Following our decision in Arkansas Bar Association v. Block,
The appellants, Sam Block, et al, have appealed and raise but one point, which is aptly stated in their brief as follows:
“There is but one question involved in this appeal and that is solely a question of law. Whether the Chancery Court properly should modify its decree of injunction is not now presented, and, indeed, should not be considered, since the petitioners have had no opportunity to present their reasons to the Court for the modification or for the change of circumstance which would warrant the modification. The sole question is whether the Chancery Court has the power to modify the injunction once it has been entered.”
The appellees, while admitting that in ordinary cases an injunction may be revoked or modified, take the position that since the injunction here was entered on a mandate of this Court, any modification thereof would not be in conformity to the mandate and that therefore the trial court was without jurisdiction. The fact that the injunction was issued on a mandate of this Court goes only to the question of whether the trial court properly should modify the decree and not to its jurisdiction.
In Stane v. Mettetal,
Reversed and remanded for trial on the merits.
