122 Tenn. 339 | Tenn. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the Court.
These consolidated causes were heard together in the chancery court of Hamilton county and in this court, and will he so determined.
Complainants in the first-styled cause are J. W. Kelly & Co., Wakeman Distilling Company, and Chattanooga Brewing Company, all corporations created and organized under the laws of Tennessee, having their domiciles and places of business in Chattanooga, Hamilton county, Tenn., where they owned and operated distilleries and a brewery, and were, previous to July 1, 1909, without question, lawfully engaged in the wholesaling of whiskies and beer.
Complainants brought their bill July 6, 1909, in the chancery court of Hamilton county, for the purpose of enjoining Matt N. Whittaker, as district attorney, and S. A. Conner, as sheriff, from instituting and prosecuting criminal actions against them for sales of whiskies and beer that they might make as wholesale dealers at their places of business in the city of Chattanooga, Hamilton county, Tenn., in violation of the provisions of an act of the general assembly of Tennessee, known as the “Sales Act” or “Four-Mile Law of 1909,” being chapter 1, p. 3, of the published Acts of Tennessee of 1909, because, as they insist, that statute, when properly construed, does not apply to and prohibit sales of whiskies and beer by wholesale, and, further, that the statute was not enacted in the form and ceremony prescribed by the constitution of Tennessee, and its provisions violate certain other provisions of the constitutions of Tennessee and of the United States.
The statute sought to be construed and attacked — the “Four-Mile Law of 1909,” or the “Sales Act” — was enacted January 20,1909, and is in these words, viz.:
“An act to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage near any school house, public or private,*346 where a school is kept, whether the school be in session or not.
“Section 1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of the State of Tennessee, that it shall not be lawful for any person to sell or tipple any intoxicating liquors, including wine, ale, and beer as a beverage, within four miles of any schoolhouse, public or private, where a school is kept, whether the school be then in session or not, in this State, and that anyone violating the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction, shall be punished by fine for each offense of not less than $50.00 nor more than $500.00, and imprisonment for a period of not less than thirty days nor more than six months.
“Sec. 2. Be it further enacted, that the grand juries shall have and exercise inquisitorial powers in respect to violations of this act, and it shall be the duty of the circuit and criminal judges of the State to give the same in charge to them.
“Sec. 3. Be it further enacted that all laws in conflict with this act be, and the same are hereby repealed.
“Sec. 4. Be it further enacted, that this act shall take effect from and after July 1st, 1909, the public welfare requiring it.”
Thereafter, February 4, 1909, the general assembly enacted another statute, known as the “Manufacturers Act” (Acts 1909, p. 21, c. 10) which prohibited the manufacture in this State, for the purpose of sale, of intoxicating liquors, including all vinous, spirituous, and
The general assembly of Tennessee had before this legislation, enacted several other statutes prohibiting sales of intoxicating beverages within four miles of schoolhouses, the exact provisions of which it is not necessary to here set forth.. The first of these statutes was enacted in 1877, being chapter 23, p. 37, of the Acts of 1877, and known as the “Four-Mile Law of 1877.” The next was enacted in 1887, being chapter 167, p. 293, of the published acts of that year, and known as the “Four-Mile Law of 1887.” This last act was amended from time to time, so that sales of intoxicating beverages were prohibited in practically every part of Tennessee, except the cities of Memphis, Nashville, Chattanooga, and La Follette. Whether sales by wholesale or only by retail were prohibited by this, legislation is not now necessary to be considered; these acts being only referred to that the objections made by complainants to the “Four-Mile Law of 1909” may be fully understood.
Complainant’s charge in their bills that the statute called in question (chapter 1, Acts 1909), when properly construed, does not prohibit sales made by wholesale dealers, but that, if otherwise construed, in its enactment and provisions, article 2, section 17, and article 1, section 8, of the constitution of Tennessee and the “due process clause” and “commerce clause” of the fed
Complainants, for the purpose of showing a case within the jurisdiction of a court of equity, and to enable them to present the constitutional objections made to the provisions of the statute, further charge:
That, when the Sales Act was enacted January 20, 1909, they were, and had been for many years previous thereto, engaged in the lawful manufacture and sale, as wholesale dealers, of whiskies and beer in the city of Chattanooga, where they had their distilleries and brewery, their warehouses and places of business, having customers in Tennessee and many other States of the Union, and one of them in Mexico and the Philippine Islands; that théir plants represented investments of many thousands of dollars, and their businesses were established, valuable, and profitable, all of which would be greatly depreciated in value, and rendered almost worthless, if they were prohibited from making sales of their whiskies and beer in Chattanooga.
That J. W. Kelly & Co. had on hands January 20, 1909, stored in its own warehouses and that of the United States, 7,500 barrels of whiskey, of the value of $700,000, and after deducting what it could sell by diligent efforts, about 1,500 barrels, and adding what it thereafter manufactured, it had in stock July 1, 1909, about 8,000 barrels; that the Wakeman Distilling Com
That the value of this property consisted in its sala-bility, and that, if complainants were prohibited from selling it, its value Avould be greatly depreciated and destroyed, and they Avould suffer irreparable loss and injury.
They further charge that there are numerous schoolhouses, where school is kept, in’Hamilton county, and all other counties of the State, so situated that there is scarcely any territory which is not within four miles thereof, unless it be in some small, sparsely settled portions of the State.
They further charge that the defendant M. N. Whit-taker, district attorney, has construed the Sales Act to prohibit all sales of intoxicating beverages, whether by wholesale or retail, in which construction the defendant S. A. Conner, sheriff, concurs, and that these officers have announced their intention to arrest and prosecute
They further charge:
“To do business, complainants must sell and make many sales of the liquors they have, and every sale will constitute an offense, if the said law be valid and forbid wholesale sales. The punishment imposed is both fine and imprisonment — a punishment extremely severe. To cease to sell will break up and destroy the business of complainants and cause their said valuable properties to become a loss on their hands. To sell will subject them to numerous prosecutions and expensive trials, which they aver and say they ought not to be subjected to, inasmuch as said act is void, and, if valid, does not forbid or make unlawful wholesale sales — the only kind of sales complainants propose to make; and
“Because of this situation complainants say that they are entitled, as law-abiding citizens of Tennessee, to invoke the injunctive powers of this court for their protection. They charge and say that the act which, if it be criminal at all, constitutes the crime, is the act of sel-ing their liquors, which act of selling is the only way in which they can use and enjoy the same; and the said act*351 of selling claimed to be criminal is a property act, and not one which in itself affects the right of any other person, in any way — that is, the act of selling, claimed to be criminal, is the sole and only form in which complainants can enjoy, use, and utilize their property hereinbe-fore described.”
The prayer of the hill, other than that for process, is in these words:
“That the writ of injunction issue now, restraining and enjoining defendants, and every one of them, personally and officially, their agents, deputies, police and subordinates, from
“(a) Attempting to arrest, and from arresting, any of complainants for making any wholesale sale of the intoxicating liquors they now have, whether they were on hand January 20, T909, or not, at their respective places of business in the bill described, in Hamilton county, Tennessee; at any time either before or after July 1, 1909,.in violation of said Sales Act of January 20,1909; and from
“(b) Preparing or preferring and prosecuting any indictment against them, or any of them, in the criminal court of Hamilton county, Tennessee, for making any such sale or sales above described; and that
“(c) Said Sales Act be declared and decreed not to prohibit sales of intoxicating liquors by wholesale dealers in wholesale packages or quantities, in Tennessee; and that
“(d) Said act be declared not to prohibit such*352 wholesale sales by dealers in such incorporated towns in Tennessee as may be lawfully made under chapter 167 of the Acts of 1887, hereinbefore mentioned, as the same stood amended before said Sales Act of January 20, 1909, was passed; and that
“(e) Said Sales Act of 1909 be decreed to be unconstitutional and void; and that
“(f) Injunction granted be made perpetual/7
In the second bill, filed by John H. Conner, a stockholder of appellant J. W. Kelly & Co., against J. W. Kelly & Co., its president, Carl White, and the official defendants, practically the same facts are set out and the same contentions made as in J. W. Kelly & Co.’s original bill; the proceeding being one by a stockholder to enjoin the company and its president from shutting down the business because of the Sales Act of 1909, which is charged to be inapplicable to wholesale dealers and unconstitutional, and an injunction being prayed because of the irreparable damage to said Conner’s interest in the company.
The causes were consolidated and heard by the chancellor upon motions made by defendants to dismiss the bills for want of equity and jurisdiction, upon the grounds that the suits were for the purpose of enjoining threatened criminal prosecutions by the authorized officers of the State of Tennessee, arid were in effect suits against the State, and the application of the complainants for a provisional injunction. The chancellor
The defendants then answered, substantially admitting the facts charged in the complainants’ bills, and the causes were set for hearing on bills and answers.
The chancellor, upon final hearing, sustained the constitutionality of the Bales Act, and held that it prohibited all sales, whether by wholesale or retail, within four miles of a schoolhouse, except those made for interstate shipment, which he held were not prohibited, and pronounced a decree accordingly, granting a perpetual injunction against all interferences with sales for shipments to other States and countries.
Complainants and defendants prayed separate appeals to this court and perfected them.
The errors assigned by complainants are these:
“First. The court erred in holding that the selling of intoxicating liquors at wholesale — that is, sales in wholesale packages or quantities, and not for consumption at the place of sale — was prohibited by the ‘Four-Mile Act of 1909,’ being chapter 1 of the Acts of the fifty-sixth general assembly of the State of Tennessee.
“Second. The court erred in holding that said act was not in violation of article 2, section 17, of the constitution of Tennessee: (a) In that the prohibition of the*354 sales of liquor within four miles of a schoolhouse. was not embraced in the title, which prohibits the sale near any schoolhouse, etc.; and (b) in that the wholesaling of liquor is not a sale as a beverage, and, therefore, not expressed in the title; and (c) in that it is in violation of that part of the above section to the effect that: ‘All acts which repeal, revise or amend former laws shall recite in their caption, or otherwise, the title or substance of the law repealed, revised or amended.’
“Third. The court erred in holding that said act, as construed by that court, was not in violation of article 1, section 8, of the constitution of Tennessee, and ‘the due process of law’ clause of the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution, for that, under the ‘Manufacturers Act,’ the manufacturer may sell at wholesale till January 1, 1910, while the wholesaler cannot, which discrimination is unreasonable and arbitrary and class legislation.
“Fourth. The court erred in not holding that said ‘Four-Mile Act,’ as construed, was violative of section 21 of article 1, and section 8 of article 1, of the constitution of Tennessee, and amendment of the federal constitution, and section 1 of the fourteenth amendment of the same.”
Those assigned by M. N. Whittaker and S. A. Conner are as follows:
“First. The court erred in overruling the first ground of the motions to dismiss the bills ‘for want of equity,’ because no ground of equity jurisdiction what*355 soever is shown in said bills-, and they were filed solely to interfere with and enjoin criminal proceedings which complainants allege they feared were about to be instituted by the defendants as. officers charged with the duty of enforcing the criminal laws of the State, and particularly chapter 1 of the Acts of 1909, prohibiting sales of intoxicating liquors as a beverage within four miles of a schoolhouse where school is kept.
“The sole purpose of the hills is to prevent defendants in their official capacity from performing their lawful functions in the execution of chapter 1 of the Acts of 1909, and to take the opinion of the court upon the constitutionality of said act, which is a valid constitutional statute of the State of Tennessee, so that no ground of equitable cognizance is presented in the bills, and they should have been dismissed for want of equity.
“Second. The court erred in not dismissing the hills as to the defendants Whittaker, district attorney for the Sixth judicial circuit, and Conner, sheriff of Hamilton county, because, as to these defendants, said bills were, in effect, suits against the State.
“In order to determine the effect of a suit, the court will look behind the parties named as defendants on the record, and, if the State be affected in the same manner as though it had been named on the record,- the suit is in legal effect against the State, and not maintainable. In the enforcement of her criminal laws, the State can only appear in the circuit and criminal courts of the State through and by her district attorneys, and she*356 can only apprehend and bring before the circuit and criminal courts offenders against her laws by the sheriffs and their deputies, so that to enjoin the district attorney from preferring and prosecuting indictments and the sheriff from making arrests thereunder is in effect to enjoin the. State from administering and executing-statutes enforceable only in the circuit and criminal courts of the State.
“Third. The court erred in not sustaining the second and fourth grounds of the motions to dismiss the bills, because the court was without jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the bills, and has no power to interfere with the enforcement of the criminal laws of the State.
“The sole purpose of the bills is to enjoin prosecutions, and arrests thereunder, against complainants, as wholesale dealer's, for selling intoxicating liquors as beverages in wholesale quantities in violation of chapter 1 of the acts of 1909, and a court of equity in this State has no jurisdiction, either inherently or by statute, to interfere with or enjoin prosecutions for offenses against the criminal laws of the State, which are administered solely in courts having criminal jurisdiction.
“Fourth. The court erred in not sustaining, as to the defendants Whittaker and Conner, the third and fifth grounds of the motions to dismiss the bills, because these defendants are made parties solely in their official capacity, and a court of equity in this State is without jurisdiction to interfere with or control the action of a district attorney in prosecuting indictments or present-*357 meats for the State, or the sheriff in making arrests under the authority of criminal process issuing- in the name and at the instance of the State.
“Fifth. The court erred in holding and decreeing that chapter 1 of the Acts of 1909 does not prohibit complainants from selling at their places of business in Hamilton county intoxicating liquors to be shipped to customers in other States, and in enjoining the defendants from prosecuting, arresting, or interfering with complainants ‘in the selling of such liquors for shipment to other States and territories of the Union or in foreign countries,’and in enjoining ‘J. W. Kelly & Co., and its officers and agents, from closing the business of selling intoxicating liquors for shipment out of Tennessee.’
“The act of 1909 (chapter 1), makes unlawful all sales of intoxicating liquors as beverages within four miles of a schoolhouse in Tennessee after July 1, 1909, so that any sale of intoxicating liquors as beverages by the complainants after July 1, 1909, at their respective places of business in Hamilton county, the same being within four miles of a schoolhouse where school is kept, as shown in the bills, would be in violation of the plain terms and provisions of said act. Said act does not seek to interfere with mere shipments of liquors out of the State, and no claim is made by the bills that the defendants, or either of them, sought either to prevent such shipments or claim that complainants had no right to make such shipments; but, even conceding to the*358 complainants the right to ship their liquors out of the State, such right does not include the right to make a sale thereof at their places of business in Tennessee. “While the learned chancellor does not so state, it is inferable from his holding that he was of the opinion that complainants are, under the commerce clause of the federal constitution, protected in their alleged right to make sales at their places of business in Hamilton county for shipment out of the State. But in such holding he erred, for the reason that the commerce clause of the federal constitution affords no protection to goods sold in the State, and intended to be shipped out of the State, but only protects goods from the time interstate transportation actually begins and until such goods are delivered to the consignee.
“Sixth. The appellant city of Chattanooga specially assigns that the learned chancellor erred in granting any decree whatsoever against it, not only for the reasons above stated, but particularly because no facts whatsoever are averred in the bills entitling complainants to relief against it.
“The sole averment of the bills in any way affecting Chattanooga is that the chief of police and police officers of said city have notified complainants that their officers and agents would be arrested every time any sales were made by such officers and agents contrary to the orders of the attorney-general.
“It is not shown that these police officers of the city of Chattanooga were acting under any authority or in*359 structions conferred upon them by the city of Chattanooga, or that the city of Chattanooga had taken any cognizance whatsoever, by ordinance or otherwise, of the subject-matter of the Four-M'ile Act of 1909, so that any decree against appellant city of Chattanooga was wholly unwarranted.
“Seventh. The chancellor erred in granting any relief whatsoever in the case of John H. Conner v. J. W. Kelly & Co. et al., because the bill in that case is unknown to the forms of a court of equity, in that it is an attempt by a minority stockholder of a corporation to compel the managing officials of such corporation to violate, by continuing sales of intoxicating liquors within four miles of a schoolhouse, a valid, constitutional statute of the State.”
The first, second, and third assignments of error of defendants M. N. Whittaker and S. A. Conner challenge the jurisdiction of the chancery court to entertain complainants’ bills, determine the questions made, and grant the relief prayed. Therefore these assignments must be first disposed of.
We will first examine the objection raised by the first and third assignments, to the effect that the chancery court has no jurisdiction to enjoin pending or threatened prosecutions for violation of the criminal laws of the State.
This proposition, as a rule of general application is unquestionably sound and well established in our jurisprudence.
The general assembly of Tennessee (chapter 4, p. 32, Acts 1835), enacted that the chancery courts should continue to have all the powers and jurisdiction properly and rightfully incident to a court of equity' by existing laws, and this was carried into our Code enacted in 1858 in section 4279.
When Tennessee was organized into a sovereign State, it adopted all the laws of the State of North Carolina at the time the territory composing it was ceded to the federal government. Smith v. Bank, 115 Tenn., 18, 89 S. W., 392.
The jurisdiction and procedure of the high court of chancery of England was adopted by North Carolina as the jurisdiction of the chancery court of that State before the cession act, and was therefore adopted in this State when our chancery court was created. This is what is called the “inherent jurisdiction” of the chancery court, and that which has been subsequently vested by the legislature is called the “statutory jurisdiction.” Gibson’s Suits in Chancery, section 23.
There has been no statute enacted in this State which
The question arose in the case of Fritz v. Sims, in Avhich the opinion was delivered by the present chief justice, and to be found reported in 122 Tenn., 137, 119 S. W., 63. There, as in the case at bar, the complainant brought his bill to enjoin threatened prosecutions under a statute imposing punishment by fine and imprisonment for its violation, which, as claimed by the officer whose duty it was to enforce it, prohibited the complainant from using and disposing of property to which he asserted title, because, as complainant claimed, the statute upon a proper construction did not apply to his property, and that, if it did, it deprived him of his property without due process of law, impaired the contract under which he held title, and was in contravention of the provisions of the constitutions of Tennessee and of the United States. The statute there in question was the game law of Tennessee, and the property was fish in a lake claimed as private property.
The chief justice, in disposing of the case, said:
“It will thus be seen that the chief, and in fact the*362 only, purpose of tbe complainant in tbe institution of this suit, was to obtain relief by injunction from tbe annoyance of further prosecutions for assumed violations of tbis act in question. That tbe chancery court is without jurisdiction to grant such relief, we think, is well settled by tbe authorities” — citing 2 Story, Eq., Juris., section 893; 3 Pomeroy, Eq., section 1361, note; 22 Cyc., 903; 16 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 370.
There is no case decided by tbis court to tbe contrary or allowing any exception to tbe rule there stated.
We will however, upon account of tbe great importance of tbe case now under consideration, both because of tbe public interest and tbe value of tbe property involved, again examine tbe question.
Tbe general rule is stated by Mr. Daniell in bis work on Chancery Practice and Pleading, at page 1620, thus:
“Tbe court will also refuse an injunction to stay proceedings in any criminal matter. Tbe court has no jurisdiction to grant an injunction to stay proceedings on a mandamus, an indictment, an information, or a writ of prohibition.”
In Beach’s Modern Eq. Pr., vol. 2, section 761, tbe rule is stated as follows:
“It is tbe rule of almost universal application, both in England and in tbis country that a court of equity has no jurisdiction by injunction to restrain a criminal proceeding whether it be by indictment or summary process.”
Suess v. Noble (C. C.), 31 Fed., 855, was a bill to re
“That no such power exists — that its exercise has been denied both in England and this country for centuries— is beyond question. This will be placed beyond all doubt by tbe authorities cited below. Whoever will for a moment consider tbe nature and grounds of equity jurisdiction will not fail to see insuperable objections to tbe exercise of any restraining power whatever in equity over tbe course of criminal proceedings. . . .
“Again, public offenses are prosecuted in England in tbe name of tbe king, and in tbe United States in tbe name of tbe State. It is manifest that neither tbe king nor tbe State could be made a defendant to a bill in equity. Tbe restraining power of tbe court would be futile as against them, and it would avail nothing for tbe court to address its restraining process to public and private prosecutors, even if tbe power to do so existed, since tbe State would readily find other agents to represent it in tbe criminal proceeding. Courts of equity, therefore, deal only with civil and property rights. They have no jurisdiction to give relief in criminal cases, and they will not, therefore, interfere by injunction with tbe course of criminal justice” — citing Kerr v. Corporation of Preston, 6 Ch. Div., 463; Saull v. Brown, 10 Ch. App., 64; Moses v. Mayor, 52 Ala., 198; Joseph v. Burk, 46 Ind., 59; Gault v. Wallis, 53 Ga., 675.
“The bill seeks to enjoin criminal proceedings. A court of equity possesses no such power. This principle is settled by the uniform current of authorities in England for two centuries, and in this country from the foundation of its jurisprudence. The recent emphatic reaffirmance of the doctrine by the supreme court of the United States renders it unnecessary to do more than repeat the rule in the language of that court.”
In re Sawyer, 124 U. S., 200, 8 Sup. Ct., 482, 31 L. Ed., 402, the supreme court of the United States, speaking through Mr. Justice Gray, said:
“From long before the Declaration of Independence it has been settled in England that a bill to stay criminal proceedings is not within the jurisdiction of the court of chancery, whether those proceedings are by indictment or by summary process. . . .
“Lord Chancellor Hardwicke, while exercising the power of the court of chancery incidental to the disposition of a case pending before it, of restraining a plaintiff, who had by his bill submitted his rights to its determination, from proceeding as to the same matter before another tribunal, either by indictment or by action, asserted in the strongest terms the want of any power or jurisdiction to entertain a bill for an injunction to*365 stay criminal proceedings, saying: ‘This court has not originally, and strictly, any restraining power over criminal prosecutions.’ And again: ‘This court has no jurisdiction to grant an injunction to stay proceedings oh a mandamus, nor to an indictment, nor to an information, nor to a writ of prohibition, that I know of.’ Mayor & Corporation of York v. Pilkington, 2 Atk., 302, s. c., 9 Mod., 273; Montague v. Dudman, 2 Ves., Sr., 396, 398.
“The modern decisions in England, by eminent equity judges, concur in holding that a court of chancery has no power to restrain criminal proceedings, unless they are instituted by a party to a suit already pending before it, and to.try the same right that is in issue there. Attorney-General v. Cleaver, 18 Ves., 211, 220; Turner v. Turner, 15 Jurist, 218; Saull v. Browne, L. R., 10 Ch., 64; Kerr v. Preston, 6 Ch. D., 463.
“Mr. Justice Story, in his Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence, affirms the same doctrine. Story, Eq. Jur., section 893. And in the American courts, so far as we are informed, it has been strictly and uniformly upheld, and has been applied alike whether the prosecutions or arrests sought to. be restrained arose under statutes of the State or under municipal ordinances”— citing West v. Mayor, etc., of New York, 10 Paige (N. Y.), 539; Davis v. American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 75 N. Y., 362; Tyler v. Hamersley, 44 Conn., 419, 422, 26 Am. Rep., 479; Stuart v. Board of Supervisors, 83 Ill., 341, 25 Am. Rep., 397; Devron v.*366 First Municipality, 4 La. Ann., 11; Levy v. Shreveport, 27 La. Ann., 620; Moses v. Mayor, etc., of Mobile, 52 Ala., 198; Gault v. Wallis, 58 Ga., 675; Phillips v. Mayor, etc., of Stone Mountain, 61 Ga., 386; Cohen v. Goldsboro Commissioners, 77 N. C., 2; Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Little Rock, 39 Ark., 412; Spink v. Francis (C. C.), 19 Fed., 670, and (C. C.), 20 Fed., 567; Suess v. Noble (C. C.), 31 Fed., 855.
The authority of this case is questioned upon the ground that the exact point was not involved; but it has been, from the time the opinion was .delivered, recognized as correctly defining the jurisdiction of courts of equity in this matter, and has been approved and followed in numerous cases decided by the courts of the United States and of many of the States, and the objection for these reasons is without force.
In Brown v. Birmingham, 140 Ala., 600, 601, 37 South., 173, 174, the supreme court of Alabama, speaking through Chief Justice McClellan, in dismissing a bill of this character, said:
“But apart from all these considerations — or looking to them only as some of the reasons underlying the broad proposition now to be announced — the general rule is that the chancery court is wholly without jurisdiction to enjoin such quasi criminal prosecutions, hoAV-ever great and irreparable the damages to result from them to the party complaining may in fact be. It is not the sort of case in which the court can interfere, though the consequences to the complainant of allowing the*367 prosecutions to proceed may be ever so grievous and irreparable. This statement of tbe doctrine includes of necessity and leads to tbe proposition that tbe insolvency of tbe municipality under tbe supposed authority of wbicb tbe prosecutions are to be instituted, and of its officers proceeding therein, is altogether, immaterial. Tbe administration of State and municipal governments, in tbe prosecutions of alleged violators of their penal laws or of violators of their supposed criminal laws, must be left to take its own course in tbe courts ordained to administer those laws, unhindered by tbe courts of equity, whose activities are in general strictly confined to matters of a purely civil nature; and this though such administration may wrongfully entail damages upon tbe citizens wbicb are grievous indeed, and beyond all remedy, either because in their nature irreparable or because be is balked of their recovery by tbe insolvency of those responsible for tbe prosecutions. There are, it is true, some so-called exceptions to tbe general rule we have stated; that is, there are some cases in wbicb prosecutions for alleged violations of penal ordinances may be enjoined. But it would perhaps be more apt to say that injunctions in such cases maybe granted as incidental and ancillary to tbe exercise of some acknowledged equity jurisdiction, resting upon other bases than tbe mere harassment of prosecutions under void ordinances, than that tbe cases form an exception to tbe general rule.”
There are numerous other cases in which tbe rule
There are also other authorities of high character, which, while conceding the general rule to be that the jurisdiction of courts of equity is confined and limited to civil and property rights, hold that there are well-defined and established exceptions to it, one of which ■is that, when these rights are wrongfully affected and injured by an invalid .criminal law, courts of equity have the power to, and will, under certain conditions and circumstances, enjoin prosecutions for violations of the law, to protect and preserve such rights and property and prevent loss and irreparable injury that would otherwise follow.
“But it is said that tbe acts proposed to be done are not tbe subject of equitable jurisdiction, or that, if they are, the jurisdiction ought not to be exercised until a trial at law shall have been bad. To neither of these propositions can I give my assent. I agree that tbe jurisdiction of this court in a case of this nature rests upon injury to property, actual or prospective, and that this court has no jurisdiction to prevent the commission of acts which are merely criminal, or merely illegal, and do not affect any rights of property; but I think there are here rights of property quite sufficient to found jurisdictioh in this court.”
The case of Louisiana State Lottery v. Fitzpatrick et als., 3 Woods, 222, Fed. Cas. No. 8541 (15 Fed. Cas., 871), involved this question. The Louisiana State Lottery was organized under a statute of Louisiana in the year 1868 (Act No. 25, p. 24, of 1868). It built up an enormous business and its franchises -were extremely valuable. In April, 1879, the legislature of that State repealed the act incorporating the comp any, and made it a misdemeanor, punishable by fine and imprisonment, for any one thereafter to engage in the lottery business. Thereupon the lottery company filed a bill against the city of New Orleans, enjoining all prosecutions under this act, on the ground that it impaired the contract entered into between the company and the State.
The court said:
*370 “Writers on equity jurisdiction properly say that the court of chancery does not deal with matters of crime, misdemeanors, offenses against prohibitory laws, nor questions of mere morality. But there is this reservation : That it is only when those matters are not connected with the rights of property with respect to which the court has jurisdiction. Attorney-General v. Cleaver, 18 Ves., 211. In Macauley v. Shacknell, 1 Bligh (N. S.), 6 Eq., 558, the vice chancellor says: ‘The jurisdiction of this court is to protect property, and it will interfere by injunction to stay any proceedings, whether connected with the crime or not, which go to the immediate, or tend to the ultimate, destruction of property, or to make it less valuable for use or occupation! ”
The case of Logan & Bryan v. Postal Telegraph Co. (C. C.), 157 Fed., 574, was to enjoin the “bucket shop” law of Kansas. It is there said:
“That a court of equity has no power to restrain criminal proceedings, with few exceptions, is the established rule in England as well as in the courts of the United States” — citing Sawyer Case, and others. “The exceptions are where the equity proceedings are instituted by a party in the suit already pending before the court, and are in the nature of ancillary proceedings, or where the complainant had acquired property rights, which, by the enforcement of the criminal laws enacted thereafter, would be destroyed and rendered worthless.”
In Dobbins v. Los Angeles, 195 U. S., 241, 25 Sup.
“It is well settled that, where property rights will be destroyed, unlawful interference by criminal proceedings under a void law or ordinance may be reached and controlled by a decree of a court of equity.”
Complainants also cite, as sustaining their position, the cases of Ignaz v. Knoxville, 1 Tenn. Ch. App., 5; Trading Stamp Co. v. Memphis, 101 Tenn., 181, 47 S. W., 136; Reagan v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 154 U. S., 388, 14 Sup. Ct., 1047, 38 L. Ed., 1014, Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S., 542, 18 Sup. Ct., 418, 42 L. Ed., 819; Davis & F. Mfg. Co. v. Los Angeles, 189 U. S., 220, 23 Sup. Ct., 498, 47 L. Ed., 778, Vance v. Vandercock, 170 U. S., 438, 18 Sup. Ct., 674, 42 L. Ed., 1100; Ex parte Young, 209 U. S., 159, 28 Sup. Ct., 441, 52 L. Ed., 714, 13 L. R. A. (N. S.), 932, and a number of others, to all of which we will hereafter refer.
While there is not as great a conflict in the authorities upon this question as seemingly appears from the excerpts quoted, some does exist, growing, doubtless,
We are dealing solely with the jurisdiction of the chancery court of this State. There may be- cases involving civil and property rights, where courts of equity have power to enjoin threatened criminal proceedings, under invalid statutes and ordinances, injuriously affecting those rights, when it is absolutely necessary to protect the jurisdiction of the court over the property. We refer to cases where the court has jurisdiction of the property upon some acknowledged ground of equity jurisdiction, and the injunction is merely incidental and ancillary, in order to preserve that jurisdiction and make it effective. Whether this be so or not, we are not now called upon to decide, as no such case is presented in this record.
Complainants’ contention is. that an exception to the general rule exists in all cases where civil and property rights are involved, and a multiplicity of prosecutions under an invalid statute will greatly injure and ultimately destroy those rights, resulting in irreparable
We will first examine the statute charged to he invalid, and the case upon which the complainants seek to enjoin the defendants from enforcing it.
This act was passed by the general assembly in the ■exercise of the police power vested in the State. If it is within the police power, the legislature had plenary power to deal with the subject-matter. There is no doubt now but what the regulation and prohibition of the sale of intoxicating- liquor is within the police power of the several States, provided there is no interference with interstate commerce.
In Webster v. State, 110 Tenn., 504, 82 S. W., 182, Mr. Justice Wilkes, speaking for this court, said:
“The traffic in intoxicating liquors is universally recognized as a proper subject for police regulation, and may be controlled, restricted, or even totally prohibited, without violating any constitutional right under the police power. 22 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2d Ed.), p. 927, and cases cited; Boston Beer Company v. Massachusetts, 97 U. S., 25, 24 L. Ed., 989; Bartemeyer v. Iowa, 18 Wall., 129, 21 L. Ed., 929; Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S., 623, 8 Sup. Ct., 273, 31 L. Ed., 205.
*374 “The regulation, restriction, and even prohibition of the liquor traffic being clearly within the police power of the State, it is for the legislature to decide when the exigency exists for the exercise of that power, and its exercise is not to be controlled by the courts. Powell v. Pennsylvania, 127 U. S., 683, 8 Sup. Ct., 992, 32 L. Ed., 253 (Bose’s Notes).”
And as bearing upon the validity and extent of legislation upon this subject, in the same opinion, it is said:
“And the exercise of this power with respect to the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, even to the extent of abolishing them, is not a denial of an equal protection of the law, nor a violation of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States.”
The case of Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S., 623, 8 Sup. Ct., 273, 31 L. Ed., 205, in which the validity of the Kansas prohibition law is sustained, is a leading case upon these questions. We quote from the syllabus, which correctly states the holding of the court:
“Legislation by a State prohibiting the manufacture within her limits of intoxicating liquors, to be there sold or bartered for general use as a beverage, does not necessarily infringe any right, privilege, or immunity secured by the constitution of the United States.
“It belongs to the legislative department to exert what are known as the ‘police powers’ of the State, and to determine^ primarily, what measures are appropriate*375 or needful for tbe protection of tbe public morals, tbe public bealtb, or tbe public safety — subject to tbe power of tbe courts to adjudge whether any particular law is an invasion of rights secured'by tbe constitution.
“Government does not interfere with, nor impair, any one’s constitutional rights of liberty or of property, when it determines that tbe manufacture and sale of intoxicating drinks, for general or individual use, as a beverage, are or may become hurtful to society, and constitute, therefore, a business in which no one may lawfully engage.”
And in tbe opinion Mr. Justice Harlan says:
“If, therefore, a State deems tbe absolute prohibition of tbe manufacture and sale, within her limits, of intoxicating liquors for other than medicinal, scientific, and manufacturing purposes, to be necessary to the peace and security of society, the courts cannot,' without usurping legislative functions, override the will of the people as thus expressed by their chosen representatives. They have nothing to do with the mere policy of legislation. Indeed, it is a fundamental principle in our institutions, indispensable to the preservation of public liberty, that one of the separate departments of government shall not usurp powers committed by the constitution to another department.”
This statute is purely a police measure of general application. It has no special reference to complainants or their property. It does not invade or appropriate property, nor in any way affect the title or in
Complainants’ case, presented in their bill, is that, when properly construed, the statute does not apply to them and their business as wholesale dealers, but, if it does, it is invalid, and that, notwithstanding its inapplicability and invalidity, the officers of the State, whose duty it is to enforce criminal laws, are threatening- them with prosecutions so numerous that, should they be mistaken in their positions, the excessive fines that may be adjudged against them would practically bankrupt them, and that for this reason, and the fear of their employees of arrest, fine, and imprisonment, they are deterred and prevented from carrying on and conducting their business and from selling their property as' they have the right to do,' if the statute does not prohibit wholesaling or is unconstitutional for any of the reasons charged; and their contention that civil and property rights are involved is nredicated upon the charge that the value of their property — the whisky and beer owned by them — consists in its salability, and that the threatened prosecutions under the law, by deterring them from making sales, destroy this value, and the use and enjoyment of the property.
When reduced to its last analysis, their suit is simply one to enjoin the officers of the State from prosecuting them for pursuing a business, made unlawful by a statute enacted in the exercise of the police power, until they can have it construed, and its validity or
We think not.
We do not think the cases relied upon by complainants, when analyzed, and the special facts and circumstances thereof are considered, support their contention that courts of equity have such jurisdiction.
We will now briefly examine those cases.
The case of Ignaz v. Knoxville, supra, was a bill to enjoin the city of Knoxville from collecting a privilege tax in excess of its municipal powers. The: decision of the court of chancery appeals was rested upon the authority of Trading Stamp Company v. Memphis. While it was affirmed by this court, it does not appear whether it was upon this ground or not. The case of Trading Stamp Company v. Memphis, supra, does not sustain that decision. That was a bill to enjoin the legislative council of the city of Memphis from passing an ordinance which was in excess of the authority vested in.that municipality and ultra vires, and not to enjoin prosecutions under an existing ordinance. Again, these were not criminal, but civil, actions. They are, therefore, not in point here.
Austin v. Day and Kossuth, supra, and Springhead Spinning Company v. Riley, L. R., 6. Eq., 558, English cases, were suits, not to enjoin a criminal prosecution, but the commission of crimes, which invaded property
Schandler Bottling Company v. Welsh (C. C.), 42 Fed., 563, is an opinion delivered by the district judge in granting a preliminary injunction, and exactly the contrary was held by the circuit judge upon a motion to dissolve the injunction; the case being heard for this purpose with that of Hemsley v. Myers.
The question is not raised or decided in the case of Vance v. Vandercock.
Reagan v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, Smyth v. Ames, and Perkins v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co. (C. C.), 155 Fed., 445, under proceedings in which the case of Eos parte Young arose, and which is hereafter referred to under the latter style, were bills brought by trustees for bondholders and the stockholders of railroad companies to enjoin the enforcement of tariff rates, fixed in two of the cases by the general assemblies of Nebraska, and Minnesota, and in the other by the railroad commissioners of Texas under a statute of that State, upon the ground that they were unreasonable and confiscatory, and- denied to the railroad companies the equal protection and due process of law. The chief question of jurisdiction in these cases was whether the suits were actions against the several States; but injunctions were granted restraining suits
“It is further objected (and the objection really forms part of the contention that the State cannot be*381 sued) that a court of equity bas no jurisdiction, to enjoin criminal proceedings, by indictment or otherwise, under the State law. This, as a general rule is true. But there are exceptions. When such indictment or proceeding is brought to enforce an alleged unconstitutional statute, which is the subject-matter of inquiry in a suit already pending in a federal court, the latter court, having first obtained jurisdiction over the subject-matter, has the right, in both civil and criminal cases, to hold and maintain such jurisdiction, to the exclusion of all other courts, until its duty is fully performed. Prout v. Starr, 188 U. S., 537, 544, 23 Sup. Ct., 398, 47 L. Ed., 584. But the federal court cannot, of course, interfere in a case where the proceedings were already pending in a State court. Taylor v. Taintor, 16 Wall., 366, 370, 21 L. Ed., 287; Harkrader v. Wadley, 172 U. S., 148, 19 Sup. Ct., 119, 43 L. Ed., 399.
“Where one commences a criminal proceeding who is already a party to a suit then pending in a court of equity, if the criminal proceedings are brought to enforce the same right that is in issue before that court, the latter may enjoin such criminal proceedings. Davis, etc., Co. v. Los Angeles, 189 U. S., 207, 23 Sup. Ct., 498, 47 L. Ed., 778. In Dobbins v. Los Angeles, 195 U. S., 223, 241, 25 Sup. Ct., 18, 22 (49 L. Ed., 169), it is remarked by Mr. Justice Day, in delivering the opinion of the court, that fit is well settled that, where property rights will be destroyed, unlawful interference by criminal proceedings under a void law or ordi*382 nance may be reached and controlled by a court of equity.’ Smyth v. Ames, supra, distinctly enjoined the proceedings by indictment to compel obedience to the rate act.
“These cases show that a court of equity is not always precluded from granting an injunction to stay proceedings in criminal cases, and we have no doubt the principle applies in a case such as the present. In re Sawyer, 124 U. S., 200, 211, 8 Sup. Ct., 482, 31 L. Ed., 402, is not to the contrary. That case holds that in general a court of equity has no jurisdiction of a bill to stay criminal proceedings; but it expressly states an exception, ‘unless they are instituted by a party to the suit pending before it and to try the same right that is in issue there.’ Various authorities are cited do sustain the exception. The criminal proceedings here that could be commenced by the State authorities would be under the statutes relating to passenger or freight rates, and their validity is the very question involved in the suit in the United States circuit court. The right to restrain proceedings by mandamus is based upon the same foundation and governed by the same principles.”
And on page 166 of 209 U. S., page 456 of 28 Sup. Ct. (52 L. Ed., 714, 13 L. R. A. [N. S.], 932), it is further said:
“Such remedy is undoubtedly the most convenient, the most comprehensive, and the most orderly way in which the rights of all the parties can be properly,*383 fairly, and adequately passed upon. It cannot be to tbe real interest of any one to injure or cripple tbe resources of tbe railroad companies of tbe country, because tbe prosperity of both tbe railroads and tbe country is most intimately connected. Tbe question of sufficiency of rates is important and controlling, and, being of a judicial nature, it ought to be settled at tbe earliest moment by some court, and when a federal •court first obtains jurisdiction it ought, on general principles of jurisprudence, to be permitted to finish tbe inquiry and make a conclusive judgment, to tbe exclusion of all other courts. This is all that is claimed, and this, we think, must be admitted.”
This case also decides that excessive fines and punishment, so great as to deter a party from rendering himself liable therefor, may be a denial of due process, and ground for federal jurisdiction, but does not bold it is a ground of equitable jurisdiction.
Central Trust Company v. Citizens’ Street Ry. Co. (C. C. ), 80 Fed., 219, was also a tariff rate case. Tbe statute in question reduced tbe rates and diminished-tbe value of tbe corporate franchises of tbe street railway company, and thus directly involved property. What we have said in relation to tbe railroad cases above discussed applies to this case.
Tbe cases of City of Atlanta v. Gate City Gaslight Company, 71 Ga., 106, and Port of Mobile v. Railroad Company, 84 Ala., 125, 4 South., 106, 5 Am. St. Rep., 342, involved ordinances which were effective, or being
The case of Louisiana State Lottery Company v. Fitzpatrick has been stated. The repealing act destroyed the franchise of the complainant, upon which its very existence depended, and violated the contract made between it and the State. Therefore it directly affected property rights and operated to absolutely destroy them.
Austin v. Austin Cemetery, 87 Tex., 330, 28 S. W., 528, 47 Am. St. Rep., 114, was a suit brought to enjoin an invalid ordinance prohibiting burials in a cemetery belonging to complainants under severe penalties. The jurisdiction to enjoin the city from enforcing the penalties was sustained; but in the case of Wardens v. Washington, 109 N. C., 21, 13 S. E., 700, seeking similar relief against a like ordinance, jurisdiction was denied. The latter case, for well-known reasons, is more persuasive than the former in the courts of this State.
The cases of Davis & Farnun Mfg. Co. v. Los Angeles, 189 U. S., 207, 23 Sup. Ct., 498, 47 L. Ed., 778,
These cases are criticised in Camden Interstate Railway Co. v. Catlettsturg (C. C.), 129 Fed., 427, and Logan & Bryan v. Postal Telegraph Co. (C. C.), 157
N. C. Baseball & Amusement Co. v. New Orleans, 118 La., 228, 42 South., 784, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1014, 118 Am. St. Rep., 366, is a bill brought to enjoin an ordinance of the city of New Orleans prohibiting the establishment and operation of a baseball park within certain territorial limits, with penalties for its violation. The complainant, before the passage of the ordinance, had purchased property in that territory costing $40,-000 for a ball park, and it brought its bill, charging that the ordinance was invalid upon the ground that it was deprived of its property without due process of law, and impaired property rights protected by the federal constitution. The supreme court of Louisiana, after referring to the cases decided by it holding that courts of equity had no such jurisdiction, sustained the bill upon the authority of Dobbins v. Los Angeles, because a federal question was involved. We do not understand why the court understood that the Dobbins Oase was' controlling, rather than those determined by it in defining the jurisdiction of the courts of the State.
Fellows v. Charleston, 62 W. Va., 665, 59 S. E., 623, 13 L. R. A. (N. S.), 737, 125 Am. St. Rep., 990, in
Greenwich Ins. Co. v. Carroll (C. C.), 125 Fed., 121, was a bill attacking as invalid a statute of Iowa regulating insurance companies, and to enjoin criminal prosecutions for violations of it. District Judge McPherson, upon demurrer, held that it could be sustained. This case is perhaps more in point than any other relied upon by complainants, and does sustain , their contention.
Hutchinson v. Beckham, 118 Fed., 399, 55 C. C. A., 333, and Southern Exp. Co. v. Mayor of Ensley (C. C.), 116 Fed., 756, were bills .filed to obtain a definite determination of the validity of ordinances imposing license taxes upon the complainants, and to establish complainants’ right to do business in the cities enacting the ordinances, and enjoin vexatious litigation for penalties imposed. These cases, like a large number of the others relied upon by complainants, involved municipal ordinances, suits for penalties under which were enjoined, and have no bearing on the case at bar. Penalties denounced by- municipal ordinances are not crimes or misdemeanors, and actions to recover them are not criminal, but civil, in their nature. This was
“A license imposed for revenue is the exercise of the taxing, not the police, power, and prosecutions before the corporate tribunal for doing the business without a license are quasi penal at most. In substance and legal effect, they are civil proceedings. Royall v. Virginia, 116 U. S., 583, 6 Sup. Ct., 510, 29 L. Ed., 735. The 'offense’ here, if there is any law to support it, does not in any wise interfere with the control of the local tribunals over the mass of governmental powers committed to them for the welfare of the people of Ensley under what, for want of a better name, we denominate the 'police power.’ It is about prosecutions for offenses under ordinances directed solely to that end that many of the authorities are strict in holding that courts of equity must not interfere.”
In Camden Interstate Railway Co. v. Catlettsburg, supra, after discussing cases in which an injunction will be granted to restrain criminal prosecutions where property rights are involved, this is said:
“Likewise that line of cases must be distinguished from those which uphold the right of a court of equity to enjoin proceedings to enforce payment of penalties prescribed for nonpayment of taxes or license fees that are illegal on the ground that thereby multiplicity of suits is prevented. Such proceedings are civil in their nature.”
In the case of Royall v. Virginia, 116 U. S., 572, 6
“As the sum. demanded for the license is a tax, the provision for the punishment of one who pursues his profession without a license is a part of the revenue system of the State, and is a means merely of enforcing payment of the tax itself, or of a penalty for not paying it. It is legally equivalent to a civil action of debt upon the statute, and its substantial character is not changed by calling the default a misdemeanor, and providing for its prosecution by information. The present case, therefore, stands precisely, so far as the constitutional questions arising in it are affected, as if it were a civil action in which the commonwealth of Virginia was plaintiff, seeking to recover the amount due on account of the tax and penalty.”
Sylvester Coal Co. v. St. Louis, 130 Mo., 323, 32 S. W., 649, 51 Am. St. Rep., 566, a bill to enjoin penal actions under a municipal ordinance, is to the same effect. It is there said:
“The doctrine that the criminal statutes cannot be tested, or their enforcement restrained, in the civil courts has no application to the case. Municipal statutes: Kansas v. Clark, 68 Mo., 588; Ex parte Hollwedell, 74 Mo., 395; St. Louis v. Marchel, 99 Mo., 475, 12 S. W., 1050. They are quasi criminal in form, but not so regarded in procedure.
“We think the petition presents a case in which the validity of the ordinances may be inquired into by a*390 court of equity, and, if found to be invalid, the relief prayed for may be granted.”
This is well settled in Tennessee, and all such actions are held to be civil, and not criminal, cases, and they need not be begun by presentment or indictment. Mealier v. Chattanooga, 1 Head, 75; Bristol v. Burrow, 5 Lea, 128; Wood v. Mayor, 5 Heisk., 441; O’Haver v. Montgomery, 120 Tenn., 448, 111 S. W., 449.
While some o'f the cases discussed support complainants’ contention, the majority of them do not; the jurisdiction of the court being sustained upon some well-established ground of equity jurisdiction, and upon facts and circumstances which are not present in this case, and the injunctive relief being merely incidental and ancillary. Many of them were also suits against municipal corporations, which can be sued, and the proceedings enjoined were merely civil actions. For these reasons, they are not applicable or authority in this case.
We will not review at length the cases holding that the jurisdiction does not exist.
The majority of them were bills brought to enjoin prosecutions under statutes and ordinances, alleged to be illegal, in which the complainants claimed that, without injunctive relief, in their business and property they would suffer great and irreparable injury, and were remediless save in a court of equity, and are directly in point here. Those of Suess v. Noble, Hemsley v. Myers, Paulk v. Mayor, Burnett v. Craig, Thompson v.
Courts of equity are not constituted to deal with crime and criminal proceedings. If the law be held valid, they cannot punish the complainant for the offenses committed, or compensate those injured by his wrongful action while the hands of the officers of the
The case of Poyer v. Des Plaines, 123 Ill., 111, 13 N. E., 819, 5 Am. St. Rep., 494, involved an ordinance alleged to be invalid, and suits for penalties under it were sought to be enjoined. Tbe court said:
“If tbe authorities of this village can be enjoined from prosecuting under an ordinance preservative of tbe peace (as this one certainly is), so they might be restrained from the enforcement of any other ordinance of tbe village. Their effort to discharge their duty to the public would be rendered unavailing, and the community left at the mercy of the lawless and vicious elements of society until such time as the question could be settled in the court of equity. If it should at last be determined that the ordinance was valid, that court would be powerless to enforce its provisions or impose the penalties denounced against its violation, but must remit the cases to the courts of law, which, before the assumption of jurisdiction by the courts of equity, had the right to determine every question submitted and determined in the equity jurisdiction.”
In Denver v. Beede, 25 Colo., 172, 54 Pac., 624, a bill was brought to enjoin suits for penalties imposed by an ordinance, charged to be void; and, in holding that the chancery court had no jurisdiction to entertain it, it is said:
*393 “The fallacy of granting a writ of injunction in oases of this character on the facts detailed by appellee in his bill is quite evident. If the question of the validity of the ordinance was before us for determination, and we should decide in favor of its legality, yet, notwithstanding appellee admits its violation, no judgment could be pronounced or directed against him therefor in this case; and hence the necessity of applying the rule strictly that equity will not interfere with the prosecution of actions at law, except in cases where the applicant for such relief brings himself clearly within its purview. The object of the ordinances imposing penalties for specific acts, is to protect and preserve the peace and good order of the corporate community, as criminal proceedings are intended for the preservation of the peace and dignity of the State; and if every offender against such- ordinances could invoke the interposition of a court of equity against their enforcement, by charging illegality, or by multiplying his offenses, municipal authorities would be paralyzed in discharging the public duties intrusted to them.”
Without doubt, courts of equity have no jurisdiction to entertain a bill to construe a valid criminal statute, and pending the proceeding or at its termination, enjoin prosecutions' for violations of it. Insurance Co. v. Craig, 106 Tenn., 641, 62 S. W., 155; Greiner-Kelley Drug Co. v. Truett, 97 Tex., 380, 79 S. W., 4; Arbuckle v. Blackburn, 113 Fed., 625, 51 C. C. A., 122, 65 L. R. A., 864.
Complainants have also failed to show a case of ir
Prom a careful review and consideration of all the authorities discussed, we are of the opinion that the weight of judicial opinion and text-book law is with
We are further of the opinion that courts of equity have no jurisdiction to enjoin threatened criminal proceedings under a statute enacted by a State in the exercise of the police power in relation to which the legislature has complete jurisdiction, although it be charged that the statute is invalid and that a multiplicity of actions thereunder will injure and destroy civil and property rights of the complainants, and that the damages resulting will be irreparable, when the complainants’ defense thereto, in a court having jurisdiction of the offense, is adequate and unembarrassed; and we hold that the chancery courts of Tennessee, neither under their inherent nor statutory jurisdiction, have any such'power or jurisdiction, whatever may be the exceptions to the general rule in the courts of equity of other jurisdictions.
We are also of the opinion that the complainants have not presented in this record a. case of irreparable injury, and that they can have the benefit of all the questions they have made in regard to the validity of the statute which they attack in a court of criminal jurisdiction, and that their bill does not disclose anything which would embarrass them in making those defenses, or render them inadequate, if good in law, upon a trial
This conclusion disposes of the case. The chancery-court having no jurisdiction to entertain and determine the case upon the merits, this court cannot do so; and we do not decide anything in regard to the merits or other questions than the one just disposed of. The only decree we can and will pronounce is one of dismissal and adjudging costs.
We regret that the case must take this course,.because of the public interest in the proper construction of the statute in question, the importance of it to many citizens of the State, and the rest and quietude that a final decision of it would bring to those interested.
All the questions presented in the case have been ably and elaborately argued by brief and at the bar, and the court has given much consideration to them.
The question will, almost to a certainty, be in some. form presented, and the court could now with more ease dispose of it than at any other time. We cannot, however, without usurping jurisdiction, do so.
The rule which prevents a court of chancery from interfering with the administration of the criminal laws of this State is a wise one, founded upon sound principles of public policy, and, if we had the power to do so, we fear that changing it would result in much confusion and embarrassment in preserving peace and order, and enforcing the police power of the State generally, which would outweigh the good that would follow an
We therefore feel compelled to sustain the first and third assignments of error of the defendants, and dismiss the bill for the want of jurisdiction of a court of chancery of this State to entertain it.