83 P. 156 | Cal. | 1905
This action was begun in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, for the purpose, as stated in the prayer of the complaint, of enjoining the defendants and each of them "from making or filing any criminal complaint, or issuing or serving any warrant of arrest, or arresting plaintiffs, or either of them, by reason of the taking down, cutting, or removal by any of said plaintiffs of the electric wires of the defendant, the San Francisco Gas and Electric Company." The court, upon application therefor, and after a hearing, made an order for an injunction during the pendency of the action as prayed for. From this order the defendants have appealed.
According to the allegations of the complaint and the proofs at the hearing, the plaintiffs are severally pursuing the occupation of house-movers in the city of San Francisco, and have and procure from the city as often as may be necessary, permits to move over and upon the public streets of the city the houses which they may be employed to move, and that in so doing the wires of the defendant, the San Francisco Gas and Electric Company, which overhang the streets, interfere with the moving of the houses, so that it is necessary to cut and temporarily remove the wires while the houses *370
are being moved along the particular street over which the wires extend. The plaintiffs, or some of them, have cut these wires in some instances, and have been arrested therefor at the instigation of the electric company and charged with violating the provisions of section
The statement of the case is sufficient to show that it is without merit. Courts of equity will, in proper cases, enjoin the attempt to enforce a law or ordinance making certain acts a criminal offense and imposing a punishment therefor, where the law or ordinance is invalid and its enforcement will injure or destroy the plaintiff's property or property rights. The recent authorities are practically unanimous on this proposition. Some of the decisions even go so far as to hold that injunction will lie where the enforcement of the invalid law does not directly affect property or rights thereto, but operates upon the plaintiff's business, and thereby causes him material and irreparable loss. (City v. Beckham, 118 Fed. 399; Mills v.Chicago, 127 Fed. 731; Greenwich Ins. Co. v. Carroll, 125 Fed. 121.) But upon this latter point there is a conflict, and the weight of authority and reason seems to be to the contrary.(Brown v. Mayor,
The case seems to have grown out of a dispute between the plaintiffs and the electric company concerning the amounts which house-movers should pay to the company for the expenses and damages caused by the cutting of the wires when necessary, the right of the company to demand a deposit in advance to cover such expense, and concerning the question which party has the paramount right to use the streets for the purposes of their business. The object apparently sought by the suit is a judicial determination of these questions in a court of equity, to be used as a precedent in the criminal courts upon the trial of prosecutions under section
The order granting the injunction is reversed.
McFarland, J., Angellotti, J., Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred. *374