delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court, of Baltimore City passed in contempt proceedings.
On the 11th of November, 1921, the Montebello Park Company, a body corporate, Erank M. Goetz and Annie M. Goetz, his wife, filed a bill of complaint in the Oireuit Oourt of Baltimore City against John 'II. Kelly and Marie Kelly, his wife, to enjoin them from erecting or proceeding with the erection of a garage on their lot in Baltimore City within seventy-five feet from the front street line of said lot, and on the same day a preliminary injunction was granted and issued enjoining the defendants, their “agents-, servants and employees” as prayed in the bill. The endorsements on the writ of injunction returned by the sheriff, set out in the record, contain the affidavits of Oarl Martin Distler and Frederick H. Hennighausen that a copy of the writ was served by them on John H. Kelly and Marie Kelly, his- wife, on the same day it was issued, and the return of the sheriff stating that the injunction was again served on Kelly and his wife on the 14th of November, 1921. On the latter date the court below passed an order requiring Kelly and his wife and Harry Oolliso-n to- appear in said court on the 18th of November, 1921, and show cause why they should not he punished for contempt of court for disobeying: the injunction issued on the 11th of November, 1921, and on the 15th of November Kelly and his wife filed their “answer” setting up the following defenses:
*196 “1. That the paper alleging to be a writ of injunction was served on them on November 11th, 1921, a legal holiday.
“2. That the said writ of injunction was not served .by a sheriff or deputy sheriff of Baltimore Oity.
“3. That the said writ of injunction was not served upon the independent contractor who was engaged in erecting the garage mentioned therein.
“4. That the said John H. Kelly and wife had no control over the said contractor, and could not carry ' out the orders of this court.”
After a hearing oar the 18th of November, 1921, at which Kelly and his wife and Harry Gollison wer’e present and testimoaiy was produced to show the violation of the injuno tioai, aaad also by the defendants, the court below passed an oi’der iar which, after stating that the evidence showed that Kelly aaid his wife aaid Gollison. had wilfully violated the injunction, it imposed a fine of $200 on Kelly and his wife, arid a fine of $100 on Gollison, and committed them to the custody of “the warden of the jail of Baltimore City” until the fines were paid. The defendants promptly paid the fines imposed, and then entered this appeal from the order.
The first and important question to be determined is whether an appeal lies from such an order. The comman law rule was that a court of competent jurisdiction is the sole judge of contempts against its authority and dignity, and its judgment in such cases is final and conclusive, and not reviewable bjr any other tribunal, either on a writ of error or appeal, unless specially authorized by statute. Rapalje on Contempts, sec. 141; 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,, 33-34; 9 Cyc. 61-62; 13 C. J., pp, 97-98, par. 155; 6 R. C. L., p. 538-540, see. 51; R. C. L., Supp. 2, p. 151, sec. 51.
It is said in 13 O. J. 97: “The common-law rule has been changed, however*, in many jurisdictions by constitutional or statutory provisions authorfiziarg a review. Accordingly, in jurisdictions where, by statutory or constitutional provisions,
*197
review of contempt orders may be had, authority is not wanting in support of the right of review in cases of civil or constructive contempt, especially in remedial proceedings for contempt where the punishment inflicted is in the nature of an indemnity to the party injured.” It is said in 7
Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law,
pp. 28-29; “Contempts of courts are further classified as criminal and civil. The division between the two is not uniformly defined in all jurisdictions.” This is illustrated by tbo several definitions, of civil and criminal contempts contained in tlie text and in the note on page 29. See also
Rapalje on Contempts,
sec. 21; 9
Cyc.
p. 6; 6
R. C. L.
490; and 13
C. J.
6. In the ease of
Bessette
v.
W. B. Conkey Co.,
“For example: If a defendant should refuse to pay alimony, or to surrender property ordered to be turned to a receiver, or to make a conveyance required by a decree for specific performance, he could be committed until he complied with the order. * * * The order for imprisonment in this class of cases, therefore, is not to vindicate the authority of the law, but is remedial and is intended to coerce the defendant to do the thing required by the order for the benefit of the complainant. If imprisoned, as aptly said in In re Nevitt, 117 Fed. Rep. 451, ‘he carried the keys of his prison in his own pocket.’ lie can end the sentence and discharge himself at any moment by doing what he had previously refused to do.
“On the other hand, if the defendant does that which he has been commanded not to do, the disobedience is a thing accomplished. Imprisonment cannot undo or remedy what has been done nor afford any compensation for the pecuniary injury caused by the disobedience. Tf the sentence is limited to imprisonment for a definite period, the defendant is furnished no key, and he cannot shorten his term by promising not to repeat the offense. Such imprisonment operates, not as a remedy coercive in its nature, hut solely as punishment for the completed' act of disobedience. * * * In this case the alleged contempt did not consist in the defendant’s, refusing to do an affirmative act required, but rather in doing that *201 which had been prohibited. The only possible remedial relief for such disobedience would have been to impose a fine for the use of the complainant, measured in some degree by the pecuniary injury caused by the act of disobedience.”
In that case the petition in the contempt proceeding contained a prayer for remedial relief, while the court, instead of granting the only remedial relief that could have been given in such a case, namely, a fine payable to the complainant, imposed the punitive sentence of imprisonment appropriate only in a proceeding for criminal contempt, and the Supreme Court said: “The result was as fundamentally erroneous as if in an action of ‘A vs. B. for assault and battery’ the judgment entered bad been that the defendant be confined in prison for twelve months.” The Court held that the fact that the petition in the contempt proceeding contained a prayer for remedial relief was a “controlling fact” and decisive of the character of proceeding as one in equity for civil contempt.
Again, in the ease of
Re Merchants’ Stock Co., Petitioner,
The same distinction between civil and criminal contempts is stated in Staley v. South Jersey Realty Co., 83 N. J. Eq. 300, decided in 1914, where the court held that by the'Act of *202 1909 the legislature of New Jersey had given the right of appeal in criminal contempts. Prior to that act, the courts of New Jersey held that an order passed merely to punish the party was not reviewable, the court in Grand Lodge K. P. of New Jersey v. Jansen, 62 N. J. Eq. 737, saying: “As a mere punishment for contemptuous conduct, the order being within tiro jurisdiction of the court of chancery, is not appeal-able, but, so far as it is for the relief of the suitor, it is subject to appeal.” In 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 29, and 13 C. J. 7, it is said: “If the contempt consists in doing a forbidden act, injurious to the opposite party, the contempt- is considered criminal.”
The precise question has not been considered or decided by this Court. It appears from the printed report of the early case of
State
v.
Stone et
al., 3 H. & McH. 115, that the general court fined the chief justice and associate justice- of the Charles County court for contempt for refusing to obey a writ of certiorari, and that they prayed an appeal to the court of appeals, which the general court refused to- grant. In the syllabus, that case is treated as authority for the statement: “An appeal does not lie from an order imposing a fine for contempt of court.” Tu the case of
Williamson v. Carnan,
1. G. & J., 184, the chancellor, on a motion to- dissolve an injunction, ordered that the injunction he continued until final hearing; that the defendant remove obstructions placed on a certain road mentioned in the proceedings, and that he pay a fine of fifty dollars for not obeying the preliminary injunction in the case. Erom this order and other orders in the case, including the order directing the injunction to issue, the defendant appealed, and in overruling a motion to dismiss the appeal Cirra-v JnuGE Bfci-iaxax said: “The order of the Commissioners of Baltimore County, on the 13th of December, 1827, confirming the report of the commissioners appointed by the levy co-uxt of that county, and directing and authorizing the old road to he shut up, placed the premises over which it formerly run, under the control of the appellant
*203
to whom the land belonged, and gave him the same right of user of the land of that road, that he had of the rest of his estate. And we think that the subsequent, order of the court of chancery, does so materially affect the right and interests of the appellant, as to bring the case within the principle of
Thompson
v.
McKim,
heretofore decided by this Court, and form a lit subject of appeal.” The order referred by the- the Court as affecting the material interests of the appellant and being a fit subject of appeal was evidently the order requiring him to remove the fence and other obstructions from the bed of the old road, which land, the Court held, had been restored to him !>y the action of the County Commissioners confirming the report of the commissioners appointed l>y the levy court, and the decision has no bearing upon the question we ar*e here considering. The ease of
ex parte Maulsby,
*204
Applying tlae distinction clearly and forcibly pointed out by the authorities and decisions referred to, and from -which we have quoted, it is clear that the record in this case presents a case of criminal contempt. The offense of which the appellants were adjudged guilty consisted in the doing of an act forbidden by the writ of injunction previously issued, and the sentence or punishment imposed was not remedial, but distinctly punitive. There is nothing in the contempt proceeding set out in the record indicating that the parties treated it as a proceeding in equity for civil contempt; there was no petition praying for remedial relief, the fines were not made payable to the parties injured by the disobedience, and the only purpose of the order imposing the fines was to vindicate the authority of tire court by punishing the act of disobedience. The contempt proceeding must therefore he regarded as independent of the equity ease in which the injunction was granted, and as a proceeding in law for criminal contempt.
Matter of Christensen Engineering Co., supra; Bessette
v.
W. B. Conkey Co., supra; Compers
v.
Bucks Stove and Range Co., supra.
See also
Binney’s Case,
There is no statute in this State expressly providing for appeals in contempt eases, and under the common-law rule, the decision of the general court in
State
v.
Stone, supra,
and the decisions in a number of other states
(People, ex rel. etc.
v.
Gilmore,
On the other hand, if we apply the view adopted by tbe Supreme Court of the United States that the question of the right of appeal in cases of criminal contempt must be determined by reference to tbe provisions of our statute providing for appeal in criminal cases, the result would be the same in this case. The section of the Code authorizing appeal in criminal cases is section 80 of article 5, which provides: “The parties to criminal proceedings shall he entitled to' hills
*205
of exceptions in the same manner as in civil proceedings, and appeals from judgments in criminal casos may be taken in the same manner as in civil cases,” etc. In the case of
Mitchell
v. State,
The fact that the writ of injunction was served on Kelly and his wife on a legal holiday did not render the contempt proceedings void
(Handy
v.
Maddox,
If the order appealed from could' be reviewed by this Court, we should not hesitate to affirm it, but it follows from what has been said that the appeal must be dismissed
Appeal dismissed, with costs.
