178 Iowa 961 | Iowa | 1916
‘ ‘ This franchise is granted, and the rights and privileges herein conferred are subject to the following conditions, and the cars of said company shall be run upon and along the tracks of said company in conformity with the following-rules, to wit: . . . Cars shall start from all proper starting points as early as 6 o’clock A. M., and run continuously as late as to .11, o’clock P. M., or until 12 P. M. if necessary. The council reserving the right to require the company to run until 12 P. M. at such times as it may designate by resolutions or ordinances. At all times during the day or night while ears are running, they shall, in each and every direction, run at intervals of not more than 20 minutes up*965 ■to 10 o’clock P. M., after which, at least every 30 minutes in each and every direction, the last car to leave the central station on its outward trip as late as 11 o’clock P. M.”
With reference thereto, counsel for appellant argued that this means that “the cars should make the round trip in each direction in the city traversed by the street car system at intervals of not more than 20 minutes;” that wherever defendant “projected a line, or close parallel lines, there should be one round trip at least every 20 minutes in the direction of such line or close parallel line.” The argument seems to be that “each and every direction” has reference to geographical'directions, or the points of the compass; and if cars go out in one general direction, as in a northerly direction, and they or others return from the northerly part of the city, this should be construed as operating the cars as exacted by the ordinance, assuming the lines to be connected by a loop, and only a few blocks apart. They say that, at the time the franchise was granted, it must have been perfectly obvious to all parties connected therewith, “and to the public in voting the same, that, if any car went out upon that line, it would either have to come loach upon the same line, or remain out. In that case, there would have been no necessity for the use of the expression, ‘in each and every direction,’ since it could hardly have been assumed by anyone that the company would run a ear out to the end of its line and leave it there. ITence some other meaning must have been intended to be conveyed by the expression, ‘each and every direction,’ as the same occurs in the ordinance.”
Suppose the words be omitted, as proposed, might not the company comply with the terms of the franchise by operating only in one direction? Again, if there were a loop to another track, a round trip every 40 minutes would comply with the part of the ordinance quoted, without the clause proposed to be omitted; and, even if not omitted, under counsel’s argument this would be so, regardless of how far the lines were apart, if extending in the same general direc
No fair interpretation of this language can be made from it other than that cars are to be operated each way on the track at the intervals stated. The manifest object was to prescribe the minimum of service to be exacted in any schedule to be adopted by the company for the operation of the ears “upon and along the tracks” of the company. Possibly the words “each way” or “in each direction,” if inserted in the ordinance, would have been quite as, if not more, definite. But parties are not bound to make use of the most exact language. It is enough if that from whieh the meaning or intention of the parties can be ascertained is made' use of. If the words convey a definite meaning, whieh involves no absurdity, nor any contradiction in other parts of the instrument, then that meaning apparent on the face of the instrument should be accepted. If expressed in plain and unambiguous 'terms, whether general or limited, the parties are to be held to mean what they have plainly expressed, and not what the courts, in view of the evidence adduced, believe they should have agreed upon. Just how the ears of the. company might be run “in each and every direction” on its tracks — and by this is meant all its lines or tracks — without operating its cars in both directions, we are at a loss to understand. Possibly, in view of the topography of the city and the sparsity of settlement in some localities, it might have been preferable to allow cars to run out a part or all of the way on one track or line and return on another, without going both ways. If this shall prove true, appropriate changes may be effected in renewing the franchise at its termination. Ordinarily, a street car line extends in several directions, and those in Ottumwa furnish no exception. Indeed, in the original plat of what is now a part of Ottumwa, the streets are laid out parallel with the general direction of the Des Moines River and at right angles therewith, and subsequently, streets in
*969 “The writ of mandamus is not always demandable as an absolute right, and whether it shall be granted or not frequently rests in the discretion of the court. ’ ’
See People v. Olsen, 215 Ill. 620 (74 N. E. 785), where it was said that:
“"When a writ of mandamus is asked, the court may inquire whether it will operate impartially, create confusion and disorder, and whether it will or will not promote substantial justice. Courts, in the exercise of the discretion with which they are vested, may,' in view of the consequences attendant on ihe issuing of a writ of mandamus, refuse the writ, though the petitioner has a clear legal right for which mandamus is a proper remedy. People v. Board of Supervisors, 185 Ill. 288 (56 N. E. 1044). The court may act on existing facts, and view the case with reference to the consequences of its action.”
As seen, the defendant was under legal obligation to operate the cars both ways on Second and Main Streets because of having undertaken so to do, and we have to ascertain whether the trial court, in ordering that it do as it had agreed, abused its discretion. Necessarily, it was difficult to ascertain to what extent the public was inconvenienced by operating the cars one way only on these streets. No count having been made of how many walked each day from Main Street to Second Street to take a car moving west, or from Second Street to Main Street to take ears going east, the safe inference from the facts proven is that the number must have been large. During the year previous to October 1, 1914, 1,409,-069 fares were received on the lines on which the five cars are operated, or an average of 3,860 per day. How many of these were compelled to travel a block to get a ear is mere matter of inference, but the loop was near the business center of the city, and business houses are located on each street west of Market Street. According to the evidence, Main Street is the principal business street. Several wholesale houses are located on Commercial Street, south of Main
The rule to be deduced from the cases relied on by appellant is that a company acquiring fwo lines of railway between the same termini, operation of one of which will substantially accommodate the public, even though at slight inconvenience to some, will not be compelled to operate both lines; and the same doctrine applies to the maintenance of depots in close proximity. See Crane v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 74 Iowa 330; People v. Rome, W. & O. R. Co., 103 N. Y. 95 (8 N. E. 369) ; Territory v. Eastern Railway, 15 N. M. 599 (110 Pac. 852) ; Day v. Tacoma R. & Power Co., 80 Wash. 161 (141 Pac. 347).
That question is not involved in this ease save in principle; for the' defendant has abandoned neither line, but
We are not inclined to interfere with the issuance of the writ of mandamus, as prayed, by the trial court. — • Affirmed.