Development Co. v. Brannan

2 Citing cases

  1. Huber v. Delong

    91 P.2d 53 (Wyo. 1939)   Cited 3 times

    Sec. 89-3901 R.S. Plaintiff cannot obtain possession by injunction in order to maintain an action to quiet title. Alaska Co. v. Brennen, 40 Wyo. 106. Plaintiff cannot recover on the weakness of his adversary's title. Davis v. Baptist Convention, 45 Wyo. 148. A deed to a person by an assumed name is valid. 18 C.J. 176, 430. Bank v. Plank (Wis.) 124 N.W. 1000. Bank v. Co. (Wash.

  2. Miller v. Scoggin

    189 P.2d 693 (Wyo. 1948)   Cited 3 times
    In Miller v. Scoggin, 64 Wyo. 248, 189 P.2d 693 (1948), Scoggin claimed his threatened use of a rifle to prevent the movement of running machinery onto a claim was only a bluff.

    It is not necessary that the writ of injunction itself should deny possession to one of the contending parties and give it to another. If the writ, no matter how worded, has that effect and upon the trial such effect is shown, then the writ should not have issued. Casper Wyoming Theatres Co., et al. v. Rex Inv. Co., 37 Wyo. 357; Alaska Development Co. v. Brannan, 40 Wyo. 106. Only damages which follow naturally and proximately from the actions themselves are recoverable. Damages created without necessity, where there is ample law to determine the question without the damages being created, cannot be recovered.