The three questions certified to us, when considered separately, cannot be answered categorically; but when they are reduced in terms to the concrete and practical issue involved, they present a question of substantial importance that should be decided without regard to mere matters of form. The question, in substance, is whether equity will intervene to restrain the police authorities from stationing officers outside of a place having a liquor tax certificate, when such authorities suspect that place of being conducted as a disorderly house; and from notifying customers who are in the place and those who are about to enter the same that it is a disorderly house which is likely to be raided at any moment, and that those who are on the premises at the time of such raid are liable to arrest.
The pivotal point around which this question revolves is, that the plaintiff is engaged in the sale of intoxicating liquors. That is a business which, when uncontrolled and unregulated by law, is fraught with grave dangers to the public peace, health, morals and safety; and even when regulated by statute, as far as it may be, it is productive of much idleness, pauperism, disorder and crime. In order to prevent and to minimize these evils, as far as possible, it has been deemed necessary for the welfare of society that the business of liquor selling should be hedged about by conditions and restraints from which other callings may be safely exempted. Under the law of our state one of these conditions is that no one shall be permitted to carry on that business without a liquor tax certificate duly issued by the proper authorities; and another is that “ no person, either as owner or agent, shall permit any place where the traffic in liquors is carried on to become disorderly.” (Liquor Tax Law, sec. 23, subd. 9.)
*327To effectuate this command of the law, “ All officers authorized to make arrests in any city * * * may, in the performance of their duties, enter upon any premises where the traffic in liquors is carried on or liquors are exposed for sale at any time when such premises are open.” The defendant was concededly an officer having authority to make arrests in the city of Yew York, and as a member of the police force in that municipality it was his duty “ at all times of day and night' * * * to especially preserve the public peace, prevent crime, detect and arrest offenders, * * * carefully observe and inspect all"places of public amusement, all places of business having excise or other licenses to carry on any business j all houses of ill-fame or prostitution, and houses where common prostitutes resort or reside, * * * and to repress and restrain all unlawf ul and disorderly conduct or practices therein ¡ enforce and prevent the violation of all laws and ordinances in force' in said city.” (New York Charter, L. 1901, chap. 466, sec. 315.)
The substance of the allegations of the complaint and the affidavits upon which the injunction herein was granted is that the plaintiff is conducting a lawful business in a proper manner, and that the defendant has maliciously, oppressively and unlawfully interdicted his business in the particulars set forth and restrained by the injunction. Opposed to these allegations are the numerous affidavits presented by the defendant, containing specific and detailed statements which tend very strongly to show that there was abundant basis for the suspicion that the plaintiff’s “hotel” was a place in which disorderly practices prevailed. But we are not now concerned, with the truth or falsity of these conflicting assertions. They are referred to merely for the purpose of showing that, upon the point which is determinative of the question whether the defendant acted lawfully or otherwise, there is a sharp controversy of fact. If the plaintiff did in fact maintain a disorderly place, it was the defendant’s right, if it was not his duty, to warn persons about to enter against becoming participators in plaintiff’s violation of the law. The *328whole question, whether the acts of the defendant and his inferior officers were legal or not, depends entirely upon the character of this so-called hotel. This basic question should not lie determined in a court of equity upon affidavits, but in a court of law and by evidence that is tested and scrutinized according to the settled rules. In a case quite similar in principle, although different in its facts (Davis v. Am. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 75 N. Y. 362), this court has held that a court of equity is not the place for the trial of such a question. There the plaintiff was engaged in the business of slaughtering hogs in the city of New York. The president of the defendant society was an officer authorized to make arrests and he went upon the premises of Davis, threatening him and his employees with arrest unless they would discontinue their method of killing hogs, which was claimed to be unnecessarily cruel. The action was in equity to restrain the defendant, its officers and agents, from making such arrests. At the trial the' plaintiff adduced evidence which strongly tended to show that his method of slaughter was not unnecessarily cruel. Notwithstanding this evidence the complaint was dismissed and, upon appeal to this court, it was held that the case made by the pleadings and proofs was not one of equitable cognizance. In speaking for this court upon that question the late Judge Earl said: “A person threatened with arrest for keeping a bawdy house, or for violating the excise law, or even for the crime of murder, upon the allegation of his innocence of the crime charged, and of irreparable mischief which would follow his arrest, could always draw the question of his guilt or innocence from trial in the proper forum. An innocent person, upon an accusation of crime, may be arrested and ruined in his character and property, and the damage he thus sustains is damnum ahsque injuria, unless the case is such that he can maintain an action for malicious prosecution or false imprisonment. He is exposed to the risks of such damage by being a member bf an organized society and his compensation for such risks may be found in the general *329welfare which society is organized to promote. This action is absolutely without sanction in the precedents or principles of equity.”'
'. If equity will not intervene in behalf of a concededly lawful business of a fixed and unchanging character, to prevent the criminal prosecution of some alleged unlawful act in its conduct, how can such intervention be justified in a case where the business itself, even when lawfully conducted, exists by mere sufferance of law, or where it is of such a character that it may be lawful or unlawful at the will of him who conducts it? Such a situation as is presented in the case at bar is one which, in its very nature, cannot be adequately dealt with by a court of equity. What might be a trespass at one instant of time may be a perfectly justifiable and necessary act at another. Here lies the fundamental distinction between the case at bar, and that class of cases in which equity assumes jurisdiction to restrain trespasses that are continuous or permanent in their nature, and where such relief is necessary to obviate multiplicity of actions at law and to prevent continuity of wrong. This case is also intrinsically unlike the cases of which People ex rel. Stearns v. Marr (181 N. Y. 463) is a type, in which “ strikers ” have been enjoined against interference with a lawful business by unlawful “ picketing.” The whole subject may be briefly summed up in the statement that we see nothing in the case at bar to take it out of the ordinary rule that equity will not interfere to prevent the enforcement of the criminal law. If the plaintiff has been oppressed and injured by any unlawful act of the defendant he may invoke the Penal Code (Sec. 556), or he may have an action at law for. his damages.
The orders of the Special Term and Appellate Division should be reversed and injunction vacated. The third question certified is answered in the negative. The first and second are not answered. Costs to the appellant in all the courts.
Cullen, Ch. J., Gray, Bartlett, Haight and Vann, JJ., concur; O’Brien, J., not voting.
Orders reversed, etc.