Case ID: sw_163/html/0579-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "PHILLIPS, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Ex parte ZUCCARO.
    (Supreme Court of Texas.
    Jan. 28, 1914.)
    1. Injunction (§ 1) — Classification—“Restraining Order.”
    Under the Texas practice, injunctions are classified: First, as a “restraining order,” which is an interlocutory order made upon application for an injunction as a part of a motion for the preliminary injunction, by which a party is restrained pending the hearing of the motion; second, an order which operates, unless dissolved by an interlocutory order, until the final hearing; and, third, a perpetual injunction, which can only be ordered upon final decree.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Injunction, Cent. Dig. § 1; Dec. Dig. § 1.
    
    For other definitions, see Words and Phrases, vol. 7, pp. 6183, 6184.]
    2. Injunction (§ 150) — 'Temporary Restraining Order.
    On January 27th an injunction suit was instituted by the county attorney praying for a temporary restraining order enjoining defendants from permitting moving picture shows being opened on Sunday, and that the cause be set for hearing, and that upon final hearing the temporary restraining order be made permanent, and the petition was presented on the same day to the judge of the district court, who indorsed thereon the following fiat: “Petition granted and clerk of district court directed to issue and direct to each and every defendant * * * an order enjoining, restraining, and prohibiting them and each of them from opening or permitting to be opened their theaters and moving picture shows on Sunday * * ⅜ until further orders of this court; this cause set down for hearing Saturday, February 3d.” Held, that the order was only a temporary restraining order and expired on the date of the hearing, unless extended, and hence a judgment of contempt for its alleged violation after such date was void.
    [Ed. Note. — For- other cases, see Injunction, Cent. Dig. § 335; Dec. Dig. § 150.]
    3. Injunction (§ 152) — Final Hearing..
    Where a petition for an injunction was presented to the circuit court on January 27, 1912, the cause could not have come on for final hearing until the succeeding term unless an appearance was entered, so that where none was entered, it could not be set for final hearing on February 3, 1912, so that an order setting it for hearing on that date could only have been intended to determine whether a temporary injunction should be issued operative until final hearing.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Injunction, Cent. Dig. §§ 337, 343; Dec. Dig. § 152.]
    Original proceedings on habeas corpus by Andrew Zuccaro against W. M. Rea, Sheriff of Tarrant County.
    Relator discharged.
    See, also,' 162 S. W. 844.
    Wray & Mayer and Baskin, Dodge & East-us, all of Ft. Worth, for relator.
    
      
      For other cases see same topic and section NUMBER in Dee. Dig. & Am. Dig. Key-No. Series & Rep’r Indexes
    
   PHILLIPS, J.

The writ of habeas corpus was issued in this proceeding upon the application of the relator complaining that he was restrained of his liberty by the sheriff of Tarrant county in virtue of a commitment issued out of the district court of that county upon a judgment convicting him of contempt of court in disobeying an injunction previously issued.

On January 27, 1912, the county attorney of Tarrant county instituted in the Sixty-Seventh district court of that county an injunction suit in behalf of the state of Texas against the relator and others, praying for the issuance of a temporary restraining order enjoining the defendants from opening, or permitting to be opened, for amusement their theaters and moving picture shows on Sunday; that the cause be set down for hearing; and that upon final hearing the temporary restraining order be made permanent. The petition was presented on the same day to the Honorable W. T. Simmons, judge of the court, who thereupon indorsed thereon the following fiat: “Petition granted and clerk of district court of Tarrant county, Tex., directed to issue and direct to each and every defendant named in this petition an order enjoining, restraining, and prohibiting them and each of them from opening or permitting to be open their theaters and moving picture shows, respectively, on Sunday, for public amusement, from giving therein any performances for public amusement, and from charging a fee for admission thereto or from doing any of said acts until further orders of this court. This cause set down for hearing Saturday, February 3, 1912, at 2 o’clock p. m., and clerk directed to issue notice hereof to defendants and each of them.” A notice as provided in the fiat was issued and served upon the relator, but it appears that no other process has ever been issued in the cause.

On November 24, 1913, the Honorable Marvin H. Brown, judge of the court referred to, without any motion or complaint charging the relator with a violation of the alleged injunction, issued an order to.the clerk of the court to cite the relator, among others, for contempt of the court for violation of this injunction. Upon hearing, the relator was adjudged in contempt, a fine assessed against him, together with imprisonment in the county jail for three days and until the fine should be paid. The relator has previously presented his petition for the writ to the honorable Court of Criminal Appeals, which declined to entertain it upon jurisdictional grounds, whereupon, on application to this court, our jurisdiction being undoubted, it was ordered that the writ issue.

It appears from the record submitted to us that no other order in respect to the injunction has ever been made in the cause referred to than that embodied in the fiat of the judge above quoted; that no hearing was^had on February 3, 1912, the date fixed in the fiat therefor; that the case has never been tried, and no other orders have ever been made therein. The fiat constitutes the sole basis for the injunction claimed to have been violated, and must alone be looked to for the purpose of determining whether any injunction was in force, for the violation of which the contempt proceeding would properly lie.

If the order embodied in the fiat amounted only to a temporary restraining order, provisional in its nature and limited in its duration to the date appointed for a hearing, it is manifest that the relator could not be competently held in contempt for acts committed after such date. If the order, on the other hand, possessed the force of a continuing injunction, effective until final hearing of the cause unless dissolved in an appropriate proceeding, he of course remained subject to the restraints it imposed.

In the opinion of this court, delivered by Chief Justice Gaines, in Riggins v. Thompson, 96 Tex. 154, 71 S. W. 14, the classification of injunctions under our practice is thus stated: “(1) A restraining order, which is defined to be: ‘A restraining order is an interlocutory order made by a court of equity upon an application for an injunction and as part of the motion for a preliminary injunction, by which the party is restrained pending the hearing of the motion.’ (2) One which is intended to operate, and which does operate unless dissolved by an interlocutory order, until the final hearing. And (3) a perpetual injunction which can be properly ordered only upon a final decree.” In that case the district judge had ordered, by fiat indorsed upon the plaintiff’s petition, that the defendants appear upon a date named to show cause why permanent injunction should not issue, and that a restraining order issue to the defendants as prayed for, ponding such hearing. It was held that the order issued upon the authority of the fiat was only temporary in its character and expired upon the date appointed for the hearing.

The fiat here involved is not in the same terms as the one considered in that' case, but there can be no doubt under this authority that the only effect of the order was to temporarily enjoin the defendants, and, there having been no continuance of the injunction, it expired on the date appointed for the hearing.

The court appears to have been in session on January 27, 1912, the date the petition was presented and the order made. The cause could not, of course, have come on for final hearing until the succeeding term, unless an appearance was entered, which was not done. Accordingly it was not subject to be finally heard on February' 3, 1912; and, in ordering that “this cause (is) set down for hearing” for that date, the judge could not have intended that any other hearing be had than one for the purpose of determining whether an injunction should issue, operative until the final hearing. This must be true, since he was without authority to try the cause on that date, which was only seven days subsequent to the date of his order; and, unless the hearing thus appointed was for the purpose stated, his ordering a hearing for such daté was a vain act. If the hearing was fixed for the purpose of determining whether an injunction should issue, and such it seems to us is the obvious effect of the order, it is clear that the injunction originally ordered was provisional in its nature, and was intended to be operative only until the date named for the hearing. Otherwise there was no occasion for the hearing.

It is manifest, under the record presented to us, that the injunction expired on February 3, 1912. The judgment of contempt, based upon such injunction, for an alleged violation long subsequent to the date of its expiration, was therefore void and of no effect; and the relator should be discharged. It is unnecessary to consider the other questions presented under the application.

Relator discharged.