This is an original application for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondents to restore a portion of an abandoned street railway line, and to maintain and operate the same. The application alleges that the relators are citizan» of the United States and of the state of Nebraska, and residents and taxpayers of the city of Lincoln; that the Capital Heights Street Railway Company, from February, 1887, until December, 1890, operated and maintained a street railway in the city of Lincoln, with all facilities necessary to accommodate the traveling public, from the corner of Twelfth and O streets to the corner of Randolph and Fortieth streets, by a route specially described in the application; that the relators are the owners of a large number of lots and tenement houses abutting upon or adjacent to the streets along which said car line passed; that at the time of locating said line, “in consideration of constructing, operating, and maintaining a street car line and service thereon on Randolph street aforesaid, the property owners along Randolph street aforesaid paid to the said street car company a large sum of money, the exact amount of which is unknown to the relators; that among the number your relators paid to the said company the sum of $1,400 for the construction, operation, and maintenance of the street car line and service aforesaid; that after the said street railway was put in running order and was in operation your relators expended many thousand dollars in erecting buildings adjacent to said line of street railway. Said buildings are still owned by the relators. That about December, 1890, the Capital Heights Street Railway Company consolidated all its stock, property, and franchise»
“Your relators say that at all times herein mentioned the Home Street Railway Company and the Lincoln Street Railway Company have been independent and competing lines of street railway.
“Your relators further say that for the purpose of stifling the competition between the Home Street Railway Company and the Lincoln Street Railway Company, and for the further purpose of monopolizing all the street railways in the city of Lincoln, the respondent, the Lincoln Street Railway Company, purchased of, and from, the Home Street Railway Company all the stock, property and franchises of the said Home Street Railway Company, including all that part of said line formerly known as the Capital Heights Street Railway, paying to the said Home Street R dlway Company the sum of $95,000 in the bonds
The application then charges that shortly after said purchase a portion of said line was abandoned and soon after another portion, until there was a complete abandonment of the whole line; that rails and ties of a portion of the line have been torn up and carried away by the respondents ■and put in use in other parts of the city by the Lincoln Street Railway Company, and that the respondents now threaten to remove the remainder of the rails and ties; that these acts have been performed for the purpose of forfeiting the franchise; “ that the relators are now compelled to walk one-half mile to obtain street car service from their property on Randolph and G streets; that by reason of the abandonment of such street car service on Randolph street and G street the property of the relators and of. all citizens living and owning property along the aforesaid street car line of the Home Street Railway Company has become .greatly depreciated in value; that a large number of relators’ houses, situated in close proximity to said car line, have become vacant by reason of the abandonment of said line, and the property of the relators has been lessened in value many thousands of dollars.”
To this application the Lincoln Street Railway Company and F. W. Little demur, and the Home Street Railway Company files a motion to strike out from the application certain. averments, being those in regard to the relators’ ownership of property near the car line, those in relation to the contribution of money for its construction, and those in regard to the injury to the relators’ property by reason of the abandonment of the line.
The regular procedure in mandamus is to make the
In support of the demurrer of the Lincoln Street Railway Company and F. AY. Little two points are urged» First, that the allegations of the application do not show any connection of the demurring respondents with the line-of road referred to which charges them with the duty of" maintaining it; second, that the application nowhere-charges that public interests have suffered by reason of the abandonment of the road, or that there is a public demand for its operation, and that private interests alone are-insufficient to sustain the action. On the first point the allegations are that the Lincoln Street Railway Company has been, at all times mentioned, operating a line of street railway on several streets -in Lincoln; that Little is its-president; that the Home Street Railway Company and the Lincoln Street Railway Company have been independent and competing lines, and that, for the purpose of stifling competition between them and monopolizing all the railways in Lincoln, “ the Lincoln Street Railway Company purchased of and from the Home Street Railway Company all the stock, property, and franchises of the said Home Street Railway Company, including all of that part of said line formerly known as the Capital Heights Street Railway, paying to the Home Street Railway Company the sum of $95,000 in the bonds of the said respondent, the Lincoln Street Railway Company; that for the purpose of concealing the true state of facts surrounding such purchase, the stock of the said Home Street Railway Company was transferred to F. AY. Little, the respondent hei’ein, who holds the same in trust for the respondent, the Lincoln Street Railway Company.” In 1889 an act was passed to-enable street railways to unite their road3 by consolidation,, purchase, sale, or by subscription to or purchase of capital stock. (Session Laws, 1889, ch. 38 ; Compiled Statutes, ch„
The motion of the Home Street Railway Company seeks to eliminate from the application all the averments by which it is sought to show a special interest in the relators by virtue of their contributing funds to the company which constructed the road, and by virtue of their owning property along its line. The application does not show that the money contributed was the consideration for any promise for any special operation of the line for any definite period.
The allowance of a writ of mandamus rests largely in the discretion of the court. Even where the duty is essentially a public one, and where it is not necessary to show any special interest, the court would undoubtedly be justified in denying the writ if the proceedings appeared to be vexatious or trivial. In the case of the Union P. R. Co. v. Hall, supra, the writ was allowed at the instance of relators, who were merchants in Iowa and frequent shippers on the respondent’s road. It is hardly possible that it would have been allowed at. the suit of a citizen of Maine who •had no business relations with the company and would not be in anywise affected by the result. So here, if the question is to be considered one of public right it does not follow that the court would interfere by mandamus at the Instance of any citizen of Lincoln having no special inter
It may be remarked that this case was instituted before the decision in State v. Lincoln Gas Co., 38 Neb., 33, and has been entertained as an original action for that reason.
Judgment accordingly.