108 N.Y. 611 | NY | 1888
The defendant appeals from an order of the General Term of the Superior Court of New York, affirming an order of the Special Term, enjoining the defendant from attaching to or using certain labels, or imitations thereof, upon boxes containing cigars manufactured and sold by him.
The order was granted upon pleadings and affidavits presenting a controverted state of facts, and, so far as the question depends upon such facts, we must assume that the court below proceeded upon the theory that the plaintiffs' version was correct. Upon this assumption it is quite clear that the order was discretionary, and not appealable to this court. We have repeatedly held that the granting, continuing, or dissolving of a temporary injunction, is within the discretion of the court of original jurisdiction, and that its determination cannot be reviewed here. (Pfohl v. Sampson,
In the case, however, of McHenry v. Jewett (
The issue thus made presents a serious question of law as to the rights of the plaintiffs, and we are not prepared to determine it in this preliminary proceeding, and in the absence of findings of fact showing the particular grounds upon which the judgment is based. (Selchow v. Baker,
We think this case comes within the general rule relating to the appealability of orders granting preliminary injunctions, and the appeal should therefore be dismissed.
All concur.
Appeal dismissed. *614
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