161 Ind. 445 | Ind. | 1903
— The appellee, a corporation organized under the laws of this State, and engaged in the business of transporting natural gas by means of pipe-lines and pumping-stations to and from points in said State, brought this suit against the appellant, a railroad corporation, also organized under the laws of Indiana, and owning and operating a railroad therein, to compel the latter to permit the appellee to place a fourth line of pipe in and upon a right of way claimed and used by the appellee under the railroad of the appellant, to quiet its title to its said right of way, and to enjoin the appellant from interfering with its use thereof. The appellant filed its answer to the complaint, and also its cross-complaint in five paragraphs. Demurrers to the second and third paragraphs of the cross-complaint were sustained, and after this ruling the appellant dismissed its action as to the first, fourth, and fifth paragraphs of its cross-complaint. Issues were formed, the cause was tried by the court, and there was a finding and judgment for the appellee.
The errors assigned are upon the decisions of the court sustaining demurrers to the second and third paragraphs of the cross-complaint.
Counsel for appellee make the point that at the time these rulings occurred there were three other paragraphs of the cross-complaint before the court, which are not now in the record, and’ that the facts averred in these three paragraphs, or in one or more of them, may have been the same as those set forth in the paragraphs to which the demurrers were sustained. It is contended, therefore, that as the appellant might have introduced the same evidence and obtained the same relief" under the other paragraphs of its cross-complaint, the decision of the court upon
It is suggested in argument that if several paragraphs of a pleading are filed, and a demurrer is sustained to one of them because of its identity with another paragraph, the unsuccessful party, by afterwards withdrawing the remaining paragraphs, might obtain an unfair advantage on appeal unless it is presumed in favor of the ruling of the trial court that the same evidence would have been admissible under the paragraphs withdrawn after the decision on the demurrer, and subsequently omitted from the record. There is much force in this suggestion, but we prefer to place our decision in this case upon a more substantial ground.
It appears from the allegations of each paragraph of the cross-complaint that the appellee constructed and maintained its pipe-lines under and across the right of way of the appellant by virtue of an express license in writing executed by the appellant, and supported by a valuable consideration. This license was éxecüted May 25, 1899, and at the time of the filing of the cross-complaint was in full force. Every objection now urged against the maintenance of the pipe-line for the transportation of natural gas existed when this agreement was entered into by the appellant. All-the dangers from leakage, fire, explosions, and sinking of the railroad tracks arising from the maintenance of the pipe-line, together with the inconvenience of slackening the speed of trains while passing over the intersecting pipe-line, were as obvious and urgent when the appellant granted the license to construct and operate
The circumstance that the appellee is using artificial means to increase the flow of the gas through its pipes affords no ground for enjoining it from so doing at the suit of the appellant. The violation of a statute by the appellee is not of itself a sufficient reason for an injunction. It does not follow that such method of transportation increases the danger of accidents by leakage, fire, or explosion. In fact, from all that appears, such method may dimmish the probability of such misfortunes. Before a party is entitled to relief by injunction because of the violation of a statute, it must appear that by reason of such unlawful act his person or property is exposed to danger or subjected to injury.
The dangers described in the cross-complaint arise from the nature of the article transported. They are constant and inseparable from it. They exist whether the natural gas is carried through pipes at a pressure of 300 pounds to the square inch or at a pressure of fifty pounds. They are as likely to occur whon the gas is transported by natural pressure as when it is moved by artificial means. The danger of leakage and explosions is increased by pressure, however that pressure may he applied. The cross-complaint entirely fails to show that the danger to the property of the appellant has been increased in the slightest degree by the means employed by the appellee to move the gas through its pipes, or that it has sustained, or is likely to sustain, any special injury different from that of the public at large by the alleged unlawful acts of the appellee. Manufacturers Gas, etc., Co. v. Indiana Nat. Gas, etc., Co., 155 Ind. 566.
The general averment in the second and third paragraphs that “such * * * violation of the statute
Judgment affirmed.