Williams v. Jones Amerman
This text of 75 S.E. 705 (Williams v. Jones Amerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Acting Associate Justice. This case comes up to this Court on appeal from an interlocutory or preliminary injunction issued by Judge Gage on June 30, 1910, on the following exceptions, viz.:
1. “That his Honor erred in holding that leave to sue was granted by any Court of competent jurisdiction, so far as appears by the complaint, and in holding, by implication, that mere permission granted to plaintiff ‘to commence and maintain this suit, as she may be advised,’ without notice to defendant, in anywise precluded consideration of the adequacy of these pleadings to support a cause of action or injunction, as it does not follow that the Court granting leave ‘to commence this suit,’ predetermined that any complaint the plaintiff might be advised to frame would suffice to constitute a cause of action, be immune from any plea apparent on its face, or that it would support an injunction temporary or otherwise..
3. “That his Honor erred in holding that in considering the rule and return herein, he could not consider whether or not the plea of res judicata was established upon the face of the complaint, and exhibits submitted therewith; whereas, he should have held the same showed an adjudication upon *346 the very acts complained of in another suit, to which the parties herein were privy, and that a motion for permanent injunction, based upon practically identical cause of action and allegations, was pending in such other suit, and should have consequently refused the application for injunction in this case.
3. “That his Honor erred in holding the return irrelevant in showing the pendency of a motion in another jurisdiction for the same injunction sought in the present motion, and in not discharging the rule and refusing the motion after it appeared that the order of Judge Prince referred to had been granted.”
In order that there may be a clear understanding of the matters herein presented, the “case” for appeal herein, except Exhibit “F,” which is the opinion of this Court, reported in 85 S. C. 1, should be incorporated in the report of this case.
“Where it appears by the complaint that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded, and such relief, or any part thereof, consists in restraining the commission or continuance of some act, the commission or continuance of which, during the litigation, would produce injury to the plaintiff, * * * a temporary injunction may be granted to restrain such act.” Quoted from section 240, volume II, of the Code of Laws of South Carolina, 1902.
The sole object of this section of the Code is to preserve the subject of controversy in its then existing condition, and without determining any question of right, merely to prevent a further perpetration of wrong or the doing of any act whereby the right in controversy may be materially injured or endangered, until a full and deliberate investigation of the case is afforded to the party.
In passing upon an application for an interlocutory or preliminary injunction the Court must satisfy itself, not that the plaintiff has certainly the right, but that he has a fair question to raise as to the existence of such a right. *348 It is true that the Court will not interfere if it thinks there is no real question between the parties; but seeing that there is a substantial question to be decided, it will preserve the property until such question can be disposed of.
The plaintiff may be entitled to a preliminary injunction in cases where his right to the relief sought may fail on a hearing on the merits. Am. & Ene. L., vol. XVI, p. 345.
Under the decisions of our Court it is not proper for a Circuit Judge to consider the merits of a case of this kind at chambers on a motion for a temporary injunction, except in so far as they may enable him to come to a proper conclusion as to whether a prima facie showing has been made. When such showing is made a temporary injunction will be granted without regard to how the case may terminate on the hearing on the merits.
Our Courts hold that where the action is for the sole purpose of an injunction, and a temporary injunction is essential to the assertion and preservation of a legal right, if established as alleged in the complaint, it would be error of law to refuse a temporary injunction. Alderman & Sons Co. v. Wilson, 69 S. C. 156, 48 S. E. 85, and cases therein cited.
Ordinarily, however, an interlocutory injunction is not a matter of right, but of grace, resting in the sound discretion of the Judge. Pelzer, Rodgers & Co. v. Hughes, 27 S. C. 415, 3 S. E. 781.
For these reasons the exceptions of the defendants are overruled, and the order of Judge Gage herein appealed from sustained.
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75 S.E. 705, 92 S.C. 342, 1912 S.C. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-jones-amerman-sc-1912.