1. A motion to assess damages in a case under Jud.Code §
266 in which an injunction has been dissolved and the bill
dismissed should be determined by the District Court in the
exercise of its ordinary jurisdiction, without participation by the
two additional judges. P.
312 U. S.
625.
2. A judgment of the District Court dismissing a motion to
assess damages in a case decided by the court of three judges
(Jud.Code § 266) is not invalidated by the fact that the two
additional judges took part in its consideration, and, though not
appealable directly to this Court, it is reviewable by the Circuit
Court of Appeals, whose action upon it may in turn be reviewed here
on certiorari. P.
312 U. S.
626.
3. In a suit by numerous carriers by truck to enjoin state
officials from enforcing a state statute imposing license fees,
wherein the District Court, in dissolving an injunction and
dismissing the bill, had dismissed, without hearing its merits, a
counterclaim for the license fees owing by the several plaintiffs,
the dismissal having been based upon a doubt of the right of the
defendants to maintain such a counterclaim and having been made
without prejudice to any right to maintain an independent suit or
suits thereon --
held, that the ruling was not decisive of
the right of defendants to obtain by motion at the end of the
litigation an assessment of damages caused by the injunction, and
costs. P.
312 U. S.
626.
4. The plaintiffs having prevented collection of lawful license
fees on behalf of the State of Missouri through an injunction
obtained in a suit against the State's Attorney General, its Public
Service Commission, and other public agencies, charging that the
fees were unconstitutional and that the defendants threatened to
collect them, and many of the plaintiffs having failed before the
injunction was dissolved to deposit the fees falling due from them,
as required by the injunction order and their injunction bonds,
held:
(1) That the plaintiffs have no standing to resist a motion for
assessment of damages upon the ground that the statutory power
Page 312 U. S. 622
to collect such fees is lodged in the State Treasurer, who was
not a party to the suit. P.
312 U. S.
627.
(2) Whoever has the power in Missouri to collect such license
fees, the Attorney General has exclusive authority to bring suits
in the name and on behalf of the State. P.
312 U. S.
627.
(3) The defendant officials and agencies were proper parties to
invoke an assessment of damages on behalf of the State. P.
312 U. S.
628.
(4) The District Court, sitting in equity, has power to see that
whatever sums are recovered go to the proper state officials. P.
312 U. S.
628.
5. The District Court abused its discretion in refusing to
assess damages in the injunction suit, thus remitting the State and
its officials to many actions at law against the plaintiffs, some
of them possibly in other States, and giving rise to serious
problems in the apportionment of damages, including costs and
expenses of litigation. P.
312
U. S. 630.
It is especially fitting that equity exert its full strength in
order to protect from loss a State which has been injured by reason
of a suspension of enforcement of state laws imposed by equity
itself.
114 F.2d 1 reversed.
Certiorari, 311 U.S. 642, to review a decree which affirmed the
District Court's denial of a motion to assess damages and costs in
an injunction suit.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issues in this case revolve around the power of a federal
District Court to assess damages allegedly caused by a temporary
injunction issued by the court but later dissolved on final
hearing. These issues grow out of this situation: respondents in
this Court, seventy-six
Page 312 U. S. 623
individuals, partnerships, and corporations operating trucks as
common carriers in interstate commerce, filed a bill in the federal
District Court to enjoin petitioners here, Missouri officials and
agencies, from enforcing against them certain allegedly
unconstitutional tax and license features of the Missouri Bus and
Truck Law. [
Footnote 1] A
single district judge granted a temporary restraining order under
which respondents were required to post injunction bonds and under
which the contested fees were to be deposited with a trustee during
the litigation. But because the bill sought to restrain state
officials from enforcing an allegedly unconstitutional state
statute, the case was set down for hearing before a three judge
District Court pursuant to section 266 of the Judicial Code as
amended, 28 U.S.C. § 380. Petitioners, in their answer to
respondents' complaint, counterclaimed for fees and licenses the
respondents had failed to pay in the past, [
Footnote 2] and later amended the counterclaim to
include amounts the respondents failed to deposit with the trustee
during the litigation. Ultimately, the three-judge court found the
Bus and Truck Law constitutional,
23 F. Supp.
865, dissolved the restraining order, dismissed the truck
operators' bill, and also ordered the counterclaim dismissed
without prejudice because of "serious doubt as to the right of the
defendants
Page 312 U. S. 624
to maintain" such an action. The truck operators did not appeal
from the dismissal of their bill. Petitioners' attempt to bring the
dismissal of their counterclaim here by direct appeal was dismissed
for want of jurisdiction.
306 U. S. 204.
Thereupon, the petitioners, on their own behalf and "in behalf of
the Missouri and of the State Treasurer," filed in the three-judge
court a motion for assessment of damages and costs against the
truck operators and their injunction bond sureties. That court
denied the requested relief on the ground that the questions
presented by the motion for damages had been ruled upon and finally
determined by the judgment dismissing the original counterclaim.
The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, [
Footnote 3] but on a different ground. It held that the
motion to assess damages involved issues ancillary to the original
litigation, which would require a long and complicated inquiry;
that such litigation is not the type for which a three-judge court
is provided; that the three-judge court, however, did have
jurisdiction to consider the motion if it saw fit, or to remit it
to the single district judge, and that the action actually taken by
the three-judge court was final, since, under the circumstances,
that court had not abused its discretion. We granted certiorari,
311 U.S. 642, primarily because of the procedural importance of
determining the statutory function of a three-judge court in
dealing with questions such as those here presented. The case, as
presented to us, requires that we give consideration to these
questions:
1. Should the two additional judges, called to assist the
district judge pursuant to section 266, have participated in
consideration of the motion to assess damages?
2. Was the District Court correct in holding that its prior
denial of the counterclaim was a final adjudication
Page 312 U. S. 625
of the issues presented by petitioners' motion to assess
damages?
3. Were the enjoined Missouri officials and agencies, to whom
the injunction bonds ran, proper parties to invoke the court's
action for assessment of damages?
4. Did the District Court erroneously exercise its discretionary
power, by its refusal to hear and determine the merits of
petitioners' motion to assess damages?
First. We are of opinion that the two judges called in
under section 266 to assist the district judge in passing upon the
application for injunction should not have participated in
consideration of the motion to assess damages. The limited
statutory duties of the specially constituted three-judge District
Court had been fully performed before the motion for assessment of
damages was filed. For section 266 of the Judicial Code provides
for a hearing by three judges, instead of one district judge, only
in connection with adjudication of a very narrow type of
controversy -- applications for temporary and permanent injunctions
restraining state officials from enforcing state laws or orders
made pursuant thereto upon the ground that the state statutes are
repugnant to the federal Constitution. [
Footnote 4] The motion for damages raised questions not
within the statutory purpose for which the two additional judges
had been called. Those questions were therefore for the
consideration of the District Court in the exercise of its ordinary
jurisdiction, and the three-judge requirement of section 266 had no
application. [
Footnote 5]
Page 312 U. S. 626
But the fact that it was mistakenly assumed that the motion
should be passed upon by the district judge in association with the
two judges previously called did not, of itself, invalidate the
District Court's judgment dismissing the motion. Though that
judgment of dismissal was not appealable directly to this court
under section 266, even though participated in by three judges,
[
Footnote 6] it was reviewable
by the Circuit Court of Appeals, and since it has been so reviewed,
the issues presented are properly before us.
Second. The ground assigned by the District Court for
denying the motion to assess damages was that, by its previous
dismissal of petitioners' counterclaim, it had already ruled upon
and finally determined the questions raised by the motion. The
original counterclaim, however, was dismissed without a hearing on
the merits. No evidence was heard. It was dismissed, as the court
said at the time, because of "serious doubt as to the right of the
defendants to maintain such counterclaim," and, in the order of
dismissal, it was specified that the action taken was "without
prejudice to the right of the defendants . . . to maintain an
independent action or suit thereon." We need not here point out the
procedural reasons which might have caused the "serious doubt"
which prompted the court to dismiss the counterclaim. For. even
assuming that the court properly dismissed the counterclaim without
a hearing on the merits, it does not follow that its dismissal was
a final adjudication of either the procedural or the substantive
right of petitioners to invoke the court's jurisdiction by a motion
to assess damages. Some of the damages asserted in the
Page 312 U. S. 627
motion -- such as the costs of the litigation -- were not
asserted in the counterclaim, and such damages could not well have
been determined until after final adjudication of the issues which
caused the three-judge court to be invoked. The record shows that
action on the counterclaim was deferred pending full hearing on the
constitutionality of the Missouri statute under attack. This
postponement might well be attributed to a belief on the part of
the court that the questions raised by the counterclaim were
matters which could be better determined after final determination
of the issues presented by the original bill for injunction. The
judgment dismissing the motion for assessment of damages cannot be
supported upon the ground that the issues raised by it had been
adjudicated in the prior dismissal of the counterclaim.
Third. Respondents also seek to support the court's
judgment upon the ground that the enjoined state officials and
agencies are not the proper parties to invoke the court's action
for assessment of damages brought about by the injunction. This
claim cannot be sustained. The argument on which it rests is that
the State Treasurer, not the Public Service Commission, is given
statutory power to collect the fees that are in part the basis of
the motion to assess damages. But petitioners insist that the
Public Service Commission actually collects the fees under customs
and rules of longstanding, and urges that statutory authority
exists for such action by the Commission. But whoever has the
statutory authority to collect fees, it is not denied that the
Missouri Attorney General, one of the enjoined and petitioning
officials, is given exclusive authority to bring suit in the name
of and on behalf of the state. [
Footnote 7] And if,
Page 312 U. S. 628
upon a hearing, damages are shown to have been suffered within
the terms and conditions of the injunction bonds, the District
Court, sitting in equity, has ample power to see that whatever sums
are recovered go to the proper state officials. In addition to
this, respondents are in a poor position to argue that petitioners
are not proper parties, for one of the grounds upon which the
respondents claimed an injunction against these particular
petitioners was that it was they who were threatening to bring
actions against respondents to collect the very fees which are now
a part of the present motion for assessment of damages. At the
instance of the operators, these state officials were, for a period
of fifteen months, deprived of all opportunity to collect any fees
except those deposited with the trustees pursuant to the terms of
the restraining order. Petitioners' motion alleges that many
operators failed to comply with the conditions imposed by the
order, and that the state has been deprived of fees that it would
have collected but for the injunction. The respondents did not
bring their suit nor press their claim upon the assumption that
these officials could not and would not protect the interest of the
state. On the contrary, they acted upon a directly opposite
premise, and executed bonds running to the enjoined officials in
which they agreed to pay the damages suffered. It is obvious, and
was obvious from the beginning, that the main damages would be
suffered by the State of Missouri, and not by these petitioners as
individuals. It was to protect the state through its officials that
the bonds were required. In making this requirement, the court
acted in harmony with the governing principle
"that it is the duty of a court of equity granting injunctive
relief to do so upon conditions that will protect all -- including
the public, whose interests the injunction may affect."
Inland Steel Co. v. United States, 306 U.
S. 153,
306 U. S. 157.
Petitioners were proper parties to invoke the court's
Page 312 U. S. 629
protection of the state's interest, and we have no doubt but
that the court can mould any decree it renders so as to safeguard
the rights of all interested parties.
Fourth. There yet remains the basis upon which the
court below affirmed the District Court's refusal to assess damages
-- that the jurisdiction to exercise this power is discretionary,
and that refusal to exercise the power was not shown to be
erroneous. In considering this question, it is of no importance
that dealing with petitioners' motion for assessment of damages
would involve long and complicated hearings on issues inappropriate
for decision by a three-judge court. For, as we have pointed out,
the issues were appropriate for decision by the single judge of the
district. There can be no question of that judge's right to deal
with issues such as those here presented. Under long settled equity
practice, courts of chancery have discretionary power to assess
damages sustained by parties who have been injured because of an
injunctive restraint ultimately determined to have been improperly
granted.
Russell v. Farley, 105 U.
S. 433,
105 U. S. 444
et seq.; Pease v. Rathbun-Jones Engineering Co.,
243 U. S. 273,
243 U. S. 279.
This power is, as stated, discretionary; there are, of course,
cases where the Chancellor might properly conclude that parties
should be remitted to an action at law. But this is not one of
those cases. If petitioners had to bring actions at law, each of
the seventy-six respondents might have to be made a defendant in a
separate action. There is a controversy between the parties as to
whether or not all of these respondents could be sued or served in
the Missouri; to be compelled to sue some of them elsewhere would
work a hardship on the state. In addition to this, part of the
damages for which petitioners seek recovery is made up of various
items of cost and expense incurred in the litigation; if
petitioners succeed on the merits, there might conceivably be
serious problems raised by the
Page 312 U. S. 630
seventy-six respondents as to the portion of damages fairly
attributable to each -- a problem peculiarly appropriate to equity,
and preeminently adapted to settlement by a single court. Here,
respondents joined themselves together in order jointly to restrain
petitioners; they executed joint bonds, and they invoked the action
of equity which has traditionally exerted its power not merely to
assess damages caused by improvident injunctions, but also to
prevent the harmful consequences of an unnecessary multiplicity of
causes of action. The circumstances of this case call so strongly
for an assessment by equity that we think the court erred in
dismissing the motion for assessment of damages. And it is
especially fitting that equity exert its full strength in order to
protect from loss a state which has been injured by reason of a
suspension of enforcement of state laws imposed by equity itself.
[
Footnote 8] The judgment of
the court below is reversed, and the cause is remanded for
proceedings before a single district judge in conformity with this
opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
Mo.Rev.Stats. (1929) § 5272, as amended by Mo.Laws (1931)
p. 311, Mo.St.Ann. § 5272, p. 6689. The Missouri officials
were the Attorney General, the Superintendent of the State Highway
Patrol, the State Highway Commission, and the Public Service
Commission. The ground of attack on the statute was that it
violated the federal Constitution and the federal Motor Carrier Act
of 1935, 49 Stat. 543, 49 U.S.C. §§ 301-327 (Supp.
1939).
[
Footnote 2]
Respondents denied "each and every allegation, statement and
thing" contained in the counterclaim. Later they contended that it
was the understanding of the parties that, should the counterclaim
become material, then this pleading could be withdrawn and "an
opportunity to plead fully" to the counterclaim be exercised.
Petitioners denied that there was any such understanding.
[
Footnote 3]
114 F.2d 1.
[
Footnote 4]
See Phillips v. United States, 312 U.
S. 246;
Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. v. Oklahoma
Packing Co., 292 U. S. 386;
Ex parte Public National Bank, 278 U.
S. 101,
278 U. S.
104.
[
Footnote 5]
A District Court composed of three judges under section 266, of
course, has jurisdiction to determine every question involved in
the litigation pertaining to the prayer for an injunction, in order
that a single lawsuit may afford final and authoritative decision
of the controversy between the parties.
Railroad Commission v.
Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 302 U.
S. 388,
302 U. S. 391;
Sterling v. Constantin, 287 U. S. 378,
287 U. S.
393-394.
[
Footnote 6]
See, e.g., Public Service Commission v. Columbia Terminals
Co., 309 U.S. 620;
Public Service Commission v. Brashear
Freight Lines, 306 U. S. 204,
306 U. S. 207.
Cf. Eichholz v. Public Service Commission, 306 U.
S. 268.
[
Footnote 7]
Mo.Rev.Stats. (1929) § 11276, Mo.Rev.Stats. (1939) §
12901, Mo.St.Ann. § 11276, p. 586.
[
Footnote 8]
Cf. United States v. Morgan, 307 U.
S. 183,
307 U. S. 197;
Inland Steel Co. v. United States, 306 U.
S. 153,
306 U. S. 158;
Arkadelphia Milling Co. v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry.,
249 U. S. 134,
249 U. S.
145-146.