Crescent City Live-Stock Landing & Slaughter-House Co. v. Police Jury

On Application fob. a Reheaeing.

Bermudez, C. J.

The injunction obtained, and which was dissolved on bond, was intended to prevent the defendant from passing any resolution, or granting any permission, to erect slaughterhouses in the parish ■of Jefferson.

*1195Tlie question presented was, shall or not the defendant be enjoined ■from passing such resolution and granting such permission.

Prima fade, the lower Court, considering the oath, that the doing of either, or both of such acts, would cause the plaintiff an irreparable injury, granted the preliminary injunction, but, when the defendant moved to dissolve it on giving bond, the Court reviewed its previous decree, and, decreeing that the commission of the acts enjoined could not work irreparable injury, allowed the dissolution on bond.

From this dissolving order the plaintiff took a suspensive appeal, reiterating that the commission of the acts would cause an irreparable 'injury.'

We are at a loss, notwithstanding the sworn averments in the petition, to perceive how an injunction can lie to prevent a municipal organization from passing a resolution, or giving a permission ; and even were .such resolution passed or permission granted, we fail to realize how the plaintiff could be injured at all by such action. Non constat that the police jury, contrary to the fears or apprehensions of the plaintiff, will ■not refuse or abstain from passing the resolution or giving the permission. Whatever may be the action of the police jury in the premises, it can in no way affect the rights of the plaintiff, if any, when the proper time shall arrive for asserting them.

The test of the right of a court to grant the dissolving order is whether, from the allegations of the petition, taken for true, it appears -that the act, the commission of which is feared, would, if accomplished, be susceptible of causing an irreparable injury.

It is not because a petitioner swears he fears that the act will be done, that if it be not prevented and be committed, he will sustain an irreparable injury, that an injunction must be allowed. The Court is required to consider the nature of the act apprehended and sought to be enjoined, and in the exercise of a sound discretion is to determine judiciously. It must be satisfied not only of the correctness, but of the ■sufficiency, of the sworn allegation, and it' is not until satisfied of both that it should grant the remedy sought.

If the matters be contradictory, improbable, impossible, insufficient to justify the averment of irreparable injury, the Court is not concluded by the sworn averment. If a petitioner swear that he apprehends that the defendant will make a square circle, and that by the making thereof he will sustain an irreparable injury, and apply for an injunction, the ■Court, notwithstanding verification by oath of the allegation in the peti-■tition, would certainly be justified in refusing the remedy.

We have given our attention to the authorities quoted by the plaintiff’s learned counsel, and far from overruling them, expressly *1196affirm them as correct. But they have no applicability to the case before us.

It is well settled by jurisprudence in accord with law and reason, that no appeal lies from an order dissolving an injunction on the execution of a bond by defendants, in compliance with Art. 307 C. P., where the facts of the case show, as found in the petition, that the dissolution can work no irreparable injury to plaintiff. 2 A. 321: 4 A. 147 ; 2S A. 649.

To determine whether an appeal lies from an order dissolving an injunction under Art. 307 C. P., the Court is compelled to consider whether the order is erroneous ; if it be, the appeal lies ; if it be not, the appeal will be dismissed. The discretionary power to dissolve the injunction exists only when the act prohibited is not such as may .work an irreparable injury. 14 A. 57.

The erroneous exercise of that discretion in unfettering an act not irreparably mischievous does not give to the plaintiff in injunction a right to a suspensive appeal from the dissolving order, under the express terms of Art. 566. In such a case the necessary consequence of dismissing the appeal is the reversal of the order granting the injunction e converso. 14 A. 57.

The averments of the petition disclose a clear case of prematurity of complaint.

It will be time enough for the plaintiff to apply for an injunction upon a sworn averment of proper facts, if, after the police jury will have passed the resolution, or given the permission, some party assumes to act upon that resolution and permission.

For the determination of the motion to dismiss an opinion necessarily had to be expressed, not upon the merits, for none as yet exist, but upon the sufficiency of the sworn averment to justify the injunction. If the allegations, though sworn to, do not warrant the injunction issued, it irresistibly follows that the order dissolving it on bond was properly made under art. 307 C. P., and that if it was so made, a sus-pensive appeal from it to prevent a dissolution of the injunction should not be countenanced ; otherwise it would be permitting the continuance in force of an injunction which, on the face of the papers, issued illegally, and preventing a defendant from doing acts which it may have the right of doing, and which, when consummated, can in no conceivable manner, work any injury whatever to the plaintiff, as long as no steps are attempted to carry out the resolution or permission.

“We think that the danger apprehended is too remote and too contingent to form the basis of a proceeding in court to avert it. Courts of justice have enough to do in dealing with real, existing and present wrongs, without anticipating and combating hypothetical evils *1197of the future that may or may not arise. There are too many contingencies at present between them and danger to justify them in resorting to law.” 29 A. 272. ,

We consider with the plaintiff’s learned counsel that our ruling on the motion to dismiss virtually, unavoidably disposes of the case, which practically stands before us in the same attitude as it would occupy on an exception to the action. It is better that the litigation should end here than be unnecessarily prosecuted any further. 14 A. 57. We adhere to our previous opinion.

Rehearing refused.