114 Ga. 727 | Ga. | 1902
The Offerman and Western Railroad Company brought, in the superior court of Ware county, an action against the Way-cross Air-Line Railroad Company and others upon a bond in which the defendant .company was principal and the other defendants were securities, alleging in substance as follows: Both plaintiff and the defendant company are corporations created under the laws of Georgia, the latter having its chief office in Ware county. Plaintiff was authorized by its charter to construct a line of railroad from Offerman in the county of Pierce to Nicholls in the county of Coffee, and, in order to reach the place selected as its terminus-at Nicholls, was compelled to cross the tracks of the defendant company at that point. Near the terminus was a large sawmill operated by the Southern Pine Company, and the output from its mill was necessarily shipped over the line of the defendant company, and itwell knew that if the plaintiff wasallowed to cross its tracks and reach the plant of the Southern Pine Company, on account of the community of interest between the stockholders of the latter company and the plaintiff the business of the defendant company would be necessarily lessened, the plaintiff being under agreement with the Southern Pine- Company to move the output of its mill when in position to handle the traffic, which was also well known to the defendant company. The defendant company desiring, by reason of the facts above mentioned, to prevent the completion of the plaintiff’s road, applied for an injunction to restrain it from prosecuting a proceeding which it had instituted to condemn a right of way across the tracks of the defendant company, and on October- 9, 1899, procured a restraining order having that effect. On December 16,1899, the application forinjunction coming onfor a hearing, the temporary restraining order was rescinded and the application for injunction was denied. On December 23, the defendant company had certified a bill of exceptions assigning error upon the refusal of the judge to grant the in junction, and procured an order allowing a supersedeas of the judgment rescinding the restraining order and denying the injunction until the final determination of the case in the Supreme Court, upon condition that a bond should be given with good security in the sum of $10,000, conditioned to pay to the plaintiff all of the damages which it should sustain by reason of any delay resulting from the granting of the restraining order and the continuing of the same in force.
Another ground of the demurrer is that it does not appear that at the time the damages sued for are alleged to have been sustained the plaintiff had a line of road in operation for the transportation of freight to and from Nicholls. . A sufficient answer to this contention is that from the allegations of the petition it appears that the reason the plaintiff did not have its road completed was due to the conduct of thedefendaDt company. It is also set up in the demurrer that there is no sufficient allegation of any contract or agreement between the plaintiff and the Southern Pine Company. When the allegations of the petition are taken as a whole, we think it sufficiently appears therefrom that there was a binding agreement between the Southern Pine Company and the plaintiff to ship its freights
Judgment affirmed. .