OPINION
News Mart, Inc., d/b/a Kingston Pike News, is the operator of a bookstore and motion picture establishment where motion pictures, commonly described as “peep shows,” are shown. Appellant, V.S.D., Inc., d/b/a Adult Boutique, operates a similar establishment. The District Attorney General of Knox County brought separate actions against the appellants under the 1974 Obscenity Statute, codified as T.C.A. §§ 39-3010 — 39-3022, seeking to enjoin the further exhibition of untitled movies de
On appeal, no issue is made of the finding by the trial court that the several “peep show” films described in the complaints and affidavits are obscene. Appellants do take issue, however, with the permanent injunctions as they apply to the future showing of unnamed and undescribed films. They also insist that the injunctions against showing the films that were the subject of the action are defective in that reference is made to the complaints and affidavits for a description of the films.
In our opinion, both contentions of the appellants are correct. The procedure set forth in the present obscenity act for the issuance of injunctions prohibiting the showing or displaying of obscene material is markedly similar to that set forth in the prior obscenity act. And, in considering the prior act in New Riviera Arts Theatre v. State ex rel Davis,
As to the injunction against the further showing of the films that were the subject of the complaints in these cases, Rule 65.02 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure specifically provides that:
(1) Every restraining order or injunction shall be specific in terms and shall describe in reasonable detail, and not by reference to the complaint or other document, the act restrained or enjoined, (emphasis supplied)
While there is no question but that the descriptions of the untitled films were described with specificity in the complaints and the affidavits of Captain Whitfield, the descriptions were not included in the injunctions other than by reference. This is contra to the requirement set forth in Rule 65.02, and necessitates a modification of the injunctions for them to be effective. We think the better procedure would be for the trial court to make the necessary modifications in the injunctions. Accordingly, both actions are remanded to the trial court with instructions that it modify the injunctions to include the detailed descriptions of the films set forth in the complaints and the affidavits of .Captain Whitfield. Costs in this court are adjudged against appellants equally.
