79 F. 385 | 1st Cir. | 1897
This is an appeal from an interlocutory order or decree granting a preliminary injunction. The appellant files the following motion: ■'
“Now comes the original defendant in the above cause, the appellant before this court, and mores that the appeal taken by him from the interlocutory order or decree of the circuit court, granting a preliminary injunction, be dismissed, without prejudice to any proceedings in the circuit court, or to the right of the defendant to take any subsequent appeal, and without prejudice to the questions which may be raised by such subsequent appeal if lawfully taken, but with costs of the appeal to the appellee.”
The appellee dot's not object to the dismissal of the appeal, but it does object lo the qualifying expressions asked for.
.An appellant cannot as of right dismiss his own appeal. U. S. v. Minnesota & N. W. R. Co., 18 How. 241, 242. That ordinarily, on a dismissal on his own motion, the appellant is not entitled to an order expressed without prejudice, follows from what is said in the case cited, at page 242, that usually the court will not allow such a dismissal if the appellant intends at some future time to bring another appeal. How very cautious the supreme court usually is to shut out presumptions of any qualification in connection with such orders appears from U. S. v. Griffith, 141 U. S. 212, 11 Sup. Ct. 1005.
Where, after a hearing, a cause is disposed of by the court on appeal, for some reason not touching the merits, it is now well settled that the judgment should usually show that it is without prejudice. So, on his own motion to dismiss, an appellant may