Youngs v. McDonald

56 A.D. 14
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 56 A.D. 14 (Youngs v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Youngs v. McDonald, 56 A.D. 14 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

. This action was brought to restrain the defendant from removing certain fixtures which had been placed upon premises leased by him from the plaintiffs, which he claimed he had a right to remove at the expiration of the lease. The action was commenced in-April, 1899. On the twenty-fourth day of that month an injunction order [15]*15was granted by one of the justices of this court, which contained an order to show cause why such injunction should not be continued during the pendency of the action. The Special Term, by order entered July 17, 1899,-continued the injunction, notwithstanding the opposition of the defendant, on condition that the plaintiffs •execute, file and serve an undertaking in the. sum of $3,000 ■to pay any damage which the defendant sustained by reason of the said injunction. The order further provided: “ The grounds for granting the above injunction are, that the doing of the above restrained acts pending the litigation, would render a judgment in favor of plaintiffs ineffectual and would be in violation of plaintiffs’ rights.” In compliance with this condition, an undertaking was filed by the Union Surety and Guaranty Company, by which the surety undertook that the plaintiffs “ will pay to the said defendant such damages, not exceeding the sum of $3,000, as the defendant may sustain by reason of the said injunction, if the court shall finally decide that the plaintiffs are not entitled thereto.” When this injunction was continued and the undertaking given the case had been noticed for trial by both parties, and the trial had been fixed for a day certain prior to the decision of the motion .to continue the injunction, but the case was not tried until the following October. The trial resulted in a final judgment dismissing the complaint in the action, with costs, entered on January 23, 1900. Subsequent to the entry of the judgment the defendant applied to the court to ascertain the damage sustained by the defendant by reason of said injunc- ■ tion and. a referee was appointed for such purpose. The referee reported that the defendant had necessarily incurred expense, first, for services of counsel retained by him in procuring a dissolution of said injunction and opposing" the making thereof in the sum of $1,735, being the reasonable valtie of said services over and above the general costs recovered in the action ; second, for the reasonable value of the' services of counsel retained in procuring the order of reference to assess the damages therein in the further sum of $40; and, third, for the reasonable value of counsel’s serv- ■ ices upon the said reference in the sum of $300.. The referee further reported that he allowed $1,500 for services generally in preparation for and upon the trial of the action and $300 for the [16]*16services rendered upon the motion for the continuance of the injunction on the return of the order to show cause; and allows no damage to the defendant for the withholding of possession of the fixtures which are the subject of the action. The. total amount allowed by the referee was $2,075, with the fees of the referee and stenographer upon the reference. The plaintiffs excepted to this report, but such exception was overruled and the referee’s report confirmed, and from the order confirming the same the plaintiffs appeal to this court;

The allowance by the referee for the reasonable value of services of counsel retained to prosecute' this proceeding for the ascertainment of the damages sustained by the defendant in consequence of the injunction seems to be proper, as the referee had personal knowledge of the services rendered in the proceeding before him, and the witnesses as to the value of the services were examined before him. His finding upon that subject seems to be sustained by the evidence, and we are not disposed to interfere with the amount fixed by him for such services. We do not think that the plaintiffs are liable for the counsel fees incurred in opposing the motion to continue the injunction during the pendency of the action. The question that was then presented to the Special Term was whether an injunction should continue during the pendency of the action. The expense incurred by the defendant in the argument of that motion was not a damage or injury caused to him by the continuance of the injunction, as it was incurred before the injunction was continued and before the bond was given. The question was whether or not there should be an injunction, and whether or not such injunction when granted would cause the defendant injury had no relation to a determination of the question as to whether or not it should be granted. This question was presented to the-Iate General Term of the Supreme Court in the first department in the case of Whiteside v. Noyac Cottage Assn. (84 Hun, 555) where- the court said: ££It (the injunction) was granted, as we have already said, upon notice, and the counsel fees paid by the defendant for opposing the application for the injunction do not constitute damages occasioned to him by the injunction granted. And it is for damages resulting to him because of the granting of the injunction that the surety agrees to respond.”

The remaining question is as to the allowance by the referee of [17]*17the sum of $1,500 for the services of counsel in preparing for and upon the trial of the action. The rule that has been established in relation to the liability of a surety upon such an undertaking as to counsel fees incurred by the defendant for the trial of the action seems to be that ordinarily such counsel fees will not be allowed as damages sustained by the injunction; that to justify such an allowance it must appear that the defendant had made all reasonable and proper efforts to obtain a dissolution óf the injunction and had failed, so that the trial of the action was necessary to get rid of the preliminary injunction. The sureties in such a case are liable only for the damages caused by the preliminary injunction. The expenses incurred by the defendant in defending the suit not necessary to prevent the preliminary injunction from becoming permanent are not damages caused by reason of the preliminary injunction; and thus, in Phœnix Bridge Co. v. Keystone Bridge Co. (10 App. Div. 176) we held that where an injunction was granted upon notice, but without opposition on the part of the defendant, and where no motion was made to vacate it, the counsel fees on and before the trial were not properly allowed. The distinction between that case. and this is that in this case the defendant did appear and oppose the continuance of the injunction. The court, however, continued the injunction. There was thus imposed upon the defendant the obligation of trying the action in order to procure a dissolution of the injunction which had been continued in force until the final judgment. No motion subsequently made to vacate that injunction would have been effectual, as the parties to the action were bound by the adjudication that the injunction should continue until the final judgment in the action. The defendant had done everything he could to avoid the continuance of this injunction. The only way in which he could get rid of it was by a trial of the action. The case is thus brought directly within the case of Andrews v. Glenville Woolen Co. (50. N. Y. 282) where the court held that the counsel fee upon the trial in that case could be allowed, saying“ The defendant made the proper effort to dissolve the injunction before the trial. The court required that the question should be deferred, to be disposed of on the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
56 A.D. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/youngs-v-mcdonald-nyappdiv-1900.