On August 24, 1929, Catlicart Van and Storage Company filed against the “City of Atlanta,” the “Borough of Atlanta,” and “Atlanta,” a petition alleging that it is engaged in the business of hauling’and moving for other persons household and kitchen furniture, wares, and merchandise; that it is not engaged in moving “persons;” that a large number of persons in the City of Atlanta change their places of abode on or about September 1st, and petitioner has at that time and for some time thereafter a large amount of hauling, which is required to be done
No express ruling appears to have been made upon a demurrer to the petition. The answer of the defendants denies the material allegations of the petition, and, with reference to the allegation that petitioner had been informed of the intention to enforce the provisions of the act, sets up the following: “The charter amendment will be enforced by the city, but, so far as these defendants are informed, it has no knowledge of any threats to arrest and inL
A court of equity should not exercise its extraordinary powers where there is no grave danger of impending injury. Bare fears of injury will not authorize such action. Elam v. Elam, 72 Ga. 162 (2), “Injunction is extraordinary process, and the most important one which courts of equity issue. It is well denominated ‘the strong arm of equity.’ The writ ‘is not an ex debito justitise for an injury threatened or done to the estate or rights of a person; but the granting [of] it must always rest in sound discretion, governed by the nature of the case.’ Enfield Toll Bridge Co. v. Conn. River Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
