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ARK.] SQUIRES V. NEW AMSTERDAM CASUALTY C . 467 SQUIRES V: NEW" AMSTERDAM CASUALTY COMPANY. ...4-3077 . ..ppinion* delivered May 15. , 1933.. 1. PROHIBITIONPARTIES.—The writ of prohibition lies to the court, and not to the parties to the litigation. INJUNCTIONMULTIPLICITY OF SUITS.—Equity will not enjoin the prosecution of numerous actions at law growing out of the same transaction, in the absence of other legal or equitable rights existing in the person seeking the injunction. 3. S INTERPLEADERCONSTRUCTION OF CROSS-COMPLAINT.—Afl . admission of liability is essential before a cross-complaint can be treated as a bill of interpleader or a bill in the nature of a bill of interpleader. 4. INTERPLEADERPAYMENT INTO COURT.—A cross-complaint by the surety of a foreign insurance comPany , asking that it be treated as a bill of interpleader held not to confer jurisdiction on the chancery court to restrain an action at law on the bond where the rn surety fails to deposit the Money in C011k to be prorated among the claimants on Such bond. Prohibition to Pulaki :Chancery Court; Will .0. Akors,.Special Chancellor ; Writ granted. - ,
468 SQUIRES V. NEW AMSTEROAM CASUALTY CO: [187 John L. McClellan and Sann T. ice Tom Poe, for appellant. Buzbee, Harrison, Buzbee-ce Wright, for appellee. HUMPHREYS, J. -This is an application to this court for a writ of tifohibition against Will G. Akers, special chancellor of the Pulaski Chancery Court, and the New Amsterdam Casualty Company, which is a party to the litigation in said court, to inhibit them from proceeding by restraining order or injunction to prevent petitioner herein from prosecuting his suit in the Little River Circuit Court to recover on a . $10,000 judgment which he obtained against'''. E. Pattison in the circnit court of Saline County. The suit to collect the judgment from the New Amsterdam Casualty Company was based upon a bond executed by it to qualify the Union Indemnity Company to do business in Arkansas, in which latter company H. E. Pattison held an indemnity policy. Appellant sustained injuries in an automobile collision through the negligent operation of a car owned by H. E. Pattison and recovered the judgment aforesaid against him on account of the injuries received. He obtained an execution against Pattison out of the circuit court of Saline County, .which was returned nulla bona. The Union Indemnity Company, in which Pattison held an indemnity policy, became insolvent. It owned some real estate in Little River County in this State. Subsequent to the insolvency of the Union Indemnity Company, the petitioner herein filed an attachment suit against the Union Indemnity Company in the circuit court of Little River County and levied upon the real estate. He made the New Amsterdam Casualty Company a party defendant, alleging its liability for the payment of the judgment under its qualifying bond executed to obtain the right Of the Union Indemnity Company to do business in Arkansas. During the pendency of this suit in Little River County, the New Amsterdam Casualty Company was made a defendant in a suit brought by the Independence Indemnity Company in the chancery court of Pulaski County, which company had also executed a qualifying bond to qualify the Union Indemnity Com-
ARK.] SQUIRES V. NEW AMSTERDAM CASUALTY CO. 469 pany to do business in Arkansas. The New Amsterdam Casualty Company filed an answer and cross-complaint in the suit of the Independence Casualty Company, in which it made the petitioner herein a cross-defendant along with others, in which it pleaded that the petitioner herein be required to interplead and file its claim against the New Anisterdam Casualty Company for adjudication in the Pulaski Chancery Court and that he be enjoined from further prosecution of his . suit at law in the circuit court of Little River County against the New Amster-dam Casualty Company. In the cross-complaint; it admitted the execution of the qualifying bond in the sum of $20,000, but denied any liability thereunder to the petitioner or other cross-defendants, and obtained from Will G. Akers, special chancellor, a restraining order commanding your petitioner to refrain from prosecuting his suit at law in the circuit court of Little River County against the New Amsterdam Casualty. Company. This application must be treated as a request for a writ of prohibition against Will G. Akers, special chancellor, only, for a writ of prohibition lies to the court and not to the parties to the litigation. Dunbar v. Bour-land, 88 Ark. 153, 114 S. W. 467; Merchants' &Planters' Bank v. Hammock, 178 Ark. 746, 12 S. W. (2d) 421. The only other question arising on this petition for a writ of prohibition is whether the chancery court of Pulaski County had jurisdiction under the allegations of the cross-complaint of the New Amsterdam Casualty Company to _issue a restraining order against the petitioner herein -: The gist of the cross-complaint was to implead the petitioner herein to file and litigate their respective claims against the New Amsterdam Casualty Company under the qualifying bond it exedutea in behalf of the Union Indemnity Company. It admitted the execution of the bond, but denied any liability to the dross-defendants thereon. The doctrine of the prevention oi a multiplicity of suits is invoked to sustain the jurisdiction of the chancery court and "to justify the issuance of the restraining order. Other legal or equitable rights to relief must exist in one -before equity will, at his instance,
470 SQUIRES V. NEW AMSTERDAM CASUALTY C 1187 enjoin the prosecution of numerous actions at law growing out of the same transaction. 1st Pomeroy ' .s Equity Jurisprudence (Fourth Edition), § 250 ; Jones v. Barris, 90 Ark. 51, 117 S..W. 1077. The . cross-complaint cannot be. maintained as an action of interpleader or an-action in .the nature of inter-pleader, thereby conferring jurisdiction on the chancery court to issue the restraining order, for essential and necessary averments are lacking to so treat or construe it. In the first place, liability under the bond Was not admitted ; but, on the contrary, was specifically An admission of liability was essential and necessary before tbe cross-complaint could be treated as a bill of inter-pleader or a bill in the nature of a bill of interpleader. Southwestern. Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Benson, 63 -Ark. 283, 38 S. W. 341 ; Crass v. Memphis & C. R. Co., 96 Ala. 447, 11:So. 480. In the next place, the money was not deposited in the court to be prorated among the claimants, nor was an offer to . do so:contained in tbe cross-Complaint, and for this reason also' the cross-complaint was fatally defective as a bill of interpleader or a bill in the. nature of . a bill of interpleader. conferring jurisdiction on tbe chancery court to issue a restaining order. 15 R. C. Ii., 230. "In- a proper case for a bill of interpleader complainant may . have an injunction , restraining claimants from further prosecution of their . actions , at law ,pending the litigation under the interpleader, but only on bringing the fund into court. 33 C. J. 452. The case of Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v.. Moore, 92 Ark..446, 123 S. W. 233, cited and relied upon by respondent, in no way contravenes tbe principles announced herein. In that case the Chicago, Rockisland & Pacific Railway Company admitted liability and offered to pay the amount into court, and also aVerred an , equitable issue of alleged claini.of a lien upon its railroad in addition to the prevention of a multiplicity of suits. That suit was clearly one in the nature of a bill of interpleader. The writ of prohibition is granted.
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