dissenting. I differ from the court in the disposition made of this case and consider the questions involved of sufficient importance to justify some statement of the reasons for my dissent. The plaintiffs, Coffin & McDonald, have heretofore, to-wit, on November 24, 1904, instituted an action in the Superior Court of Swain County, N. C., against Chas. E. Elint and others, to recover damages to a large amount for an alleged breach of contract on the part of the defendants. Those defendants, being all non-residents of the State, an attachment was sued out in the action and levied on a large tract of land, about 78,000 acres situated in Swain County. The defendants then made a general appearance, and on their application the cause was removed into the Federal Court for the Western District of North Carolina, where the same is now pending. Afterwards, to-wit, in April, 1906, the plaintiffs instituted the present action in the Superior Court of Swain County against O. J. Harris, W. H. Woodbury and William Tabor and filed a verified complaint, alleging the pendency of the former action in the Federal Court against Charles E. Flint and others and the existence of a valid attachment and levy on the 78,000 acres of land belonging to said Flint and his co-defendants. The plaintiffs further allege that the land so levied on is chiefly valuable for the timber growing thereon, and that the defendants have wrongfully entered upon said *712land and are cutting down tbe timber and manufacturing and removing the same, and that these wrongs and trespasses constitute an irreparable injury to the plaintiffs by lessening the security which the plaintiffs hold for the amount they may recover, and rendering said recovery fruitless.
The plaintiffs in this second action in the State Court, having obtained a restraining order, the defendants on notice duly given, moved to vacate the same on the complaint for want of “equity in the bill,” and on the hearing the court below being of opinion with the defendants vacated the restraining order and the plaintiffs excepted and appealed.
It will be noted that, so far as the record now discloses, the present defendants have no connection whatever with Charles E. Elint and others, defendants in the suit now pending in the Federal Court, and by accepting the statements in the bill, as true, it is admitted:
1. That the land belongs to Charles E. Elint and his co-defendant in the original suit.
2. That the plaintiffs hold an attachment, duly levied upon this property and the only security available for their recovery.
3. That the defendants in the present suit are wrongfully cutting the timber on the land and, removing the same, and their wrongful conduct, unless restrained, will so impair the value of the property as to render the praintiffs’ recovery fruitless.
The decision of the court is made to rest on the position that, inasmuch as the cause in which the attachment was issued, has been regularly removed to the Federal Court, any action to protect and conserve the interest in the property acquired and held by the plaintiffs under the warrant of attachment must be brought and maintained in that court. But I do not understand this to be correct doctrine and am of opinion that it is not the law on the facts presented in this appeal.
*713It is conceded that the order for removal transferred to the Federal Court the original action between the' plaintiffs and Charles E. Flint and bis co-defendants, together with all the incidental questions at issue between these litigants, and the said defendants having appeared generally and become parties, the action which, as at first constituted, was more strictly one in rem, by that appearance has become one in personam. Waples on Proceedings in Rem., sec. 580; Cooper v. Reynolds, 77 U. S., 308. The status of the plaintiffs, then, in reference to this suit in the Federal Court, is that of actors seeking to recover damages in personam for breach of a contract and holding an inchoate lien on the realty as a security for the amount they may recover in that action. Such a position gives the plaintiffs no right to possession of the property nor to the rents and profits thereof, and the motion therefore for a receivership was properly disallowed.
The plaintiffs, however, on the facts stated, are entitled to injunctive relief against wrongful trespasses upon the property, which threaten to destroy its value and render their recovery fruitless. Revisal, sec. 806, 807; Webb v. Boyle, 63 N. C., 271; Gordon v. Lowther, 75 N. C., 193; Jones v. Britton, 102 N. C., 166; Latham v. Lumber Co., 139 N. C., 9; People v. VanBuren, 20 L. R. A., 447; High on Injunction (4 Ed.), sec. 658, citing Camp v. Bates, 11 Conn., 51. And there is no reason that occurs to me why the plaintiffs shall not be permitted to assert this right in the State as well as in the Federal Court. Both plaintiffs and defendants jn the present action are citizens, resident in the State of North Carolina, where the property is situated. The issue between them is in no way, so far as how appears, involved in the other action.
There is nothing here which threatens or tends to threaten the validity of the attachment lien, nor which impairs nor tends to impair the value of the security, nor which obstructs *714or tends to obstruct tbe due and orderly procedure of tbe action now pending- in tbe Federal Court or to prevent or interfere with tbe due application of tbe property to whatever judgment that court may render. On tbe contrary, tbe present action, being for tbe purpose of preventing a trespass on land on wbicb it is admitted that tbe plaintiffs have a valid attachment lien, is in aid of tbe Federal suit and tends to preserve tbe property held as security. I think, therefore, tbe plaintiffs should be allowed to proceed with their action and that on tbe facts admitted the restraining order should have been continued to tbe bearing.
Tbe cases apparently to tbe contrary cited in tbe opinion of tbe court are all cases where personal property has been seized -and was held under process from tbe Federal Court, and, by reason of such seizure and possession, tbe property was held to be in the custody of tbe law and on that account was protected from interference. I respectfully suggest that tbe fallacy, if there be such, in tbe principal opinion arises from not having been advertent to tbe distinctions wbicb exist between the levy of an attachment on realty, as here, and the seizure of personal property by levy, as in the decisions relied upon.
Possibly, if tbe defendants in tbe original action bad not appeared and the suit was one more strictly in rem, tbe authorities cited by the court might be considered as controlling, but I apprehend no case can be found where, in an action in personam, tbe levy of an attachment on realty in tbe Federal Court and before any final judgment bad by wbicb conflicting rights are declared, has been held to draw tbe property into tbe custody of the law to such an extent as to prevent action by a State Court seeking to enforce a right or redress a wrong, of wbicb it would otherwise have full jurisdiction. In 3 Am. & Eng. Enc., 215, it is said: “The effect of a levy on real estate, however, in this respect differs materially from that of a levy on personalty. No estate or *715interest passes to tbe officer. ITe acquires no right to take tbe rents, issues or property. Tbe possession and tbe right to it remain in tbe defendant undisturbed.” And in 4 Cyc., 605, it is said: “Since in tbe case of a levy on realty, the "officer levying acquired no possession nor special property, there is no reason why an attachment creditor may not acquire a valid lien by the levy of a writ of attachment on land on which another officer had already levied an attachment or execution, subject, of course, to the lien of the prior levy.”
The decided cases support the doctrine as stated. In re Hall & Stilson Co., 73 Fed. Rep., 527, it is said:
1. “The rule of comity which forbids the seizure of property, subject to the jurisdiction of one court, by another court of concurrent jurisdiction, applies only where there is active or constructive possession of the property by the former court; 2. The levy of an attachment upon real estate gives to the court from which the process issues neither actual nor constructive possession.of the property, but only creates a lien thereon in favor of the attachment creditor. 3. Where real property, under attachment upon process from a State Court, is taken into the possession of a receiver of a Federal Court, leave should not be granted by the latter court to sell such property under execution in the attachment suit, if the property is not ample to meet all claims upon it, or if the condition of the title is such that the property would be likely to be sacrificed if sold before the title is cleared up by a decree.” This case is an apt authority in support of the view here contended for, and many others might be cited. Powers v. B. & L. Asso., 80 Fed. Rep., 705; Stanton v. Embry, 93 U. S., 548.
Even in one of the cases relied upon by the defendants, Buck v. Colbath, 70 U. S., 334, it is held: “The rule that among courts of concurrent jurisdiction that one which first obtains jurisdiction of a case has the exclusive right to decide *716every question arising in tbe case, is subject to some limitations and is confined to suits between the same parties or privies seeking the same relief or remedy, and to such questions or propositions as arise ordinarily and properly in the progress of the suit first brought, and does not extend to all matters which may, by possibility, become involved in it.”
In the case before us the. plaintiffs, holding an inchoate lien on realty by virtue of process in a suit now pending in the Federal Court which as we have seen they have a right to protect by injunctive relief, institute an action in the State Court against a trespasser. There is nothing in the action, so far as it now appears, which interferes or tends to interfere with any property right or interest involved-in the original suit. On the contrary, it is in aid of the relief sought in the Federal Court, and in my judgment the plaintiffs should be allowed to proceed.
Connor, J., concurs in the dissenting opinion.