79 S.W. 4 | Tex. | 1904
The local option law prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors having been put in force by an election in Grayson County, the plaintiff in error, a corporation domiciled in that county and engaged in selling drugs by wholesale, instituted this proceeding to enjoin the defendant in error, the county attorney, from prosecuting its salesmen for sales of alcohol as a drug to retail druggists in the ordinary course of plaintiff's business. No sale had been made and no prosecution had been begun, but the defendant had notified the plaintiff that such sales of alcohol as plaintiff purposed to make were, in his opinion, inhibited by the law, and that defendant would institute prosecutions for all such sales as might be made. The plaintiff alleged these facts in its petition and claimed, in substance, that this was an unlawful interference with its business which would deter its agents from selling its alcohol and would impair its business and the value of its stock of alcohol on hand, and thereby inflict irreparable injury upon it; or, if it proceeded to make such sales, would involve its agents in many prosecutions. It claimed that such sales of alcohol to retail druggists for use as a drug and not as a drink would not be a violation of the law. *380
The district judge refused the injunction, the ground of his decision not appearing from the record. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed this judgment on the ground that such sales of alcohol as plaintiff claimed the right to make were prohibited by the law, pretermitting any decision of the question whether or not, if plaintiff were right on this point, the case made entitled it to an injunction to prevent the threatened prosecutions. This latter question must be decided before the other is reached, for the reason that, until a proper case is presented calling for the exercise of equity jurisdiction to grant an injunction, a court of equity has nothing to do with such questions as that decided by the Court of Civil Appeals. We are of the opinion that such a case was not made by the petition and the Court of Civil Appeals should have so held, leaving to the proper tribunals invested with jurisdiction to try criminal prosecutions the question whether or not sales of the character in question would constitute violations of the law. The course purposed by the respondent was merely to institute, before the courts established by law to try such issues, legal proceedings in which the question whether or not the acts charged constituted violations of an existing and valid law was properly determinable. The plaintiff does not claim that the law is void or not properly in force in Grayson County; but, conceding that it is in full force, plaintiff seeks to put in issue the guilt or innocence of its agents in making particular sales. Courts of equity are not organized to try such questions, and therefore generally refuse to enjoin criminal prosecutions. That this is the general rule is established by a multitude of authorities. There are some exceptional cases in which the writ has been used to restrain invasions of civil and property rights under guise of penal proceedings, but none found by us furnishing a precedent for granting the relief here sought. They are generally cases in which municipalities, by void ordinances or regulations, have invaded franchises or rights of property of corporations or individuals, and have sought to enforce such ordinances or regulations by penalties. In these cases the injunction was directed against the municipality itself or those of its officers by whom its authority was represented, and the perpetuation of it at once established the invalidity of such authority and protected the property right. Even in this class of cases the jurisdiction is not always admitted. City of Austin v. Austin Cemetery Assn.,
Again, an injunction like that prayed for would be little more than an instruction from the court to the officer defining the sales which are to be allowed, and it would always be open to him to prosecute for sales not within the terms of the definition, or which, if ostensibly within them, were really evasions of the law. Now, the law itself gives the definition of the offenses which it intends shall be punished and prescribes the courts in which and the procedure through which it is to be applied and the guilt or the innocence of persons prosecuted under it is to be determined. In our opinion it would be little short of usurpation for a court of equity to take hold of the officers and substitute, in advance, for the definitions of the law, its own, and enforce by the writ of injunction conformity to the rule prescribed. Especially is this true where the final construction of the penal laws is intrusted to the Court of Criminal Appeals and not to the courts administering civil remedies.
The case of Davis v. American Society, etc.,
After holding that Bergh had authority to make the arrests the court say:
"Hence it can not be disputed that Bergh was acting under a valid law and regular authority, and that he had the right to make the threatened arrests, if the plaintiffs were actually engaged in violating the law to prevent cruelty to animals. The only question for contestation was whether, as matter of fact, they were guilty or innocent of such violation; and the determination of that question could not, by such an action as this, be drawn to a court of equity. Whether a person accused of a crime be guilty or innocent is to be determined in a common law court by a jury; and the people, as well as the accused, have the right to have it thus determined. If this action could be maintained in this case then it could in every case of a person accused of a crime, where the same serious consequences would follow an arrest; and the trial of offenders, in the constitutional mode prescribed by law, could forever be prohibited. A person threatened with arrest for keeping a bawdy house, or for violating the excise laws, or even for the crime of murder, upon the allegation of his innocence of the crime charged and of the irreparable mischief which would follow his arrest, could always draw the question of his guilt or innocence from trial in the proper forum. An innocent person, upon an accusation of crime, may be arrested and ruined in his character and property, and the damage he thus sustains is damnum absque injuria, unless the case is such that he can maintain an action for malicious prosecution or false imprisonment. He is exposed to the risks of such damage by being a member of an organized society and his compensation for such risks may be found in the general welfare which society is organized to promote.
"This action is absolutely without sanction in precedents or principles of equity." Further on the opinion has to say: "The case nearest in point for the plaintiffs is that of Wood v. City of Brooklyn, 14 Barb., 425. It is but a special term decision, and yet it is by an able judge; and I will refer to it only to point out more clearly a distinction which *383 I make. There an injunction was granted to prevent the enforcement of a void ordinance of the city of Brooklyn. Without determining whether that case was properly decided, it is widely different from this. If here, the law under which Bergh was acting had been wholly void, or if he had been wholly without authority to act under the law, then this case would have been analogous to that. But that case would have been widely different, and certainly have required a different determination, if the ordinance had been valid, and the sole question had been whether or not the plaintiff was guilty of its violation. It is therefore unnecessary to determine, in this case, whether the plaintiffs were, as matter of fact, guilty of violating the law."
The case before us does not, perhaps, depend so distinctly as that upon a question of fact, but most of the reasoning of the opinion, which we regard as sound, is applicable. The plaintiff seeks to have the court declare, in advance, as matter of law, that sales made under given circumstances would be lawful, but the courts appointed to try alleged violations of law are as competent to decide this question as the questions of fact which would be involved, and to them is confided by law the function of deciding both. Any decision which this court might make, as we have pointed out, would necessarily be inconclusive; and this alone shows the impropriety of employing the writ of injunction for such a purpose. It follows that the judgment of the District Court, refusing the injunction, should be affirmed without a decision of plaintiff's contention as to its right to make the sales.
Affirmed.
Justice Brown not sitting.