This is a bill hied by the complainants to secure an injunctions against the defendant, preventing the latter from discontinuing a railroad station at Broadway, Warren county, in this state.
The proofs show that the defendant company had established' a station at the place above named and maintained a man in. charge thereof. On a certain date they announced that they were going to- abandon the station. It turns out from the proofs-that they did not mean that they were not going to stop any trains at that place thereafter, but that they were going to withdraw from it any personal attendance , of an agent.
So far, then, as the right which any complainant here may claim to have by reason of private contract, I refuse relief upon the principle just stated.
So far as the right is public, I refuse relief for the reasons stated in the Jacquelin Case.
Furthermore, since the erection of the railroad commission by the act of 1907 (P. L. 1907 p. 448), I incline to the opinion that all such matters should, in the first instance at least, be submitted to the commissioners for their action—not determining (as, of course, I should not before the point is raised) whether the court has, otherwise, jurisdiction. Certainly, where the state has erected a commission for the express purpose of dealing with
1 will advise -a decree dismissing the bill, without costs to either party. The latter qualification is put in by consent of the defendant, who said that it would not insist upon its right to costs.
