124 Minn. 239 | Minn. | 1914
Appeal by defendant Smith from an order directing issuance of a temporary injunction enjoining defendant railway and express companies, pending determination of the action, from complying with Laws 1913, p. 632, c. 433 (G. S. 1913, §§ 4385, 4386), regulating shipment of cream on railroads within the state, and also restraining defendant Smith, as attorney general or otherwise, from bringing-actions or proceedings to compel any of his codefendants to comply therewith and from enforcing its penal provisions. The order was granted on the complaint and affidavits in support thereof, after answer interposed by defendant Smith, the record disclosing none other.
The complaint alleged plaintiff’s ownership of an established business in St. Paul for manufacturing butter from cream, of great value, its good will alone being worth $25,000, with a fixed trade’ and many customers in this and adjoining states, from whom large quantities of cream were bought and shipped to plaintiff’s factory, the greater part of which came by rail from places more than 65 miles distant. It then substantially continues: Many other large manufacturers of butter in the state are similarly circumstanced, and before the act went into effect defendant carriers transported the cream mentioned to plaintiff and to them, on passenger trains, in express and baggage cars, under published tariff rates for intrastate transportation, but since have refused to receive the cream for carriage in Minnesota, except for distances not exceeding 65 miles, unless accompanied by a certificate of pasteurization, which regulation cannot be complied with. Further, defendant express companies have no refrigerator service, nor defendant railway companies on passenger trains, and the same could not be instituted within less than a year, and would require prohibitive freight charges. Moreover,, both
The statute assailed prohibits shipment of cream for a distance of more than 65 miles over any railroad in the state, except in refrigerator cars kept effectively iced and in sanitary condition, unless the cream shall have previously been pasteurized. Railroad companies ■are forbidden to ship or receive for shipment cream except as provided, and violations constitute misdemeanors.
Court of equity’s power to determine the validity of penal statutes and to restrain criminal prosecutions thereunder when unconstitutional, where such would directly result in irreparable injury to property rights, is undoubted, the question being the propriety of its exercise in a given case, and the rule, furthermore, being subject to the qualification that it does not authorize actions the gravamen of which is to enjoin criminal proceedings. See note, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 193; Minneapolis Brewing Co. v. McGillivray (C. C.) 104 Fed. 258, 272.
This court, in accord with many others, both state and Federal, for reasons to be adverted to later, has sanctioned such relief reluc
The present case involves neither trespass nor direct injury to property, but differs from Cobb v. French in that plaintiff does not claim to be threatened with criminal prosecutions under the act assailed. Indeed, it argues for the relief prayed because it is so circumstanced as to be unable to violate the statute and make test at law of its validity. Plaintiff’s effort, then, is not directed at compelling defendants to observe a statute, but, on the contrary, to violate it, and the accomplishment of this result is sought through judicial examination thereof in equity, involving determination of its constitutionality, aided by a temporary injunction. Several questions are discussed, but all lead from and bring us directly to- consideration of what we deem the primary question involved, namely: Does the complaint state a cause of action against any of defendants %
As said in Wadhams Oil Co. v. Tracy, 141 Wis. 150, 156, 123 N. W. 785, 787, 18 Ann. Cas. 779, it will not do “to make of the courts, by equitable interference, a sort of superior upper house to consider and pass, in general and particular as well, upon legislative enactments.” Likewise, it was declared in Gibbs v. Green, 54 Miss. 592, 612, quoted with approval in Benz v. Kremer, 142 Wis. 1, 125 N. W. 99, 26 L.R.A.(N.S.) 842:
“Neither an executive nor a ministerial officer can be enjoined generally from putting a law in force. Mississippi v. Johnson, 4 Wall. 475 [18 L. ed. 437]. The complainant who seeks an injunction must be able to specify some particular act, the performance of which will damnify him, and it is such act alone that he can restrain. This court has no power to examine an act of the legislature generally and declare it unconstitutional. The limit of our authority in this respect is to disregard, as in violation of the Constitution, any act or part of an act which stands in the way of the legal rights of a suitor before us; but a suitor who calls upon a court of chancery to arrest the performance of a duty imposed by the legislature upon a public officer, must show conclusively, not only that the act about to be performed is unconstitutional, but also that it will inflict a direct injury upon him.”
See also Minneapolis Brewing Co. v. McGillivray, supra; and in the extreme case of Ex parte Young, 209 U. S. 123, 148, 28 Sup. Ct. 441, 449, 52 L. ed. 714, 13 L.R.A.(N.S.) 932, 14 Ann. Cas. 764, it was said, in discussing the propriety of granting the relief sought:
“The distinction is obvious between a case where the validity of the act depends upon the existence of a fact which can be determined only after investigation of a very complicated and technical character, and the ordinary case of a statute upon a subject requiring no such investigation and over which the jurisdiction of the legislature is complete in any event.”
If this action may be maintained, it seems clear that, in all cases of attempted police regulations, whenever one receives merely incidental injury in property rights therefrom, resort to equity may be
We are satisfied the right to test the constitutionality of penal statutes has not been unduly limited by our decisions, and an extension of the doctrine would be a long step on the road to “government by injunction.” We regard the limitation requiring direct, as distinguished from consequential injury, “'distinct from the proceedings to punish personally for the commission of the crime,” necessary in order to preserve the established boundaries dividing legislative and judicial authority, as well as civil and criminal jurisdiction. Moreover, substantially borrowing Mr. Justice O’Brien’s observations in
We hold the complaint alleges no direct injury or trespass to or against plaintiff’s property rights, that the action is essentially one to restrain criminal prosecutions, ancLno cause of action is averred.
Order reversed.