1 Minn. 202 | Minn. | 1854
By the Oowt
This case is brought here by appeal from the decision of the District Court for the County of Washington, sitting as a Court of Chancery.
The Appellant filed his Bill in that Court on or about the 20th day of June, A. D. 1852, stating, among other matters, that in March, 1848, the Legislature of the Territory of Wisconsin gave the exclusive right to William Nobles, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, to establish and maintain
Pursuant to the prayer of the Bill, an Injunction was issued on the 22d day of June, 1852. On the 4th day of August, 1852, an order was entered in the cause, that the Bill of complaint be taken as confessed, the Defendant having failed to answer said Bill as he. was required.
Soon after the entry of "the order pro confesso, the Defendant made a motion founded upon an affidavit, excusing the neglect to answer, to vacate the order, and for leave to file an answer, a copy of which was exhibited, and for a dissolution of the injunction.
Upon the hearing of this motion, the Court ordered that the order pro confesso be vacated; that the Defendant have leave to answer within ten days from the filing of the order, and that the injunction be dissolved.
It is from this order that the Appeal is taken.
Upon the argument it was urged that the Defendant was in contempt for not answering, and therefore had no right to make any motion in the case. Admitting that the defendant was in contempt, it certainly would be proper for him to take some steps to purge the contempt. Now, in this case the Defendant gives a reason for not answering in season, and the Court con
It would, perhaps, have been more strictly correct to have made a distinct motion to dissolve the injunction after the answer was put in, but as the answer was exhibited, and the injunction was not discovered until after the time allowed for filing the answer, I do not consider the course taken as so erroneous, as upon an Appeal to vitiate the order.
I now come to the only question remaining in the cause,— Was the injunction properly dissolved ?
To decide this question it is proper to examine the Defendant’s answer.
The answer admits all the facts charged in relation to the grant to Nobles, but avers that the charter set up by Complainant was modified and partially repealed by an Act of the Legislature of Wisconsin approved April 16th, 1852, which repealed that section of the charter which forbids the establishment of any other ferry within two miles of Complainant’s ferry; and
Hie Defendant also avers that he established a ferry on Lake St. Croix, and carried passengers between certain points, upon which points he had permission of the owners to land; and that the western terminus of his said ferry is at least half a mile from the point designated as the western terminus of Nobles’ original ferry grant. The Defendant also avers that he was duly licensed by the County Commissioners of the County of St. Croix, Wisconsin, and the County of Washington, in this Territory.
On the part of the Defendant, it was urged:
First. That the grant to Nobles of an exclusive ferry right was invalid: it being in conflict with the Ordinance of 1787, which made 'the Lake St.-Croix a common highway forever free to the citizens of the United States.
Second. That if the Legislature had the right to impose this restriction, the restriction has been so modified by the Legislative authority as to legalize the acts of the Defendant.
From the view I have taken of this case it will not be necessary to consider the first objection, and I will at once proceed to examine the second.
It was strenuously urged upon the argument, that the Legislature had no power to repeal or'modify Nobles’ grant. Were this a new question it might be necessary to enter into an examination of it at length, but the question is not an open one. The power of the Legislature to amend and repeal a charter, where it has the power reserved to do so in the charter itself, is, in my judgment, too plain and well-settled to admit of a doubt.
The only question, then, is: Have the Legislature so modified Nobles’ grant as to legalize the acts of the Defendant.
The Legislatures of Wisconsin and Minnesota have each re
It may be urged that a ferry right is necessarily exclusive, and, consequently, that the Complainant has an exclusive right unless his charter is repealed altogether. This position, I think, is not tenable. If the grant to Nobles was a mere emanation of a royal prerogative, or if it was a grant of some right which the citizen did not before possess — as, to build a bridge across a navigable stream — this position might be correct. In this case, however, every citizen has a right, without any grant, to transport passengers and freight across Lake St.-Croix, and to land upon the shores, provided the owner of the land does not object. IIow, then, can the granting of a charter to one man exclude another, unless the terms of the charter are.exclusive ?
The conclusion, therefore, at which I have arrived is, that the Defendant had been guilty of no infringement of the legal rights of the Appellants, and that the order of the District Court must be affirmed.
Order affirmed.