Tullock v. Mulvane

184 U.S. 497, 22 S. Ct. 372, 46 L. Ed. 657, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2285
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 3, 1902
Docket59
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 184 U.S. 497 (Tullock v. Mulvane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tullock v. Mulvane, 184 U.S. 497, 22 S. Ct. 372, 46 L. Ed. 657, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2285 (1902).

Opinion

Mr. J ustick Wiíitk,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

*503 The assignments of error, though fourteen in number, are reducible to three propositions.

Í. A contention that as the bond provided for a liability only ip cáse it was finally decided that the injunction was wrongfully granted, no recovery could be had upon the bond, because the stipulation between the complainants and certain of the defendants had the effect of rendering it, impossible to have a final determination in the courts of the United States whether the injunction ought originally to have been granted.

2. A claim on the part of the defendant that as the bond for injunction was executed under the order of a court of equity of the United States, and therefore by an authority exercised under the United States, and as liability was only to arise when it had been finally decided that the injunction ought not to have been granted,.action on the bond could not be brought pending an appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States, and the final determination by that court of the controversy.

3. An assertion that as, by the settled rule of the courts of equity7 of the United States, attorneys’ fees were not an element of damage covered by the terms of an injunction bond’ given in such court, recovery of such fees on such bond was not within the purview of the bond when construed with reference to and by the light of the authority under which the bond ■was given.

It is urged by7 the defendant in error that these contentions involve no Federal question and that if they do they were not sufficiently set up in the lower courts, and therefore this court has no jurisdiction to review them. We dispose at once of the contention that if the propositions involve Federal questions they7 were not duly7 raised below, by referring to the statement which we have made of the case, whereby7 it appears that the contentions were raised below by the pleadings, by the objections to evidence and by the requests for instructions, and indeed as so raised were expressly7 considered and directly passed upon by both the trial court and the Supreme Court of the State of Kansas, which latter fact in and of itself suffices to present the Federal question, even if it had been otherwise *504 ambiguously raised on the record, which is not the case. Oxley Stave Co. v. Butler County, 166 U. S. 648.

In determining whether these Federal questions are involved, we shall for the moment take it for granted that the premises upon which such asserted questions rest are well founded, and if under such hypothesis we find that there is jurisdiction it will then be our duty to put such assumption out of view and determine the merits of the contentions.

Whilst apparently the propositions involve several distinct assertions of Federal right, in their ultimate analysis they reduce themselves to one and the same contention; that is, that a bond given for an injunction in an equity cause in a court of the United States is to be construed, with reference to the liability administered in the courts of the United States on that subject as settled by this court. That this fundamental proposition embraces all the contentions would seem to be clear, when it is borne in mind that the controversy as to the stipulation and as to the pendency of the cause in the Circuit Court of Appeals assert both the generic right of the defendant to have the obligations under the bond measured and determined by the law prevailing in the courts of the United States and the claim as to the attorneys’ fees propounds but the same right as to one of the elements of damage which it was asserted the bond embraced. Whilst the unity of the propositions is thus demonstrable, as in the court below and in argument they have been separately treated and different considerations have been assumed to apply to them, we shall consider the propositions separately.

We embrace the first two contentions under one heading, as follows:

First. Did the claim that there had been no breach of the condition of the bond beccmse of the stipulation filed in the cause in which the bond was gimen and because of the pendency of the appeal in the Circuit Court 'of Appeals present Federal questions, ■ cmd', if yes, were they well founded ? ' ■

It may not, we think, be doubted that a bond for injunction in an equity court of the United States given under the order of such court is a bond executed in and by virtue of an author *505 ity exercised under the United States.” Rev. Stat. sec. • 709. Certainly, the courts of the United States derive all their powers from the Constitution and laws of the United States, and them authority is therefore- exercised thereunder. Being then an obligation entered into by virtue of such authority, the conclusion cannot be escaped that the defence specially set up that no liability on the bond could arise until the court of the United States in which the controversy was pending had finally determined that the injunction should not have been granted,-was the Assertion of an immunity from liability .depending on an authority exercised under the United States, and therefore necessarily involved the decision of a Federal question. To state the result which must necessarily flow from a contrary deduction is sufficient of itself to demonstrate the unsoundness of the reasoning by which the non-Federal nature of the question can alone be upheld. For it is clear that if it be true that the bond given in a Federal court of equity oh the granting of an injunction, is not to be construed with reference to the rules of law applicable to such bonds in such court, then there can be no certain general rule by which to determine the liability of the obligors upon the bond. Their responsibility would be one thing in a court of the United States and a different thing in the courts of the various States, which would imply that the parties did not contract with reference to any definite rule of liability. Indeed, the argument conduces to a conclusion which necessarily cripples the power of the court under whose order an injunction bond is executed. It is settled that such court has the inherent • right to set the bond aside and to determine in its discretion whether recovery could be had upon it. Russell v. Farley, 105 U. S. 433. And yet if the liability upon the bond when given can be measured in courts other than the court requiring the execution of the bond, by a wholly different rule of liability from that which obtained in the court which had ordered the giving of the bond, it must follow that although the latter court had decreed that the injunction had rightfully issued, yet in an action upon the injunction bond in another forum the sureties might be made to respond in damages without hope of redress.

A reference to some of the decided cases concerning what *506

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Bluebook (online)
184 U.S. 497, 22 S. Ct. 372, 46 L. Ed. 657, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tullock-v-mulvane-scotus-1902.