination and full consideration, that Pomeroy is not sustained in his “ conclusions,” stated in § 269 of his most valuable treatise, and that the cases he cited do not maintain the proposition that mere community of interest “in the questions of law and fact involved in the general controversy, or in the. kind and form of relief demanded and obtained by or against each individual member of the numerous body,” is ground for the interposition of chancery to settle, in one suit, the several controversies. There is no such doctrine in the books, and the zeal of the learned and usually accurate writer mentioned, to maintain a theory; has betrayed him into error on this subject. It has so blinded him as tp cause the confounding of distinct things in his view of this subject, to wit: joinder of parties, and avoidance of multiplicity of suits. It has been found that many of the cases he pressed into service to support his assertion are on the subject of joinder, where confessedly there could be no doubt .that the matter was of equity cognizance. Every case he cited to support his text will bo found to be either where each party might have resorted to chancery or been proceeded against in that forum, or, to rest on some recognized ground of equitable interference other than to avoid, multiplicity of suits. The cases establish this proposition, viz.: Where each of several may proceed or be proceeded against in equity, their joinder as plaintiffs or defendants in one suit is not objectionable ; but this is a very different question from that, whether, merely because many actions at law arise out of the same transaction or occurrence, and depend on the same matters of fact and law, all may proceed or be proceeded against jointly in one suit in chancery; and it is believed that it has never been so held, and never will be, in cases like those here involved. Where each of several parties may ..proceed in equity separately, they are permitted to unite, and make common cause against a common adversary, and one may [188]*188implead in one suit in equity many who are his adversaries, in a matter common to all in many cases, but never when the only ground of relief sought is that the adversaries are numerous, and the suits are for that not in itself a matter for equity cognizance. Attention to the distinction mentioned will resolve all difficulties in considering the many cases on this subject. There must be some recognized ground of equitable interference, or some community of interest in the subject-matter of controversy, or a common right or title involved, to warrant the joinder of all in one suit; or there must be some common purpose in pursuit of a common adversary, where each may res.orfc to equity, in order to be joined in one suit; and it is not enough that there “is a community of interest' merely in the question of law or of fact involved,” etc., as stated by Pomeroy in § 268. Although he asserts that this early theory has long been abandoned, he fails utterly to prove it. An examination of the cases he cited under § 256 et seq., will show this to be true. The opinion of the justice (Harlan) in 43 Fed. Rep., 824, does support the text of Pomeroy, and cites 1 Pom. Eq. Jur., §§ 245, 255, 257, 268 and 273, and Crews v. Burcham, 1 Black, 352, 357. We are content with what has already been said as to the text of Pomeroy, and affirm that not one of his citations sustains his conclusion and the language of Harlan, J., in the case cited; nor does Crews v. Burcham sustain the language of Justice Harlan. It belongs to the class of cases where each party might have brought his bill, and all who had a common cause were permitted to make common contest in chancery with their adversaries who were united by a common tie.

The decision of the case in which Harlan, J., gave his support to tthe doctrine of Pomeroy, is not complained of, but the opinion is not justified by any case with which we have been made acquainted. The case was one in which each might have brought his separate bill to quiet title, and all concerned were permitted to unite in' one bill against their [189]*189common adversary; and so, it is believed, will be found all the eases on this subject. Certainly, those relied on by Pomeroy are of this character. Those cited in the note to §269, in which he asserts most broadly the doctrine we combat, are Keese v. Denver, 10 Col., 112; Carlton v. Newman, 77 Me., 408; DeForest v. Thompson, 40 Fed. Rep., 375; Osborne v. Railroad Co., 43 Fed. Rep., 824; Railroad Co. v. Gibson, 85 Ga., 1; The Schuyler Fraud Case, 17 N. Y., 592; The Water Company Case, L. R., 2 Ch., 8; and the case of the Complicated Contract, 7 N. J. Eq., 440. The case in 43 Fed. Rep., 824, has already been noticed supra. The opinion in the case in 10 Colorado quotes the language of Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., § 269, but the case was one where one or more plaintiffs may sue in equity for the benefit of all othei’S similarly situated.

Carlton v. Newman, 77 Me., 408, affirms the jurisdiction of equity to enjoin the collection of an illegal tax for the purpose of preventing multiplicity of suits, where the entire levy, affecting all the tax-payers, was illegal. It appears to be exceptional, and to rest on peculiar grounds, not applicable to the case before us. The opinion cites Pomeroy’s Eq., § 269, but seems to rest on the proposition that the whole tax was illegal.

The case in 40 Fed.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Miss. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tribette-v-illinois-central-railroad-miss-1892.