119 Ala. 129 | Ala. | 1898
The appellee filed this bill for the purpose of enjoining the appellant from constructing a track for railroad or street car purposes across the line or railroad track of complainant in the town of Wood-lawn. A temporary' injunction issued in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The cause was' set down for
Whenever any person, corporation or authority, vested with the power of eminent domain, undertakes to exercise such power, by appropriating private prop
“It is not of importance, therefore, to subject to analysis the allegations of the bill, and determine whether
In Highland Ave. & Belt R. R. Co. v. Matthews, 99 Ala. 24, Walker, J., for the court used this language: “The jurisdiction of a court of equity to prevent the commission of such a ■'wrong is not based upon the absence or inadequacy of legal remedies for the recovery of damages for the wrong when it has been consummated. The recognized equitable remedies may find support upon either of two grounds: 1st, upon the special jurisdiction of courts of equity to confine corporations to the exercise of the powers conferred upon them by law; and, 2d, upon the inadequacy of legal remedies to protect the constitutional right in its entirety, courts of law being unable to- compel the payment of compensation to the property-owner before his property is taken, injured or destroyed.” A court of equity does not seek occasion to exercise its injunctive power, and when the title to land proposed to be.- taken is not clear, a court of equity, exercising its judicial discretion, will regard the consequences of its action, and award or withhold an injunction according to circumstances. But where the ownership is admitted or clearly established, the law being plain, that compensation must be paid before the lands are taken, the owner
We are aware that in the case of Western Railway of Alabama v. Ala. Gr. Trunk R. R. Co., 96 Ala. 272, 283, distinction was not clearly observed between cases where the right and title of complainant was admitted or clearly established, and where it was in doubt, and the rule “that a court of equity in the use of a sound discretion- will balance the relative inconvenience and injury which is likely to result from granting or withholding the writ and will be largely governed by such circumstances,” was held applicable alike to either case. We modify what was said in this respect, and adhere to .the rule declared in 75 Ala. 280, supra, that where the title of complainant is admitted or clear, he is entitled to the intervention of a court of equity until the constitutional condition which requires compensation to be first paid has been complied with, and a mere denial of title as a conclusion, without a statement of facts, is wholly insufficient.
The first paragraph of complainant’s bill avers that “said East Lake R. R. runs through the said town of Woodlawn, along, over and upon a right of way which complainant acquired long before the said town of Woodlawn was incorporated, that its East Lake R. R. is in the center of its right of way, and that complainant has been owning and operating its said East Lake R. R. over said right of way for more than seven years.” We find no denial of this specific averment in respondent’s answer, or elsewhere. It is not pretended that complainant has been compensated. Its refusal to consent to any proposition or agree to any amount, did not authorize respondent to proceed across its right of way without condemnation proceedings and payment of compensation. Under the principles of law declared as applicable to the case, so far as raised by the assignment of errors, there is no error in the decree of the chancery court. — Railway Co. v. Witherow, 82 Ala. 197.
Affirmed.