Clement, Blackstock, & Van Slyk v. Chesapeake & Delaware Canal Co.
This text of 3 Del. Cas. 183 (Clement, Blackstock, & Van Slyk v. Chesapeake & Delaware Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
As no exceptions to the further answer are filed, and no cause upon the record is shown or filed, the course is for the defendants to move that the injunction be dissolved, according to the order made the 3rd instant. The defendants are in the affirmative, therefore, on such motion. The plaintiffs have stated and shown nothing, and therefore the defendants will proceed first.
We have filed an affidavit or affidavits.
reads affidavit of service of order on Mr. Clement by Thomas Stockton, Register of this court, served on March 3. Affidavit made by Thomas Stockton this day.
This affidavit is not evidence of notice. The form is not right. The solicitor of complainants had no notice. The defendants only served a copy of the order on Clement, according to the affidavit. .
2 Madd.Ch. 225. Defendant or attorney present when order made for injunction, bound by it.
That may be in argument hereafter, but it is not yet so shown, and as the complainants have not stated or shown or filed any cause whatever, the plaintiffs will proceed with their motion.
This is the first I have heard of the affidavits. The record showed no such thing when this question first arose. I examined the record and saw nothing of the kind noted, and until this moment the affidavit was not mentioned.
The notice is sufficient that the motion should proceed. The counsel for the complainants were present in court when the order was made. I consulted them about the day on which the cause should be shown; and though they would not consent, and took no part in fixing on this day, yet they knew at the time of the order and of the day fixed by the Court on which the cause should be shown. A copy of the order was served by the Register on Mr. Clement, one of the complainants, on the 3rd of March; besides, since the 3rd of March, many of the papers filed with the further answer of the defendants, the Canal Company, have been allowed by the Court to be taken by the complainant’s counsel for their inspection and examination, with the further answer. Now under all these circumstances, to decide that the solicitors of complainants had not notice of the order would be to shut my eyes and all my senses against plain, palpable facts; and against the plainest conviction of my senses. The notice is sufficient, and the motion must proceed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
3 Del. Cas. 183, 1827 Del. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-blackstock-van-slyk-v-chesapeake-delaware-canal-co-delch-1827.