284 F. 850 | 6th Cir. | 1922
This is an appeal by defendants from an order awarding temporary injunction in a case growing out of an employés5 strike. It appears from the statements of counsel for the respective parties in open court that since the appeal was taken the strike has terminated and the acts enjoined by the order in question have ceased. The question of. the propriety of the temporary injunction has thus become moot, and the appeal cannot properly be retained for the purpose of deciding questions which may arise between the parties hereto or between other parties.
It appears that in the main suit permanent injunction and damages are sought by plaintiff, and that a trial of those issues in that suit is contemplated. In the exercise of our duty to malee such order as is “most consonant to justice,” in view of the condition and circumstances of this case, the appeal from the order of temporary injunction now here is dismissed, without determining the merits thereof, and without prejudice to.and without passing upon the rights of the parties otherwise in the pending suit, or to the hearing and trial of such other issues therein.
As neither party is in fault for the ending of the controversy relating to the propriety of temporary injunction, no award of costs on this appeal will presently be made, but such costs will abide the final decree in the main suit in the court below and be covered thereby. Each party is at liberty to withdraw from the files of this court such copies of the printed record and briefs as they respectively have caused to be filed herein.