Case ID: blackf_8/html/0377-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Smith, J. \n      Per Curiam.\n    ", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Cooper v. Hamilton.
    Bill for an injunction to restrain a stranger from taking rails from the owner’s land, and for an account, &c. Held, that this being the case of an ordinary trespass, the bill could not be sustained.
    ERROR to the Allen Circuit Court.
   Smith, J.

'This was a suit in chancery brought by Henry Cooper against Allen Hamilton. The bill of complaint charges that, in 1836, one Lee bought the west half of a certain section of canal land in Allen county; that Lee assigned his certificate to one MMakin, who assigned it to Cooper, the complainant, who, in 1841, perfected his title by obtaining a patent; that, in 1838, Sherman and Wilson had possession of the east half of the same section, and about that tiftie assigned their certificate to one Columbia, who, in January, 1842, sold his interest to Hamilton, the defendant. The bill then charges that either Sherman and Wilson or Columbia, or all of them, while in possession of said east half of said section, committed trespasses on the land of the complainant by cutting down trees, and splitting them into rails wlrich were used in making a fence; that said fence was upon Cooper's land; that at the time Hamilton came into the possession of the adjoining half section, there were about fifteen hundred of these rails upon the complainant’s land; that Hamilton caused about seven hundred of them to be moved from the complainant’s and put upon his own land, and was persisting in a determination to cany away the remainder. The bill prays for an injunction to prevent the defendant from removing the remainder of the rails, and that he be required to account for the value of those previously taken by him.

H. Cooper, for the plaintiff.

W. H. Coombs and I. H. Kiersted, for the defendant.

The injunction was granted, but on final hearing upon the bill of complaint, the answer of the defendant, and a deposition taken in the cause, the Court, after finding the facts set forth by the complainant to be true, ordered his bill to be dismissed.

The interference, by injunction, in restraint of waste was originally founded on privity of title, and the Courts were for a long time extremely strict in confining their relief to such cases. The rigour of this rule has been very much relaxed, and, indeed, it is now held that an injunction will lie for a mere trespass, but only in cases of great and irreparable mischief. 6 Johns. C. R. 46. — 7 id. 315, 332. — 2 Story’s Eq. 207. No precise rule can be laid down as to the cases in which an injunction will be granted against a stranger, to prevent the commission of a trespass, but it is always expected that a strong case of destruction or irreparable mischief will be made out — of irreparable mischief which may be effected before any trial can be had as to the controverted right. Eden on Inj. 233. — 7 Yes. 308. Rut an injunction will not be allowed,, in order to prevent the repetition of a trespass, where the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law. 1 Johns. C. R. 31S. We do not think the facts alleged in the bill of complaint in this cause, admitting them to be true, present a case which calls for the interposition of a Court of Chancery. The plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law and the bill was properly dismissed

Per Curiam.

The decree is affirmed with costs. 
      
      ) Where there was no privity of title and the injury was a mere trespass, Courts of equity did not interfere until the time of Lord Thurlow; it being considered that the law furnished, in such cases, a sufficient remedy. “ I remember,” says Lord Eldon, “when in a case of trespass, unless it grew to a nuisance, an injunction would have been refused: and even in the case of waste, if by temporary acts, from time to time merely, the subject of an action, and not bringing along with it irreparable mischief, Lord Iiardwicke thought it was granted only as following the relief. Lord Thurlow had great difficulty as to trespass. I have a note of a remarkable case, in which the name of one of the parties was Flamang. There was a demise of close A, to a tenant for life; the lessor being landlord of an adjoining close B. The tenant dug a mine in the former close. That was waste from the privity. But when we asked an injunction against his digging in the other close, though a continuation of the working in the former close, Lord Thurlow hesitated much; but did at last grant the injunction: first, from the irreparable ruin of the property as a mine; secondly, as it was a species of trade; and, thirdly, upon the principle of this Court enjoining in matter of trespass, where irreparable damage is the consequence.” Hanson v. Gardiner, 7 Ves. 305, 307.
      Since Flamang’s case, mentioned above, there have been frequent cases, both in England and in the United States, in which trespasses, strictly so called, have been enjoined. The "rule, however, on the subject appears to be well settled, that it is only where the trespass is of an aggravated character — where the mischief is to the substance of the estate and irreparable — that an injunction will be granted. Jerome v. Ross, 7 Johns. C. R. 315. “If,” says Judge Story, “the trespass be fugitive and temporary, and adequate compensation can be obtained in an action at law, there is no ground to justify tho interposition of Courts of equity.” 2 Story’s Eq. 260. See Eden on Injunctions, ch. 8, O. —2 Story’s Eq. 240 to 262.