When we granted leave to file these consolidated mandamus proceedings, the issue presented was whether the court of appeals abused its discretion by ordering the trial *947 court to set aside a permanent injunction granted while an interlocutory appeal of the prior temporary injunction was pending. Subsequent events, however, have rendered these causes moot. We therefore dismiss them, but in so doing, disapprove the action of the court of appeals.
Relators petitioned the trial court for temporary and permanent injunctive relief prohibiting the Public Utilities Commission from continuing rate proceedings involving Gulf States Utilities Co.’s construction of a nuclear power plant. The trial court granted a temporary injunction, and Gulf States and the PUC appealed. While this interlocutory appeal was still pending, the trial court granted a permanent injunction, and to make that judgment final, severed it from the remainder of the case. On motions by the PUC and Gulf States, the court of appeals issued a per curiam order directing the trial court to set aside the permanent injunction and order of severance on the ground that these orders interfered with the appellate court’s jurisdiction over the interlocutory appeal from the temporary injunction.
The parties then perfected their appeal from the permanent injunction. The court of appeals issued an opinion in the interlocutory appeal, dissolving the temporary injunction.
Both the PUC and Gulf States have filed motions to dismiss these mandamus proceedings as moot. Relators oppose these motions, arguing that if these proceedings are dismissed, the stay of the court of appeals’ order would necessarily be vacated.' Relators fear that the court of appeals’ order would regain effect, requiring the trial court to set aside the permanent injunction and creating a jurisdictional cloud over their appeal'from that final judgment. We conclude that relators’ concerns are unfounded. Now that the court of appeals has considered the appeal from the permanent injunction, its prior order directing the trial court to set aside that judgment can no longer have effect. We conclude that these proceedings are indeed moot.
Therefore, a majority of the Court dismisses these mandamus causes and vacates our stay of the court of appeals’ order. In so doing, however, we specifically disapprove the action of the court of appeals in ordering the trial court to set aside the permanent injunction. Trial courts are to be encouraged to proceed expeditiously from the granting or denying of temporary injunctive relief to full consideration of the merits so' as to reduce the necessity for interlocutory appeals. For a court of appeals to stay proceedings in the trial court while it considers an interlocutory appeal increases delay and expense and should not be done absent compelling circumstances, circumstances lacking in this case.
