ROBERTSON v. COY

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ROBERTSON v. COY
1930 OK 560
293 P. 1105
146 Okla. 155
Case Number: 21847
Decided: 12/09/1930
Supreme Court of Oklahoma

ROBERTSON
v.
COY et al.

SyllabusC

¶0 1. Injunction--Office of Restraining Order.
A restraining order is an order granted to maintain the subject of controversy in status quo until a hearing may be had on the application for temporary injunction. Its purpose is merely to suspend proceedings until there may be an opportunity to inquire whether injunctive relief should be granted, and is not intended as an injunction pendente lite.
2. Appeal and Error--Order Dissolving Restraining Order not Appealable.
Section 780, C. O. S. 1921, provides for a review of an order that grants, refuses, vacates, or modifies an injunction, but does not authorize an appeal from an order dissolving a restraining order.

Error from District Court, Tulsa County; Saul A. Yager, Judge.

Action by Will Robertson against H. G. Coy et al. From an order of the trial court dissolving a temporary restraining order, plaintiff appeals. Dismissed.

Joe Simpson and B. C. Franklin, for plaintiff in error.
E. A. Robinson and Quincy, J. Jones, for defendants in error.

PER CURIAM.

¶1 This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Tulsa county made on the 4th day of October, 1930, in an action wherein the plaintiff in error was plaintiff.

¶2 The plaintiff in the trial court sought an injunction against the sale of real estate upon execution, and on the 3rd day of October, 1930, an order was issued restraining the defendants from selling the real estate levied upon and fixed the 10th day of October, 1930, as the date for hearing upon application for temporary injunction. On October 4, 1930, the defendants filed a motion to vacate and dissolve the restraining order, and upon hearing upon said motion and upon the same day the court dissolved the restraining order, leaving the cause pending in the trial court. From this order, the plaintiff appeals.

¶3 The defendants now move the court to dismiss the appeal for the reason the order appealed from is not an appealable order.

¶4 Under the 2nd subdivision of section 780, C. O. S. 1921, this court may review an order that grants, or refuses, vacates, or modifies an injunction. The distinction between a restraining order and temporary injunction has been clearly drawn in this court in the case of Ex parte Grimes, 20 Okla. 446, 94 P. 668; Goldsmith v. City of Ardmore, 136 Okla. 201, 277 P. 230. In the last-named case, in the body of the opinion, the court says:

"In 22 Cyc. p. 745, a restraining order is defined, an order granted to maintain the subject of controversy in status quo until a hearing on an application for temporary injunction. Its purpose is merely to suspend proceedings until there may be an opportunity to inquire whether an injunction should be granted, and it is not intended as an injunction pendente lite."

¶5 The Court of Civil Appeals of Texas, Galveston, in the case of Simpson v. City of Nacogdoches, 152 S.W. 863, announced the following rule:

"Rev. Civ. St. 1911, art. 4644, allowing an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals from an order granting, refusing, or dissolving a temporary injunction, does not authorize an appeal from an order dissolving a temporary restraining order."

¶6 The Supreme Court of Indiana, in the case of Terre Haute & L. Ry. v. St. Joseph, S. B. & S. R. Co., 155 Ind. 27, 57 N.E. 530, under statute authorizing an appeal from an interlocutory order granting, dissolving, or overruling a motion to dissolve an injunction, held that an appeal would not lie from an order dissolving a temporary restraining order. In the case of Emporia v. Emporia Telephone Co., 90 Kan. 118, 133 P. 858, in the body of the opinion, the Supreme Court of the state of Kansas said:

"The first question presented is whether the order actually made below was a temporary injunction or merely a restraining order; an appeal lying from the former and not the latter."

¶7 In 3 C. J. 564, in discussing the right of appeal from injunctive orders, the following language is used:

"The order or decree, to come within the statute, must be one granting, refusing to grant, dissolving or refusing to dissolve, an injunction, according to the terms of the particular statute, and as a rule it must relate to an injunction as distinguished from a mere temporary restraining order."

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