Opinion
No. 30857.
November 27, 1933.
1. APPEAL AND ERROR.
Appeal granted to settle principles of cause after court dismissed bill as to certain defendant and overruled demurrers as to other defendants and allowed time to amend bill could not be entertained, since Supreme Court could not settle all controlling principles (Code 1930, section 14).
2. APPEAL AND ERROR.
Chancellor may grant appeal to settle principles of cause only where appeal would settle all principles applicable to suit (Code 1930, section 14).
APPEAL from Chancery Court of Hinds County.
Green, Green Jackson, of Jackson, for appellants.
The bill is multifarious.
Griffith's Mississippi Chancery Practice, secs. 197 et seq.; Reese v. Salmon, 99 So. 382; Sec. 396, Mississippi Code 1930; Clark et al. v. Miller, State Revenue Agent, 142 Miss. 123, 105 So. 502; Carter v. Kimbrough, 122 Miss. 543, 84 So. 251; Nelms v. Brooks, 105 Miss. 74, 61 So. 985.
The complainant did not comply with conditions precedent to filing of suit.
Section 5972, Mississippi Code of 1930; Oliver Construction Company v. Crawford, 142 Miss. 490, 107 So. 877; United States Fidelity Guaranty Company v. Mobley, 143 Miss. 412, 108 So. 501; Mississippi Fire Insurance Company et al. v. Evans, 153 Miss. 635, 120 So. 738; Sartin v. Prentiss County, 152 Miss. 17, 118 So. 357; Miers v. Miers, 160 Miss. 746, 133 So. 133.
Stevens Heidelberg, of Hattiesburg, for appellants.
The jurisdiction of equity to prevent a multiplicity of suits does not extend to enjoining a number of separate actions at law against the same defendant to recover damages, where the plaintiffs have no community of interest, except in the question of law and fact involved, and cannot be proceeded against separately in equity.
Tribette v. Illinois Central Railroad Company, 70 Miss. 182; Cumberland Telephone Telegraph Co. v. Williamson, 101 Miss. 1.
The suit was prematurely brought.
H.M. Bryan, J. Morgan Stevens and J.M. Stevens, Jr., all of Jackson, for appellee.
The appeal should be dismissed. We are convinced that under the authorities the court has no jurisdiction of this appeal and that the appeal herein should be dismissed.
The decree, granting the appeal, states that it is predicated upon and is in accord with the provisions of section 14 of the Code of 1930. This court recently has thoroughly reviewed the subject of interlocutory appeals, and has discussed at length the requisites necessary for such appeals to be taken in proper cases.
Stirling et al. v. Whitney National Bank et al., 150 So. 654; Liberty Trust Company et al. v. Planters Bank, 124 So. 341, 155 Miss. 721.
In the Stirling case, the court said:
"In Trust Co. v. Planters Bank, 155 Miss. 721, we went to the trouble to make a review of the subject of interlocutory appeals and to point out that our present revised statute means exactly what it says, that such an appeal does not lie to settle some or even most of the controlling principles, but must be effective to settle all the controlling principles of the case, and in such an adequate manner as to furnish a definite guide throughout the case, so far as the merits thereof are concerned. The bill is clearly good as to some of appellants, and even if not as to the others, as to which we express no opinion, a decision here as to those others would manifestly not settle all the controlling principles of the case but only a part of it."
The appellee, Roddis Lumber Veneer Company, filed a bill in the chancery court of Hinds county against the appellant Standard Lumber Manufacturing Company, the Mississippi State Hospital, improvement and land sale commission, and various contractors, and the sureties on their bonds, for the construction of certain buildings at the new insane hospital at Whitfield, Mississippi.
The substance of the bill is that the Roddis Lumber Veneer Company manufacture certain doors, known as "Roddis Doors," and that the contracts between the state hospital, improvement and land sale commission, and said contractors provided that such doors, or their equivalent, should be used in the buildings to be erected by them; that the complainant sold to the Standard Lumber Manufacturing Company the required number of doors and shipped them to Whitfield, Mississippi. That the state hospital, improvement and land sale commission, and the various contractors knew that the complainant had sold such doors to the Standard Lumber Manufacturing Company, and that such doors had been used in the construction of said buildings. The bill further alleges that the Standard Lumber Manufacturing Company had made partial payments for said doors, but that there was still due more than two thousand dollars on invoices made exhibits to the bill. It is further alleged in the bill that the Standard Lumber Manufacturing Company has become insolvent, and that if the funds due by said contractors to the said company should be paid to it, such funds would be squandered; and that the state hospital removal, improvement and land sale commission, and the various contractors were liable to the complainant for the value of the doors so furnished which had not been paid for by the Standard Lumber Manufacturing Company, and sought judgment against said defendants for the respective amounts.
There was general demurrer by the defendants separately, all of which, however, covered the same ground, and also special demurrers by which they covered practically the same grounds; the general demurrer assigning the following: (1) That there was no equity on the face of the bill and (2) that the bill shows on its face, that as to these defendants, the complainant has a full, complete, and adequate remedy at law.
The special demurrer assigns a number of grounds, as follows: (1) The bill is multifarious for the reason that the complainant undertakes in one cause and in one bill of complaint to unite many causes; (2) the bill is multifarious because it joins as parties several firms, individuals, etc., who have no common interest; (3) that the bill is multifarious because the interests of the defendants flow from different sources, and have no common or connecting link; (4) that the bill is multifarious because the respondents, while joined as parties defendant, do not ask for relief for the reason that no allegation of delivery of any doors is made; (5) that the exhibits prayed to be considered a part of the bill do not appear as exhibits to a certified copy of the bill of complaint furnished these defendants.
The court sustained the demurrer as to the Mississippi State Hospital Removal, improvement and land sale commission, and dismissed the bill as to it, but overruled the demurrers as to the other defendants, and allowed sixty days within which to file amendments to their bill; granting an appeal to settle the principles of the cause.
We are of opinion that the appeal cannot be entertained. If we should hold that the bill does not state a cause of action, it might be amended and resubmitted. If we hold that it does state a cause of action, pleas might be filed in confession and avoidance, and all the issues shifted. In other words, we would be unable to settle all the controlling principles of the cause, because the issues have not been made up, and we are unable to see what issues might arise during the course of the trial. This, of course, would be dependent, in a considerable degree, upon the defense that might be made to the bill by the pleadings. An issue might be made upon the allegations of a pleading in defense of the declaration, or a pleading subsequent to that issue.
A chancellor only has power to grant an appeal under section 14, Code 1930, where such appeal would settle all the principles applicable to the suit. This was expressly held in several cases. Carothers v. Bank of Baldwyn, 158 Miss. 602, 131 So. 111; Liberty Trust Co. v. Planters' Bank, 155 Miss. 721, 124 So. 341, and Stirling v. Whitney Nat'l Bank et al., decided October 30, 1933, 150 So. 654.
Accordingly, the appeal will be dismissed.
Dismissed.