Attorney General v. Tudor Ice Co.

104 Mass. 239
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 104 Mass. 239 (Attorney General v. Tudor Ice Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General v. Tudor Ice Co., 104 Mass. 239 (Mass. 1870).

Opinion

Gray, J.

This court, sitting in equity, does not administer punishment or enforce forfeitures for transgressions of law; but its jurisdiction is limited to the protection of civil rights, and to cases in which full and adequate relief cannot be had on the common law side of this court or of the other courts of the Commonwealth.

The Tudor Ice Company is a private trading corporation. It is not in any sense a trustee for public purposes. This is not a [241]*241suit by a stockholder or a creditor. The acts'complained of are not shown to have injured or endangered any rights of the public, or of any individual or other corporation ; and cannot, upon any legal construction, be held to constitute a nuisance. It is expressly stated, in the report of the chief justice, that “ it does not appear that any of the creditors of the company are in danger of losing by it, and there is no objection to its proceedings, except that they are not authorized by its act of incorporation and are alleged to be against public policy for that reason.” Nc case is therefore made, upon which, according to the principles of equity jurisprudence and the practice of this court, an injunction should be issued upon an information in chancery.

In Attorney General v. Utica Insurance Co. 2 Johns. Ch. 371 Chancellor Kent, in a very able and elaborate judgment, after a thorough discussion of the question on principle, and an extensive examination of the earlier authorities, held that such an information could not be maintained to restrain .an insurance company from exercising banking powers in violation of a statute of New York; but that the proper remedy was at law, by information in the nature of a quo warranto ; and no appeal appears to have been taken from his decree. An information in the nature of a quo warranto was thereupon filed, and sustained by the supreme court of New York, and judgment rendered thereon that the corporation be ousted from the franchise which it had usurped. People v. Utica Insurance Co. 15 Johns. 358. Similar proceedings may be had at law in this Commonwealth in a proper case. Goddard v. Smithett, 3 Gray, 116, 122, 123. Attorney General v. Salem, 103 Mass. 138. Boston & Providence Railroad Co. v. Midland Railroad Co. 1 Gray, 340. Gen. Sts. c. 145, §§ 16-24.

One early English case of high authority, not cited by Chancellor Kent, nor at the argument of the present case, is so much in point as to be worth quoting in full. Upon a bill in equity, filed by the attorney general, at the relation of several freemen of the Weavers’ Company, against the officers of that company, setting forth “that the defendants had been, guilty of many breaches and violations of their charters, and had op« [242]*242pressed the freemen, &c., and mentioned some particulars; and for a discovery of the rest, and that they might be decreed for the future to observe the charters, and to have an account of the revenue of the corporation which the defendants had misspent, &c., was the end of the bill. To which the defendants demurred, because, as to part of the bill, it was to subject them to prosecutions at law, and to a quo warranto; and as to the other parts, the plaintiffs had remedy by mandamus, information, or otherwise, and not here. And of the same opinion,” the report proceeds, was Lord Cowper, “ who said it would usurp too much on the king’s bench; and that he never heard of any precedent for such a case as this; and so allowed the demurrer.” Attorney General v. Reynolds, 1 Eq. Cas. Ab. (3d ed.) 131.

The modern English cases, cited in support of this information, were of suits against public bodies or officers exceeding the powers conferred upon them by law, or against corporations vested with the power of eminent domain and doing acts which were deemed inconsistent with rights of the public.

Some of them were cases of misapplication of funds raised by taxation and held by municipal corporations or officers upon specific public trusts. Such were Attorney General v. Norwich, 16 Sim. 225, Attorney General v. Guardians of Poor of Southampton, 17 Sim. 6, and Attorney General v. Andrews, 2 Macn. & Gord. 225.

The hypothetical case, in which Lord Westbury, in Stockport District Waterworks v. Manchester, 9 Jur. (N. S.) 266, said that he should “ probably not hesitate ” to act upon the information of the attorney general, was of a suit to restrain the making of a contract between an aqueduct corporation and a city to carry water beyond the limits which the city was authorized by law to supply.

The passages cited from Liverpool v. Chorley Water Works Co. 2 De Gex, Macn. & Gord. 852, 860, and Ware v. Regent's Canal Co. 3 De Gex & Jones, 212, 228, were but dicta that an unauthorized diversion of water or flowing of land by an aqueduct or canal corporation, without proof of actual or imminent injury to property, gave no right of suit to an individual, and [243]*243could only be checked on an application to the court by the attorney general.

The case of Attorney General v. Great Northern Railway Co. 4 De Gex & Smale, 75, was a clear case of nuisance, the unlawful obstruction of a public highway by a railroad. That of Attorney General v. Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton Railway Co. 2 Weekly Rep. 330, was the case of the opening of a railway line in violation of an order which an authorized public board had made upon the ground that it would be unsafe to the public.

The single case, in which an information has been sustained in an English court of chancery against a corporation for carrying on a business beyond its corporate powers, is Attorney General v. Great Northern Railway Co. 1 Drewry & Smale, 154, in which Vice Chancellor Kindersley in 1860 restrained a railway company from trading in coal in large quantities, upon the ground that there was danger that, if allowed to go on, it might get into its hands the coal trade of the whole district from or through which its railway ran, and thus acquire a monopoly injurious to the public. That case is evidently the foundation of the dictum, of Vice Chancellor Wood, two years later, in Hare v. London & Northwestern Railway Co. 2 Johns. & Hem. 80, 111.

In Attorney General v. Mid Kent Railway Co. Law Rep. 3 Ch. 100, a mandatory injunction was granted upon the information of the attorney general to compel a railway company to construct a bridge over a public road, and with as gradual a slope as was required by a special clause in its charter; and the objection that the attorney general might have had an equal and complete remedy at law was stated by each of the lords justices as if it required no answer and afforded no ground for refusing to entertain jurisdiction in equity. It is often said, in the English books, that the king or his attorney general, suing in behalf of the public, has the election to sue in either of his courts, and may therefore enforce a legal right in the court of chancery. 1 Dan. Ch. Pract. (3d Am. ed.) 6, 7. Attorney General v. Galway, 1 Molloy, 95,103. However that may be, by [244]

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Bluebook (online)
104 Mass. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-tudor-ice-co-mass-1870.