This is a proceeding by injunction to restrain the defendants from enforcing against the plaintiff a certain ordinance of the defendant city. The-substance of the petition is, that the City of Kansas is. a municipal corporation under the laws of the state, and the defendant, Henry C. Kumpf, is the mayor, and the defendant, Thomas M. Speers, is the chief of police, of said city; and that the plaintiff is a railroad corporation, under the laws of the state, for the purpose of constructing and operating endless cable-line railways, in said city; and that it has constructed and is operating such lines over and along certain named streets in said city; that its said road intersects and crosses certain streets in said city; that plaintiff’s cars are run over said road every few minutes in the day, and is a great public convenience, carrying more than ten thousand people daily. The petition then sets out the ordinances of said city under which it built and is operating said road. It then alleges that, while, under the grant from the city, it was made subject to a certain named ordinance respecting the existing police regulations of the city, which did not contain the requirement herein*94.after named, and that the grant expressly stipulated that, while it was subject to the right of amendment, etc., ,by[the city, it provided that any change in the same, to .be binding on the plaintiff, should affect all street railways in said city in the same manner. It is then alleged that, on the second day of October, 1886, after ■the grants aforesaid, and the construction of the plaintiff’s road, the common council of said city passed an ■ordinance requiring the plaintiff to keep flagmen or watchmen at certain points along the line of its road, where it crosses certain streets, and at certain curves, ■during certain hours of the day and night; which said ordinance imposes certain heavy penalties, in the way of fines, on its officers and servants for any and every car .it permits to run over said points without such watchman ; that its said road is crossed by various other street railway car lines at said street crossings, and that other roads have on their lines like curves, and there is no provision of like character requiring said other railroads to keep or maintain such watchman at said points, or ■like points on their lines, or to share with plaintiff the ■costs and expense of maintaining such guards where their respective lines intersect; “that plaintiff’s said railroad is about three miles in length, and that the combined length of the other street railroads in said city is not less than twenty miles, and many of the curves on said railroads are in populous parts of said city, while the curves on plaintiff’s said railroad, where said watchmen or flagmen are required to be kept, are not in populous portions of said city; that, by reason of said ordinance having by its terms no application to any street railroad except that of plaintiff, the same is unjust, inoperative, and void as to this plaintiff; but, nevertheless, the defendants assert and claim that said ■ordinance is valid and binding on the plaintiff, and threaten to arrest its officers, agents, and servants unless they comply with the terms thereof, and to interfere with and stop the running of plaintiff’s cars over its .said line of railroad ; that if defendants are not *95restrained by the order of this court- they will carry said threat into execution, subject the public to great inconvenience by arresting the servants of plaintiff engaged in operating said railroad, and thereby stopping the running of plaintiff ’ s said cars, and doing to plaintiff a great and irreparable damage and injury by reason of the interruption of its business and depriving it of the profits arising therefrom, and subjecting it to great expense in the stoppage of its machinery ; that the damage, caused by the stoppage of plaintiff’s road cannot be certainly determined, as the profits arising from its operation depend upon the volume of public travel thereon, which is variable.”
The petition then concludes with the usual averment that it has no adequate remedy at law, and with, the appropriate prayer for injunction.
On the hearing of this application, the court refused to grant the relief, and dismissed the petition. Plaintiff has appealed.
I. It is first objected by respondents that the-appeal is premature. This is based on the assumption that the appeal was taken from the action of the trial court in merely refusing to grant a temporary injunction, leaving the cause of action still pending in the court. The rule of law seems to be well established in this state that an appeal does not lie from the mere refusal to grant a temporary writ of injunction, without more, or from the action of the trial court in merely dissolving the temporary injunction. Tanner v. Irwin, 1 Mo. 65; Johnson v. Board of Education, 65 Mo. 47; Harrison v. Rush, 15 Mo. 175. - But such is not this case. The record shows that, on the twenty-second day of November, 1886, the petition was presented to the court in term, whereupon the court granted an ad-interim order, staying the defendants until the twenty-seventh day of that month, when they were cited to appear and show cause; that, on the fourteenth day of December, following, the following entry of record appears: ‘ ‘ The defendants having entered their appearance herein, and having *96waived the issuing of a restraining order, and the arguments of counsel having been fully heard, and 'the motion herein fully considered by the court, the petition for a temporary writ of injunction is denied, and the petition herein is dismissed.” From this it is manifest that the court; not only refused the temporary writ, but also dismissed the petition. So there was no longer any cause of action left pending in that court. It was, so far as the court could act, a final disposition of the case, which entitled the plaintiff to appeal. Witthaus v. Bank, 18 Mo. App. 183.
II. The next question to be answered is, is the remedy by injunction permissible on the facts disclosed by the bill? The threatened injury to plaintiff’s property and business arises from the fact that the municipal authorities of Kansas City are about to enforce against plaintiff the provisions of the ordinance mentioned in the’ petition, exacting of plaintiff the maintenance of certain, watchmen, or guards, at designated street-crossings and curves in the road. The penalty prescribed for a disregard of this ordinance by plaintiff is the liability h> arrest of its officers, agents, and servants, and, on conviction, the imposition of a certain maximum fine, with conditional imprisonment in default of payment thereof. It is now the recognized doctrine that such municipalities, through their councils, are miniature general assemblies, and their ordinances have the force and effect of laws, passed by the state legislature. So it is said : “ The municipal ordinances and the state statutes are from a common source of authority; one class presents it in a delegated, and the other in a direct, form; but it is the power of the state which speaks in both.” St. Louis v. Foster, 52 Mo. 513; State v.DeBar, 58 Mo. 395. It is a well-established doctrine that courts of equity never interfere to stay proceedings of a criminal character; as such courts deal only with civil and property rights. 1 High on’ Injunctions, sec. 68; Moses v. Mayor, 52 Ala. 209; Oil Co. v. Little Rock, 39 Ark. 412; Kerr v. Preston, 6 Ch. D. 463; 2 Danl. Ch. Pr. 1620; Hill Inj., p. 19, sec. 30, *97p. 223, sec. 7. This principle was so strongly rooted in the minds of the old common-law judges that Holt, C. J., declared that he would disregard an order of a court of equity to stay a criminal proceeding in his court. Holder staffe v. Sanders, 6 Mod. 16; Attorney General v. Cleave, 18 Vesey, 219; Lord Montague v. Dudman, 2 Vesey, 396.
It is one of the recognized rules that a court of equity, having acquired jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter, will retain the cause until complete justice and final adjudication of the rights of the parties are determined. If action, for example, had been actually taken, by the city, and warrant of arrest had been issued by the city recorder, for the enforcement of this ordinance, and this bill had been filed to stay the proceeding, and on the hearing the chancellor, or the circuit court sitting as a court of equity, should be of opinion that the ordinance in question was valid, and that the proceeding was proper, no one would contend that, on the refusal to grant an injunction, or on the dissolution of a temporary injunction, the circuit court could proceed to judgment against the offending party. It could only remit him to trial before the city recorder, whose jurisdiction is original, with the right of appeal, not even to the circuit court, but only to the criminal court of Jackson county ; and this court could only acquire jurisdiction of the case by appeal from the criminal court. And the rule that a court of equity will not interfere to stay a criminal prosecution is applied to proceedings under city ordinances enforceable, as this is, by fine, with consequent liability to imprisonment. Authorities supra; Rogers v. Cincinnati, 5 McLean, 337.
We have not overlooked the suggestion of plaintiff, in its petition and brief, that, as its officers and servants are liable, under the' ordinance, to an arrest for every car run over its track without a compliance with the ordinance, thus either multiplying, to an enormous extent, litigation, or subjecting the company to a suspension of *98its entire business until the validity of the ordinance could be tested ; and that it would be extremely difficult to estimate the damage done to plaintiff’s business, even if there were any responsible agent for such damage, a strong appeal to equitable interference and protection is made. And I am free to admit that I can conceive of a state of affairs growing out of an attempt to enforce a vicious and invalid ordinance against such a corporation, which would be so destructive of the property rights of the corporation, under its franchise, as ought to invoke the extraordinary powers of a court of equity for the preservation of its property and its corporate life. But extreme cases are the quicksands of the courts ; and too great caution cannot prevail to avoid a precedent that may prove more hurtful in the end than the evil it was designed to avert in the given case. This court, exercising as it does appellate jurisdiction over like causes originating in the recorder’s court of this city, may well recognize its own knowledge of the fact that the administration of justice, through appeal from that to the higher courts, is not so tardy as to probably entail any .great loss to plaintiff by submitting this controversy to that jurisdiction. At all events, we do not perceive such emergency in the situation as would justify us in breaking through the better-established doctrine of non-interference as a court of equity with the administration of a penal statute in the courts of criminal jurisdiction.
The only authorities which I have been able to find countenancing the remedy by injunction in such cases are Mayor v. Radecke, 49 Md. 218, and Wood v. Brooklyn, 14 Barb. 425. While, perhaps, it would not be fair to say that the latter case has been overruled, yet its authority is much impaired by the language of the court of appeals in Davis v. American Society, 75 N. Y. 369. The Maryland case, however, goes the full length of sustaining the jurisdiction claimed by appellant for a court of equity in this case. With no spirit of criticism, but with the highest respect for the dignity and learning of that tribunal, we cannot refrain from the observation *99that this case is not an inapt illustration of how the broad language of the judge, employed in reference to a given state of facts and law under consideration, may be misused in its application to a different state of facts, involving a different principle in practice. The language of the court is, that any party whose interests are to be injuriously affected by the enforcement of a void ordinance, may, and properly ought to, go into a court of equity and have the execution of the ordinance stayed by injunction, adding, that this course of proceeding has been sanctioned and approved by this court in numerous cases. The adjudications cited were cases touching the validity of ordinances not of a penal or criminal character. They were cases involving the validity of ordinances for the paving of streets at the expense of the property-owners, or attempting to appropriate private land to public use, or to issue bonds without a vote of the taxpayers, in contravention of the state constitution. And the case of Page v. Mayor, 34 Md. 558, from which the learned judge, in Mayor v. Radecke, quotes the language above given, arose out of a contest over the validity of an ordinance providing for the opening of streets in the city of Baltimore, and the appeal was taken by a dissatisfied property-owner from the assessment made on his property taken. As to such cases, purely civil in their character, there is little question now but that it is within the province of a court of equity, by injunction, to protect the property-owner against such unauthorized invasions. Such ordinances are not penal. Such is the case of Springfield Ry. Co v. City of Springfield, 85 Mo. 674. After the defendant city had given, by grant, the right to the plaintiff railroad to construct its track over the public square, and the railroad company had so constructed its road, the city threatened, and was about, to fence up the square, with an iron fence, which would thereby disconnect a part of the road, destroying its usefulness, etc. The court held that the remedy of injunction would lie, as equity “ will interfere to protect and secure the enjoy*100ment of a franchise secured by statute, because it affords, the only plain and adequate remedy. And so equity will protect rights of a like character acquired under municipal ordinances.”
The validity of the ordinance in question can be fully tested in a trial, under an arrest, in the law courts. One judgment therein should end’ the litigation. There is high authority for saying that in the contingency, suggested by plaintiff’s counsel, of as many arrests and prosecutions as there should be separate trips of the plaintiff’s cars, a court of equity might, after one conviction, stay temporarily the proceedings in the others until a final determination of the first. Railroad v. Mayor, 54 N. Y. 159. The court distinguish such a case from that of West v. Mayor, 10 Paige, 539. No such contingency has as yet arisen in the condition of this complaint ; and until it does we are not called upon to affirm or deny the authority of the above case. It is of such dignity, however, as to suggest to the city the propriety of avoiding, in any contest involving the validity of the-ordinance in question, the unnecessary multiplication of actions until the right to proceed be determined in one action.
It results that the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
All concur.