72 Miss. 73 | Miss. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant exhibited his bill against the appellees, alleging that he is the real owner of the land therein described and that the appellees are in possession thereof, claiming title adversely; that he had theretofore proceeded in equity against appellees for a cancellation of their title, and, on final hearing, the court had decreed the title of appellees to be valid, and from that decree he had prosecuted an appeal to the supreme court, which was then pending and undetermined; that the principal value of the land consisted of the timber, growing thereon, which the appellees were about to cut and remove from the land, and that they were insolvent and unable to respond in damages. An injunction was prayed and obtained restraining the appellees ’ from cutting the timber until the rights of the parties should be determined. The defendant moved to dissolve the injunction on the face of the bill, and, on .a hearing, a decree was made dissolving the injunction and awarding damages on the injunction bond. From that decree this appeal is prosecuted.
In support of the decree it is said:
1. That a court of equity will not enjoin the commission of waste by one in possession of land, claiming adversely to the complainant, the complainant’s title not having been established by an action, and that, in face of the decree against complainant’s title in the former controversy, no relief can be granted to him as against those determined by that decree to be the true owners.
2. That, if complainant, by any proceeding, could have secured an injunction, it should have been prayed in the former litigation, from the lowerQcourt so long as the record of that cause remained there, and from this court after the appeal had brought that cause here.
The cases cited by counsel for appellees, Poindexter v. Henderson, Walker (Miss.), 176; Nevitt v. Gillespie, 1 How., 108; Skipwith v. Dodd, 24 Miss., 487; and Eskridge v. Eskridge,
But in this state the jurisdiction in equity in this class of cases by our constitution is lifted far above the region of doubt. By § 159 of that instrument, the general jurisdiction of chancery is conferred, and, by paragraph thereof, is made to
Clearly, the relief sought by the complainant in this cause is such as falls within the auxiliary or ancillary jurisdiction of equity, and -which, under the former practice in equity, was generally withheld until the right at law had been established, but which, under the modern practice, was frequently afforded. The constitution hot only destroys the obstacle which had formerly existed to the exercise of this auxiliary relief, but, as to the cases falling within paragraph “f ” of § 159, §160 confers jurisdiction upon courts of equity to try legal as well as equitable titles. If a court of law first acquires jurisdiction, equity may, without awaiting exhaustion of the legal remedy, afford auxiliary aid; if the court of equity first acquires jurisdiction, it may proceed to final and complete relief, though the titles .and rights involved are of a legal, as distinguished from an equitable, character.
It may be that complainant stood in no need of the restraining process until after the determination in the court below of
The decree is reversed., the iiymiction restored, and ca/iose remanded.