146 Ind. 673 | Ind. | 1897
The appellee sued the appellant to enjoin it from doing certain acts and asking a temporary restraining order until the final hearing. The trial court granted a temporary restraining order until the
The motion to dissolve was overruled, and from this interlocutory order this appeal is prosecuted. Burns’ R. S. 1894, section 658 (R. S. 1881, 646).
The errors assigned call in question the sufficiency of the facts stated in the complaint to constitute a cause of action for an injunction, or warrant relief by way of injunction, and the action of the circuit court in overruling appellant’s motion to dissolve the restraining order, in granting the injunction upon the evidence and in overruling appellant’s motion to modify the judgment. We presume counsel mean to say, overruling appellant’s motion to modify the restraining order, as there was no judgment, and their motion to modify was not to modify the judgment, but to modify the restraining order.
The substance of the complaint is, that the plaintiff, the Globe Tissue Paper Company, is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Indiana, engaged in the manufacture of paper by water power, and has been so engaged for many years prior to May 29, 1891; that on sáid day, the St. Joseph Hydraulic Company, a corporation, was the owner of an undivided third of the water power of the St. Joseph river, furnished and produced by reason of a dam constructed across said river in the city of Elkhart by the Elkhart Hydraulic Company some years prior thereto, which water so owned by said St. Joseph Hydraulic Company was to be and has been used on the north side of the St. Joseph river by means of a raceway, owned by said St. Joseph Hydraulic Company on the north side of the St. Joseph river, which connects with the water of the St. Joseph river above said dam
Prayer for a temporary restraining order, restraining defendant from using any of said water power, excepting such surplus water in said head-race as may be therein contained hereafter over and above the amount of power so contracted for by plaintiff, to-wit, 9,927 cubic feet of water per minute, and on the final hearing that the injunction be made perpetual during the remainder of the time plaintiff’s contract is to run. The temporary restraining order was issued in accordance with the prayer.
The objections urged against this complaint are general, and amount to a contention that it fails to show an equitable right or a clear right to the water; that the injury is not permanent but temporary; that the injury done and threatened is not irreparable, etc.
On appeal from an interlocutory order overruling a motion to dissolve an injunction, as here, where one of the points made for reversal was the alleged insufficiency of the complaint, this court, borrowing from an approved author, said: “It is not, however, necessary that a case should be made out which would entitle the plaintiff to relief, at all events at the hearing. It is enough if the court finds upon the pleadings and the evidence a case which makes the transaction a proper subject for investigation in a court of equity. The question for the court upon the interlocutory application is not the final merits of the case. When the case comes on to be heard, the final merits may be very different. But this consideration will not prevent the court from breaking in upon the proceedings at law, where from the merits to be gathered from the pleadings and conflicting affidavits there appears on the whole a case proper for the investigation of the court, and a fair question to be reserved till the hearing.” Kerr Inj., p. 14; Spicer v. Hoop, 51 Ind. 365, at pp. 371, 372.
The only evidence was by way of affidavits read on both sides. The affidavits in support of the application fully support the complaint and warranted a temporary injunction. In such a case we can no more determine the weight of conflicting affidavits than we can settle conflicts in the evidence on appeal from a final judgment. Spicer v. Hoop, supra; Schnurr v. Stults, 119 Ind. 429; Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Hendricks, 128 Ind. 462.
The defendant’s affidavits tended to prove some of the allegations in the second paragraph of its answer,
The affidavits were conflicting on all these points, but the affidavits on behalf of the plaintiff concede that the plaintiff does waste some water, but not as much as the affidavits on the other side show, and no more than is ordinary in such cases.
On this point appellant’s counsel plant themselves in a vigorous contention that there being no conflict on the point that there is a needless waste of water by appellee, that there ought to be a reversal.
But it is impossible to see how it should make any difference in the legal rights of the appellant if the appellee saw fit to waste all the water it had purchased. It is not contended that it at any time took more than 9,927 cubic feet per minute. This it had purchased and paid for, and it had a right to use it or waste it just as it chose. If the appellant desired to get the use of the part thereof not needed by appellee, it ought in good conscience to get the consent of the owner, and if that consent could not be got without paying for it, that was its plain duty. What we have already said disposes of the motion to modify the. temporary restraining order.
But we may suggest a serious question. presented
Finding no available error in the record, the temporary restraining order is affirmed.