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The Maryland Code, Public General Laws, 1888
Volume 389, Page 153   View pdf image
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ART. 16.] CHANCERY—INJUNCTION. 163

said infant to sell said lands, tenements and real estate or
for his interest in the same; and upon the confirmation of
said sale, all the proceedings had in pursuance of said decree
and in conformity thereto, including the deeds of the trustees
there made or thereafter to be made, shall be as valid and
binding upon all parties, and shall confer as good title upon the
purchasers as if the proceedings upon which the original decree
was passed had been in strict conformity to the requirements of
law.

Injunction.

P. G. L, (1860,) art. 16, sec. 51. 1785, ch. 72, sec. 28. 1876, ch. 224.

63. If any person against whom an injunction has been issued,
shall violate the same after service thereof, or shall permit or con-
nive at the violation thereof by any other person, the court, on
notice of such violation, may issue attachment of contempt against
such person; and if on proof the party be adjudged guilty of the
contempt, he may be fined or imprisoned, or both, in the discre-
tion of the court.

Ibid. sec. 52. 1785, ch. 72, sec. 28. 1876, ch. 224.

64. If the violation complained of, be waste after injunc-
tion to stay waste, the court shall ascertain the damage done by
the waste, by affidavit, or such other proof, as the court may judge
necessary, and may fine the defendant to the extent of double the
damage done and so ascertained; and if the violation be the trans-
fer of monies, property, or choses in action, after injunction for-
bidding siich transfer, in addition to the attachment against the
defendant, a summons shall go for the assignee, if he be known;
and if it appear that such assignee had knowledge of such injunc-
tion, at the time of accepting the transfer, or possession of
property, or choses in action, he also shall be held in contempt,
and no title shall be deemed to have passed to him, and he may be
required to surrender to the court, on its order, the property, money,
or choses in action, of which he has become possessed; but if the
purchaser, taker or assignee, be innocent of contempt, his title, if
otherwise good, shall be protected; and the court shall take proof
of the value of such property, money, or choses in action, disposed
of, or assigned; and the fine in all cases provided for in this sec-

 

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The Maryland Code, Public General Laws, 1888
Volume 389, Page 153   View pdf image
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