45 So. 876 | Miss. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the court.
Grant filed a bill in the chancery court of Lauderdale county, alleging that a certain street, called “ B street,” had been dedicated to the public use as a street; that a certain portion of B street embraced between Eleventh and Seventeenth avenues had been obstructed by the appellants by placing therein box cars, platforms, etc., thereby making it impossible for the public to use said street. On the allegations of this bill an injunction was prayed for and granted, restraining the appellants from further obstructing said street until a final hearing of the case. The appellants answered the bill. After the granting of the injunction, according to the allegations of 'a cross-bill filed by appellants, Grant went with force and arms and removed the obstructions from B street, etc. Thereupon the appellants filed what they call a “ cross-bill.” This cross-bill recited the history of what had been done in the case and the alleged conduct
That very familiar section is in these words: “ An appeal may be granted by the chancellor in term time, or in vacation, from any interlocutory order or decree whereby money is required to be paid, or the possession of property changed, or when he may think proper, in order to settle the principles of the cause, or to avoid expense or delay; but such appeal shall be applied for within ten days after the date of the order or decree complained of; and bond shall be given and approved as in appeals from a decree overruling a demurrer and the chancellor shall determine whether the appeal shall operate as a su
We desire to take advantage of this occasion to make some observations for the benefit of all the chancellors in the state — not the learned chancellor who granted this appeal, alone — with respect to the great abuse of this section 35 of the Code of 1906. There has grown up a most vicious practice of granting appeals whenever any party losing on demurrer asks the court to allow an appeal for the purpose, as is always said, of settling the principles of the cause. It was never the purpose of this section that the chancellors, out of mere courtesy or complaisance, should grant appeals merely because they were asked for, or insisted upon, by litigants losing on demurrers. Wherever there are difficult causes to be tried, and there are important principles, never before settled in this state, and necessary in particular causes to be settled for the guidance of the chancery court in the proper determination of the cause, there the chancellor should grant an appeal; but, where the principles involved in the determination of the cause have already been
What we have said, of course, is not in the slightest degree intended as criticism of any chancellor in this state. We can well imagine how they are besieged by litigants who wish to appeal, and how much easier it is to be obliging and com
The motion to dismiss this appeal is sustained, and the appeal hereby dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.