99 N.Y.S. 1107 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1906
This is a motion for an order vacating, on the merits, an injunction pendente lite heretofore granted in this action. The action was brought in Kings county to restrain the police commissioner and other police officials of New York city from maintaining a post of officers upon the plaintiff’s premises in Forty-second street, borough of Manhattan, and in the hallways leading to said premises, for the purpose of discovering or preventing gambling and pool selling therein. An injunction was granted allowing, pendente lite, the relief asked in the complaint. No appeal from the temporary order of injunction was taken, and the action was subsequently removed to New York county. Since said .order was made the Court of Appeals has held in Delaney v. Flood, 183 N. Y. 323, that equity will not interfere to prevent the enforcement of the criminal law. In that case the police were stationed outside -of a place which had a liquor tax license, and which they suspected of being á disorderly house, and likely to be raided as such. Pending an action for a permanent injunction against such acts, the plaintiff therein obtained a temporary restraining order. This order was reversed by the Court of Appeals. After referring to the duties of the police, as prescribed in section 315 of the Greater New York Charter, and stating that the legality of the acts of the police “ should not be determined in a court of equity upon affidavits, but in a court of law, and by evidence that is tested and scrutinized according to the settled rule,” the court continues: “If equity will not intervene in behalf of a concededly lawful business of a fixed and unchanging character, to prevent the criminal prosecution of some alleged unlawful act in its
Injunction pendente Hie vacated.