201 F. 441 | S.D. Fla. | 1912
The bill alleges that the complainants are residents of the state of Florida and this district, that they are engaged in the business of legally selling liquor in the city of Jacksonville, Fla.; that the respondent is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Georgia; that it is a common carrier with its business extending from the state of Georgia into the state of Florida and this district. The bill further alleges that divers persons in Savannah, Ga., and in other cities in Georgia, are engaged in making illegal sales of liquor, such sales being misdemeanors and prohibited by the statutes of the state of Georgia. The bill further alleges that the liquors sold illegally are shipped to the purchasers in the state of Georgia by the respondent in its capacity as a common carrier. The bill alleges knowledge on. the part of the respondent that the liquors so sold and shipped are sold in violation of law. The bill alleges that the rates for such carriage from the place of the illicit dealers to the purchasers to whom the goods are delivered are less from a shipping point'in Georgia to a near delivery point in Georgia than from Jacksonville, Fla., to such delivery point; that, in fact, such shipments made entirely within the state of Georgia can be made so much cheaper to the same destination point from Jacksonville, Fla., that the Jacksonville dealer cannot compete with the illicit dealer in Georgia; and that thereby serious damage is done to the legitimate business of the complainants. Upon the allegations of this bill, the complainants pray that the respondent be restrained and enjoined from receiving shipments of liquor from the illegal dealers of Georgia and from transporting same. The respondent filed an answer that so far as the injunction prayed was concerned left the bill intact.
In the consideration of this case the first question to be met is that of the court’s jurisdiction. The respondent denies that this court has jurisdiction, and cites in support of his contention A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Macon Grocery Company, 166 Fed. 206, 92 C. C. A. 114; Macon Grocery Co. v. A. C. F. R. R. Co., 215 U. S. 501, 30 Sup. Ct. 184, 54 L. Ed. 300.
“It is further objected that the court had no jurisdiction to decree an injunction in effect abating a nuisance caused by the construction of intakes in the republic of Mexico, and it is claimed that there is a rule in support of this objection to the effect that a court of equity can never compel a defendant to do anything which is not capable of being physically performed within the territorial jurisdiction of the court.”
And further, on page 813 of 172 Fed., on page 235 of 97 C. C. A., the court continues:
“The injury charged in the present case was an injury to property within the jurisdiction of the court, and the party charged with the commission of the injury was also within the jurisdiction of the court. * * * The cause of the injury was not serving a useful purpose for any one, and the relief asked for was that the party causing the injury might be enjoined from continuing to injure complainant’s property within the jurisdiction of the court. Why may not a court restrain a party over whom it has jurisdiction from injuring property within its jurisdiction? How does it affect the question of jurisdiction or venue to say that the party on whom the court must act may find it necessary to do things outside the jurisdiction of the court in order to comply with the order of the court? May this not often happen, and would it not happen oftener, if it were determined that such an excuse was sufficient to defeat the jurisdiction of the court?”
These cases were affirmed by the Supreme Court, 215 U. S. 604, 30 Sup. Ct. 405, 54 L. Ed. 345.
In this case the nuisance complained of is located in Georgia, but the property injured, namely, the legal business of the complainants, is located in this district, and this court has jurisdiction of the party complained of as committing the nuisance. It is urged by respondent’s counsel that, as it was not an illegal act tO‘ ship liquor in the state of Georgia, an injunction as prayed in the bill would be enjoining a legal act. That argument is incomplete. An act legal in itself may be so connected with other acts in a chain of acts that it becomes a link in a crime. It would not be a crime for B. to accept a watch from A., but if the watch was a stolen one, and B. had guilty knowledge of the fact, then his acceptance of the watch might be criminal. If A. is making illegal sales of liquor, and employs B. to deliver the purchases of liquor so sold, and B. has knowledge that he is delivering liquor illegally sold, then B. becomes an agent in the commission of a crime, is particeps criminis, and, an illegal sale of liquor being a misdemeanor, he is a principal, and can be convicted as, such. In this
The question was urged by counsel for the respondent, “Why was this bill not brought in Georgia? Either in the state or United States courts?” The court deems that question immaterial. The sole question here is: Do the allegations of the bill and the admissions of the answer show that this court has the right to grant the relief prayed?
“Again, it is objected that it is outside the jurisdiction of a court of equity to enjoin the commission of crimes. This, as a general proposition, is unques*445 tionod. A chancellor has no criminal jurisdiction. Something more than the threatened commission of an offense against the laws of the land is necessary to call into exercise the injunctive powers of the court. There must be some interference, actual or threatened, with property rights of a pecuniary nature, but, when such interferences appear, the jurisdiction of a court of equity arises, and is not destroyed by the fact that they are accompanied by or are themselves violations of tbe criminal law.”
The court is of the opinion that it has jurisdiction, and that the facts alleged in the bill and admitted or undisputed by the answer of the respondent entitles the complainants to the relief sought. It will be so ordered.