Webb v. Beal

148 P. 487, 20 N.M. 218
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1915
DocketNo. 1702
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 148 P. 487 (Webb v. Beal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Beal, 148 P. 487, 20 N.M. 218 (N.M. 1915).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT.

HANNA, J.

— Appellee instituted this suit in the district court of Chaves eountjq for damages in the sum of $500 on an injunction bond given by appellants to appellee in an earlier cause instituted in the same court. Appellee, in his complaint filed in the trial court, alleged that the appellants had wrongfully sued out an injunction to restrain him from continuing to tear down and injure a fence of the appellant Beal, and to restrain- him from permitting his cattle to enter and graze upon the premises of the said Beal. The injunction was issued in the first cause referred to, upon appellant’s furnishing a bond in the sum of $500, and the plaintiff in this cause below, appellee here, was ordered to show cause at Carlsbad, N. M., why said injunction should not be continued in force, which place was about 150 miles from appellee’s home; that after a hearing at Carlsbad, upon a demurrer to the first complaint, which was sustained, the cause was continued for further hearing at Boswell, N. M., it being asserted by the plaintiff below, appellee here, that in consequence of the issuance of said injunction he-was compelled to keep his cattle under herd for a period of several months, and in order to procure the dissolution of the injunction he was compelled to employ, and did employ, counsel, to whom he paid fees in the sum of $300; that he was compelled to make frequent trips to Boswell, in addition to his said trip to Carlsbad, by reason of the necessity of his appearance in court in the matter of securing the dissolution of the injunction, occasioning an expense of about the sum of $75. The injunction bond given in the first cause referred to was in the usual form, conditioned that the appellant Beal would pay all sums of money, damages, and costs as: should be adjudged against him if the injunction should be dissolved; the sureties thereupon being the other appellants Logan and Mundy. Upon the trial of the cause, the district court rendered a judgment for appellee against the defendants, appellants here, for the sum of $250, being $200 as reasonable fees for the attorneys necessarily employed in and about the dissolution of the temporary injunction, and the further sum of $50 as expenses necessarily incurred in and about the defense and dissolution ■of the injunction; and further finding against appellee here in the matter of his claim for damages on account of •extra expense in and about the herding of his cattle. From which judgment an appeal was prayed and allowed to this court.

Appellants’ first and second assignments of error are predicated upon the action of the trial court in overruling a demurrer to the complaint filed by appellee in this •cause. The grounds of this contention are, so far as it is now necessary to consider them, that attorney’s fees and ■expenses incurred in attending court to defend an injunction suit are not such elements of damages as are compensated by law; a similar contention being further made as to the element of damage alleged to exist by reason of the necessity for the herding of the cattle during the time that the injunction was in force.

A second demurrer was interposed to the first amended •complaint, which was overruled by the court, which raised the proposition that the suit was prematurely brought, by reason of the fact that the appellant Beal had more than nine months’ time after the institution of this cause •of action within which to appeal to the Supreme Court from the judgment in the first cause referred to; or, in ■other words, that the suit upon the injunction bond should not have been instituted until the expiration of the period of one year within which the appeal from judgment might be sued out.

The third assignment of error is predicated upon the action of the court in sustaining appellee’s motion to ■strike out certain paragraphs of appellants’ answer. This •assignment of error concerns the same legal propositions as dhe first two assignments herein referred to, and the same might also be said as to the fourth assignment of ■error, which is predicated upon the action of the trial •court in admitting testimony offered by the plaintiff be-' low as to his expenses in the first suit in the matter of attendance upon court, and as to sums paid for attorney’s fees in the cause. The fifth and sixth assignments of error are predicated upon the judgment of the trial court ..in that judgment should not haye been rendered: for' counsel fees and expenses of the plaintiff in attendance upon court.

[1] By appellee it is contended that the first two assignments of error are not available, because a defendant by answering over upon demurrer over-ruled waives all objections to the petition of the plaintiff, except to the jurisdiction of the court and the failure of petition to state a cause of action. This rule was followed by this court in the case of Baca v. Baca, 18 N. M. 63, 134 Pac. 212, though it may not be available by appellees in the present instance,, by reason of the fact that a question would seem to have-been raised going to the sufficiency of the complaint. It is not material to consider this technical objection, however, as the same propositions of law are involved in the-consideration of the fourth, fifth, and sixth assignments-of error. We will therefore consider the questions raised upon their merits, the essential question being: Did the-court err in admitting testimony as to counsel fees and' expenses incurred in connection with the dissolution of the injunction bond?

We are not unaware of the fact that there has been a great conflict of authority in the courts of this country upon this question. The federal courts have uniformly held against the right to recover for counsel fees expended in a case of this character.

There are a small number of our American states who-have approved the doctrine of the federal courts in this-respect. They are Arkansas, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, gnd Virginia. The federal courts and those of the jurisdictions last referred to seem generally to follow the holding of the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Oelrichs v. Spain, 15 Wall. 211, 21 L. Ed. 43, which high authority held that counsel fees-are not recoverable in suits on injunction bonds, basing its-conclusion very largely upon the principle of public policy, upon the theory that such allowance would tend to-limit or restrict the right to litigate and raise a question of great delicacy by reason of the fact that there is no-fixed standard by which, the honorarium of an attorney can be measured,, and creating a further condition subject to abuse growing out of the fact that, when both client and counsel know that the fees are to be paid by the other party, such fees might be agreed upon between them as would tend to constitute an abuse of the rights of the opposite party.

This court, whose view is of necessity of great controlling weight with us, further based its decision by analogy upon other actions, such as trespass, where, in the absence of circumstances of aggravation, only compensatory damages can be recovered, which do not include the fees of counsel. And in other ex delicto actions, where vindictive damages may be assessed by the jury by way of example, and while such damages may indirectly compensate the plaintiff for money expended in counsel fees, the amount of these fees cannot be taken as the measure of punishment or a necessary element in its infliction.

[2]

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Bluebook (online)
148 P. 487, 20 N.M. 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-beal-nm-1915.