Court Opinion

ID: 8175086
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:20:09.711068+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:54.629321
License: Public Domain

BRANNON, PRESIDENT:
George W. Gall, Jr., was cashier of the Tygart’s Yalley Bank and as such executed an official bond in which Andrew J. Gall, Burton M. Gall and others were sureties, and a liability accrued to .the bank on the bond against the parties thereto on account of. said cashier’s misconduct, and the sureties, or some of them, and the bank, as the plaintiffs in this cause allege, made a compromise of the liability under the bond, by which compromise the sureties were to pay, and did pay, to the bank six thousand dollars in full discharge of the liability. Some time afterwards the bank brought an action of debt in the circuit court of Barbour County upon the said bond, and later still Andrew J. Gall and Burton M. Gall filed their bill in equity in said court setting up the said compromise and payment of the sum stipulated by it in discharge of said liability, and stating that the bank, upon said compromise and payment, accepted the payment in full satisfaction of the liability under said bond and agreed to surrender the bond to said sureties; and such proceedings were had in this chancery suit that the court entered a decree canceling said bond, requiring its surrender to the plaintiffs, and perpetually enjoining the bank from further prosecution of the said action of debt. From this decree the bank has appealed.
We hold that equity has no jurisdiction to entertain this suit, because there is full and adequate remedy in a court of law. We do not at all deny that equity has, under proper circumstances, jurisdiction to cancel deeds and other instruments; in fact, it is the only court which can cancel an instrument; but the exercise of its jurisdiction for that purpose is under limitations which have been long prescribed. In the present instance a court of law was actually in possession of an action upon that bond upon a lawful and proper jurisdiction. The rights upon that bond were legal rights, if any existed; the right of defense against that bond based on the compromise and payment was a legal defense, both cognizable at law. Even where there is no action at law actually pending equity does not take jurisdiction to. cancel a document except under special circumstances; but In this case there was an actually pending action at law, and we will see what the authorities say as to the condition upon which equity will exercise jurisdiction. Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence s. 179, thus states the law: “In further limitation upon *599the power of equity to interfere where the primary rights, interest, or estates are legal, the doctrine is well settled that when the jurisdictions of law and of equity are concurrent, the one which first takes actual cognizance of any particular controversy ordinarily becomes thereby exclusive. If, therefore, the subject matter or primary right or interest, although legal, is one of a class, which may come within the concurrent jurisdiction of equity, and an action at law has already been commenced, a court of equity will not, unless some definite and sufficient ground of equitable interference exists, entertain a suit over the same subject matter even for the purpose of granting reliefs peculiar to itself, such as cancellation, injunction, and much less to grant the same kind of relief which can be obtained by the judgment at law. The grounds which will ordinarily prevent the application of this doctrine, and will permit the exercise of equitable jurisdiction in such cases, are the existence of some distinctively equitable feature of, the controversy, which cannot be determined by a court of law, or some fraudulent or otherwise irregular incidents of the legal proceedings sufficient to warrant their being enjoined, or the necessity of a discovery, either of which grounds would render the legal remedy inadequate. This rule results in part, in the United States, from the provisions of the national and State Constitutions securing the right to a jury trial which belongs especially to the machinery of legal actions.” In Shelby v. Bacon, 10 How. 56, it is held: “Where two tribunals have concurrent jurisdiction, the one which first obtains possession of the subject must adjudicate, and neither party can be forced into another jurisdiction.” These principles deny this bill any standing in the court of equity, because of the pendency of the action at law. This is enough'to decide the case; but even if there were not an action at law brought long before the chancery suit, the authorities say that equity has no jurisdiction because the door, of a common law court is wide open to the defense based on that compromise by proper pleas setting it up. What is the hindrance to pleading that matter in bar of an action at law? Will not a judgment based on a verdict conclude either party? If that verdict and judgment be for the defendants, would it not effectually bar that bond on the principle of res judicata? Could another action or suit be thereafter brought upon it ? Surely not. Where then is the inadequacy of legal remedy? Mr. Hogg in Equity Principles, a. 45, says: “Equity will never cancel pr *600rescind a contract, agreement, or other written instrument, except upon some recognized principle of jurisdiction belonging to tbe court of chancery. It is generally accepted doctrine that equitable relief, for the purpose of cancelling a contract, will not be granted in a case where the injured or defrauded party has an adequate, certain and complete remedy at law. The usual instances wherein equity interposes here are to remove a cloud upon title to real estate;.to cancel deeds or other contracts because of fraud, mistake, undue influence, fraudulent concealment, inadequacy of consideration, mental incapacity and infancy, and because of contracts obtained by persons in confidential relationship with others.” In Oelrich v. Spain, 15 Wall. 211, 231, it is said: “Where there is a complete remedy at law, a bill in equity must be dismissed. This objection is regarded as jurisdictional, and may be enforced by the court, sua sponie, though not raised by the pleadings nor suggested by counsel.” See note 9 Am. St. R. 859. Beach, Modern Bq. Juris., s. 551, says: “The eases in which a court of equitty exercises its jurisdiction to decree the surrender and cancellation of' written instruments are, in general, where the instrument has been obtained by fraud; where a defense exists which would be cognizable only in a court of equity; where the* instrument is negotiable, and by a transfer the transferee may acquire rights which the present holder does not possess; and where the instrument is a cloud upon the title of the plaintiff to real estate.”
In section 553 Mr. Beach further says: “It is not material upon the question of jurisdiction that the party seeking the relief has a defense at law to the instrument of which he prays the surrender and 'cancellation. But, on the other hand, some circumstance in addition of the allegations of a defense must be shown. The instrument must have been created or obtained by fraud, or there must be some danger that by its transfer to a bona fide holder the party may lose the benefit of his defense, or some other substantial reason must be assigned showing that a defense at law is not a sufficient protection. Tf/ say the court of appeals of New York, The mere fact that a defense exists to a written instrument were sufficient to authorize an application to a court of equity to decree its surrender and cancellation, it is obvious, that every controversy in which the claim of either party was evidenced by a writing could be drawn to the equity side of the court and tried in the mode provided for the trial of equita*601ble actions, instead of being disposed of in the ordinary manner by a jury. And further, the mere ordinary danger of losing evidence, common to every case involving questions of fact, is not regarded as a sufficient ground for the exercise of the jurisdiction. If it were, every case where a defense must be made would be brought into equity.” In s. 552 we find the language: “Some special ground for equitable relief must be shown, and the mere fact that an instrument ought not to be enforced is insuffb cient, standing alone, to justify a resort to a court of equity.” Of course if the estate or interest is purely equitable, not legal, equity has exclusive jurisdiction; for otherwise the party would have no relief. Where the right is legal equity will not exercise jurisdiction, if the legal remedy is adequate. 1 Pom. Eq. Juris., ss. 1377, 911. These principles plainly require us to reverse the decree and dismiss the bill, because of want of jurisdiction in equity to entertain it, and of course without prejudice to the right of the plaintiffs to their defense at law. It is hardly necessary to say that this decision shall not prejudice in any way their right of defense at law.

Reversed.