Court Opinion

ID: 7093134
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:08:02.986082+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:09.270614
License: Public Domain

"Weight, Cb. J.
1. jtoo-hbht; líen. Several questions are discussed by counsel; but we shall confine ourselves to the more material ones, these being sufficient to fully dispose of the case now before us.
Plaintiffs are not judgment creditors. Por the purposes of the present inquiry, their action is like any ordinary one upon a note, account, or any simple contract, or evidence of indebtedness. They have a foreign judgment;. but, until it becomes a judgment in our courts, they are no more than creditors at large, and until they obtain tbe recognition of their claim by the adj udication of our State tribunals, they have no other or different rights as to tbe propertjr of their debtor than if their demand was indorsed by a less solemn or conclusive proceeding or instrument. Por, however effectual such judgment may be, or whatever the faith and credit to which it may be entitled, it is very certain *496that it cannot be enforced here until Its validity is recognized and passed upon by the judgment of our courts.
2. injunc-creditor.' This being so, upon common law principles, we know of no principle upon which plaintiffs were entitled to this injunction. The rule is, as far as we know, without exception, that the creditor must have completed his title at law, by j udgment (if not by execution), before he can question the disposition of the debtor’s property. Angell v. Draper, 1 Vern., 399; Shirley v. Watts, 3 Atk., 200; Bennett v. Musgrave, 2 Ves., 61; Wiggins v. Armstrong, 2 Johns. Ch., 144; Jeremy’s Eq., 161. The reason of the rule is, that, until the creditor has established his title, or his debt, by the judgment of a court, he has no right to interfere; for, unless he has a certain claim upon the property of the debtor, he has no concern with his frauds. To establish any other rule, might lead to an unnecessary and perhaps fruitless and oppressive interruption of the exercise of the debtor’s rights. 2 Johns. Ch., supra.
3. — coustnied. We are, then, to inquire how far this rule has been changed by statute. Appellants rely upon chapter 155 of the Revision, entitled, “ Prohibition in an action by ordinary proceedings.” The material portions of this chapter are found in §3798, which declares that, “in all cases of breach of contract or other injury, where the party injured is entitled to maintain, and has brought, an action by ordinary proceedings, he may, in the same cause, pray and have a.writ of injunction against the repetition or continuance of such breach of contract, or other injury, or the committal of any breach of contract, or injury of a like kind, arising out of the same contract, or relating to the same property or right, and he may also, in the same action, include a claim for damages or other redress.”
It seems to us, however, but too apparent that this provision does not, in the least, aid appellants’ case. Did they propose to restrain the repetition or continuance of defend*497ant’s breach of tbeir contract to pay this judgment (if such a thought is allowable), there might be some reason for their proposition. But they propose nothing of this character. What they propose to restrain defendants from doing does not, in any proper sense, arise out of the contract sued on, nor does it relate to plaintiffs’ property or right in the contract. A patent case under this statute would be, where it is sought to compel a defendant to abstain from an act in violation of his covenant, or to restrain him from a continuance of the same injury, as in the case of a nuisance, or the repetition of a trespass, or the practicing of a profession or carrying on a trade within a particular district. And, therefore, it was held, in Hall v. Crouse et al., 14 Iowa, 487, that, in an action at law to recover damages for cutting and carrying away timber, plaintiff might have an injunction to prevent a repetition of such trespasses. In such a case it is not necessary, as in equity, without the aid of the statute, to show that the inj ury is irreparable, or that the trespasser is insolvent and unable to respond in damages for the injury, or the like; but it is'sufficient that the party claims a legal right, and seeks to prevent a repetition of the same wrong, or the continuance of an injury relating to the same right or property. The plaintiff, instead of being confined to his redress for the injury sustained, is by this, statute given a remedy for preventing the continued commission of the same. The theory of plaintiffs’ counsel would, however, enlarge and extend the purpose of the statute far beyond what was ever contemplated by the legislature, or the report of the English commissioners from which we borrow this chapter.
We need hardly say that the authorities cited by counsel have no application to cases of this character. There is, in the present state of this case, no controversy respecting the title to this land, as in King v. King, 2 Vesey, 192. Nor is it a case where a trustee is about to transfer or use pro*498perty to his own benefit, to the injury .of fcbe beneficiary, as in Osborn v. The United States, 9 Wheat., 844. Nor, still, again, is it a case where the vendee seeks to restrain a vendor from conveying the legal title pending a suit for a specific performance, as in Echliff v. Baldwin, 16 Ves., 269. And see other cases cited in 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., §§ 907, 908, 953-955. The same and similar cases are referred to in Eden on Injunctions, vol. 1, p. 12; vol. 2, p. 339 (marg.), note 1, and pp. 342, 343. It is true that plaintiffs allege that these debtors brought money with them from Canada, and invested the same in these lands. But they were, not in any sense the trustees of plaintiffs in relation to such funds, nor have plaintiffs any right in equity to follow the same into the lands thus purchased. If they had, their remedy would be very clear, and their rights very different.
Affirmed.