An ajaplication is now made, after cause shown, for a peremptory mandamus to compel the respondent to set aside an order granting an injunction, which is claimed to be beyond his authority, and which lie has refused to disturb. As the grounds of the motion do not rest on the mere impropriety but upon the illegality of this •order, and as some points of jurisdiction are raised both as to that of the respondent and our own, a brief reference to the nature of the controversy is necessary. It will not be important to go into particulars very far.
The injunction was issued in a suit in equity brought in the circuit court for the county of Iosco, by Dewitt C. Welch and J. Frederick Behr against Charles M. Prescott and Charles M. Averill and the Lake Huron & Southwestern Railway Company, and the Tawas & Bay County Railroad Company. The grievance complained of was the refusal of the latter company to carry logs and lumber for complainants at rates and in the manner agreed upon in a contract made in April, 1878, by a firm named Hall, Shook & Co., of which complainants were members, and to whose rights they claim to have succeeded. The grievance is alleged to have arisen out of the following state of facts:
The bill after showing this, sets out that debts were created, and in course of time an assignment made by the corporation under which Prescott became purchaser of the •assets and through him they passed to the Tawas & Bay County Kailroad in which he is principal stockholder. This corporation is a railroad and not a tram road company and its road is considerably longer than the other. There are allegations of frauds on the part of Prescott against the interests of the original corporation in managing to absorb the assets.
It is then averred that the new company refuses to carry out the old agreement and requires large prices, and otherwise violates its supposed duty to complainants.
The circuit judge enjoined the relator by preliminary injunction from running over so much of the road as was built by complainants, except on condition of carrying logs and lumber on the terms agreed upon in April, 1878.
There are two considerations to be noticed on the merits of this hearing — First, whether the circuit court could take jurisdiction of such a case at all; and second, whether it had power under any circumstances, to issue such a preliminary
This agreement was not of such a nature as to give complainants any more claim against the property and road-bed than would be possessed by any other contractors. If the price had been payable in any other way, and no lien reserved, the road would not be bound in any SUch way as would allow such a bill as the present to enforce a specific, claim on it. The contract to run the lumber of complainants is the same in all respects as if made with anybody else, and is no more than an ordinary executory contract. If there had been no change of owners'it is difficult to see how equity could have anything to do with enforcing it. '
But there can be no room for claiming any legal identity between the two corporations. .And before any creditor can assume to inquire into the transmutation of assets he must put himself upon the footing of a judgment creditor. In that capacity he could do no more than reach assets equitably belonging to his debtor. In any other capacity he has no concern with his debtor’s doings.
It does not now occur to us in what possible way equity could relieve complainants on the facts averred.
But the present case is one where the court has undertaken to dispose of the merits without a hearing in the ordinary course of justice. The interlocutory order, as it is called, gives all the substantial relief that is prayed for. It has been decided repeatedly that any decree or order divesting possession or rights on a preliminary inquiry is illegal'and void, so that no one need respect or obey it. People v. Simonson 10 Mich. 335; Port Huron & Gratiot Ry. Co. v. Judge of St. Clair 31 Mich. 456; Salling v. Johnson 25 Mich. 489; McCombs v. Merryhew 40 Mich. 721; Arnold v. Bright 41 Mich. 207.
Any such order made in an equity case is a final decree and appealable as such. Barry v. Briggs 22 Mich. 201, and above cases. But as before suggested it is more than erroneous, and is absolutely void. • An appeal, though admissible,
The question thus arises whether mandamus is the proper remedy. "We have already practically settled this in P. H. & G. Ry Co. v. Judge of St. Clair, where the point was presented and decided. But it may be proper to refer to some of the reasons for so holding.
The jurisdiction of this court in mandamus eas'es is not statutory, but plenary, and supervision is given over all inferior tribunals by the Constitution, Art. 6, sec. 3. Under the constitution legal and equitable jurisdiction is united in the circuit courts, and it is enjoined that distinctions between the two jurisdictions shall be. removed as far as possible. Sec. 5. In granting this remedy, courts are always disposed to confine it to cases where there is no other adequate specific remedy. But the existence of a remedy of another nature which is not adequate furnishes no reason for refusing it, if the necessity of justice requires it. We had occasion in La Grange, relator v. State Treasurer 24 Mich. 468, to consider this jurisdiction quite fully and we think the views there expressed are • in accordance with the soundest authority. Mandamus is á prerogative' writ designed to afford a summary and specific remedy in those cases where without it the party will be subjected to serious injustice. As pointed out by the eminent authorities there cited, it is from its very nature a remedy that cannot be hampered by any narrow or technical bounds. The right coupled with the necessity of such a vindication of it supports'the jurisdiction, and the court in using its discretion, while careful not to use this writ when it is not essential, will apply it where it is.
As the English Chancery was not inferior to the King’s Bench, that is reason enough why there are no precedents for the writ in chancery cases. But as explained in the cases
But in the present case the whole business of the corporation is stopped unless the company submits to conditions which the court has no power to impose. If the officers disobey the writ they have to decide for themselves whether it can safely be done, and few persons are willing or should be compelled to act under such a pressure. An appeal always involves considerable delay, and during the interval there is room for new controversies. The case therefore is urgent, and as there is no doubt of the illegality of the order complained of, it should not be continued to menace the persons engaged in. the enterprise. They should not be "driven to the alternative of seeming to defy the authority of the courts.
We think a mandamus is a proper remedy and should be granted, with costs against the complainants in chancery.