144 Ga. 157 | Ga. | 1915
(After stating the facts.) The power of the superior court to prevent disobedience of its injunctions is an important one. A temporary restraining order granted, to remain of force until the hearing of the application for an interlocutory injunction, has all the force of an injunction until rescinded or modified by the court. Civil Code (1-910), § 5501. If the court has-jurisdiction of the person and subject-matter, and grants an injunction, the person enjoined can not justify a violation of it on the ground that it was erroneously or improvidently granted. A motion to have the injunction revoked or modified, or a writ of error (in a case where such writ may be had), is the remedy, if a party enjoined thinks that the injunctive order was erroneously granted. Russell v. Mohr-Weil Lumber Co., 102 Ga. 563 (29 S. E. 271). The circumstances, the nature of the order granted, and the good faith of the parties may be considered in connection with the penalty to be imposed, if there has been a violation of the injunctive order. Ibid. A defendant who is enjoined from doing a particular act can not with impunity evade the force of the injunction by permitting the act enjoined to be done by his agents, or in his presence with his acquiescence. Blood v. Martin, 21 Ga. 127.
Thus much is said that there may be no misapprehension as to the fact that a superior court has power to enforce its injunctive order, and that persons enjoined, whether private individuals or administrative officers, must in good faith obey such an injunction until it has been modified or reversed or has become inoperative. At the same time, attachment for contempt in violating such an order is a summary remedy which may affect the liberty of the citizen, and care should be taken in its use. It has been said that, in order to punish for a violation of an injunction, the order should clearly embrace the act complained of. German Savings Bank v. Habel, 58 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 336. In one ease a complainant, claiming to be in possession of certain premises, obtained- a preliminary injunction against the defendant, enjoining him from certain trespasses, and also from interfering with or meddling with the possession of or entering upon the premises. But in fact the defendant, not the plaintiff, was in possession, and upon the plain
Let us now consider what transpired in the ease before us. The petition alleged that the defendants were proceeding to levy a tax to build or “hull in” the court-house, and that it would be illegal to levy such a tax, for certain reasons. The prayer, so far as it affects the present case, was that “the board of commissioners [naming them] be enjoined from levying the tax herein mentioned.” The judge of the circuit passed an order requiring the defendants to show cause why the injunction should not be granted, and ordered “that in the meantime, and until the hearing, the defendants be and they are enjoined as prayed.” It will thus be seen that the restraining order, so far as material, was only to enjoin the commissioners from levying the tax mentioned. The petition for attachment alleged that the defendants had disregarded and
The word “levy” is not always used with the same meaning. As applied to taxes, it sometimes has been used as meaning to raise and exact by authority of government, or to determine by vote the amount of tax to be raised. In some cases the word has been used with reference to the ministerial or executive act of entering taxes on the books and collecting them. There is, however, a difference between the levying of a tax and its assessment or collection. In Emeric v. Alvarado, 64 Cal. 529 (2 Pae. 418), it was said that “levying a tax” usually means the fixing of the rate at which prop
The restraining order, as has been stated above, referred only to the levying of the tax. It did not expressly cover the giving of notice of the levy after it had been made, or the collection of the tax by the tax-collector. It did not appear that the defendants did any affirmative act in regard to the matter of a tax levy after notice of the restraining order. The facts are not like those in Blood v. Martin, 21 Ga. 127, supra, and similar cases, where the defendant was present when the act which had been enjoined was done, and made no effort to prevent it. The only complaint made here is that the newspaper published the notice after the defendants were served with the restraining order, and it does not appear that they made any effort to stop the publication. In their sworn answer they stated that they had made the levy and advertised it before receiving notice of the restraining order, and disclaimed any intention of violating or defying the order of the court. There was no evidence tending to show that they acted contumaciously, or with intention to violate the restraining order. They might well have understood that it was only intended to prevent them from passing the order levying the tax and placing it upon their minutes; and that when this was done before notice of the restraining order, they were not required to go to the newspaper office and withdraw the advertisement.
The order of the court adjudged the defendants to be in contempt, but directed that they and each of them might purge themselves of such contempt by discontinuing and withdrawing instanter the Special tax levy and the publication thereof in the Chatsworth Times, and paying the costs of the proceeding.. It was further ordered that, upon failure to comply with this order, each of the defendants should be confined in the common jail of Murray county until further order of the court. This order on its face seems to recognize the difference between the tax levy and the publication thereof in the newspaper. If the order levying the tax had been
Further, we see no evidence which authorized the holding of Sellers in contempt. He was not a commissioner, and had no authority to revoke the tax levy and withdraw the publication, if he had so desired. There is nothing to show that he advised the commissioners to violate the order of the court, or did anything tending to that end after knowledge of the restraining order. No question as to his fees is involved in the present proceeding. Hpon the whole, after careful consideration, we are constrained to think -that the trial court erred in the judgment which he rendered.
Two amendments were made to the petition for injunction after the restraining order was granted; but they do not affect the ruling above made.
The ease of Dunn v. Beck, ante, 148 (86 S. E. 385), arose under a former equitable petition to restrain the board of commissioners from erecting the court-house according to certain plans and specifications. The equitable petition under which this contempt proceeding arose was filed later.
Judgment reversed.