25 Pa. Super. 564 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1904
Opinion by
This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from the decree of the court below refusing an injunction and dismissing their bill. The learned court below found from sufficient evidence that the defendant company is a street railway corporation duly organized under the laws of Pennsylvania by the merger and consolidation of three several street railway companies, which had theretofore been duly organized and authorized to construct street railways by letters patent duly granted and issued by the com monwealth. We are not called upon to pass upon any question as to the legality of the organization of the defendant company. Nor are we called upon to decide upon the right of the defendant to construct and operate a street railway in accordance with the Act of May 14, 1889, P. L. 211. The bone of contention is over the construction of a few hundred feet of the defendant’s track in the township of Canton along what is known as the West Middletown road. The plaintiffs allege that the company only had the right to construct its road on the east side of the Chartiers Valley Railroad, and that it had no right to cross the latter railroad and construct its track along the West Middletown highway at a distance of 500 or 600 feet west from its charter route. It is also contended that the company had no right, as it did, to cross the Chartiers Valley Railroad over the bridge described in the bill. The learned court has found that this bridge is in the borough of Washington and not in the township of Canton, and therefore not under the jurisdiction and control of the supervisors of Canton township. From the findings of fact by the learned court below, which seem to be well supported by the evidence, we are not convinced of any error sufficient to require the reversal of the decree. Substantially the grounds of complaint in the bill are: 1. The divergence of the company from its charter route. 2. The want of consent of the local authori
Having concluded that the findings of fact by the learned judge below are substantially correct our question is, did the court err in dismissing the bill? We think not for the following reasons : 1. The de facto supervisors of Canton township in July, 1898, granted permission to the Canonsburg Railway Company, a constituent company of the defendant, to lay its track along the highways of said township, and the defendant company subsequently entered upon the highway in question and constructed its track without objection from the present plaintiffs, and they did not revoke the former permit although it was duly of record in the minute book of their predecessors in office. 2. The supervisors of Canton township and the general public stood by and permitted the defendant company to locate its track over the now disputed highway and expend large sums of money in the construction thereof from the month of February, 1903, till September, 1903, without making any objection or attempt to prevent such construction. 3. There is no sufficient evidence to warrant a finding of fact that the divergence from the chartered route and construction of the railway along the western side of the Chartiers Valley Railroad works any special or serious injury to the plaintiffs or their township. In our opinion to have sustained the bill and granted the injunction prayed for would have worked great harm and injury to the defendant company without any corresponding benefit to the plaintiffs.
In Rahn Township v. Tamaqua & Landsford Street Railway Co., 167 Pa. 84, the Supreme Court held: “That (street
It being established, and practically conceded, that the defendant company had a right to construct its railroad in that vicinity we are of the opinion that the foregoing cases establish the doctrine, that a reasonable divergence from the chartered route was in the discretion of the company, and whether such divergence has been exceeded is not a question that concerns the plaintiffs, but must be left to the control of the commonwealth through its proper officials.
In Penna. R. R. Co. v. Montgomery County Passenger Ry. Co., 167 Pa. 62, it was said : “ That where township officers and owners of land abutting on roads have stood by and permitted the expenditure of large sums of money in the construction of a street railway upon the roads, they cannot afterwards demand that the railway shall be torn up or its use enjoined.” In Heilman et. al. v. Lebanon, etc., Street Railway Co., 180 Pa. 627, it was said: “The general situation must now be considered and we must take into account the rights of the plaintiff and the nature and extent of the injury of which he complains, but we must not overlook the interest of the general public, or the consequences to the defendant company of the decree asked for. Equity does not enforce a strict legal right, regardless of consequences. It is-said that an injunction is of grace.”
The learned judge in dismissing the bill saved the rights of the township of Canton to proceed at law to recover any damages sustained by reason of the use and occupancy of the highway by the defendant with its track or tracks, and the running of its cars thereon. Under the circumstances we think this was all that the plaintiffs were entitled to ask.
We find nothing in the record requiring a reversal of the decree, and it is therefore affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the cost of the appellants.