56 Fla. 756 | Fla. | 1908
On the 16th day of April, 1908, the appellant filed its bill in chancery, in the Circuit Court for Dade County, against the appellees. A temporary injunction or restraining order was obtained from a Court Commissioner, without notice to the defendants, by the complainant against the defendants restraining the further prosecution of a certain action which had been instituted in the County Judge’s court for Dade County by J. W. Acton, manager of the Delray Canning Company, against the complainant, “seeking to remove the complainant, the Builders’ Supply Company, from a certain building,” which is described, and further restraining all the 'defendants “from molesting the complainant in any manner, by legal proceedings or otherwise, in the peaceful and quiet possession of the premises in question until the hearing of the cause or the further order of the court,” The defendants, J. W. Acton and J. W. Acton, manager of the Delray Canning Company, filed a motion to dissolve such temporary injunction upon various grounds, two of which were to the effect that, the bill was wanting in equity and that it showed upon its face the complainant had a full and complete remedy at law. After a hearing of the cause upon such motion and argument by the respective counsel, the Circuit Judge made an order dissolving the temporary injunction. From this interlocutory order the complainant entered an appeal to this court, and the sole point presented to us for determination is whether or not the court erred in making such order.
As to the principles of law governing the granting of temporary injunctions or restraining orders, especially where no notice has been given to the defendants of the time and place of the application therefor, see Godwin v Phifer, 51 Fla. 441, 41 South. Rep. 597, and author
Turning to the bill, we find that the allegations therein which form the basis' for the' relief sought, in brief, are that, upon the first day of March, 1907, a verbal lease was entered into between J. W. Acton, manager of the D.elray Canning Company, and the E. O. Painter Fertilizer Company, whereby the said Acton leased to the Painter Fertilizer Company the premises in question, that in taking such lease the Painter Fertilizer Company was acting for and on behalf of complainant, which
As has been enunciated by this court in several decisions, as a reference to the authorities already cited will show, it is incumbent upon a complainant to allege in his bill every fact, clearly and definitely, that is necessary to entitle him to relief; and if he omits essential facts therefrom, or states such facts therein as show that he is not entitled to relief in a court of equity, he must suffer the consequences of his so doing. This principle applies to all bills in equity, but is especially applicable to bill seeking an injunction, the rule being that the title or interest of the complainant and the facts upon which he predicates his prayer for such relief must be stated positively, with clearness and certainty. The bill must state facts and not opinions or legal conclusions. So far as the question of fraud is concerned, courts of law have jurisdiction as well as courts of equity, and it does, not appear from the bill that the fraud was of such a complex or peculiar nature as to reqiiire the interposition of a court of equity. As to the matter of discovery, it is not made to appear that any attempt was made by complainant to secure the personal presence of Painter as a witness at the trial, or, failing in securing his attendance, that his deposition could not have been taken. Upon a proper and sufficient showing, the County Judge doubtless would 'have granted a postponement or continuance in order that the testimony of such absent witness might be obtained. Looked at from whatever view-point, we fail to see the equities in the bill entitling the complainant to a temporary injunction, and consequently are of the
Certain answers of the defendants are copied in the transcript, but, as they were filed after the making of the order from which the appeal was taken and were not before the court at the time of the making of such order, they are not properly before us for consideration.
Order affirmed.