84 Ala. 115 | Ala. | 1887
The present bill is filed by the Louisville & Nashville Bailroad Company against the Port of Mobile to enjoin the enforcement of an ordinance of that municipality, which declared it unlawful for any person or corporation to load or unload cars in the public streets of the city, under a penalty of not less than twenty-five dollars for each and every violation of the provision. The ordinance excepts cotton, coal and ice in certain localities, but this exception has no material bearing' on the present controversy.
The bill claims for the complainant a vested franchise to exercise the right of loading and unloading freight along the line of its track constructed through Commerce street in said city, and that the enforcement of the ordinance in the manner which has been threatened by the municipal authorities, will operate as a total destruction of this valuable franchise, which the company had been peaceably exercising for about eighteen years. It is averred that the ordinance in contro
We, first, inquire as to the origin and nature of the right ' or privilege claimed by the complainant; second, whether the ordinance in question operates as an illegal interference with it; and third, as to the jurisdiction of a court of equity'to interfere by the aid of injunctive relief.
That the legislature, under the general police power inherent in the State, had the constitutional power to authorize the city of Mobile to grant the right to construct a railroad track, upon which steam engines are operated, across and through the streets of that city, must be conceded. And after such permission it would lie in the mouth of no one to complain that the changed use of the street would per se be a nuisance. — Perry v. New Orleans, Mobile & Chat. R. R. Co. 55 Ala. 413.
Under the authority thus conferred in the charter of the company, the city of Mobile, on September 7, 1869, passed an ordinance by which it “granted” to the railroad the right of way through certain streets, including “also the right to lay a single track, with the necessarry sidings arid turn-outs from the northern boundary of its depot . . . through Commerce street . ■ . . in such manner as said company may deem expedient and necessary for its business and interests.”
Upon the faith of this grant the track of the road was constructed through Commerce street, with the necessary sidings and turn-outs, for the purpose of loading and unloading freight and merchandise into and from the various stores and warehouses located upon said street; and has been ever since continuously used for this purpose from day to day, without complaint or objection from any source, for a period of seventeen or eighteen years, until the attempted revocation of the ordinance in December, 1886.
The privilege thus granted is obviously' a franchise of the most valuable kind — being one of the most common examples of such a grant or privilege. — Davis v. Mayor, 67 Amer. Dec. 186, 193. It is certainly a “right, privilege or franchise” within the meaning of the company’s charter, having reference, as it does, to the construction and management of the -railroad, and the conduct of its business of transportation within the limits of the city of Mobile. Such a special privilege conferred directly by legislative enactment, or in a mode provided for by such enactment,
Our conclusion is that the railroad company was possessed of an irrevocable franchise, conferred by the city ordinance, giving it the right to load and unload freight at its sidings and turn-outs, constructed on Commerce street, subject to the limitation only that the use of the street by tbe public should not be unnecessarily or materially impaired.
The equity of the present bill can be supported upon the ground that the court will lend its aid to prevent the destruc
It can not be tolerated that a municipal corporation in view of these principles, should escape the grasp of a court of chancery, in a clear case of equitable cognizance, by the device of adding a penalty to an illegal and void ordinance, which is designed as a repudiation of its own valid grants
There is nothing in the case of Burnett v. Craig, 30 Ala. 135; s. c. 68 Amer. Dec. 115, which is. in conflict with the foregoing views, as will appear from the later case of Moses v. Mayor, &c. of Mobile, 52 Ala. 198. The mere fact that an act is criminal does not divest the jurisdiction of equity to prevent it by injunction, if it be also a violation of property rights, and the party aggrieved has no other adequate remedy for the prevention of the irreparable injury which will result from the failure or inability of a court of law to redress such rights. — 1 High on Injunc. § 20; Mayor &c. of Baltimore v. Radecke, 49 Md. 217; s. c. 33 Amer. Rep. 289; Third Ave. R. R. Co. v. New York, 54 New York, 159; Mayor &c. of Mobile v. Waring, 41 Ala. 139; s. c. 8 Wall. 110.
The decree of the chancellor, refusing to dismiss the bill for alleged want of equity, and refusing to dissolve the injunction, is in harmony with the foregoing views, and must be affirmed.