The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas, adjudging the defendant guilty of a wilful violation of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas, and committing him to- jail until he “shall pay unto the clerk of said Court for the plaintiffs herein the sum of one hundred dollars., together with the sheriff’s fees and any other costs that may arise, or until further order of this Court.”
The defendant asks the reversal of the order on three grounds. First. Because the order, as he alleges, was granted at chambers, and for that reason void. Second. Because the Circuit Judge, without authority of law, added the words, “until further order of this Court,” after the decree was filed and appeal taken; the decree without such added words being, it is insisted, a nullity as providing an indefinite term of imprisonment. Third. Because the defendant could not in the contempt proceeding be required to make reparation to. plaintiffs as a punishment.
In conformity with the complaint in the cause, the Court of Common Pleas had made a decree enjoining the defendant from setting up any claim to or committing any trespass on certain lands of plaintiffs. Upon affidavits submitted by plaintiffs to the effect that the defendant was cutting valuable timber trees on the land, in disregard of the decree of the Court, Hon. D. A. Townsend, presiding in the Court of *569 Common Pleas for Kershaw County, on June 4, 1903, issued an order requiring the defendant to show cause the next day why he should not be attached for contempt. In his decree Judge Townsend thus states the action taken upon hearing the return of defendant:
“The defendant, in response to said order or rule, appeared personally in Court on the 5th day of June, 1903, and by his attorney, J. T. Hay, Esq., answering the said.order, denied that he had trespassed upon the lands of plaintiffs or crossed the line fixed by C. C. Haile, surveyor, or disregarded the order of this Court, and with sundry other allegations alleged that the defendant ‘can prove where line is located by William Sanders, James Ross and Isom Medlin, old citizens, but is unable to procure their attendance to-day.’ Thereupon it was proposed by J. T. Hay, Esq., attorney for the defendant, that the matters in issue be referred to a referee to- take testimony and report to- the Judge at a later-date, and by agreement of counsel and upon motion of defendant’s attorney, an order was passed, dated the 5th day of June, 1903, referring it to John S. Yerner, master for Rich-land County, to take testimony at Columbia, S. C., upon the issues involved and report the same to me not later than July the 1st, 1903, and that the cause be decided by me at chambers, having been heard at the session of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, in Camden, and been marked ‘Heard’ on the calendar.”
The appeal does not bring in question the Circuit Court’s findings of fact. One of these findings was that the defendant had wilfully violated the injunction, and appropriated or destroyed the property of the plaintiffs which the Court had undertaken to protect. The contempt was, therefore, criminal, so far as it offended the dignity and authority of the court; and civil, soi far as it violated the rights of the plaintiffs under the protection of the decree. All contempt proceedings grow out of the duty of the individual to> obey the orders of the court, and the court’s duty to- maintain its dignity and authority; but the maintenance of the court’s *571 dignity and authority is not itself the ultimate purpose to be attained; this is rather a means bo the practical end, that litigants who submit their personal and property rights to a tribunal established by law, may have their rights as adjudicated by that tribunal protected ánd enforced by its power. When the contempt does not directly affect any particular individual, the penalty is inflicted for the benefit of the state at large. When, on the other hand, property of an individual is taken or destroyed, in contempt of the court’s order, those interested have a right to ask of the court its restoration or payment of its value at the hands of the offender, and the court requires such restoration or payment of its value as part of the punishment. In each instance the ultimate purpose is the protection of adjudicated right.
The case of
Ex parte Thurmond,
Such an order is plainly not imprisorfment for debt, and does not fall under the case of
Golson
v.
Holman,
28 S. C., 53,
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
