70 Miss. 602 | Miss. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant exhibited his bill in chancery against Henry, Peter, Andrew aud John Hahmer. He avers that John Hahmer is the owner of a certain farm now occupied by ■complainant, and, on the twenty-sixth day of November, 1891, leased the same to one Helmont for the term of three years, beginning January 1, 1892, and delivered possession thereof to Helmont, who entered and occupied and held the same ■until November 14, 1892, when he assigned the remainder of his term to complainant, and put him in possession of the farm. That complainant continued in the quiet and peaceable possession of said farm until the-day of-, 1892, when, during his temporary absence, the defendants, Andrew and Peter Hahmer, forcibly entered upon the premises, and, by violence, broke into the residence then occupied by him, in which action they were advised and directed by the defendant, Henry Hahmer; that complainant, afterwards, and
The prayer for relief is that said lease-claim by Henry shall be 'canceled, and that an injunction may issue, prohibiting the said defendants, or either of them, from instituting other-criminal prosecutions against complainant, or from entering upon the premises without due process of law. An injunction was granted as prayed, and tlie defendants moved to dissolve the same upon the face of the bill. This motion was sustained, and the injunction dissolved, from which order-the complainant has been granted an appeal to this court by the chancellor, in order that the principles involved may be settled by this court.
From the statement of the cause, it is apparent that the defendants, Andrew a'nd Peter Dahmer, have, or claim, no sort of interest in the property iu controversy, and there is-no averment by which it appears that the defendant, John,
A somewhat extended examination of the approved text-writers and of judicial decisions has disclosed no suggestion among the writers that the jurisdiction invoked may be exercised by courts of equity, nor have we'found a decided case by which it is upheld, other than two cases decided by the judges of the district courts of the United States, sitting in equity upon the circuit, in which the jurisdiction of equity to enjoin criminal prosecutions has been pressed to great, and, as we think, unwarrantable, lengths. The cases to which we refer are Bottling Co. v. Welch, 42 Fed. Rep., 561, and Lottery Co. v. Fitzpatrick, 3 Woods, 222. In the first of these cases, prosecutions under a state law against unlawful retailing were enjoined, upon the ground that the complainant was engaged in interstate commerce; and, in the other, prosecution under a statute of Louisiana, forbidding the vending of lottery-tickets on the drawing of a lottery, on the ground that the state, by contract with the complainant, had granted to it the right to do the forbidden act. In neither ■case Avas there a pending suit involving property rights, but the hill in each Avas exhibited for the primary and original purpose of enjoining criminal prosecutions in the state court, and necessarily involved the poAver and jurisdiction of a court of equitj' to draAV to itself the investigation of the guilt or innocence of the complainant of the offense, which AAras or
We think no English case can be found of modern times, and no case in the United States, other than the two above noted, in which a court of equity has enjoined the prosecution of criminal proceedings. In Mayor v. Pilkington, 2 Atk., 302, the complainants had exhibited their bill in chancery to establish their sole right of fishery in the river Ouse. While the suit was peuding, they caused the agent of the defendant to be indicted in the .sessions at York, where there were judges, for breach of the peace in fishing in their liberty. On motion of the defendant, Lord Chancellor Hardwicke made an order restraining the plaintiff from proceeding at the sessions till the hearing of the cause. In Kerr v. Corporation of Preston, 6 Ch. Div., 467, Jessel, M. R., declared that, with the exception of Mayor v. Pilkington, there was no instance in which a court of equity had interfered in criminal cases, and that in Saull v. Browne, L. R., 10 Ch. App., 64, he had declined to follow that “doubtful decision,” and, on appeal, his decision was affirmed.
Where an officer of a court, acting under its direction, tore down some houses which were the subject of litigation, one of the parties to the suit was restrained from proceeding criminally against him. Turner v. Turner, 2 Eng. Law & Eq., 130. The vice-chancellor, Lord Cranworth, declared the distinction to be an obvious one, for, while1 the court had no jurisdiction over an indictment in general, as over a mere civil proceeding, yet, when a court made an order in a cause over which it had jurisdiction, its execution could not be made the ground of a criminal prosecution by one of the parties, for the officer would be punished by the court if he failed to comply therewith. Mayor v. Pilkington and Turner v. Turner are the only English cases with which we are acquainted in which the prosecution of criminal proceedings has been restrained, and, in each, the relief was granted by a mere order of the court, acting upon parties to a pend
The supreme court of the United States, In re Sawyer, 124 U. S., 200, reviewed the decisions in England and America, and declared that there was no jurisdiction in chancery to enjoin-prosecutions for crime, except in cases in which the order is made to restrain a party to a suit already pending before the-court, and to try the same right that is in issue there. Sawyer, who had been arrested for contempt of the injunction of a federal court, was discharged on habeas corpus, upon the-ground of an entire want of power in the court to grant the-injunction.
There are many cases to be found, proceeding upon an obvious and clear distinction, in which courts of equity have-enjoined acts affecting property rights, notwithstanding the fact that such acts might also be ground for indictment. To this class are to be assigned the cases of Emperor of Austria v. Day, 3 De Gex, F. & J., 217; Spinning Co. v. Riley, L. R., 6 Eq., 551. In the latter case the chancellor said: “ The truth, I apprehend, is that the court will interfere to prevent acts amounting to crime, if they do not stop at crime, but also go to the destruction or deterioration of the value of property.” To the same class belong numerous other decisions which rest upon the same principle, which is clear and easily distinguishable from that of enjoining the ordinary criminal prosecutions which affect the property rights more or less indirectly, and in which no jurisdiction can be taken in courts of equity. In the cases of Bottling Co. v. Welch, 42 Fed. Rep., 561, and Lottery Co. v. Fitzpatrick, authorities^ for the exercise of the jurisdiction in the one class were cited
There are a few eases in which the enforcement of void ¡municipal ordinances, the execution of which directly affected property rights, have been enjoined, and criminal prosecutions before the municipal authorities restrained. City of Atlanta v. Gate City Gas-light Co., 71 Ga., 106; Shinkle v. City of Covington, 83 Ky., 420. But, with the exception of Bottling Co. v. Welch and Lottery Co. v. Fitzpatrick, we have found no decisions of any court that a bill in equity may be exhibited for the single purpose of enjoining criminal prosecutions, and against these decisions stand the unbroken line •of decisions of all courts of authority.
Judgment affirmed.