Beasley v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co.

191 U.S. 492, 24 S. Ct. 164, 48 L. Ed. 274, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1419
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 14, 1903
Docket79
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 191 U.S. 492 (Beasley v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beasley v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co., 191 U.S. 492, 24 S. Ct. 164, 48 L. Ed. 274, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1419 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals ordering a bill against a railway company incorporated under the laws of the United States to be dismissed. The bill seeks to enjoin the railway company from building a depot within three miles of one already built at Uni in Louisiana, and alleges the following facts: Mrs. Beasley, the first named plaintiff, conveyed to a Louisiana corporation,, the Texarkana, Shreveport and Natchez Railway Company, a strip of land, one hundred feet wide, for a railroad track through her plantation, habendum to the company and its assigns so long as the *494 railroad was maintained and operated over the strip. By the act of sale, which was executed by both parties, it was declared to be a part of the consideration for the transfer “that the grantee or its assigns shall not build ... or establish any other depot along the line of said railroad within three miles north or'south of the one stipulated for.” The defendant-purchased the road from the grantee “ subject to the obligations and stipulations contained in’’ the act of sale. It now is constructing a depot on the road within a mile and a fraction of the one at Uni. The bill further alleges that there is no public necessity for a depot within the stipulated limits. There w;as a demurrer for the reason that there is an adequate remedy at law, and the demurrer was sustained by the Circuit Court,- and the bill dismissed. This decree Was reversed by the-Circuit Court of Appeals, and the bill was ordered to be dismissed for want of equity without prejudice to an action at law. 115 Fed.- Rep. 952. There is a motion to dismiss the appeal to this court on the ground that the decree was not final in form, but the decisions are the other way, and the case being one in which the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals can be -reviewed in this court under the act of March 3, 1891, we have jurisdiction and the motion must be overruled. Merrill v. National Bank of Jacksonville, 173 U. S. 131. See Great W estern Telegraph Co. v. Burnham, 162 U. S. 339, 342.

The act of sale gives its own definition of the word “depot,” but no question is made that the depot intended to be built is within the prohibition of the instrument in that and other respects.' We assume that if the plaintiff’s grantee had built the structure it would have broken- its' agreement. 'We also assume for the purposes of the case, without deciding, that the contract as a contract is not void, although similar contracts have been pronounced void in some of the cases cited below. Qn these assumptions the question is how far the burden of that agreement passed to the defendant, and whether, at least as against the-defendant, equity will require it to be specifically performed.

*495 Such a liability, wherever asserted, would have to be worked out, if at .all, in terms of easement, covenant running with the land, implied contract, or equitable, restriction.

Although the Louisiana Codé recognizes such servitudes “‘as the prohibition of building on an estate, .or of building above'a particular height,” Rev. Civil Code, Art. 728 (724); see Art. 718 (714), and although it has been held at common law that such a servitude for the benefit of neighboring land may be created within reasonable limits, and created by words of covenant, Ladd v. Boston, 151 Massachusetts, 585, 588; Brown v. O’Brien, 168 Massachusetts, 484, compare La. Rev. Civ. Code, Art. 743 (739),it was not argued that there was an .easement in this case/ It would be questionable whether the obligation was “not imposed on the person or in favor of the person, but only on an estate or in favor of. an estate;” La. Rev. Civ. Code, Art. 709 (705); Code Nap. 686; whether it was not in the words of. Marcadé, commenting on this article of the Code Napoléon, a servitude réelle entachée de personnalité.” 2 Marcadé, 627. “There can be no praedial servitude, when the object is merely to: satisfy the wants of the present owner.” Sohm, Inst. Roman Law, Ledlie’s transí. § 56, II, p. 262. Apart from the peculiarities of Louisiana law, there would be almost equal difficulty in regarding the agreement as a covenant the burden of which ran with the land according to the principles of the common law, and for substantially the same reason. It is true that, the covenant is negative, but it does not benefit the use and occupation, of the plaintiff’s land physically, and is not intended to. It is intended simply to improve the market value of that land by giving to it a right not to be competed with in the way of railway conveniences. Norcross v. James, 140 Massachusetts, 188, 192. As to an implied contract, that would-be. a fiction, and the plaintiff’s rights, so far as the question of policy is concerned, would not be enlarged by adopting, that form. See Lincoln v. Barrage, 177 Massachusetts, 378, 380.

Whether the true theory of equitable restrictions is the same *496 as- that of covenants running with the land, or different, as their historical antecedents are different in part, it would seem that the two must have somewhat similar limits. With regard to injunctions, we see in Art. 298, 3, of the Code of Practise cited by the plaintiff,, no reason to suppose that the law of Louisiana is peculiar in any way, affecting the present case. Whatever the form which the attempt to restrict may take, obviously it is not desirable to allow large tracts of land to be tied up and cut off from the ordinary, incidents of ownership, according to the invention of the owner, in perpetuity, in favor of other large tracts which may come by division into many hands. La. Rev. Civ. Code, Art. 656 (652). See Parish v. Municipality No. 2, 8 La. Ann. 145, 169. If such restrictions should be enforced' without limit in equity as against all purchasers with notice, the practical result would be an unlimited extension of easements, since notice always can be secured by registration. Easements hitherto have been confined pretty narrowly both in quality and in space. Equitable relief has been refused upon a covenant by a grantee not to open or work a quarry upon his land adjoining the land conveyed, in a suit between-assignees of the original grantor and grantee. It was a mere covenant against competition. Norcross v. James, 140 Massachusetts, 188. On the other hand, a covenant by a grantee not to sell sand from half -an acre was enforced against the grantee’s son and grantee in favor of the grantor in Hodge v. Sloan, 107 N. Y. 244, and in old times it would seem that a covenant in connection with a gift of a mill in Tenbury not to raise another mill in Tenbury might have been enforced against the heir of the covenantor. Y. B. 5 ed. Ill, 57, pl. 71; S. C., 7 ed. III, 65, pl. 6, 7. Of course, there are numberless cases in which contracts have been enforced which in a more immediate sense affected the occupation and enjoyment of the quasi

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Bluebook (online)
191 U.S. 492, 24 S. Ct. 164, 48 L. Ed. 274, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beasley-v-texas-pacific-railway-co-scotus-1903.