187 Tenn. 530 | Tenn. | 1948
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was fined $50.00 and given a workhouse sentence of sixty days by the Criminal Court
On August 8th, 1947, the plaintiff in error and another were “permanently enjoined from operating a disorderly house or selling or unlawfully possessing or storing intoxicating liquor anywhere in Hamilton County, Tennessee, or from any violation of law charged in the petition, . .
On January 9, 1948, a petition to punish the plaintiff in error was filed in said court alleging two specific violations of said injunction. In each of these violations the plaintiff in error was found guilty and fined for violating the law, i. e., selling unstamped liquor and selling beer without a license. Fines were paid by the plaintiff in error for each of these violations.
The plaintiff in error’s only defense to the petition for contempt is that he has already been prosecuted criminally for the same acts which are now charged as contempt of the injunction above referred to.
The contrary to this contention has been definitely held by this Court in Ricketts v. State, 111 Tenn. 380, 77 S. W. 1076, and in Osborn v. State, 160 Tenn. 599, 28 S. W. (2d) 49.
The mandates of a court must be obeyed. When they are disobeyed it becomes the duty of the court to punish for contempt. The court must do this to uphold the respect due such mandates. The dignity and efficiency of a court requires that its orders be obeyed and a failure to obey requires punishment in accord with the gravity and wilfulness of the disobedience.
When one is enjoined from committing certain illegal acts a commission of these acts subjects the offender to a criminal prosecution and a prosecution for contempt
For the reasons given the judgment must be affirmed.