49 Ga. 202 | Ga. | 1873
This was a bill filed by the complainant against the defendant, praying for an injunction to restrain it from laying down a horse railroad track in Broughton and Bolton streets in the city of Savannah. On hearing the bill, answer of defendant, and the affidavits exhibited by the respective parties, the presiding Judge refused to grant the injunction prayed for, whereupon the complainant excepted. On the 20th of December, 1866, the complainant was incorporated by an Act of the General Assemhly/and authorized to construct and maintain a railroad for the transportation of produce, merchandise axid passengers, from a point within the corporate limits of the city of Savannah, to the Isle of Hope and Skid-away Island, and to construct and maintain branch railroads beginning at such points on the main line, as the directors of said company may select, running to Montgomery and White Bluff. By the 6th section of the Act, the said company were entitled to operate said railroad by steam or horse power, and have the exclusive use of the same for their cars, or other conveyances. On the 22d of July, 1868, the Mayor and City Council of Savannah passed an ordinance, by which it is declared that the complainant should have the exclusive right of way for ten years, and for such further time as the Legislature of the State might grant, over all the streets in the city of Savannah, excepting such as are intersected by squares, and those less than forty-five feet wide, for the purpose of con
Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.