128 Ga. 447 | Ga. | 1907
(After stating the facts.)
■6. While the tenant had no right to remove the articles in question from the premises, could he be restrained from so doing by injunction, when it was not shown that removal would cause irreparable damages, or that he was insolvent? It should be noted that such removal would not constitute mere trespass, so as to make applicable section 4916 of the. Civil Code, which declares: “Equity will not interfere to restrain a trespass, unless the injury is ir-, reparable in damages, or the trespasser is insolvent, or there exist other circumstances which, in the discretion of the court, render the interposition of this writ necessary and proper, among which shall be the avoidance of circuity and multiplicity of actions.” The unauthorized removal of the articles by the tenant from the rented premises would be waste; the difference between waste and trespass being that waste is an injury to the estate by one who has not an .absolute or unqualified title, but who is rightfully in possession, while trespass is an injury to the estate, or the use thereof, by one who is a stranger to the title. 30 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 236. Failure to keep in view this distinction has sometimes led to confusion in the adjudication of cases. In Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence the learned author, in discussing injunctions to prevent torts, and after saying that “the inadequacy of the legal remedies is the criterion which determines the exercise of this preventive jurisdiction; and the criterion is enforced, especially by the American courts, with great strictness,” says: “The legal remedy is ordinarily considered as adequate in cases of torts to the person, and to property held by a legal title, and equity does- not interfere. There are, however, certain species of torts, in respect to each of which, as a class, it is settled that the legal remedy is generally inadequate, so that equity will generally interfere to prevent the wrong by injunction. There are other species of torts, in respect to each of which, as a class, the legal remedy is adequate, but may become inadequate, in individual instances, from their particular circumstances, so that in those instances an injunction will be granted. In the kind of torts for which the legal remedy is generally inadequate, so that an injunction is a proper remedy, the title of the injured party must be clear, the injury real, and not merely temporary or transient. They are waste, nuisance,” etc.
Upon the same subject of waste it is said, in Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, §693: “An injunction will issue to restrain a lessee from pulling down, damaging, or destroying, contrary to his covenant, any of the buildings, trees, bark, wood, underwood, hedges, or fences, or from sowing the farm with a pernicious crop, or removing from the farm any of the hay or straw, dung or manure, produced or made thereon, or to prevent a lessee from making such alterations in a dwelling-house, by changing it into a store or warehouse, as would produce permanent injury to the building. But the rule is not so rigid when applied to city leases/’ etc. This same author says (§691) : “A landlord need not wait until waste is actually committed; for if he ascertains that the tenant is about to commit an act which would operate as a permanent injury to the estate, the court will restrain him from doing such act. . . Where a tenant from year to year, having received notice to quit, was proceeding to take away the crops, manure, etc., .contrary to the usual course of husbandry, and to cut and damage the hedgerows, etc., the chancellor granted an injunction, observing that the principle applied equally to the case of a tenancy from year to year as to a lease for a longer term.” The particular case here referred to and cited is Onslow’s case, 16 -Yes. Jr. 173, decided by Lord Chancellor Eldon in 1809. In George’s Creek Co. v. Detwold, 1 Md. Ch. Dec. 371, the rule is announced that if
Upon an examination of our own cases where injunctions have been sought to prevent injuries to realty, it will be seen that as to such cases the old common-law distinction between waste and trespass still exists, and that injunctions have been held to be proper to stay waste, regardless of the question as to whether the damages would be irreparable, while as to cases involving mere trespass it has been otherwise. We shall presently show that so far as this court is concerned it stands committed to the view that an injunction will be granted to stay or prevent waste, whether the damage •threatened would be capable of adequate pecuniary compensation ■or not, and whether the party-sought to be enjoined is solvent or insolvent. But, before doing so, it may be well to consider how the distinction as to the use of injunctions in cases of waste and their use in cases of trespass probably arose. At common law there was no preventive process for threatened trespass, however .great and irreparable the damage threatened might be. The common law afforded no remedy until the trespass had been committed, when by an- action of trespass the owner of the realty might recover damages for the injury which he had sustained. But .as to waste it was otherwise. At a very early period, the common-law gave to the owner of the inheritance a remedy against waste by a tenant in dower, or by the courtesy, or a guardian in chivalry, and this remedy was a writ of prohibition, issuing out of chancery, ■directed to the sheriff and commanding him to prevent the waste from being committed; and in execution of this writ the sheriff
But however the jurisdiction of courts of equity to stay or prevent waste may have originated, whether from the writ of prohibition or the writ of estrepement, it is very clear that when they first began to exercise it, and for -a long time thereafter, they still recognized and rigidly adhered to the old distinction between waste and trespass, and hence would not enjoin threatened trespass by a mere stranger to the title. In the case of Twort v. Twort, 16 Ves. Jr. 128, decided in, 1809, Lord Eldon said: “I have had occasion to express my surprise, that this court did not formerly' enjoin in the case of trespass; where there was no intermediate protection; as against waste; and therefore more reason for interfering to prevent irremediable mischief: yet Lord Thurlow long refused an injunction against trespass; and where' a mine under one field, demised to the defendant, extended also under another field, belonging to the landlord, but not comprised in the lease, had great difficulty in granting the injunction except as to the former; in which there was privity of estate. It appeared to me that it should have gone to both; and, where the effect was irremediable mischief, I have ventured to' do it.” Within more recent years, the tendency of courts of equity, both 'in England and in this country, has been to break down the old distinction between waste and trespass. But this tendency has been toward greater liberality in the use of injunctions to prevent threatened trespass, instead of toward limiting or restricting their use in cases of threatened waste. Now the courts grant injunctions against trespass in all cases where the trespass would produce irreparable damages.
It has been said that the courts have adopted a uniform test, applicable to both classes of cases, making jurisdiction to grant
Our conclusion is that an injunction was - properly granted in the present case. We have, of. course, treated the case from the standpoint that the evidence was sufficient to establish the fact that the defendant placed all the fixtures upon the land while he was the owner thereof. There was practically no dispute as to • this, except as to the new sugar-cane boiler, which the defendant testified that he placed upon the premises after he became the ten
Judgment affirmed.