19 F. 231 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1884
This is a suit by the Torpedo Company, a corporation of the state of Delaware doing business in the state of Pennsylvania, against the incorporated borough of Clarendon, in Warren county, in the latter state, to restrain the enforcement against the plaintiff of an ordinance of the borough, enacted April 24, 1882, which declares it to be unlawful for any person to “store, house, convey, carry, or have in his or her possession,” within the borough limits, any nitro-glycerine, (except enough to “shoot” any oil well in the borough, on payment of a license fee of $10,) under a penalty of not less than $50, nor more than $100, for each offense, upon conviction before the burgess or a justice of the peace. The proper operation of oil wells, it seems, requires that torpedoes containing nitro-glycerine be exploded from time to time in the wells. The plaintiff has established works for the manufacture of nitro-glycerine in the county of Warren, nine miles from Clarendon, and on the opposite side of the borough there has been located a magazine of one of its customers for the storage of nitro-glycerine for the supply of the trade in the oil territory known as the Clarendon field, lying in and about the borough. The plaintiff alleges that to reach this magazine with supplies of nitro-glycerine it is necessary to traverse certain highways within the borough limits, but which do not pass through the thickly-settled portions of the town. To insure safety in transportation, the plaintiff has observed commendable care in providing wagons constructed specially for the jmrpose, with appliances well adapted to reduce the danger of explosion to the minimum, and it is alleged by the plaintiff that these precautions secure the public from all risk. The plaintiff began business after the passage of the ordinance, and the magazine was located so late as May or June, 1883. Employes of the plaintiff have been twice arrested and fines imposed for violations of the ordinance, but these judicial proceedings have been removed into the proper court of Warren county, and are there now depending. The plaintiff claiming that the regulation in question is unreasonable and oppressive,—abridging its legal right to use the public highways of the borough, and injuring its business,—and that the ordinance is without legislative warrant and void, prays the court for an injunction'to restrain the borough from enfoi'eing the same against the plaintiff, and from arresting its employes, or bringing or prosecuting any action, civil or criminal, against them for a violation thereof.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff rely on Butler's Appeal, 73 Pa. St. 448. But it is not an authority, it seems to me, for the proposition that an injunction is a proper remedy for the injury of which the plaintiff complains. That was a case of a clearly illegal exercise by city councils of the taxing power. I have been referred to no precedent, nor have I been able to find 'any, where a court of equity in such a ease as the present has granted the relief the plaintiff seeks. But in several analogous eases such redress has been denied, and the aggrieved party turned over to his legal remedies. Burnett v. Craig, 30 Ala. 135; Gaertner v. City of Fond du Lac, 34 Wis. 497; Cohen v. Goldsboro, 77 N. C. 2; Brown v. Catlettsburg, 11 Bush, 435. Here the plaintiff’s legal remedies are, I think, ample. One of those has already been invoked; for by certiorari or appeal the proceedings against the plaintiff’s employes for violation of the ordinance have been removed into the proper state court, and aro there pending. It does not appear to me that the plaintiff is likely to sustain any injury which may not be fully and adequately compensated by an action for damages, should it be adjudged that the ordinance is invalid.
The motion for an injunction is denied.