17 Ind. 514 | Ind. | 1861
This was a suit for an injunction. The appellant was the plaintiff, and the appellees were the defendants.
The complaint alleges these facts: At the Spring term, 1856, one Gabriel!a Ilunnieutt recovered a judgment in said Court against Oassel, the plaintiff in this action, for one thous- and dollars, which judgment was rendered upon certain bonds filed by the plaintiff in the auditor’s office of Wayne county, under the provisions of an alleged act, entitled “An Act to regulate the retailing of spirituous liquors, and for the
The relief prayed is, that upon final hearing the sheriff be enjoined from selling or keeping possession of said property under the execution, and. that Seott, the clerk, be perpetually enjoined from issuing any other or further execution upon said judgment, &c., and that other relief be granted, &c.
Appended to the complaint, there is an affidavit of the plaintiff alleging the matters and things therein stated to be true, c%c. The record shows that the plaintiff, having given the notice and filed the undertaking prescribed by the statute, moved the Court for -a restraining order, in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, to operate during the pendency of the suit; that the defendants appeared in pursuance of the notice; but the Court overruled the motion, refused the order, and the plaintiff excepted, and thereupon the defendants demurred to the complaint, their demurrer was sustained, and the suit dismissed, &c. For a reversal, it is argued that the act of 1853, referred to in the complaint, is in conflict with the Constitution, and that the judgment on the bonds, having no foundation, save in that act, is a nullity. The first branch of the argument is correct. We have decided the act in question to be unconstitutional. Mershmeir v. The State, 11 Ind. 482. It does not, however, follow that the judgment is a nullity. It was founded upon the bonds, and not on the act, and of the suit upon them, the Circuit Court had full jurisdiction. The act being void, the bonds
Per Curiam. — The judgment is affirmed, with costs.