70 Tex. 682 | Tex. | 1888
On the fifth of May, 1886, the State of Texas, by John D. Templeton, its Attorney General, filed its petition against the, appellee, Charles Goodnight, for a mandatory injunction to compel the removal of certain enclosures around public lands of the State, and to restrain the construction ,of any additional fences. The defendant filed a plea in abatement on the ground that there was a want of necessary parties to the action; and also a general demurer to the petition. The plaintiff excepted to the plea in abatement, and the exceptions were overruled. The court then sustained the demurrer to the petition, and the State declining to amend, the petition was dismissed.
We are of the opinion that the demurrer to the petition was improperly sustained. The allegations show that the defendant had practically enclosed for the purposes ofr pasturing and raising cattle and horses over six hundred thousand acres of the public school lands of the State; and also over fourteen thousand acres of its unappropriated public domain; and that when the fences are not continuous the enclosures are “guarded by line riders, or in some other equally effective manner.” It is alleged that the enclosures prevent the use of the public lands so enclosed as commons for grazing purposes by the inhabitants of the State, and
This is an obstruction of a right which the State, before the passage of the act of February 7, 1884, might have waived, but Avkich since the passage of that act it becomes the duty of its proper officers to remove by legal proceedings. But the obstruction complained of in this case is something more than an interference with the rights of the State as a body politic. In so far as it obstructs the right of common in the public lands and the moving of cattle to market and their passage in being removed from one part of the country to the other it is an interference with individual rights to public property. The enclosure of public lands for private use, whether viewed as a Avrong merely to the body politic or as an infringement of the privileges of its citizens, is a nuisance subject to be abated at the - suit of the State, and an injunction is a well recognized and appropriate remedy. U. S. v. Brighton Ranch Co., 26 Fed. Rep., 218; same case, 25 Id., 465 ; Railway Co. v. Ward, 2 Black, U. S., 485; State v. Atkinson, 24 Vt., 448; State v. Woodward, 23 Vt., 92; Attorney General v. Wood, 108 Mass., 436; Lead Co.’s App. 96 Pa. St., 116.)
But it is insisted in the brief of counsel for appellee that the State has a plain, adequate and complete remedy, without resort to the writ of injunction. We understand it to be claimed, in the first place, that because the act of February 7, 1884, makes the enclosure of the public lands a penal offense, and provides for the prosecution and punishment of offenders against it, that therefore a court of equity will not interfere,
Besides, the act provides that its provisions shall not apply to any person or corporation who has heretofore, or who may thereafter, in good faith, fence land not their own. (Acts 1884, p. 69, sec. 3.) Hence a criminal prosecution would not succeed unless it were shown beyond a reasonable doubt that the enclosure was erected with unlawful intent; whereas, in a suit for an injunction, proof of good faith would constitute no defense.
But we are also referred to our statutes which provide for the action of trespass to try title as affording an adequate legal remedy for the wrongs complained of in this case, but we do not so regard it. It may be, that if the fence were wholly or mainly upon the public lands, that the State, by bringing an action for the recovery of the possession, could eject the intruder and destroy the enclosure. But such, as we understand it, is not the case made in the petition. The petition alleges that the defendant has enclosed the lands of the State; not that they have erected the enclosures upon their lands. The case of the United States v. Brighton Ranch Company, 26 Federal Reporter, 218, was brought in the United States circuit court for Nebraska, to compel the defendants, by a mandatory injunction, to remove a barbed wire fence erected partly on the public land and partly on its own, around some fifty thousand acres of the public domain of the general government. At a preliminary hearing upon the law of the case, Judges Brewer and Dundy held that the action was properly brought; and on the final hearing, Mr. Justice Miller, of the Supreme Court, sitting in the circuit, awarded the mandatory injunction compelling the removal of the enclosure. (U. S. v. Ranch Co., 25 Fed. Rep., 465.) That case affords an authoritative precedent for the procedure in the case before us.
We are also of opinion that the court below erred in overrul
In view of another trial it is proper to add a few remarks in regard to the extent to which the court may go, in granting relief to the plaintiff as to those portions of the fences in con
But in all cases, when persons have an interest in the enclosures who are within the jurisdiction of the court, we think a proper practice requires that they should be made parties to the proceedings.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.