Kerr v. Davis

The Chancellor.

Where the complainant has commenced a former suit in this court for the same cause and has failed, his proceedings in the second suit will be stayed until the costs of the first are paid. (Spires v. Sewell, 5 Sim. Rep. 193.) The existence of such a principle in this state is recognized in the provision of the revised statutes, which exempts paupers from the operation of the rule. (2 R. S. 445, § 4.) In that case the legislature has made provision for the protection of the defendant against suits merely vexatious, by requiring the pauper to show to the court in the first place, that he has a meritorious cause of action or suit. The principle of staying the proceedings in a suit until the costs of a former suit for the same matter are paid, has never been extended so far, however, as to stay proceedings where the first suit was in a court of law and the last is in a court of equity. (Demarest v. Wynkoop, 2 John. Ch. Rep. 461. Stebbins v. Grant, 19 John. Rep. 196.) The present case, therefore, does not come within the operation of the principle, as the first suit by this complainant was in a court of -law.

*55There is another ground, however, on which this court is authorized to interfere in this case for the protection of the petitioner. No court should allow its process or proceedings to be perverted for the purposes of injustice and oppression. Here it is sworn by the petitioner, and not attempted to be denied by the complainant, that this second suit is brought in bad faith, without any reasonable hope or expectation of success, and for the sole purpose of vexing, harrassing and annoying the petitioner; the complainant by reason of his insolvency, being exempt from the usual penalty in such cases, the payment of the costs of the defence. As this allegation of the petitioner must be taken as true upon the papers before me on this application, I think it my duty to interfere, so far at least as to stay this vexatious and unjustifiable proceeding until the costs of the suit in the supreme court are paid. An order must therefore be entered staying all proceedings on the part of the complainant, as against Davis the petitioner, until the complainant shall have paid the costs in the suit at law, and $12 as a gross sum for the costs of this application ; or until he shall have filed with the register a bond in the penalty of $250, with two sufficient sureties to be approved of by a master, conditioned to pay the petitioner such costs as may be awarded to the latter in this suit. And the petitioner is to have forty days after payment of such costs, or notice of the filing of such bond, to put in his answer to the complainant's bill. If such costs are not paid, or security filed and notice thereof given, within sixty days after service of a copy of the order on the complainant Or his solicitor, the bill as to the defendant Davis, is to be dismissed with costs.