76 Tenn. 465 | Tenn. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
The motion made in this case, is to discharge the supersedeas. granted by one of the judges of this court in vacation, under the Code, 3933, and for this purpose we are asked to look into the proceedings of the court below, and pass upon the propriety of the order. The motion, and the argument in support thereof, raise the question whether the court can revise the action of one of its judges, under the statute, and to what extent.
These provisions clearly do not contemplate the bringing, up to this court by the supersedeas of the cause in which the order was made, or any part of it, for immediate revision. And it has, consequently, been held that the writ will not operate as an appeal or writ of error: McMinnville & Manchester Railroad Co. v. Huggins, 7 Cold., 217. The object of these provisions was to enable the court, or one of its judges, to stay the execution of an order or decree of the •chancery court which, in advance of the final hearing, undertakes to deprive the litigant' of money or property. And the reason of the legislation was, that under our system of jurisprudence, an appeal lies of right from every final decree, and that the remedy would be of no avail if the court undertook to do by interlocutory order what ought only to be done by the final • decree. The orders and decrees intended to be embraced in the statute were only such as are of a nature to be actively enforced against the rights of property of the litigant, not those intended to impound or protect. Upon an application for the writ, the
The bilj. in this case was filed to close up a partnership in a race mare. The mare was to be trained by the defendant at certain wages, and, when trained, sold, and the profits divided. The order of sale may deprive the defendant of his property before the animal is trained so as to ensure the expected profits. The order may not' be erroneous; and yet it certainly accomplishes in advance all the purposes of the final decree. It clearly falls within the statute.'
Motion disallowed.