149 Mo. 245 | Mo. | 1899
The plaintiff and defendant are corporations owning and operating street railways in the city of St. Louis.
By section 6, article X, of the charter of said city, it is provided that: “Any street railway company shall have the right to run its cars over the tracks of any other railway company, in whole or in part, on the payment of just compensation for the use thereof, under such rules and regulations-as may be prescribed by ordinance, and it shall be the ditty of the municipal assembly to immediately pass such ordinances as may be necessary to carry this provision into effect.”
By virtue of general ordinance number 12,562 and special ordinance number 17,047, passed in pursuance of this charter provision, and of a decree of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis under the provisions of said ordinances, the defendant company acquired the right to run its cars over the
' But in the meantime the defendant having made its connections with the plaintiff’s tracks as contemplated in the ordinance and decree, and having thereafter on or about the second of April, 1895, commenced running its cars on the plaintiff’s tracks, the plaintiff on the twenty-first day of September, 1895, instituted this proceeding in the St. Louis Circuit Court by petition, complaining therein, in substance, that defendants are using cars of too great a width for plaintiff’s tracks, by means whereof the operation of its own cars thereon are impeded and retarded. That owing to defendant’s neglect in opening and closing the switches at Grand and Lafayette avenues and in keeping the same duly operated, the plaintiff’s cars are there delayed. That because of the manner in which defendant’s switches are arranged and constructed at that place, plaintiff’s cárs are liable to be and have been frequently thrown from the track, thereby
The answer sets up the proceedings had in the circuit court and states that it is now operating its cars upon the tracks in accordance with the provisions of ordinance number 12,652, and the proceedings had thereunder. Defendant specifically denies the allegations and charges of the petition, but says that the cars originally put upon the track were too wide in view of the excessive narrowness of the tracks of the People’s Railway Company, portions of them being out of alignment; and that narrower cars have been built and substituted therefor at great expense, which obviated all difficulties, and that the delays from the wider cars were temporary and inconsiderable, and had been fully remedied. And further answering the allegations of plaintiff’s petition concerning the alleged defective construction of connections at Lafayette avenue and Tower Grove park, or the manner the switches at said points are operated, denies each and every of said allegations, and says that such connections are made in accordance with the plans approved by the Board of Public Improvements, and which was well known to plaintiff, and any difficulty at such crossings is owing entirely to the defective construction or conditions of plaintiff’s own tracks, and for which defendant is in nowise responsible. The reply denies all the allegations of the answer, except the words “and says that such connections are made in accordance with the plans approved by the Board of Public Improvements, and which was well known to plaintiff.”
Upon the issues thus framed, the court after hearing a great volume of evidence, disposed of the case by the following finding and judgment: * “Now, on this day, comes the parties hereto by their attorneys, and this cause having been
Erom which judgment the plaintiff duly appealed to this court.
It is a well settled principle of law, that where a new duty or cause of action is created by statute and a particular proceeding not theretofore existing to enforce the duty or to vindicate the right conferred, is prescribed, the statutory remedy, if adequate, and no other, must be pursued. [Endlich on Int. Statutes, sec. 154; Baker v. Railroad, 36 Mo. 543; Clinton to use v. Henry Co., 115 Mo. 557; Hickman v. City of Kansas, 120 Mo. 110; Pleasant Hill v. Dasher, 120 Mo. 675; Markowitz v. Kansas City, 125 Mo. 485.]
The proceeding provided by the ordinances for the purpose of securing to the plaintiff full and fair compensation for all the injury it might suffer by reason of the delays and inconveniences resulting from the exercise by defendant of its right to connect its tracks with and pass its cars over the plaintiff’s tracks, was a valid and adequate one. [Union Depot Railroad Co. v. Southern Railway Co., 105 Mo. 562; Grand Avenue Railway Co. v. People’s Railway Co., 132 Mo. 34.] In adjusting that compensation, the subject-matter to be dealt with was the tracks of plaintiff as they existed on Grand Avenue between the points designated thereon, and the cars of the defendant as they were then being operated on their own tracks. The matter to be determined was what would be fair compensation to the plaintiff for the use of those tracks by the defendant for the term of two years, in passing its said cars over them in the usual and ordinary
In that proceeding the court in its decree aforesaid did determine the compensation that should be made, and that the “switches and connections” with said tracks should be made “according to the plans of plaintiff,” as “approved by the Board of Public Improvements of St. Louis.” And when it appeared from the pleadings and evidence, as it clearly did, that the plaintiff had accepted that compensation, that the switches and connections had been constructed and made in accordance with said plans, and that all the delays, inconveniences and accidents of which the plaintiff complains were the natural result of the legitimate use of these connections and of plaintiff’s tracks by the defendant’s cars in passing over them, in the usual and ordinary course of its business; it also thereby clearly appeared, that plaintiff was not entitled to the injunctive relief prayed for, nor to any damages on account of the matters complained of, and the prayer, for injunction should not only have been denied, but plaintiff’s bill should have been dismissed. This course, however, the court did not pursue. It did deny the prayer forinjunetive relief-, and therein committed no error, but instead of dismissing the bill, as should have been done, retained it for the purpose of hearing evidence as to the damage suffered by plaintiff by reason of delays of its trains occasioned by the width of defendant’s cars, and thereupon rendered the judgment in favor of plaintiff, from which it appeals, -and in so doing committed error in favor of the plaintiff, of which it can not'complain, and the judgment should not be reversed therefor on its appeal. The defendant, however, who answered to the merits below, and took no appeal from the judgment, now, here, contends that the judgments should be reversed for the reason that the court had no jurisdiction to