184 Ga. 588 | Ga. | 1937
W. P. Montgomery filed a petition against W. J. Cannon, praying that the defendant be temporarily and permanently “enjoined from remaining on said property or in the house located thereon.” The plaintiff alleged that he was the owner of certain described lands lying along and west of the Ocmulgee Biver in Bibb County and particularly in the river swamp, which lands embraced what is known as the “brickyard lakes;” that there is located on said lands a brick dwelling-house; that on December 15, 1936, the defendant, although he had no legal right upon the premises, and without any just claim or right, broke open the door thereto and entered the same; that immediately thereafter the plaintiff requested the defendant to vacate the premises and to leave his land, which defendant re
On interlocutory hearing the following appeared from the evidence: The Georgia Rural Rehabilitation Corporation, one of the United States governmental bureaus, purchased certain farm lands or acreage in Bibb County, approximating 400 acres, and
A suit can not be maintained against the State without its statutory consent. This general rule can not be evaded by making an action nominally one against the servants or agents of a State, when the real claim is against the State itself and it is the party vitally interested. Therefore, generally, where a suit is brought against an officer or agency of the State with relation to some matter in which the defendant represents the State in action and liability, and the State, while not a party to the record, is the real party against which relief is sought, so that a judgment for plaintiff, although nominally against the named defendant as an individual or entity distinct from the State, will operate to control the action of the State or subject it to liability, the suit is in effect one against the State. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. W. & A. R. Co., 142 Ga. 532 (83 S. E. 135); Peeples v. Byrd, 98 Ga. 688 (25 S. E. 677); Printup v. Cherokee R. Co., 45 Ga. 365; Georgia Military Institute v. Simpson, 31 Ga. 273; Fowler v. Rome Dispensary, 5 Ga. App. 36 (62 S. E. 660). “If, however, the sole relief sought is relief against the State officers, it is maintainable. Such it is if it seeks compensation for a past wrong, recovery of possession of property wrongfully withheld, constituting a present wrong, or an injunction against a threatened wrong such as equity will enjoin.” L. & N. R. Co. v. Bosworth, 209 Fed. 380, 401. A suit may be maintained against officers or agents personally, because, while claiming to act officially, they have committed or they threaten to commit wrong or injury to the person or property of plaintiff, either without right and authority or contrary to the statute under which they purport to act. Although a defendant may assert that he acted officially and on behalf of the State, a suit of this class is not a suit against the State, whether it be brought to recover property wrongfully taken or held by defendant on behalf of the State. A suit against a
While the order granting the injunction in this case recites, that, “until the case is tried before a jury, the defendant is restrained and enjoined from interfering with the plaintiff’s use of said property, and from breaking the lock on said house or entering the same,” the evidence is that defendant was using and occupying a portion of this property and the house involved as an employee of the State Department of Game and Fish, in the capacity of a caretaker, who legally obtained possession thereof under a lease with plaintiff’s predecessor in title and subject to which plaintiff acquired his title, and that the plaintiff is claiming that the rights of the State Department have been lost and forfeited because of nonuser of the premises as a fish hatchery and recreation ground and abandonment thereof; whereas the State Department claims that it has neither abandoned said premises nor ceased its use thereof for the purposes for which it acquired the same, and that its rights have not been lost or forfeited by nonuser, and therefore the effect of the court’s order is to evict the defendant employee and through him the State Department of Game and Fish from property to which it asserts a claim and right of possession, and to declare said lease forfeited and void, and to deliver said premises to the plaintiff. “An injunction may only restrain; it may not compel a party to perform an act. It may restrain until performance.” Code, § 55-110. “An injunction dispossessing one party and admitting another to possession is equivalent to a mandatory injunction. Injunction is not available for the purpose of accomplishing an eviction, or to prevent interference .with realty by one already in possession.”
Judgment reversed.