22 F. Cas. 411 | S.D.N.Y. | 1843
On the 22d day of September, Jacob Tweedy moved the court to set aside the injunction issued in this case, and served on him on the 16th of August preceding. His motion was rested on the ground that an injunction was granted on the ex parte application of creditors, and without notice to him. The counsel contended that by the act of congress of March 2, 1793, an injunction cannot be granted in any case by the supreme or circuit court, or any judge of those courts, without previous reasonable notice to the adverse party or his attorney; and that the act of February 13, 1S07, in extending the power to the district judges, gave it also the same limitation. It would meet this branch of the argument with a sufficient answer to observe that the act of 1807 does not give the power to the district court, but constitutes the district judge an injunction master, as it were, in a certain class of cases, and in a qualified manner. When full equity powers are given to the court in bankruptcy by a sub sequent statute, the limitation or the exercise of these new powers is not necessarily to be understood as accompanying