Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Johnson

DUFOUR, J.

The plaintiffs, Johnson and Dare, in a suit *291against the City of New Orleans, applied for an injunction against the City to prevent it from selling a franchise; the St. Charles Street R. R. Co. intervened and united with the defendant in resisting the plaintiffs’ demand.

The Court ordered the injunction to issue upon plaintiffs’ furnishing bond in favor of both 'City and iRailroad Company, and the. present plaintiff became surety on that bond.

Johnson and Dare 'having lost their suit, the St. Charles Street R. R. Co. sued the principals and surety to recover damages on the injunction bond, and was defeated on an exception of no cause of action filed by the Fidelity Co., which defended the suit, the Supreme Court holding that the Railroad Company had no right of action on the bond.

Whereupon the Fidelity Company sued Johnson and Dare, and their counter sureties, Dinkelspiel and Hart, for .attorney’s fees and certain costs expended by them in defeating the action.

The three points presented by the defence are:

ist. That the claim urged by plaintiff is beyond the purposes, the scope and purview of the bond on which they sue.

2nd. lhat the expenses incurred by plaintiff, and which it seeks to recover, were needlessly incurred, and therefore should be 'held gratuitous and not laid as a burden upon the defendants.

3rd. That the amount of attorney’s fees claimed is excessive, under the circumstances, and that costs of brief are not taxable.

The fact that the district judge erroneously ordered the bond, to be made in favor of the St. Charles Street R. R. Co. is absolutely without significance. There is nothing to show that the 'Surety Company knew of this order, and it is apparent that they signed the bond which plaintiff’s attorneys presumably prepared and requested the Surety Company to sign. If they submitted to an illegal order, which, as the sequel shows they might successfully have resisted, it is their own fault, and the surety cannot be made *292to suffer for it. They acquiesced, named the obligees of the bond, and surety was not a party to their action, and its only duty or interest in the premises was to comply with its obligation to sign as surety for the injunction bond for which it had contracted.

The obligations incurred 'by the counter sureties exacted by the Fidelity Company for its protection were “to hold and keep harmless the company from and against any and all loss, damages, costs, charges and expenses of whatever nature or kind which the company shall or may at any time incur, sustain or be put to, for or by reason or in consequence of the company having given and executed the said bond, also all costs and expenses which it may incur in investigating any claim made thereunder, or in or about prosecuting or defending any action, suit or other proceedings which may be commenced or prosecuted against said Johnson or Dare, or both, plaintiffs in the aforesaid injunction suit, or against the Company, upon, the said bond, or any wise in relation thereto.” Considering that the amount sued for was expended in defending a suit by an obligee of the bond, named as such at the request of' the plaintiffs in injunction themselves, we find no force in the first defence.

IL

The surety had, under the terms of the contract, supra, the right to defend the suit against it, and to be reimbursed the expenses incurred in so doing.. Its attorney, Mr. Milner, insisted upon conducting the defence, ánd expressed his willingness at the same time to accept the co-operation of Mr. Hart; who represented Johnson and Dare. The principals and surety had ail equal right to select their respective attorneys, and neither was compelled to accept the other’s attorney.

III.

We find nothing excessive in a charge of $250.00 for defeating a suit for $2,500.00; the testimony shows that the fee was ac-*293ce'pted as reasonable and paid by the Fidelity Company.-

May 1st, 1905.

It is" true that the costs of brief are not taxable as costs, technically speaking, but they are certainly recoverable as “loss, damage, charges and expenses of whatever nature or kind,” according to the phraseology of the contracts. Affirmed. . •