232 Pa. 155 | Pa. | 1911
Opinion by
We think the learned court erred in entering a final decree that “the (preliminary) injunction should stand in force to give similar relief whenever a similar emergency shall arise. ” There was no prayer in the bill for such relief and the emergency, the only ground for issuing the preliminary injunction, having passed, the bill should have been dismissed.
The plaintiff filed the bill on September 19,4908, averring, inter alia, that by reason of the extraordinary, prolonged and unprecedented drouth, extending over a period of some three months, the streams tributary to Harvey’s Lake had practically dried up, and unless plaintiff company could immediately make use of the waters of Harvey’s Lake, substantially equivalent to the outflow
The correctness of the decree awarding the preliminary injunction is not now before us and need not be determined. It was presented for our consideration in North
The decree is reversed and the injunction is dissolved, each party to pay the costs which they respectively incurred in the court below, and the appellee to pay the costs of this appeal.