123 Ga. 115 | Ga. | 1905
This was an action to enjoin the Milledgeville Railway Company from constructing a spur-track on its line of railroad on a named street in the City of Milledgeville. The petition alleged that for various reasons the proposed track would be injurious to the plaintiff, and would constitute a public nuisance, and that the defendant was without charter authority to do the work contemplated. A temporary restraining order was granted; but on the hearing this was dissolved and an interlocutory injunction was denied; whereupon the plaintiff excepted. The evidence as to the alleged injurious effect upon the plaintiff of the laying of the track proposed was directly in conflict, and would have supported a decision for either the plaintiff or the defendant. The case as argued in this court turns entirely upon the authority of the defendant company to lay the track.
1. The defendant is operating under a charter granted in 1888 to the Milledgeville and Asylum Dummy Railroad Company, whose successor it is. The title of the act incorporating that company is as follows: “An act to incorporate the Milledgeville and Asylum Dummy Railroad Company, and to define its
2. By a contract executed September 18, 1888, prior to the passage of the act incorporating the Milledgeville and Asylum Dummy Railroad Company (which, as will have been seen, was ratified by the General Assembly in the passage of that act), the City of Milledgeville “demised and leased unto the said Milledgeville and Asylum Dummy Railroad Company so much of the streets' of the said city as may be necessary for a ^good and sufficient road-bed” for a term of ninety-nine years. The contract recited a consideration, designated the streets to which it referred and over which the right of way was granted, and provided that “the above-described right of way shall include
From the foregoing it follows that the judgment refusing to grant au interlocutory injunction as prayed for was not erroneous.
Judgment affirmed.