The principal question considered by the learned counsel for the respective parties upon the hearing of this appeal is not before us. Had the court below refused to hear, or had denied the application for process against the agents and servants of the defendant, for a violation of the injunction awarded by the final judgment in the action, on the ground of a want of power and not in the exercise of a judicial discretion, the decision would, I think, have been reviewable upon appeal to this court. By the appeal, with a stay of proceedings on the part of the plaintiff in execution of the judgment, the judgment was not annulled, or its obligations upon the defendant impaired, but its “ execution” was stayed—that is, the plaintiff was prohibited from issuing process in execution of it (Revised Code, § 1351.) The order of the judge was in substantial compliance with the statute, and stayed “ all proceedings on the part of the plaintiff in execution of the judgment.” But this did not affect the validity or effect of the judgment pending the
If the respondent here is right in its contention, pending an appeal from a judgment staying waste, which if committed will destroy the ferchold, the appellant in simply staying the plaintiff’s proceedings on the judgment may with impunity do the very act forbidden and destroy the freehold. This would be to give the later injunction, staying action by the one party upon the judgment effect, as working a dissolution of the permanent and general injunction before granted, restraining the other party from doing any act affecting the subject of the litigation. The judgment, so far as it enjoined
In Howe v. Searing, (supra), proceedings to punish as for a contempt, the violation of an injunction pending an appeal, with a stay, were refused upon the ground that it was process in execution of the judgment, and therefore forbidden by the stay of proceedings granted as an incident of the appeal.. But if the proceedings are regarded as independent, special proceedings, and to prevent the destruction of a right given by the judgment, and for a wrong and, injury in violation of the judgment, the reasoning of the learned judge would not be conclusive. In several cases it has been held by this court that proceedings to punish a party for a contempt are not proceedings in the action, but are special proceedings as defined and' regulated by the Code. (Sudlow v. Knox, 7 Abb. Pr. R., [N. S.], 411; Erie R. R. Co. v. Ramsey. 45 N. Y., 637; Brinkley v. Brinkley, 47 N. Y., 40.) We are not called upon to consider whether within the principle of these decisions, the proceedings contemplated by the plaintiff were “in execution of the judgment” or special proceedings founded upon a new right, and growing out of an infraction of duty by the parties implicated after and in defiance of the judgment.
If the court below had considered an application by the plaintiffs to punish the defendant and its officers and agents for a contempt, and deemed it in the exercise of them discretion as not expedient or necessary to the protection of the plaintiff, and not for a want of power, a different question would have been presented. But the court have not in any way passed upon the right of the plaintiff to process against the parties violating the injunction. The General Term in the general control which it has over the practice of the court, have merely set aside and vacated an order upon the parties to show cause upon a two days’ notice why they should not be punished for a contempt. To proceed upon an order or short notice, rather than upon a notice for the
The appeal must be dismissed.
All concur, Church, Ch, J., in the result.
Appeal dismissed.