Appellee commenced this action on August 13,1904, for an injunction to prevent the threatened removal of its track from appellants right of way at the crossing of the roads of the two companies. Upon the verified complaint and a proper undertaking a temporary restraining order was issued without notice. At the time fixed for a hearing after notice, appellant appeared, and moved for a dissolution of the restraining order, which motion was overruled, and, over appellant’s objection, the temporary injunction was continued in force until the final hearing of the cause, and from this interlocutory order the appeal was taken.
The assignment of errors challenges the sufficiency of the complaint and the action of the court in overruling appellant’s motion to dissolve the restraining order and in continuing in force the temporary injunction.
The complaint alleges, in substance, that the appellee is a street railway corporation organized February 14, 1902, under an act approved June 4, 1861 (Acts 1861 [s. s.], p. 75, §4143 R.. S. 1881), and other acts amendatory and supplementary thereto, for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating a street railroad in the cities of Indianapolis, Lebanon, Frankfort, LaFayette and Crawfordsville, and an interurban street railroad between and through said cities; that on August 21, 1903, it commenced proceedings to condemn a right of way sixty-six feet in width at a particular point named, said point not being upon a highway or street, across the track and right of way of the appellant in Clinton county; that on the 3d
Upon the hearing after notice, appellant appeared and filed a verified motion setting out the facts in the condemnation proceedings in detail, with a copy of the instrument of appropriation, alleging that the same was in part based upon the act of 1903, supra, and that appellee had been continuously using said crossing for more than nine months before the filing of the complaint, and that it had not installed at said crossing any system of interlocking works or derailing devices in the tracks of each company, wherefore it asked the
So much of section one of the act of 1903, supra, as relates to the matter under immediate consideration, is in the following language: “At every crossing of the main track of a railroad company constructed under the special proceedings, aforesaid, the company desiring to cro,ss shall, within six months after it commences to use such crossing, at its own expense, construct, and, likewise at its own expense, maintain and operate a system of full interlocking works, with a derailing apparatus in the tracks of each company, of such design and character as will be best calculated to prevent collisions at such crossing, and will meet with the approval of the Auditor of State,” etc.
Section two of said act is as follows: “If any street railroad company shall fail or refuse to construct, maintain and operate a system of full interlocking works in the manner, at the time and upon the terms stated in the preceding section, it shall forthwith cease to use the crossing required to be protected by such interlocking works, and the company whose railroad is crossed .by such street railroad company may forthwith remove such crossing, and such street railroad company shall thereafter have no right to renew and use said crossing until it shall have constructed and put in operation the interlocking works required by the preceding section.”
The General Assembly had undoubted authority to require such interlocking works at the crossings of railroads as would protect the safety of the public. This it attempted to do by the act under consideration, which also requires such interlocking apparatus to be “of such design and character as will be best calculated to prevent collisions at such crossing.”
The following quotation from the case of Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. City of Crawfordsville (1905),
In the case of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Town of Crothersville (1902),
This statute does not make appellee’s failure to furnish interlocking works punishable as a crime, but its default in that respect does authorize appellant to do the acts which
The judgment is reversed, with directions to sustain appellant’s motion to dissolve the temporary restraining order.
