55 S.E. 337 | S.C. | 1906
September 19, 1906. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The Marion County Lumber Company, a corporation under the laws of this State, brought this action to enjoin the Tilghman Lumber Company, a corporation under the laws of Virginia, from operating a logging railroad across certain lands in Marion County. A temporary injunction was granted by Judge Ernest Gary, October 4, 1905, but the same was dissolved by his order of October 18, 1905, "without prejudice to plaintiff to apply for an injunction pendente lite, if at any time it is hindered, impeded or inconvenienced in the exercise of its alleged exclusive right of way heretofore acquired by the defendant, its agents or servants," from which order plaintiff appeals.
Ordinarily, interlocutory injunctions are not a matter of right but of grace, resting in the sound discretion of the Judge. Pelzer, Rodgers Co. v. Hughes,
The plaintiff having succeeded to the rights of the Cape Fear Lumber Company, bases its claim under a deed from owners, dated May 30th, 1898, conveying to the Cape Fear Lumber Company, "all of the short straw pine timber, all the cypress timber and all the poplar timber, except timber measuring twelve inches in diameter and less at the stump end," on the described tract of 950 acres in Marion County, known as the Phil Dew Land, with "exclusive rights of way over said land and rights of ingress and egress for men, teams, vehicles and engines at any and all times, and the right of way and right to build, construct and operate a railroad across the land, etc." Subsequent to this, the defendant company took deed from the owners conveying "an exclusive right of way not to exceed eighteen feet wide upon and across" the said tract of land, with privilege "to build. construct and operate a railroad, logging road, tramway or cart or wagon way upon said right of way, also the right and privilege to use all such small timber, except pine trees fourteen inches and above at stump, and brush and earth from said right of way as may in the judgment of said Tilghman Lumber Company be required to build, construct and maintain the aforesaid railroad, logging road, etc." The defendant by its answer admits that it entered upon the said tract in September, 1905, cut out a right of way over and across the same, constructed in part a logging railroad thereon, and has distributed ties along such right of way for the purpose and with the intention of operating a steam logging railroad thereon.
Assuming that plaintiff establishes its alleged senior easement, then it is obvious that it is the owner of the dominant estate in the land described, with which neither the owners of the said land nor their subsequent grantees can materially *223
interfere. It is true, the owners retained the soil and certain timber, but by their grant to plaintiff they must be held during the continuance of the easement to have abandoned every use of the land except such as might be made consistent with the reasonable enjoyment of the easement granted.Herman v. Roberts,
The defendant cannot acquire under its junior grant any greater right than the owner of the servient estate had. The plaintiff's deed was duly recorded, and it is charged that the defendant before purchasing had actual notice of plaintiff's rights.
In so far as plaintiff seeks the aid of equity to protect its rights of way in said tract of land, we cannot say that the Circuit Judge erred in dissolving the temporary injunction at this time. It appears that plaintiff has not definitely located any right of way. The general rule is that equity will not interfere to protect an unlocated or indefinite right of way. Goldsboro Lumber Co. v. Hines (N.C.),
It is claimed, however, that the operation of a steam logging railroad by defendant across said tract would subject plaintiff's property right in the trees to greater danger of destruction from fire communicated by the locomotives. It is alleged that the logging locomotive employed by defendant constantly emits sparks and scatters fire, and that said timber is for the most part pine woods with thick undergrowth and *224 will be liable to fire at any time from the engine of defendant, and that such fire would destroy valuable timber trees of special and peculiar value to plaintiff, now making preparations to manufacture lumber on an extensive scale, and several affidavits were submitted in behalf of plaintiff, to show the liability of the timber to be destroyed by fire resulting from the operation of a steam locomotive through it on an eighteen foot right of way.
It is not the intention or province of this Court now to discuss or decide any question of fact involved in this case in advance of the hearing upon the merits, but we are impressed that plaintiff made at least such a prima facie showing of threatened danger to its property rights in the trees as entitles it to the preliminary injunction. The threatened injury to plaintiff's property would be of such a repetitious or continuing nature as to render an action at law inadequate and to warrant equitable interference by injunction. Alderman
v. Wilson,
The order of Judge Gary dissolving the temporary injunction is reversed and set aside. *225