127 P. 85 | Mont. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought on October 13, 1911, to recover damages for a trespass by defendants upon lands belonging to plaintiff. Injunctive relief is also sought to restrain defendants from committing further trespasses in which it is alleged they were engaged at the time the action was commenced, and which, it is also alleged, they threatened to continue; The lands described in the complaint and alleged to belong to plaintiff consist principally of the alternate odd sections embraced within the limits of the grant made by Congress to the Northern Pacific Railroad
Upon presentation to him of the complaint at chambers the district judge made an order requiring the defendants to appear before the court at Forsyth on November 6, 1911, to show cause why they should not be enjoined pending the action from committing the acts complained of. The order put them under restraint until the hearing could be had. After some delay a hearing was had on November 25. The defendants appeared and filed their verified answer. In it they admit that they are engaged in breeding, raising, buying and selling sheep, and that they - hold them in charge of their employees, pasturing them upon the unoccupied public lands adjoining those of plaintiff, but deny that they have been guilty of the trespasses alleged in the complaint, or that they have informed the plaintiff that they intend to continue them, or that they are insolvent. They allege affirmatively that the plaintiff, by purchasing and leasing the odd-numbered sections from the railway company, has sought to put itself in a position to control all the intervening sections of the public lands and to exclude all other persons from using them for grazing purposes, thus creating a monopoly in itself of lands to the use of which the defendants and all others are equally entitled, and that this action and other similar ones brought by plaintiff and now pending were instituted in order to effect this purpose. It was stipulated that orders to show cause in five other actions brought by plaintiff against other defendants, the purpose of which is the same as that sought herein, should be disposed of at the same hearing, each of the defendants therein being accorded the privilege of submitting such evidence as was specially applicable to his case.
The granting or refusing of an injunction in a particular case
The equity alleged in the complaint in this case is the repeated trespasses of defendants, accompanied by a threat to continue
In their briefs counsel have sought to present and have determined the right of defendants to have access to the sections of government land by crossing over the lands belonging to the plaintiff; the defendants insisting that until the plaintiff has marked distinctly the boundaries of each section owned by it,.
The sufficiency of the complaint to support a judgment for trespass was not submitted to the district court, nor was it submitted at the hearing in this court; neither was the sufficiency of the answer of the defendants to constitute a defense submitted to, or passed upon by, the district court. These are questions which must be determined in the first place by it.
Reversed <md remanded.