124 P. 672 | Or. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by the defendant, the Marshfield & Suburban Railroad Company, a corporation, from a decree enjoining it from operating cars on a public highway. The charter of Marshfield empowers the common council of that city as follows:
“To regulate the use of the streets * * for * * street railways.” Special Laws, Or. 1905, p. 214, § 28, subd. 28.
“To permit, subject to the restrictions in this act contained, and regulate the laying down and maintaining of tracks for street cars and other railroads, and the operating of railways, locomotives, motors, and cars thereon.” Special Laws, Or. 1905, p. 214, § 28, subd. 27.
“No franchise or right of way can or shall be granted by the city council to any person or corporation for using the streets or public highways of the City of Marshfield for the purpose of conducting, operating, or maintaining thereon any street railway, electric motor or horse-car line, or other railway, except upon the petition of the. owners of three-fourths of the property adjacent to and abutting upon any street, alley, or public highway through or upon which such right of way or franchise-is proposed to be granted.” Special Laws, Or. 1905, p. 214, § 121.
Pursuant to a petition, purporting to have been signed by the requisite number of such owners, Ordinance No. 266 was enacted March 26, 1907, by the common council of Marshfield, granting to C. A. Smith, his heirs and assigns, the right to construct and maintain on certain streets of the city a narrow-gauge railway and to operate thereon cars for the transportation of lumber and other freight only, which vehicles were to be propelled “only by means of horse, or overhead or underground electrical power.” All tracks to be constructed were not to exceed 30 inches in width, and the rails to be used were to be of such pattern, weight, and material, and placed on the streets designated at such places, as the common council might prescribe. If within 12 months from the passage of the ordinance Smith or his assigns should construct and operate on the west bank of Isthmus Slough at or near Marshfield a sawmill, the enactment should be in force and remain operative as long as lumber was manufactured at that place. It was provided, however, that a failure to operate the mill temporarily by reason of strikes or other unavoidable casualties should not forfeit the privilege so conferred. Within the time limited Smith and his assigns constructed at the place designated a sawmill. In order to transport the output of the mill
The right to the franchise granted to Smith has been duly assigned to the Marshfield & Suburban Railroad Company, which corporation operates on the railway mentioned cars used in transporting lumber and slab wood that has been cut into stove lengths. The cars employed for the latter purpose have racks into which the wood is thrown. The other vehicles used are open flat cars, and all are propelled by horses or mules. Cars loaded with wood have been allowed to stand on the tracks until the fuel was removed by persons to whom it was thus delivered,.and cars loaded with lumber have been permitted to remain on the railway, between street
• The general manager and the secretary of the Marsh-field & Suburban Railroad Company on August 18, 1909, issued a local freight tariff for transportation of lumber, wood, and other freight between Anderson avenue, Marshfield, and Bunkerhill at the mill of the C. A. Smith Lumber & Manufacturing Company, the successor of C. A. Smith. This schedule was posted at each end of the tramway, and a copy of the rates thus established was submitted to the State Railroad Commission. The testimony shows that excepting some freight hauled for A. J. Savage the cars referred to are exclusively employed in transporting lumber and wood from the sawmill to a shipping point in Marshfield, and that the mill company owns 47 of the 50 shares of the capital stock of the railroad company.
“It is not every case which will furnish a right of action against a party for a nuisance which will justify the interposition of courts of equity to redress the injury or to remove the annoyance. But there must be such an injury, as from its nature is not susceptible of being adequately compensated by damages at law, or such as, from its continuance or permanent mischief, must occasion a constantly recurring grievance which cannot be otherwise prevented but by an injunction.”
In the case at bar the testimony fails to show that the appellant had any depot, warehouse, or facility for transacting a public business. Its track did not unite with any other railway or form a part of any connecting line. Except in one instance during several years, the tramway has been used exclusively for transporting lumber and slab wood for its stockholders. It is apparent that such a railroad, though its officers may have adopted a schedule of freight charges and declared it to be a corporation designed to subserve a public use, is a mere private enterprise. Weidenfeld v. Sugar Run R. Co. (C. C.) 48 Fed. 615; Bradley v. Pharr, 45 La. Ann. 426 (12 South. 618: 19 L. R. A. 647) ; State v. Railway Co., 40 Ohio, St. 504.
Believing that equity has jurisdiction of the cause and that the injunction was properly issued, the decree is affirmed. Affirmed.