Original application by appellees to have appellants and their attorney cited for contempt for violating terms of temporary injunction issued by the district court, from which this appeal is taken.
The only question in the case is whether a judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, dissolving a temporary injunction of the trial court, operates instanter.
The issues involved in the appeal are fully set out in the two opinions of this court delivered on June 2, and July 2, 1926. See
The purpose of a temporary injunction is to preserve the status quo or some right of a party litigant pending a final determination of the matter in suit upon its merits So-long as the jurisdiction of the trial court attaches, the orders of that court, granting, refusing, modifying, or dissolving a temporary injunction, are effective from the time of their entry.
Article 4662, R. S. 1925 (Gammel’s Ed. p. 1278), authorizes an appeal from an order granting or refusing a temporary injunction, or granting or overruling a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction, and provides:
“Such appeal shall not have the effect to suspend the order appealed from unless it shall be so' ordered by the court or judge who enters the order.”
When such appeal is perfected, the jurisdiction of the trial court determines and that of tlie appellate court attaches. No further orders in the matter can be made by the trial court pending the appeal. Boynton v. Brown (Tex. Civ. App.)
It would seem necessarily to follow from this holding that the orders of the appellate court, affecting the injunctive relief granted or denied by the trial court, should be effective immediately. The very nature of the relief sought or obtained would seem to impel this conclusion. The relief being merely temporary and to preserve the status quo or rights of a party litigant pendente lite, there ought to repose i-n some tribunal the continuing power oyer the subject-matter. Since the appeal divests the trial court of all jurisdiction in the matter, and transfers that jurisdiction to the appellate court, the latter, in order to make the relief effective, should have the same power as the trial court originally had, and its orders, and decrees should have the same effect. We have been cited to no case in which the exact question has been determined. But we are clearly of the view that the conclusion we have announced necessarily follows from the holding in Boynton v. Brown, above.
The order heretofore made in vacation will be entered in the minutes.
