Miller v. Smythe

OPINION op the Court by

John D. Carroll, Commissioner

— Reversing.

In June, 1895, M. C. Goff and others instituted a suit in equity in the Lee circuit court against William T. Smythe, David Smythe, and Mitchell Smythe, in which they sought to recover from the defendants the possession of a tract of land, and in this action the plaintiffs, with Washington Miller and J. D. Simpson as. their surety, executed an injunction bond, “enjoining and restraining the said Smythes, or either of them, from cutting or removing any timber, trees, logs, or lumber from said land, or from selling same, or doing any other act to deprive said Miller, Goff, or Prewitt, or either of them, of any timber, trees, logs, or lumber on said land, or to interfere with said Miller’s, Goff’s, and Prewitt’s use and enjoyment of same.” This injunction continued in force from the date of its issual in 1895 until January, 1902, when the action in which it was obtained was dismissed and the injunction dissolved. Pending this action, William Smythe, one of the defendants therein, died, and in November, 1902, James D. Smythe and Jesse Smythe, named as defendants in the injunction,- and the other children and heirs at law of William Smythe, brought this suit on the injunction bond, alleging that by reason of the injunction they were prevented and restrained from using and controlling the lands claimed and owned by them, and from taking and *702selling timber therefrom, and compelled to stand by and see their timber out, carried away, and destroyed, and their property rights injured by the plaintiffs in the injunction suit, their agents and employes, who, after obtaining the injunction, entered upon the land and cut and carried away and converted to their own use timber of the value of $6,000, which was owned by the plaintiffs, and they sought to recover the sum of $6,000 and the further sum of $125, attorney’s fees and costs incurred in defending the injunction suit. The defendants, appellants here, filed special and general demurrers to the petition, which were overruled, and in an answer traversed the petition, and also averred that they were, when the injunction issued, the owners of and in possession of the land upon which the injunction operated, and from which the timber was taken, and had been in the actual, continuous and adverse possession of the land for "more than 15 years before the injunction was obtained. To this pleading a reply was filed, completing the issues, and upon a trial of the case before a jury á verdict was rendered against appellants' for $3,000, and $25 costs expended in the injunction suit. Prom a judgment on the verdict, this appeal is taken.

The first question raised by appellants is that this action to recover damages on the injunction bond can only be prosecuted by the personal representative of "William Smythe, who was the father of these appel-lees, and according to their testimony the owner of the land in controversy, and that his heirs, the appel-lees, cannot maintain this suit. We are of the opinion that the liability, if any, on the injunction bond to .William Smythe, was a personal asset that on his' death survived to his personal representative, *703and that the action to recover damages on the bond for all timber ent or carried away np to the time of the death of William Smythe should have been brought by his personal representative, and not by the heirs. In Newman on Pleading and Practice it is said that “tire personal representatives have the right of action in- relation to the personal property of the decedent, while the heirs.only properly repre^ sent him in relation to his real estate. Although an action may be brought by the real party "in interest, yet it cannot be maintained now, any more than formerly, unless the plaintiff has directly a legal or equitable interest or title in the subject of the action. An action cannot be maintained ordinarily by the heir to recover a debt due by the account of the ancestor, nor upon an ordinary bond or judgment for money payable to the deceased, without any stipula.tion that it should be paid to his heirs.” McChord v. Fisher’s Heirs, 13 B. Mon., 194; Coons v. Nall’s Heirs, 4 Litt., 263; Brunt v. Means, 11 B. Mon., 214. No reason is asisgned why this action was not prosecuted in the name of the personal representative of William Smythe, nor why he was not made a party, either plaintiff or defendant, to the action. The recovery in a case of this kind being assets in 'the hands of the personal representative, the action should have been prosecuted in his name, or he should have been a party plaintiff.- If he refused to bring or join in the suit, he should have been made a defendant. Cov. Code Prac., section 24; Brown’s Heirs v. Wilson, 12 B. Mon., 100. The special demurer should therefore have been snstained.

Appellant’s next contention is that they, as sureties in this injunction bond, are not liable for any damages *704resulting from cutting and, carrying away timber from tlie land and otherwise trespassing upon the premises. They insist that by the terms of the injunction bond they only undertook to be responsible for the damages which the defendants in that suit might sustain by reason of the injunction, if it was finally decided that the injunction ought not to have been granted, and that the damages claimed in this action was not sustained by reason of the injunction. The order'of injunction was a comprehensive writ, not only restraining the defendants in the injunction from cutting or removing any timber from the land, but from doing any other act that might deprive the plaintiffs of the right to cut or remove any logs or timber. The purpose and effect of the injunction, as disclosed by what occurred after its issual, was to prevent on the one. hand the defendants, from cutting and removing timber, and on the other hand to permit the parties who obtained the injunction to cut and remove timber from the land; and it seems clear that while this injunction- was in force the plaintiffs in the injunction suit, or persons by their direction or authority, or acting for them, did cut and remove timber from the land. To that extent the injunction injured the defendants, and the damages they sustained were fully covered by the stipulation of the injunction bond that the obligors therein would pay to them all damages which they might sustain by reason of the injunction, if it ought not to have been granted. If any timber whs cut or taken from the land by the plaintiffs, or their vendees or agents, in the injunction suit, it was. taken under the authority granted by the writ of injunction, which prevented the defendants from in any-way interfering with plain*705tiffs, in cutting and removing the timber. In- Barton, v. Fisk, 30 N. Y., 166, a ease very much like this, the plaintiff claimed to be the owner of personal property lying on defendants’ land, and sued, procuring an injunction forbidding the defendant, who claimed the property, from asserting any right to it. On a trial of the case it was adjudged that the property belonged to the defendant, and not to plaintiff; but, pending the suit, the plaintiff carried off the property and converted it to, his own' use. In an action on the injunction bond the, obligors made 'the same argument that is, made by appellants in this case. In answer to it the court said: “If the property had been carried away and converted by others, while the owners were prohibited from doing anything to protect it, the person who restrained them ought to malte compensation. But, if he means to carry it off and convert it during the restraint which he had procured to be imposed, the efficient cause of the loss was inability of defendants, caused by the injunction, to take care of and preserve that which wtas theirs.” Proceeding, the court said: “It matters not whether the injunction conferred upon the plaintiff the right to appropriate the property to his use. Assume that it did not. It necessarily impliedly authorized him to take possession of it, or countenanced him in doing so, inasmuch as it forbade all others, to interfere with him in acquiring such possession. In this respect it is somewhat analogous to the bond in an action for replevin, and impliedly imposed upon the defendant the obligation to return the property in the event of an unfavorable determination of the suit. Having taken possession, it is lost to the defendants through his wrongful negligence. This is *706the very result against which the injunction, was designed to> protect the parties.” The injunction deprived the owner of the right to protect the timber and land, and preserve it from destruction or invasion by others, and the loss of timber and other trespasses may be properly attributed to the injunc^ tion. In cases like this, courts will not be governed by arbitrary rules, but proceed upon equitable principles; the defendant in the injunction bond being entitled' to such damages on the bond as are the. necessary and proximate result of the deprivation of his property. Alexander v. Colcord, 85 Ill., 323; High on Instruction, section 1673. And the action of the court in overruling the demurrer was proper.

Both parties; claim to be the owners of the land from which the timber was taken by adverse possession, as well as paper title. The appellees concede that there is such a defect in their paper title as to render it unavailable, and there are also defective links in the chain of title offered by appellants. Recognizing these facts, the parties directed the principal part of their evidence toward an effort to establish that each had been in the adverse and continuous possession of the land for more than fifteen years previous to the institution of the injunction suit. The lines and comers in controversy are so confounded by ambiguous calls in deeds and the conflicting statements of witnesses that we have not been able tn determine with any degree of certainty where the correct lines are located, and it seems probable that the lower court labored under the same difficulty, as in the instructions submitted the question of ownership' was made to- rest upon possession alone. But oni another trial the real question in this case, *707which is one of boundary, can be ascertained with more certainty, and much, of the confusion that appears in this record cleared away, and in place of instructions 2 and 5 the court should determine from the evidence where the boundary of appellees’ land, that is in dispute, is located, and define and describe it in an instruction, so that the jury will only be required to' pass on the question whether or not appellants trespassed, or cut or injured timber, under the injunction, within the line of appellees’ title, and, if so, the amount of damages sustained by reason thereof.

The judgment is reversed, for proceedings in conformity to this opinion.