The measure of protection to be given by the undertaking
required on issuing a restraining order under § 718,
Rev.Stat., is to make good the injuries inflicted upon a party
observing the order until it is dissolved, and such undertaking
inures to the benefit of a defendant suffering injuries
irrespective of the exact time when that party has knowledge of the
pendency of the action or appears therein; nor is this protection
denied because the only defendant sustaining injuries is a woman
and the undertaking is to make good "to the defendant all damages
by him suffered."
Findings of an auditor assessing damage on an undertaking should
not be set aside by the court unless there has been an error of law
or a conclusion of fact unwarranted by the evidence.
The owner of a house in Washington, D.C., who was prevented by a
restraining order from completing alterations during the winter
months, the house meanwhile being only partially habitable, was
held, in this case, to have lost the entire use of the house, and
to be entitled to recover on the undertaking the reasonable rental
value of the house for the season.
28 App.D.C. 271 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Appeals of the
District of Columbia. The appellee, Carrie L. Munn, was
Page 209 U. S. 247
the owner of a lot of land, with a dwelling house thereon,
situated on Massachusetts Avenue in the City of Washington. The
premises adjoining this lot were owned by Stilson Hutchins, one of
the appellants. Mrs. Munn's dwelling house did not occupy the whole
of her lot, and she decided to build an addition to it. She
contracted with an architect and builder to design and construct
this addition. The work under these contracts was begun about July
1, 1902, and it was expected that it would be completed about
November 1, 1902, so that the enlarged structure would be ready for
occupation during the season of 1902 and 1903. After making the
contracts, Mrs. Munn went to Europe with her family, intending to
return and occupy the house on its completion in November. On
August 14, 1902, Mr. Hutchins filed a bill in equity in the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia, praying an injunction against
the continuance of the erection of the addition. Mrs. Munn, her
husband, the architect, and the builder were made parties
defendant. The grounds upon which the injunction was sought are not
material here. On the day of the filing of the bill, a justice of
the Supreme Court of the District entered an order that the
defendants show cause, on September 4 next, why the prayer for an
injunction should not be granted, and further ordered that, until
the hearing, the defendants be "restrained and enjoined from
continuing the erection of the building." On the same day, Mr.
Hutchins, with the other appellants as sureties, filed an
undertaking, approved by the court, which is as follows:
"Stilson Hutchins, the complainant, and William J. Dante, Ben.
B. Bradford, sureties, hereby undertake to make good to the
defendant all damages by him suffered or sustained by reason of
wrongfully and inequitably suing out the injunction in the
above-entitled cause, and stipulate that the damages may be
ascertained in such manner as the justice shall direct, and that,
on dissolving the injunction, he may give judgment thereon against
the principal and sureties for said damages in the decree itself
dissolving the injunction."
Thereupon the work on the addition was suspended, and not
resumed until
Page 209 U. S. 248
November 25, 1902, when, upon hearing, the court dissolved the
injunction and discharged the order to show cause. The work was
then continued until its completion in April, 1903. Subsequently
the decree of November 25, 1902, was affirmed by the Court of
Appeals, and the cause was referred to an auditor to ascertain the
damages caused to the defendants, or any of them, by the wrongful
suing out of the injunction. The auditor reported that Mrs. Munn
had sustained damages to the amount of $6,000, and that the other
defendants had sustained no damage. Exceptions to the auditor's
report were overruled by the Supreme Court, and the appellants were
decreed to pay to Mrs. Munn, in accordance with the terms of the
undertaking, the sum found by the auditor as damages. This decree
was affirmed by the Court of Appeals in the judgment now under
review.
It is contended that the undertaking does not, by its terms,
include Mrs. Munn in its protection, because it is expressed to be
an undertaking "to make good to the
defendant all damages
by him suffered." Little pains need be expended on the argument
which arises out of the letter of the bond. The undertaking was
exacted by the court, it was offered by the complainant at a time
when none of the defendants knew of the pendency of the suit, and
it was entitled "No. 23,468 Equity Docket, Stilson Hutchins,
Complainant, Charles A. Munn et al., Defendants." It accompanied a
restraining order directed against "the defendants and each of
them," and we think it should be held to run to all the defendants
who were included in that order.
It is further contended that, as Mrs. was never served with a
subpoena, or notice either of the order to show cause or of the
restraining order, she is not entitled to the benefits of the
undertaking. The order of the court was served immediately upon the
architect and the builder, and the work was instantly stopped. No
injury from the wrongful use of the injunction was inflicted upon
either of the defendants served with the court's order, but only
upon the owner of the house. It is now
Page 209 U. S. 249
said that, although the court had, as a condition of issuing the
restraining order, exacted an undertaking to indemnify her, she
cannot recover upon it, because she was beyond the reach of the
process of the court. But this view is based upon a misconception
of a restraining order and the undertaking to make good the injury
resulting from its wrongful use. The nature of the order and
undertaking received the consideration of this Court in
Houghton v. Meyer, 208 U. S. 149. The
authority for the issue of such an order was shown to be § 718
of the Revised Statutes. The section contemplates, in cases where
irreparable injury may be anticipated if the
status quo be
not preserved, the issue without notice of a temporary restraining
order, to be enforced only until an order to show cause on the
motion for an injunction can be heard and decided. The order may be
granted with or without security to the defendants, in the
discretion of the court. In the case at bar, the order accomplished
its purpose, and instantly arrested the progress of the work by
restraining those who were engaged in it. The injury against which
the undertaking was designed to indemnify was incurred by Mrs.
Munn, and we find nothing in the facts of this case which takes
away the remedy on the undertaking exacted by the court for her
protection. It is true that she did not learn of the issue of the
restraining order for two weeks. But counsel, though without
express authority, undertook to guard her interests, and moved to
discharge the order on August 17. With all reasonable speed,
authority to file an answer was obtained and acted upon, the cause
was heard, and the restraining order dissolved. In the meantime,
the restraining order was obeyed by all, had its full effect, and
inflicted its full injury upon Mrs. Munn's rights. Under these
circumstances, it is beyond doubt that she is entitled to recover
against those who undertook to make good her injuries the damages
which she sustained. It is enough that the order was obtained
without notice to her, that it was wrongfully sued out, that it was
observed until dissolved, and that it inflicted injury upon her
rights. These facts, irrespective of the exact time when she
Page 209 U. S. 250
had knowledge of the pendency of the suit or appeared in it,
bring her within the terms of the undertaking. That is precisely
the measure of protection which the law ought to give, and, by the
statute, does give, to one against whom, without notice and
hearing, an order of this kind is made.
The appellants alleged various exceptions to the auditor's
report, which are directed to the findings of facts upon which the
liability was based and of the amount of damages, and here,
apparently, argue those exceptions on the theory that this Court is
at liberty to consider the evidence
de novo, weigh and
balance it, and draw such inferences and conclusions as seem
proper. But this theory overlooks the proper function of an
auditor, which was correctly appreciated by the court below. The
findings should not be set aside unless it is shown that there has
been an error in law or a conclusion of fact unwarranted by the
evidence. It is enough to say that there was evidence which
supported the findings of fact of the auditor and his assessment of
damages. Nor does it appear that the auditor committed any error of
law. His report shows the following facts, briefly stated: it was
the habit of Mrs. Munn to occupy her house during the late autumn,
the winter, and the early spring, and to live elsewhere during the
remainder of the year. This was the common season of occupancy in
Washington of house of this character. She intended to occupy her
house during the season of 1902 and 1903, but was prevented from
doing so by the wrongful use of the restraining order. The addition
which, if the work had not been stopped, would have been completed
by November 1, was not completed until April, and could not have
been completed, if reasonable speed had been used, before March. In
the meantime, the house, some of whose exterior walls had been
removed, was practically uninhabitable. Shelter could doubtless
have been found in some of the rooms, which could have been closed
and warmed. But the owner was entitled to a house which could be
occupied as a whole and was available for use as a home for herself
and her family. This was denied to her by the defendants' wrongful
act. We
Page 209 U. S. 251
think that the auditor correctly adopted as the measure of
damages the value of the use of the property for the period and
season during which she was thus deprived of it as the direct
result of the restraining order which, in another proceeding, has
been found to have been wrongfully and inequitably sued out. The
decree of the court below is
Affirmed.