- (1) each known person against whom relief is sought and each public officer who has a duty to protect the property of the plaintiff is given, in the manner that the court directs, personal notice that the court will hold a hearing on issuance of a temporary or permanent injunction;
- (2) at the hearing, the court takes, in open court, testimony offered against the temporary or permanent injunction and affords the opportunity for cross-examination; and
(3) as a result of the hearing, the court finds that:
(i) an unlawful act:
- 1. has been threatened and, unless restrained, will be committed; or
- 2. has been committed and, unless restrained, will be continued;
- (ii) unless it grants the relief requested, the property of the plaintiff will be injured substantially and irreparably;
- (iii) greater injury will be inflicted on the plaintiff for each item of relief that the court denies than will be inflicted on the defendant if the court grants the item;
- (iv) it is not granting any item of relief for which a court lacks jurisdiction under § 4-307 of this subtitle;
- (v) the plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law; and
- (vi) each public officer who has a duty to protect the property of the plaintiff has failed or is unable to give adequate protection.
In addition to any other limitation under this Part III of this subtitle, a court may not issue a temporary or permanent injunction in a case that involves or grows out of a labor dispute unless:
Added by Acts 1991, c. 8, § 2, eff. Oct. 1, 1991.
Formerly Art. 100, § 68.