Opinion or the court by
JUDGE SETTLEReversing.
This equitable action was instituted in the Jefferson circuit court, common pleas division, by the appellant, the Commonwealth of Kentucky, on relation of the Attorney ■General, against the appellees, Terry McGovern and others, to prevent the holding of a prize fight advertised to take place on the 22d day of September, 1902, in the Auditorium, a large theatre situated in the city of Lousiv-ille. Terry McGovern and Young Corbett were to be the combatants, .and their managers and the owner of the Auditorium were made parties to the action.
It is averred in the petition, in substance, that tbe prizefight was to be given under the auspices of the Southern Athletic Culb of which the appellee Robert Gray is the sole stockholder and manager; that the Auditorium has a seating capacity of 4,000, and that the prices of tickets for admission into that building to witness the prize-fight vary from $5 to $20 a seat; that the fight was to take place according to the Marquis of Queensbury mies, and the fighters were to receive $10,000 between them. It is further averred that the prize-fight, if allowed to take place, would bring to the city of Louisville a great number of sporting men, disorderly persons, and criminals, and that the persons so drawn to the city would constitute a lawless, turbulent and dangerous assembly of many thousands of people, and would produce breaches of the peace and other violations of the law, which would have a demoralizing effect upon the good order and well-being of the community, and *224produce a public nuisance. It is also averred' that a criminal prosecution of the principals and others connected with them would not prevent the great injury that would be done to the people of the State by holding the prize-fight within its bounds, and, finally, that the Commonwealth has no adequate remedy at law for the injury which would result to the public welfare, if the prize-fight were allowed to be held. Answer was filed by the appellees, traversing the allegations of the petition.
Thereafter, upon the pleadings and proof, in the form of affidavits and depositions, the judge of the court in which the action was then pending issued a temporary injunction, as prayed, and upon the day following its issual a motion was made by the appellees before one of the judges of this couxt to dissolve the same, and that judge and five of his associates, members' of this court whom he called in consultation,, rendered the following opinion:
“This motion was made before the Chief Justice, who by consent of the applicants transferred the hearing of the motion to Judge White, who invited the whole court, except Judge Paynter (absent) to hear the application with him. The majority of the court who heard the application to dissolve the injunction of Judge Field are of the opinion that the contest which has been enjoined „is a prize-fight, and that it is not material whether the victor in the contest is to> receive more of the reward offered than the vanquished. The court is divided equally upon the question of whether the chancellor has preventive power under the Kentucky Statutes to restrain the holding of such contest; Chief Justice Guffy and Judges White and Burnam holding-in the negative, and Judges DuRelle, Hobson and O’Rear holding the affirmative. The motion to dissolve is therefore denied.”
*225After the foregoing action by this court, the case was submitted upon the pleadings and proof to the judge of the chancery division, No. 2, Jefferson circuit court, for trial, who rendered judgment dismissing the petition. Appellant complains of that judgment, and has brought the case by appeal to this court for review.
No one can doubt that the contest between appellees McGovern and Corbett, if it had taken place as advertised, would have been a fight. Indeed, it is clear from the evidence furnished by the record that they are prize-fighters and that the fight was to be one of unusual endurance and extreme brutality, a very feast of blood, to be enjoyed to the full by the thousands who were expected to wetness it. From the mass of testimony in regard to the bloody character of such contests found in the record we have but to mention the following:
Lambertson, the sporting editor of a Cincinnati newspaper, in describing a fight of this kind which he witnessed at the Auditorium, said it appeared to him the men were “hitting each other just as hard as they could.”
Harris, the manager of McGovern, in speaking of his manner of fighting, says: “There is ‘no make-believe” about it; that, when he goes into a contest of this kind, he ‘goes in to win;’ that he strikes ‘just as hard as he can/ and that this' is the way with every such contest, unless it is a ‘fake.’ ”
Gearhart, a professor of boxing in the city of Louisville, testified that he had seen a great many contests under the Marquis of Queensbury rules, and that they are brutal; and, upon being asked if it was customary for the contestants to try to knock each other out in such contests, he said: “The contestants do generally, if, they are fighting under the Marquis of Queensbury rules, endeavor to knock each *226other out, because, if they succeed in doing that (that is, in knocking their opponent down, so that 'he is unable to get on his feet in ten seconds), in' that way they will get the decision. Hence, they always endeavor to do that, if they are ‘fighting’ on the square,’ in sporting parlance.” Upon being further asked if the sports would regard it a square contest if the opponents did not use their best endeavor to knock each other out, he answered: “No, that would be considered a ‘fake.’ ”
A physician, Dr. Gossett, testified to having professionally attended a man named Handler, after his fight with Bill Harrahan at the Auditorium ■ in November, 1901, and of his condition said: “His upper, lip was cut in two places— one side clear through to the teeth, completely severed, and the other side was nearly through. His upper lip was swollen about three or four timas its normal thickness, and one eye was completely closed and swollen very much. Both lids were swollen about an inch in thickness, due to the extravasation of blood. He could not open one of his eyes. The other was very nearly as bad. He had a cut over one eye, about an inch and .a half in length, in which we had to take three or four .sutures. We took six or eight sutures in his lip. His face was very much bruised; looked like a piece of raw beef. Blood was oozing from different parts of it. . . . When I first saw him, the feeling I had was of sickening” disgust.”
Another witness, Mr. Lewis Humphrey, testified that he saw the fight between ,Ryan and West for the championship of the middle-weights of the United States, which occurred in the Auditorium in the city of Louisville on March 4, 1901. They fought with five-ounce gloves and under the Marquis of Queenshury rules. The fight was under the auspices of the Southern Athletic Club, of which the appellee *227Robert G. Gray was then, as now, the manager, and some of the city police were present. The fight is thus graphically described by the witness: “I saw this fight from beginning to end, being very close up to the ring, where I could very distinctly see both contestants during the whole fight. They were dressed in the manner which is universally 'customary with prize-fighters, being stripped to the waist. They started into the fight in the usual manner, by shaking hands in the center of the ring, and then began to fight each other with their fists, using and manifestly exerting all of their physical .strength in the blows .delivered against each other. It was an extremely vicious fight, and the physical punishment of each of the contestants was very great. West was the greatest sufferer. His nose was split early in the fight, so it hung in two portions. Midway in the contest he was so covered with blood that .above the waist it was difficult to see the white skin. The gloves on the hands of his opponent, Ryan, became fairly soggy with blood from .striking the face o,f West. West showed the greatest endurance, and, although at least half a dozen times it appeared as if he would faint, he remained in the ring until tba close of the seventeenth round. During this time, he was several times knocked to the floor, and barely managed to rise before the count of ten. At the end of the seventeenth round, he took a seat in the comer, and was in such :a dazed and weakened condition, that, after consultation with his seconds, the referee declared him unable to go further, and awarded the fight to Ryan. During the fight Ryan resorted to what is known as 'chopping tactics/ and cut' and bruised West in innumerable places about the entire face and head; also striking Imp in the body, raising-very perceptible bruises. ' Ryan was himself badly cut about the face, and one of his eyebrows split. He bled very *228freely, and the attentiop of his seconds between the rounds was almost antirely taken up with removing the blood frdm his face and body. A large quantity of blood covered the floor on which they were fighting, making it at several places very slippery.”
The combats described by the witnesses' were conducted according to the Marquis of Queensbury rules. It is admitted that the prize-fight, to prevent which the injunction in this case was sought, was to be fought under the same rules. A copy of these rules is made a part of the record in this case, and we here quote from that copy the following:
“Sixth. When the contestant has fallen to the ring floor through the medium of a blow or weakness, he must arise, unassisted, within a period of ten seconds. His opponent must meanwhile retire to his corner, and not resume fighting until the fallen man has regained his feet. Should the latter fail to recommence the battle within the specified ten seconds, the referee shall award the victory to the other contestant. When a contestant is on the floor, the count shall be made by the official timer of the club, either from an electric, ¡clock or his watch. He shall call off each second by striking the gong.
“Seventh. A contestant, on one knee, or hanging on the ropes in a helpless condition with his toes off the floor, shall be considered down, and, if struck while in that position, must be awarded the decision by the referee.”
The'brutal frankness of the language contained in these rul.es manifests, without the aid of extrinsic evidence, the character of the fighting provided for therein, and the cruelty of the punishment that may be inflicted thereunder.
The fact that the reward in this case was to be equally divided between the combatants can not legalise the trans*229action. As well said by counsel for appellant, to hold that the statute against prize-fighting covers only the case where the reward is- unequally divided would be to say that the statute does not prohibit the brutal and debauching public exhibition, but does prohibit a greater reward being given to one than to the other combatant. It would be absurd to place such a construction upon the purpose and object of the statute, and certainly there is nothing in its language that warrants the conclusion that it was enacted to prevent discrimination between the victor and the vanquished. “The evil designed to be remedied by the statute is that class of brutal exhibitions, for giving which considerable sums of money were paid, and we do not think the statute can be evaded by rewarding the unsuccessful, as well as the successful party.” State v. Purtell, 56 Kan., 483, 43 Pac., 783.
Nor will the use of gloves by the combatants m a prizefight make such a combat any less an offense in the eyes of the law. The Supreme Court of Louisiana in the case of State v. Olympic Club, 47 La. Ann., 1095, 17 South., 599, said of such a contest as the one under ¡consideration: “The glove contests permitted in defendant’s club are advertised extensively and are generally known as ‘prize-fights.’ The fighters are under contract with each other, with the, club, and under obligations to spectators and betters, to fight to a finish; that is, usually until there is what is called a ‘knock-out.’ There can be no reasonable objection to boxing as generally understood. It is a manly, healthful, and vigorous training, and encouraged in some of our most respectable institutions; and interference with it by • legislative power would be a great stretch of authority, bordering upon an infringement of personal liberty. And even boxing without gloves for a display of skill and for pastime, when there is no breach of the peace, and no intentional injury to *230the person, can not be considered as embraced within the statute. But in a prize contest for a purse, with or without gloves, there is, despite the customary shaking of the h'ánds and the 'preliminary courtesies between the combatants, an intention to do injury and to break the public peace. The contest is1 directly within the spirit, if not the exact definition, of an assaults In su:ch a contest, there can be no absence of an intention to do an injury, for the purpose of the contest is to subdue an opponent by knocking him senseless, or so injuring him that he can not, within a given time, continue to fight.”
It now remains to be seen whether a court of equity has jurisdiction to prevent by injunction a prize-fight. Kentucky Statutes (1899), sections 1281-1288, inclusive, prohibit prize-fighting, make it a felony to engage in prize-fighting, a misdemeanor to aid or abet in bringing on a prize-fight, or to bet on or voluntarily witness such a fight, and also a misdemeanor for any one to permit the use of his land's for a prize-fight.
Section 1289 provides: “It shall -be the duty of all judges of courts, justices of the peace, mayors of cities, trustees of towns, and other conservators of the peace, all sheriffs, constables, marshals, and other public officers, on being informed or having reason of their own knowledge to believe that such a fight is about to take place, or that there .is graining or preparation in any place, within their jurisdiction, for such fight, to suppress and prevent the sanie,’ and -for this purpose they shall arrest the offending parties, or have them arrested, or hold them to security for their good behavior, and also commit them to prison, if they do not give bail for their appearance at the next circuit court to answer the charge; and in order to suppress and prevent the same, they shall exercise all the powers vested in them for the prevention of crimes and misdemeanors;- and any *231officer having such knowledge or information, who shall willfully neglect • or fail to execute the duties required of him in this section, shall be fined in the sum of $500.00, and shall forfeit his office.”
We are told by Judge Story, in his excellent work on Equity Jurisprudence (volume 2, section 921): “In regard to public nuisances, the jurisdiction of courts of equity seems to be of very ancient date, and has been distinctly traced back to the reign of Queen Elizabeth. This jurisdiction is applicable, not only to public nuisances, strictly so called, but also purprestures upon public rights and property.” Again, in section 924, it is said by the same author: “The ground of this jurisdiction of courts of equity in cases of purprasture, as well as of public nuisances, undoubtedly is their ability to give a more complete and perfect remedy than is, attainable at law, in order to prevent irreparable mischief,' and also to suppress oppressive and vexatious litigation.” Continuing the discussion, the learned writer announces further that: “The courts (of equity) can not only prevent nuisances that .are threatened, and before irreparable mischief ensues, but arrest and abate those in progress, and by perpetual injunction protect the public against them in the future, whereas courts of • law can only reach existing nuisances, leaving future acts to be the .subject of new prosecutions or proceedings. This is a salutary jurisdiction, especially where a nuisance affects the health, morals, or safety of the community. Though not frequently exercised, the power undoubtedly exists in courts of equity thus to protect the public .against injury.”
In Pomeroy’s Equity, 3d vol., section 1349, it is said: “A court of equity has jurisdiction to restrain existing or .threatened nuisances by injunction at the suit of the Attorney General in England, and at the suit of the State or *232the people, or municipality, or some proper officer representing the Commonwealth, in this country.”
In 21 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 703, it is likewise said: “A court of equity has discretionary jurisdiction to enjoin the creation or erection of either a public or private nuisance or a purprasture. This jurisdiction is founded upon the ability of equity to prevent irreparable mischief and vexatious litigation and to furnish a more complete remedy than can be had at law. The remedy by, indictment for a public nuisance is not an adequate remedy at law, precluding the remedy by injunction; nor is tba right of a private person to call upon the public authority to abate the public nuisance, after its erection, such a remedy.”
In Attorney General v. Jamaica Pond Aqueduct Corp., 133 Mass., 361, an injunction Was granted, to restrain the lowering of the waters of a pond, on the ground that it would be injurious to the public health. In concluding its opinion, the court said: “Indeed, it may be affirmed that in no well-considered case has the power of a court of equity to interfere by injunction in cases of public nuisances been denied; the. only denial being that of a necessity for exercise of that jurisdiction under the circumstances of the particular case.”
In Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S., 672, 8 Sup. Ct., 273, 31 L. Ed., 205, suit was brought by the State to enjoin the operation of a distillery, which was forbidden by its laws, on the ground that it was a public nuisance, injurious to the morals of the community. The court, after referring to the rule herein quoted from Story’s Equity, adopted it without reservation. The same doctrine is adhered to in People v. City of St. Louis, 48 Am. Dec., 339, and Attorney General v. Railroad Cos., 35 Wis., 425.
We find by the foregoing authorities that the jurisdiction *233of courts of equity to prevent and suppress nuisances, especially such as affect the public health, morals or safety, is of ancient date, though in Kentucky this power has been somewhat restricted in its application. While the writ' of injunction may not be employed to prevent the commission of crime, as such, we see no reason why it may .not be resorted to to prevent the use of real property for the holding of a prize-fight. Indeed, we think the use of the injunction for this purpose is not only permissible, but required by the statute, supra, enacted to suppress that evil, if the means at the command of the criminal courts are inadequate to its suppression.
We are not inclined to believe that the language of the act, supra, “shall exercise all the powers vested in them for the prevention of crimes and misdemeanors,” confers upon any of the officers named therein new powers of any kind; but it does require of all ministerial officers of the State peculiar and extraordinary alertness, activity, and zeal in the exercise of all the powers with which they are vested in the matter of preventing and suppressing prizefights, and any willful failure of duty on their part will subject them to a fine of $500 and the forfeiture of office. The same provision of the statute requires that “all judges of courts,” in the performance of the duties enumerated in the statute, “in order to suppress and prevent” prizefights, shall exercise all the powers vested in them for the prevention of crimes and misdemeanors. It will be observed that the language, supra, not only embraces judges of courts of purely criminal jurisdiction, but also includes all judges of courts. Therefore, the command reaches judges of common-law and equity jurisdiction, and no such express command is laid by the Kentucky Statutes upon all judges with reference to any other crime or misdemeanor *234than prize-fighting. Under the statute, then, it is the duty of all the officers, both judicial and ministerial, named therein, to act without delay in preventing and suppressing prize-fights. • They are not to wait for the fight to begin, nor for the principals and others who are to engage therein to -reach the place determined upon for the fight, before taking the necessary steps to prevent the same, but should proceed at once before the fight, and, upon receiving notice of the fact that it will be held, to- issue proper process for the arrest of the gnilty parties, put them under arrest, and require of them bonds1 to keep the peace, and to answer for the violation of law in the circuit court.
The question presented for the consideration of the judge of the Jefferson circuit court, when the injunction was applied for in this case, was whether or not the powers that might be invoked under the criminal jurisdiction of the courts were adequate to the suppression of the prize-fight about to come off, and, if not, what further powers might be exercised by him? As the statute fequired of him the exercise of all the powers of which he was possessed, and the right to employ, the writ of injunction being one of those powers, it was his duty to grant it to the extent of preventing the use of the Auditorium for the holding of the prize-fight, if in the exercise of a sound discretion the facts before him justified such relief, in aid of the jurisdiction of the criminal courts. In granting the injunction to the extent indicated, the chancellor only exercised the jurisdiction that was exercised in draining the pond, and in suppressing the distillery, in the Massachusetts and Kansas, cases, supra.
In none of the cases, supra, was there any question of property or pecuniary right involved; nor need there be any property right involved, so far as the State is concerned, in the maintenance of the puhlic health, morals, or safety. *235These are a.ll valuable rights, though not susceptible of a pecuniary estimate, which it is the duty of the State to protect-by every means at his command; and, if a court of equity has the power to 'enjoin the use of private property as a nuisance which is dangerous to the public health, why may it not in like manner enjoin it where -it constitutes a nuisance dangerous to the public safety or morals?
Is1 the use of land or a building for the maintenance of prize-fighting a public nuisance? In Wood on Nuisances (3d Ed.) section 68, the author says.: “A public exhibition of any kind that tends to the corruption of morals, or to a disturbance of the peace or of the general good order or welfare of society, is a public nuisance. Under this, head are included all puppet shows, legerdemain, and obscene pictures, and all exhibitions, the natural tendency of which is to pander to vicious tastes, and to draw together the vicious and dissolute members of society.” That a prizefight is an exhibition of the character here described, and consequently a public nuisance, there can be no doubt; and, if so, the use of a theater for prize-fighting is such a nuisance. Therefore the Legislatures of many of the States have enacted laws for their suppression, realizing, no doubt, that the remedies afforded by the general laws were not adequate to that end; and the courts have been uniform in upholding the statutes thus enacted. Thus, in Sullivan v. State, 67 Miss., 352, 7 South, 276, the Supreme. Court of Mississippi said: “We think, however, that the evil sought to be protected against by the statute is the debasing practice of fighting in public places, or places to which the public, or some part of it, is admitted as spectators.”
Such a meeting as would have been held in the Audilorium, in Louisville, to witness the prize-fight between *236McG-overn and Corbett, if that fight had occurred, would doubtless have attracted some of the better and law-abiding class of citizens, curious to see such a spectacle as a prizefight; but for every such .reputable citizen thus attending, there would have been present a dozen gamblers, confidence men, bunco steerers, or pickpockets, gathered from all parts of the United States, men of idle, vicious and criminal habits and practices, whose business is to prey upon the public in some form or other, and many of them would remain in the community after the combat to ply their nefarious callings. Such an assembly could easily be led into a riot, or other unlawful disturbance of the public peace. In addition to the evils suggested, there would be the contaminating effect of such a meeting upon the youth of the city and State, which might prove of incalculable injury to their morals and future welfare. Such a gathering, too, would demand increased vigilance in the protection of the property of the city and its inhabitants, be a menace to good order, and disturb the peaceful pursuits and happiness of citizens who would be unwilling to patronize such an enterprize.
We conclude, therefore, that while a court of equity may not grant an injunction against the principals who were expected to engage-in the fight in question, nor those connected with them as managers, trainers, etc., because the process of the criminal courts and the powers of conservators of the peace in the city of Louisville are, or ought to be, adequate to the prevention of the prize-fight, by the arrest and prosecution of the parties concerned, yet it was proper for the lower court to enjoin the owner, proprietor and managers of the Auditorium' theater from permitting the holding of a prize-fight therein, and from allowing there-, in any future exhibitions of the same character, upon the ground that such a use of the building would constitute a *237public nuisance, dangerous to the public morals and safety. We think this exercise of power by the court can not be questioned, not because any new powers were conferred upon it by the statute against prize-fighting', but because such jurisdiction exists in courts of equity, and has practically always so existed, and, further, because its exercise was required in this instance by the exigencies of the case and the express language of the statute, which commanded the court to use all the power with which he waá vested, to the end that the nuisance might be suppressed.
As already suggested, not the least of the evils connected with the holding of the prize-fight would be the presence of the immense crowds of lawless and turbulent men from all quarters. An injunction against the use of. the building advertised as the place of the. fight would go far toward preventing the assembling of this crowd, and thereby avert incalculable mischief, which could not well be averted by the criminal courts; or their ministerial officers, after the meeting. of the audience at the place of the combat, or in the act of assembling; for, although every person who attends a prize-fight by that act violates the law, it would be impossible for the officers of the law to arrest any considerable number of them under such circumstances.
We do not regard this case as analogous to that of Neaf v. Palmer, 103 Ky., 496, 20 R., 176, 45 S. W., 506. In the latter case the. action was brought by several property owners to enjoin the maintenance of a bawdy house upan the property of another. In passing upon the questions involved, this court said, in part: “It is not alleged that there are offensive sights or sounds about the obnoxious premises, but only that the property is made less valuable in the vicinity, and that the moral atmosphere is tainted and pestilential. The injury is wholly consequential. It seems to us, under these circumstances, criminal courts had *238best be left to enforce the criminal laws. They are confessedly adequate for the purpose of suppressing such evils.”
There was nothing in the case, supra, to indicate that the bawdy house complained of could not be suppressed by the ordinary methods appertaining to the criminal court, and, the damages resulting to the plaintiff’s property from the existence of the bawdy house being wholly consequential and speculative, it would, of course, have been improper in that case to employ the writ of injunction in aid of the mere property rights of the individual. Bu-t in the case at bar the complainant is the State — the sovereign — which is seeking by a writ of injunction to prevent a great evil, affecting the people of the city of Louisville,, and the entire State as well, and which threatens irreparable injury to the public morals because of its cruelty, inhumanity, and debasing associations, and danger to the public safety because of its bringing together the lawless and turbulent elements of society from all quarters. Upon such a state of facts, and with the commands of the statute directing him to employ all his powers to avert the threatened evil, it was, in our opinion, no stretch of authority for the chancellor to employ the aid of the writ, of injunction in such an emergency, to the extent, at 'least, of preventing the use of real property for the holding of the prizefight. Nor do we think that the right of the chancellor to so 'employ the writ of injunction in this case is dependent upon the fact that a property right be involved. It may '¡be justified upon the higher ground that the morals and ■safety of the public are involved, and that the public good is of the first consideration.
If the element of continuity were needed in this case to authorize the injunction, it is shown by the record to exist; .for several witnesses testify to having attended contests ¡similar to this in the Auditorium, and the advertisement *239of the McGovern-Corbett fight showed that it would come, off at the Auditorium, and that it was one of a series of fourteen of such contests, all given under the auspices of the Southern Athletic Club, and several of which had already been held, and perhaps some of them elsewhere than in the Auditorium. The evidence shows, therefore, that the use of the Auditorium had, to some extent at least, been devoted to the maintenance of prize-fights, and that its use for that purpose is to be continued. We are of the opinion, however, that continuity is not a necessary element in this case. In Cincinnati Railroad Co. v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky., 137, the railroad was indicted for a public-nuisance in leaving a hand-car on a public road; and, though the proof showed that the car did not remain for more than a day, this court held that the offense “was not to be determined by the length of time the thing that worketh hurt, inconvenience or damage to the public continues, or by the number of times it may be repeated, nor is it necessary, in order to constitute the offense, that actual injury be sustained by any person.” In order to constitute a public nuisance, in the meaning of the law, it is not always necessary that the acts charged should have been habitual or periodical. Where a single act produces a continuing result, the offense may be complete, without a recurrence of the act. Thus one act upon the part of an individual in befouling a spring from which the public are accustomed to drink is a public nuisance. So is indecent 'exposure of one’s person in a public place. Wood on Nuisances, sections 27, 57. To. constitute the offense denounced by the statute as a prizefight, or prize-fighting, it is not necessary that a number-of such combats or that more than one combat should take place. We think one such offense at a given place would constitute a public nuisance, and, it is, the province of a court of equity to prevent nuisances that: *240are threatened, and before irreparable mischief ensues, as well as to arrest or abate those in progress, and by perpetual injunction protect the public against them in the future.
Being of the opinion that the chancellor erred in dismissing the petition, and in refusing to perpetuate the injunction, in this case, to the'extent of restraining the owners and managers of the Auditorium from permitting the use of that building for the holding of the prize-ñght between appellees, McGovern and Corbett, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to set aside the order dismissing the petition, and to enter in lieu thereof the necessary decree perpetuating the injunction to the extent herein indicated.
Whole court sitting.
Judges Paynter, Barker and Nunn dissent.