37 La. Ann. 852 | La. | 1885
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The relators complain that they have been illegally committed for contempt, by the district court and, alleging rights to a habeas corpus, want of jurisdiction in said court and usurpation of authority by it, they seek to be released from custody. They had prayed for temporary relief which was not allowed.
The district judge elaborately returns that he had jurisdiction and properly exercised it.
The record shows that certain parties obtained an injunction to prevent the defendants from doing acts which, if committed, would cause irreparable injury.
Shortly after, the defendants obtained a dissolution on bond, the order being made by a district judge sitting in the absence of the one who had allowed the injunction. Subsequently, within the legal delay, the latter judge having resumed his functions, the plaintiffs in injunction obtained and perfected a suspensive appeal to this Court, from the dissolving order, which appeal is undetermined.
The relators, defendants in injunction, then did the acts prohibited by the court and were ruled in for contempt.
After trial, the district judge considered that the effect of the suspensive appeal from the dissolving order, was to place things in the condition in which they stood when the motion to bond was made—that is to continue in force the injunction as though the motion had never been allowed. On the question of fact he found that the relators had violated the injunction and he sentenced them to ten days imprisonment.
The law and jurisprudence are no doubt in that sense, but however fettered by an appeal, the court a qua lias never been deemed absolutely stripped of jurisdiction to determine the character and effect of such appeal. 32 Ann. 814 ; 34 Ann. 90.
The appeal in this case does not affect the preliminary injunction; but only the validity of its dissolution on bond.
.In the present instance the district court had jurisdiction to ascertain primarily, whether the appeal granted was or not suspensive and, if suspensive, what it was that it suspended. It had also jurisdiction, finding that it had suspended the effect of the order dissolving on bond, to decide that the injunction was or not in force and also that its prohibitions had or not been transgressed. It could punish for contempt. 36 Ann. 942.
It is clear, as a matter of law, that the effect of the suspensive appeal from the order dissolving the injunction on bond, was to leave matters in the condition in which they stood before the dissolving order was made; a condition in which they continued as though that order had never been granted. Butchers’ Union vs. Judge, 33 Ann. 438, 494, 560, 134; also: 36 Ann. 192, 887, 192, 918; 34 Ann. 1181.
With the question of fact this Court has nothing to do.
We do not understand that the proceeding raises any issue beside that of jurisdiction just considered.
It is therefore ordered and decreed that the application herein for the nullity of the proceedings punishing for contempt, be refused with costs.