22 N.J. Eq. 94 | New York Court of Chancery | 1871
The defendants are a corporation, by virtue of an act approved March 17th, 1870, authorizing the consolidation of four railroad corporations, or any of them, under the name of the New Jersey Midland Railway Company. Three of fheso companies, the New Jersey Hudson and Delaware Railroad Company, the New Jersey "Western Railroad Company, and the Sussex Valley Company, availed themselves of the provisions of the act, and became consolidated under the name prescribed. The consolidated company was, by the act, invested with all the powers and franchises, and subject to all the obligations of the companies that were consolidated. The Western Railroad'Company were authorized to construct their road through the county of Bergen, and as no other of these three companies had that authority, the road in that county must be constructed under that charter. The complainants are a board, constituted by an act approved April 1st, 1868, and their powers enlarged by a supplement, approved March 31st, 1869, and another approved April 6th, .1871. By these acts they are authorized to grade, work, repair, and remove encroachments from all streets in the village of Hackensack, and to pass ordinances concerning the streets, and to raise, by taxes and assessment, all moneys required for these purposes. By the act of 1871, they now possess, exclusively, the power of altering, laying out, and vacating-streets. ■ •
The defendants located their road through Hackensack, and filed the location in the office of the secretary of state,
The power of this court to prevent injury and correct wrong before committed, by preliminary injunction issued at the commencement of a suit, and before the merits of the controversy are fully investigated, is one of its peculiar and most useful functions. But, like all extraordinary powers, if abused, or exercised without great caution, it may be productive of incalculable evils. On this account it is never exercised but under certain conditions.
In the first place, the right of the complainants in the subject matter in dispute, and to the remedy applied for, must be clear to the court, and free from reasonable or serious doubts, or established by proceedings at law. If the facts upon which the right depends are established or admitted, and the principles of law which, on those facts, would give the right, are settled and established in this state, it is not always necessary that the claim of the complainant should have been established in a suit at law. The Chancellor, in such case, may apply the principles as settled by the courts of law, to the facts, and allow the injunction. But when the principles of law on which the right rests are disputed, and will admit of doubt, a court of equity, although satisfied as to what is the correct conclusion of law upon the facts, may not, upon the opinion of the equity judge, without a decision of the courts at law establishing such principles, grant the injunction. This doctrine was fully declared and established by the Court of Appeals of this state, in the case of The Morris and Essex Railroad Company v. Prudden, 5 C. E. Green 530. Another principle, also recognized in that case, is, that an injunction must not issue when the benefit secured by it to one party is of little importance, while it will operate oppressively and to the great annoyance and injury of the other party, unless the wrong complained of is wanton and unprovoked.
The defendants are constructing their road under a charter
The tenth section of-the charter of the Western Company required them to construct and maintain bridges or passages across their road when any road “ now or hereafter laid out shall cross the same.” The tenth section of the charter.of' the Hackensack and New York Company, approved in 1856, required such bridges or passages “ where any road now in-use shall cross the same.” The right and privilege granted by one section was to build a road with passages at every road “then or thereafter laid out;” by the other, to build one with passages at every road “ then in use.” The franchise, as granted by the second .section, is more valuable and extensive than that granted in the first, and the fran-.chise and other powers and privileges are expressly granted as to the laying out and construction of the road. On the-other hand, the first section makes the grant subject to the-
The construction of this act, or of any statute with similar discordant provisions, has never been settled by the courts of law, and it much depends upon which of the many and various rules for the construction of statutes the court of law that shall settle the construction may apply. To me, whatever may be my own view, it is doubtful what construction will be given by the law courts. The right of the complainants to have a passage at this crossing is not settled or clear, and as the injunction depends on this right, it must bo refused.
Further : the injury to the complainants is neither great nor irreparable. The avenue has never been opened or used for public travel. The consequence of refusing the injunction will be, that the defendants may go on to complete and continue their embankment until the right shall be tried and determined at law. If that is against the defendants, they will be compelled to remove the embankment, or provide a passage through it; and the injury cannot be great that will
But again: under the rule laid down in that case, the fact that the benefit secured to the complainants is of little importance, while the injunction will operate oppressively, and to the great annoyance of the defendants, must prevent the granting of this injunction at this stage of the cause. The injury to the complainants or the public, by refusing it, as above stated, will be small. The defendants, on the other hand, will be seriously delayed in the completion of an important public work, or be compelled to build a bridge, in the shape of a tunnel, several hundred feet long, intersecting a bridge, which they have erected and are hound to maintain, over Second street; and which cannot he constructed without an outlay equal to the cost of grading nine miles of the road. They would have to remove the earth dumped on the embankment before the filing of the hill, at a cost of $2000. A diagonal crossing, hy a public road, in the manner in which this road has been laid across or along the defendants’ railroad, at an embankment as high as this, is, I think, unprecedented in engineering. If the bridging required is at all practicable, it would be at an. expense which would not be warranted in the construction of any road in that section of the country.
I do not think that the defendants are deprived of the benefit of the rule, by the wrong being wanton and unprovoked. It was not wanton. They made their embankment, in this place, under an honest, even if mistaken, construction of their corporate privileges.
The complainants can, with small expense and little inconvenience to the public, remedy the obstruction complained of. They can vacate and lay out streets. By
In Prudden’s case, the railroad was laid in Dickerson .street, upon which was the front of Prudden’s wheelwright shop and his dwelling-house; and the injury complained of was, that the rails so obstructed access to the front of his promises, that wagons could not conveniently stand there to load or unload. But Morris street, a cross street leading from Dickerson street to the north, ran along side his premises, and gave him access to the side of his lot, and thus, through the rear of the lot, to the back side of his house and shop; and as it did not appear that the exigencies of his business imperatively required the use of the street in front, •or of the front of his house or shop, the court held that the injunction should not have issued. In this case, the expense and inconvenience of changing Central avenue for a few feet, as suggested above, would not be as great, comparatively, as to Prudden, in opening access through his back yard, and the rear of his shop, to make good the want of .access to the front.
These views make it unnecessary to consider the points raised, that the complainants are not a body corporate, and •cannot maintain a suit in their own name; and that by .allowing the defendants to go on with their work, without interference or remonstrance, for more than six months, and to expend a large amount of money in the work, they have lost the right to be protected by a court of equity.