251 S.W. 53 | Mo. | 1923
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff brought this suit in the Circuit Court of Jackson County against the defendants to enjoin the latter from entering the Plaza in front of the Union Depot, a corporation, at Kansas City, Missouri, for the purpose of securing and discharging passengers arriving at or departing from said depot, on various railroad trains entering said depot, or departing therefrom, from and destined to all points of the United States, Canada and Mexico. The trial was before the circuit court, which resulted in a finding and a decree for the defendant, and the plaintiffs, after moving unsuccessfully for a rehearing, duly appealed the cause to this court.
The sufficiency of the pleadings are not challenged, so we will put them aside.
This case was first argued and submitted to Division One of this court, and after argument and submission it was assigned to our learned Commissioner SMALL to write. He reported that in his opinion the judgment of the lower court should be reversed with directions that the defendants should be perpetually enjoined as prayed.
There was no vote taken on the opinion in Division One, but it ordered the cause to be transferred to Court en Banc, where it was reargue and submitted, and assigned to the undersigned to write the opinion.
The facts of the case are not complicated, and are correctly stated by Judge SMALL in his Divisional opinion, which I hereby adopt as the facts of the case in Court En Banc. They are as follows:
The defendants, some thirty persons in number, are the owners of automobiles and are engaged in transporting passengers for hire to and from the plaintiff's depot in said city. The petition was filed on the 10th day of June, 1920. It shows that twelve different trunk lines of railroad enter and use plaintiff's depot in handling *503 their in-going and out-going passengers and their baggage. That plaintiff owns the land upon which the Union Station and its tracks are located and also the land south of said Union Station and bordering thereon, extending from Main Street on the east to Pershing Road on the south and Broadway on the west, known as Union Station Plaza, which furnishes access to and egress from said Union Station; that plaintiff at its own cost and expense has provided such sidewalks and roadways on said Plaza as are necessary for the use of the traveling public having business with the plaintiff or the lines of railroad using said Union Station. That the land covered by said Plaza cost said plaintiff approximately $650,000, and is fairly worth one million dollars, and plaintiff has expended upon paving, sidewalks and other improvements on said Plaza $90,000, which are now reasonably worth that sum. That there are and at all times have been exclusive of the vehicles owned and operated by defendants sufficient vehicles for the transportation of passengers and baggage to and from said Union Station, which are permitted to stand upon the Plaza by the plaintiff, the owners of which observe the regulations imposed by the plaintiff and recognize the right of plaintiff to manage and control said Union Station and Plaza. That defendants and each of them assert the right to stand their automobiles upon the said Plaza and the roadways thereon and appurtenant thereto and to solicit business and otherwise to do business on the said Plaza and the roadways and sidewalks thereon and appurtenant thereto without securing plaintiff's permission, and in defiance of plaintiff's ownership of said Plaza and the regulations for the protection of the public and for the preservation of order thereon. That defendants, and each of them in pursuance of their alleged claims, have heretofore continued to and have repeatedly stood their vehicles on the Plaza and roadways thereon; have solicited business thereon in a loud and boisterous manner; have interfered with and annoyed patrons of said lines of railroad using said union *504 passenger station and have committed repeated trespasses upon said Plaza and Union Station. Defendants have also taken possession of a part of said Plaza and roadways thereon in defiance of plaintiff's ownership thereof and of plaintiff's rights and have refused to surrender the possession and control thereof to the plaintiff and will continue to do so, violating the plaintiff's rights, unless restrained by an order of court, and plaintiff will thereby suffer irreparable damage. That defendants each earn large sums from the business so unlawfully transacted upon the plaintiff's property. The reasonable value of the space occupied by them exceeds $100,000. The value of the right asserted by plaintiff and sought to be protected exceeds $10,000, and plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law. The prayer is that defendants and their agents be enjoined from standing their horses, automobiles and vehicles of every kind on the said Plaza or upon the roadways thereon or appurtenant thereto and from soliciting the custom and patronage of persons or passengers upon said Plaza, sidewalks or roadways or into said station, except for the purpose of actually delivering passengers or baggage thereat and of receiving passengers and baggage for the transportation of which they shall have already received orders before coming upon said Plaza and for general relief.
The answer put the allegation of the petition in issue and alleged that ever since the Union Station was opened to the public said Plaza and the sidewalks and the roadways thereon had always been used by the public and that by reason thereof and the conduct of the plaintiff had become public roadways and public sidewalks and are now public roadways and sidewalks and are such under the laws of this State. That plaintiff is not entitled to the relief sought because it does not come into court with clean hands, in that the plaintiff and the Shaw Transfer Company, a corporation doing a taxicab business in Kansas City, Missouri, seek by this suit to set up and establish a monopoly of the taxicab business *505 done to and from the Kansas City Terminal Railway Station in the State of Missouri contrary to the laws of said State.
The reply was a general denial.
The testimony of the plaintiff tended to show the facts charged in its petition to be true. There was no serious attempt to show in the evidence, and no contention is made in the brief of counsel for defendants here, that the Plaza or any of the roadways or sidewalks thereon were ever dedicated to the public, but they were used with the consent of the plaintiff as private rights-of-way for access to and egress from said Union Station by the traveling public.
The evidence of the defendant tended to contradict that of the plaintiff as to the want of decorum on the part of the defendants in soliciting business upon the Plaza and sidewalks and roadways of the plaintiff. Defendants also offered in evidence two contracts made by the plaintiff with the Shaw Transfer Company, one dated the 31st of January, 1914, by which the plaintiff granted to said Taxicab Company the right to solicit patronage for its cabs upon said Plaza and at its said Union Station, and to allow the cabs, carriages and trucks of the Transfer Company to stand and wait upon said premises of the plaintiff, provided they did not interfere with traffic in and out of said station and that they should stand at such places as might be designated by the president of the plaintiff and under such regulations as he might prescribe. Said contract further provided that the Terminal Company should take all reasonable and lawful steps to secure to the Transfer Company the enjoyment of the privilege thereby granted and would, so far as it reasonably and lawfully may, prevent the cabs, carriages and baggage trucks of any other person or corporation engaged in soliciting or handling the same business as the Transfer Company and in competition with it, from so waiting or standing upon the premises of the Terminal Company at said Union Station. This contract further permitted the Shaw Transfer Company *506 to establish an office and booth inside of the Union Station for the solicitation and handling of business and to erect signs upon plaintiff's premises calling attention to the business of the Transfer Company. Under this contract, as compensation for the privileges granted, the Terminal Company was to receive thirteen per cent of the gross receipts for each calendar year in excess of $50,000, received by the Transfer Company from all passenger and baggage business done by it at the Union Station or upon the trains entering said station.
This contract was in effect for a period of five years and until the 15th of May, 1920, when a new and similar contract was entered into, leaving out the exclusive clause in the prior contract and inserting in lieu thereof the following: "Seventh, The rate of compensation to the Terminal Company provided for in Article Sixth hereof is fixed in view of the fact that the Terminal Company has not, at this time, given to any other firm, person or individual, rights and privileges similar to those herein granted to the Transfer Company, and it is agreed that should the Terminal Company hereafter do so, or should such rights and privileges hereafter be exercised or enjoyed by any person, firm or individual other than the Transfer Company, then this contract may, at the option of the Transfer Company, be cancelled on thirty days' written notice of its intention so to do. Provided, however, that nothing in this paragraph shall be construed as making the Terminal Company liable for any loss or damage which the Transfer Company might sustain by reason of the exercise by others of privileges similar to those by this contract granted to it, or make it liable for the return to the Transfer Company or any part of the compensation paid by the Transfer Company hereunder."
According to the testimony, plaintiff's share of the receipts or compensation from the Transfer Company was about $1,200 per month. The record also shows that the Shaw Transfer Company's attorney assisted in the trial of this case. *507
The testimony further shows that the Union Station building is located between 23rd and 24th Streets. It fronts south on said Plaza. The front extends from Main Street about 600 feet west. The Plaza is 250 or 300 feet wide, and extends along the entire front and also for some distance east and west thereof. The Station building has two entrances for the exit and entrance of passengers in front near the center facing the Plaza. The cast entrance is about 300 feet from Main Street and the west entrance about 400 feet from said Main Street. Main Street runs north and south into the heart of the business and residence portions of the city. It is the street nearest the depot, and which is used generally by the public in going to and from the said depot.
There is a sidewalk running from Main Street adjoining the front of the Station and extending the full length thereof. South of the sidewalk is a paved roadway about eighty-five feet wide, running across the entire Plaza, and beyond that is a grass plot extending to the south line of the Plaza. Pershing Road runs along this south line, east and west.
Prior to the institution of this suit, another suit had been brought by one Skaggs, the owner of a motor car doing business for hire to and from the Union Station, to enjoin the plaintiff and the Shaw Transfer Company from interfering with him in the prosecution of his business and soliciting patronage at the Union Station. This suit was brought in the Circuit Court of Jackson County and was removed to the Federal Court at Kansas City, and upon trial in that court the injunction was denied.
Afterwards, a suit was brought in the Fall of 1918, by W.M. Corbett, president of the plaintiff, in his capacity as a Federal officer in charge of the Union Station under the Federal Administration. Said suit was similar to the present, seeking an injunction against the defendants in this case. It was brought in the United States District Court at Kansas City. Upon final hearing the relief prayed for was granted by said district court, and the *508 temporary injunction against defendants from soliciting business upon the plaintiff's premises was made permanent. From this judgment the defendants appealed to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. When the cause reached a hearing in said Court of Appeals, the Government had surrendered possession of the plaintiff's station, of which fact said appellate court took judicial notice, and without passing upon the merits of the case, held that in any event the injunction could not last longer than the time during which the Government was in possession, and ordered the district court to modify its decree so as to terminate said injunction with the termination of Federal control. The defendants obeyed said injunction while it was in force, which was only for a few months, and made no attempt to solicit patronage upon plaintiff's premises during that time. Immediately, however, after the termination of said injunction, the defendants in this case resumed their business of soliciting passengers and patronage upon the Plaza, roadways and sidewalks of plaintiff, whereupon this suit was brought by plaintiff against the defendants to again restrain them from so doing.
I. The first contention of counsel for appellant is that "neither Section 23 of Article XII of the Constitution, not any principle of the common-law, gives theDiscrimination: defendants the right to conduct theirPrivate Property for private business upon the plaintiff'sPublic Use. private property without plaintiff's consent."
This is rather a peculiar way of stating appellant's position, but I presume it must mean to convey the idea that the judgment of the circuit court resulted in taking appellant's private property without its consent, which was not authorized by Section 23 of Article XII of the Constitution, nor by any principle of the common law. Regardless of the manner of stating the proposition, this is the real legal proposition involved in this litigation.
In support of counsel's contention we are cited to *509
the following authorities: R.S. 1919, secs. 9850, 9911, 9975, 9985; Christie v. Railway,
It must be admitted that there is some conflict between the authorities upon this proposition, but some of them, as I understand the cases, proceed upon a false basis.
In either event, I do not think we should give weight to the authorities cited, as against the rulings of our own court, and besides there are decisions of many other respectable courts which have taken the same view of the law of the case as this court has. Our decisions, and those of other states which adhere to the same views as we do, proceed upon the theory that, if the contract made and entered into by and between the appellant and the Shaw Transfer Company is held valid, and should be enforced, it will create a monopoly between them as to the automobile passenger business to and from the depot.
This exact point was decided by this court in favor of the respondent in the case of Cravens v. Rodgers,
But independent of that we have a constitutional provision which covers this case as completely as a glove covers the hand, namely, Section 23 of Article XII which reads as follows:
"No discrimination in charges or facilities in transportation shall be made between transportation companies and individuals, or in favor of either, by abatement, drawback or otherwise; and no railroad company, or any lessee, manager or employee thereof, shall make any preference in furnishing cars or motive power." Had this court never passed upon the question at all, this constitutional provision is so clear, complete and applicable that this court would have been firmly bound by its prohibitions.
Each of the appellants admittedly are common carriers, so are all of the defendants, and that being true, how can it be seriously contended that the Union Depot Company can discriminate in favor of the Shaw Transfer Company, and against the other twenty-eight defendants who are also common carriers of passengers and baggage for hire?
It seems to me that if any judge has any respect for his legal knowledge and oath of office, he is absolutely bound to give force and effect to that constitutional provision, regardless of the express holding of the cases before cited which hold in compliance to the views herein expressed.
When we view the cases counsel for appellant cite, they either are not binding upon this court, because the courts which rendered them are foreign, or they are based upon wholly erroneous bases, none of which should be sustained by this court.
II. There are several other interesting questions presented and discussed by counsel in their briefs, but clearly, however decided, they are subservient to the *511 views herein expressed, and no good purpose would, or could, be served, by prolonging this opinion by considering them.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed. Walker, J., concurs; White, J., concurs in a separate opinion, in which James T. Blair and Ragland, JJ., concur; David E. Blair, J., dissents in a separate opinion, in which Graves, J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result reached by WOODSON, C.J., and deem it proper to present the reasons for my position.
Some connecting-carrier cases are cited by appellant. Such cases are not in point. In each of them suit is brought by a party to a contract against the other party to the contract, either for breach of the same or to enjoin its infraction. The defendants in this case are not bound nor affected by any contract obligation between the plaintiff and the Shaw Transfer Company, for whom the Terminal Company was attempting to establish a monopoly of the taxicab business.
In the Wiggins Ferry Company Cases it was held simply that the railroad company affected had the right to deliver freight to the Ferry Company for a continuous passage to destination. [Wiggins Ferry Company v. C. A. Ry. Co.,
In the Home Telephone Company Case,
In the present case the plaintiff discharged its passengers in its depot and had nothing further to do with them except to provide for their safe and expeditious exit from the premises. The plaintiff seeks to enjoin defendant's from standing their cabs on the Plaza for *512 the purpose of receiving passengers, claiming that the space was private property.
The plaza was laid out across the front of the station — a wide thoroughfare — to afford opportunity to passengers arriving or departing to secure the most convenient means of exit and entrance. The fact that the company owned the ground at the time it was laid out and did not dedicate it to public use is of no significance; everybody was invited to use it as a public thoroughfare. Passengers arriving and departing on trains were invited to come and go in any kind of conveyance most convenient for the purpose. A passenger had the right to drive up to the front of the depot in his own conveyance or in a hired one; and a right to use his own conveyance, or a hired one, at that point to go away from the station. The taxicab drivers, as carriers, and as servants of the passengers, had the right to come there for the purpose of discharging passengers and of receiving passengers arriving on the railroad. The Terminal Company had no right to discriminate nor to interfere with such passengers as to what sort of conveyance they should take to get away from the depot, nor what sort of conveyance they should come there in. The plaintiff concedes that principle, yet under the thin guise of regulating the passenger traffic it denies its application.
It is true the Terminal Company had a right to control the use of its property so far as it was used. It allowed the Shaw Transfer Company to erect a stand inside the station, which it could very properly do. It very properly could have permitted only the one transfer company or taxicab company to carry passengers from the station to some destination, for instance another depot, if the passage was entirely over its own land. Here, however, was an attempt to say what particular vehicle a passenger should take to travel the streets of Kansas City. It says to all passengers arriving at the station that they shall take a yellow taxicab, for instance, and shall not take a blue taxicab when *513
they depart from the station, no matter what their destination. In other words, the patent purpose and effect of the arrangement was to give to the Shaw Transfer Company, for a consideration, a monopoly of the taxicab business in Kansas City. True, this purpose is under color of the right of the plaintiff to control its own property. But that is a mere pretense. There was no interference with the control of its own property, nor with the convenience of passengers arriving, nor with effective handling of plaintiff's business. The entire purpose was to have the passengers take one taxicab line and only one, from that station, and it does not matter under what pretense nor under what color that manifest purpose was attempted to be carried out. The case of Cravens v. Rodgers,
Dissenting Opinion
I am unable to concur in the majority opinion. Such opinion adopts the statement made by SMALL, C., in the opinion written by him in Division One. I fully concur in Judge SMALL'S opinion and adopt that portion of his opinion following the statement (already set out in the majority opinion) and beginning with paragraph II as my dissenting opinion in this case. Graves, J., concurs herein.
"II. We have no doubt that the plaintiff may have intended, in fact did intend, to give the exclusive right to the Shaw Taxicab Company to solicit business and stand its cabs upon its grounds and Plaza, sidewalks and roads in front of its Union Station building, but it is not legally required to do so by the contract entered into May 15, 1920. Assuming that plaintiff intends to thus favor the Shaw Taxicab Company, the question we have to decide is, whether it has the legal right to do so. The petition does not seek to interfere with the defendants from entering upon plaintiff's grounds and into its station building in delivering passengers and baggage transported to its depot by defendants, but to *514 restrain defendants from soliciting patronage and business upon its said grounds and in its buildings or standing their cabs upon its grounds.
"Learned counsel for respondents rely upon the following authorities to sustain the judgment of the lower court, holding that plaintiff had no right to so exclude defendants from its premises, to-wit: Cravens v. Rodgers,
"Appellant relies on the following authorities to show that it had a legal right to make such exclusive contract with said Shaw Taxicab Company, or any other responsible party who will properly attend to the business of transporting passengers and baggage to their destination in said Kansas City, and thus to exclude defendants from soliciting business or standing their cabs upon its property: Ferry Co. v. Railroad,
"As to the authorities relied on by respondents:
"Cravens v. Rodgers,
"`On the other hand, if better facilities are afforded to one carrier than another by the connecting carrier, competition is discouraged, a monopoly created, and the traveling public are apt to receive a slow, uncomfortable, solvenly, negligent and expensive service. Monopolies are obnoxious to the spirit of our laws, and ought to be discouraged. This is the spirit of our constitutional provision which prohibits "discrimination in charges, or facilities in transportation . . . between transportation companies and individuals or in favor of either." [Art. 12, sec. 23.] And in this case we do not think the railroad company could give the plaintiffs the exclusive privilege of approach to nearly one-half of its platform, and that the most desirable and advantageous half for procuring passengers, and thereby deny it to the defendants, both being there for the same purpose and in the same business of forwarding the railroad's passengers to their places of destination from the point where the railroad company landed them.' *517
"No authorities are referred to by the learned court in its opinion.
"The case of Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Chicago Alton Railroad Co.,
"The same ruling was made in Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Chicago
Alton Railroad Company,
"In Telephone Co. v. Telephone Co.,
"In the case of Cravens v. Rodgers, supra, the depot was about one-half mile outside of the city of Gallatin. There were but the two hack lines. The court expressly holds that they were connecting carriers of the railroad company, `and by their connection with the railroad forming one continuous line, by which passengers were transported to the same general destination, the railroad carrying them to its station near the city, and plaintiffs *519 and defendants carrying them to their several destinations in the city.' The court held that because the hackmen were connecting carriers of the railroad, the railroad could not make an exclusive contract by which it gave one the advantage over the other in getting or doing such connecting business. The Ferry Company and Telephone cases, supra, expressly decide the other way and must be deemed to overrule, if not expressly, yet by implication, the Cravens-Rodgers Case. This view of the effect of our decisions was taken by the Federal court in the litigation referred to in that court, Skaggs v. Terminal Co., 233 Fed. l.c. 830-31, and by our Public Service Commission, when it had the same question as to the rights of the cabmen at the St. Louis Union Station before it. [Yellow Cab Motor Co. v. Terminal Ry. Assn., 6 Mo. P.S.C. 19.] We think such view is correct.
"If, therefore, connecting-carrier cases are in point the law in this State is with the appellant in this case. If not, the question is an open one in this court, and we think that by far the greater weight of authority and reason is with the appellant. There are several cases cited by respondents where the facts were the same as in the case, i.e. where the cabmen asserted the right to go upon the depot company's premises to solicit business and stand their cabs where the court ruled they had a right to do so, chiefly on authority of the Cravens-Rodgers Case, decided by this court, to-wit: Kalamazoo Hack Bus Co. v. Sootsma,
"`Although its functions are public in their nature, the company holds the legal title to the property which it has undertaken to employ in the discharge of those functions. And as incident to ownership it may use the property for the purposes of making profit for itself; such use, however, being always subject to the condition that the property must be devoted primarily to public objects, without discrimination among passengers *521 and shippers, and not be so managed as to defeat those objects. It is required, under all circumstances, to do what may be reasonably necessary and suitable for the accommodation of passengers and shippers. But it is under no obligation to refrain from using its property to the best advantage of the public and of itself. It is not bound to so use its property that others, having no business with it, may make profit to themselves. Its property is to be deemed, in every legal sense, private property as between it and those of the general public who have no occasion to use it for purposes of transportation. . . .
"`It was therefore its duty to see to it that passengers were not annoyed, disturbed or obstructed in the use either of its station house or of the grounds over which such passengers, whether arriving or departing, would pass. It was to that end — primarily, as we may assume from the record — that the Pennsylvania Company made an arrangement with a single company to supply all vehicles necessary for passengers. We cannot say that that arrangement was either unnecessary, unreasonable or arbitrary; on the contrary, it is easy to see how, in a great city and in a constantly crowded railway station, such an arrangement might promote the comfort and convenience of passengers arriving and departing, as well as the efficient conduct of the company's business. The record does not show that the arrangement referred to was inadequate for the accommodation of passengers. But if inadequate, or if the transfer company was allowed to charge exorbitant prices, it was for passengers to complain of neglect of duty by the railroad company and for the constituted authorities to take steps to compel the company to perform its public functions with due regard to the rights of passengers. The question of any failure of the company to properly care for the convenience of passengers was not one that, in any legal aspect, concerned the defendants as licensed hackmen and cabmen. It was not for them to vindicate the rights of passengers. They *522 only sought to use the property of the railroad company to make profit in the prosecution of their particular business. A hackman, in nowise connected with the railroad company, cannot, of right and against the objections of the company, go upon its grounds or into its station or cars for the purpose simply of soliciting the custom of passengers; but, of course, a passenger upon arriving at the station, in whatever vehicle, is entitled to have such facilities for his entering the company's depot as may be necessary.
"`Here the defendants press the suggestion that they are entitled to the same rights as were accorded by special arrangement to the Parmelee Transfer Company. They insist, in effect, that as carriers of passengers they are entitled to transact their business at any place which under the authority of law, is devoted primarily to public uses — certainly at any place open to another carrier engaged in the same kind of business. But this contention, when applied to the present case, cannot be sustained. The railroad company was not bound to accord this particular privilege to the defendants simply because it had accorded a like privilege to the Parmelee Transfer Company; for it had no contractual relations with the defendants, and owed them as hackmen no duty to aid them in their special calling. The defendants did not have or profess to have any business of their own with the company. In meeting their obligations to the public, whatever the nature of those obligations, the defendants could use any property owned by them, but they could not, of right, use the property of others against their consent. In maintaining a highway, under the authority of the State, the first and paramount obligation of the railroad company was, as we have already said, to consult the comfort and convenience of the public who used that highway. To that end it could use all suitable means that were not forbidden by law. In its discretion it could accept the aid or stipulate for the services of others. But, after providing fully for the wants of passengers and shippers, *523 it did not undertake, expressly or by implication, to so use its property as to benefit those who had no business or connection with it. It is true that by its arrangement with the railroad company the Parmelee Company was given an opportunity to control, to a great extent, the business of carrying passengers from the Union Passenger Station to other railway stations and to hotels or private houses in Chicago. But in a real, substantial, legal sense, that arrangement cannot be regarded as a monopoly in the odious sense of that word, nor does it involve an improper use by the railroad company of its property. That arrangement is to be deemed, not unreasonably, a means devised for the convenience of passengers and of the railroad company, and as involving such use by the company of its property as is consistent with the proper performance of its public duties and its ownership of the property in question. If the company by such use of its property also derived pecuniary profit for itself, that was a matter of no concern to the defendants and gave them no ground of complaint.'
"All of the cases cited by respondents were decided before this pronouncement of the Supreme Court of the United States. Many of the other cases cited by appellant were decided since then and all follow the ruling in the Donovan Case. No case has been cited by the diligence of counsel or has been found by us, decided since the Donovan Case, which has laid down a contrary rule. We cannot incumber this opinion further by quotations from the numerous authorities cited by counsel for appellant, but it is sufficient to say of them that they are all in point and strongly sustain the conclusion we have reached in this case. Railroad v. Davidson, 33 Utah, 370, decided in 1908, is, however, worthy of special notice, in that it contains a most thorough reiew of all the authorities up to that time, as well as a most comprehensive and satisfactory consideration of the subject on principle.
"We therefore rule that plaintiff's contract with the Shaw Taxicab Company of May 17, 1920, is legal and *524 valid, and that defendants have no right, without plaintiff's consent, to go upon any part of plaintiff's depot grounds or buildings or upon its Plaza, or the roadways or sidewalks thereon, described in the petition, to solicit business or to stand their cabs or vehicles thereon, except in bringing and delivering passengers and their baggage to plaintiff's station, which must be done in a proper and orderly manner, subject to reasonable rules and regulations of the plaintiff.
"III. Respondents' learned counsel does not contend that injunction is not the proper remedy if plaintiff is right on the merits of the case. That injunction is the proper remedy we have no question. [Donovan v. Railroad,
"The result is, we reverse the judgment of the lower court and remand the case with directions to enter up judgment for the plaintiff, granting it a perpetual injunction, as prayed in its petition and according to the views herein expressed."