Berthin v. Crescent City Live-Stock-Landing & Slaughter-House Co.

28 La. Ann. 210
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1876
DocketNo. 3917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 La. Ann. 210 (Berthin v. Crescent City Live-Stock-Landing & Slaughter-House Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berthin v. Crescent City Live-Stock-Landing & Slaughter-House Co., 28 La. Ann. 210 (La. 1876).

Opinions

"Wyly, J.

Plaintiff alleges that he is by occupation a butcher and is engaged in slaughtering animals for food in the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard; that by virtue of act 118 of the acts of 1869, known as the Slaughter-House Act, petitioner and all others engaged in slaughtering animals in said parishes were j equired under penalty to slaughter at such place as might be located by the Slaughter-House Company under the requirements and restrictions of said law; that said company located their stock-landing- and slaughter-house on the right bank of the Mississippi river in the parish of Orleans, below the present depot of Morgan’s Opelousas and Texas Railroad; that said company intended to have completed said stock-landing- and slaughter-house on or before the first of June, 1869, and at said date of its pretended completion required the slaughtering of all animals intended for food in the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard to be done at said place from said date.

Petitioner represents that in obedience to law he did his slaughtering-in said place; that he is vested by law with the right to continue his business of slaughtering upon the site or place located by said company, on the right bank of the river as aforesaid; that said company has removed many tilings necessary for the slaughtering of animals from said slaughter-house to. what is known as the Cavaroc Slaughter-House, located on the left bank of the Mississippi river, just below the United States Barracks; and that said company is about to remove all facilities for slaughtering at said place and to tear down the buildings and to compel the abandonment of slaughtering at said place. He avers that said acts are in direct violation of law and of the right of petitioner to slaughter in said slaughter-house and be provided .with every facility for slaughtering- and transporting the meat across the river to market. He claimed damages in the sum of ñve thousand dollars, and prayed for an injunction, which was granted by the court.

The answer alleges that in compliance with the requirement of the third section of the act mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, being act 118 of the acts of 1869, this respondent located and erected a slaughter-house, such as is prescribed in said third section, at the place mentioned in the petition, on the right bank of the Mississippi river; that subsequently and long prior to the institution of this suit, this respondent, at the request and solicitation of nearly all the butchers engaged in business in the parish of Orleans, located and opened another slaughter-house on the left bank Of the Mississippi river at the Cavaroc plantation, as described in [212]*212the petition; that said Cavaroc Slanghter-House is in all respects of the dimensions required by the statute for the accommodation of all .butchers, and of tho capacity to enable them to slaughter five hundred animals per day; that in consequence of the Cavaroc Slaughter-House being ample and sufficient for all the purposes contemplated by law and of its superior advantages and conveniences for the business of the butchers, the slaughter-house on the right bank was nearly deserted, and it became unnecessary to keep it up for the convenience of the public; and this respondent has therefore, in the exercise of its legal rights, determined to close up said slaughter-house on the right bank of tho river, and was engaged in removing'the facilities and appliances necessary to the slaughtering business until arrested by this suit. Respondent avers that, under said act 118, the right of locating and erecting slaughterhouses at any point within the designated limits is conferred on respondent, and tho right of changing the location or abandoning one slaughterhouse and erecting another at the option of this respondent is also granted, subject to the duty of always having in operation adequate slaughter-house accommodations as prescribed by law. Respondent further avers that plaintiff has, in violation of said act 118, slaughtered animals intended for food in other places than at the slaughter-house of respondent, thereby incurring the penalty prescribed in said act, of two hundred and fifty dollars for each animal so slaughtered; that tho aggregate amount of penalty so incurred is fifty thousand dollars, for which judgment is prayed in reconvention. Respondent also prayed for an injunction against plaintiff, which was not granted.

At the trial the court below rejected plaintiff’s demand and dissolved the injunction; it also rejected respondent’s reconventional demand and refused its application for an injunction.

From this judgment plaintiff has appealed, and respondent, joining in the appeal, prays an amendment in regard to the reconventional demand and the injunction prayed for in tho answer.

Tho'important inquiry in this case is a question of law. Had tho respondent the right to change the location of the grand slaughter-house which it located and erected prior to the first day of June, 1869, pursuant to tho requirement of said act 118, and which was a condition precedent to tho enjoyment of the monopoly and franchises conferred by said act ? Had said corporation tho right to abandon the location and tear down the slaughter-house on the right bank of the river and establish as a substitute the Cavaroc Slaughter-House, situated on the left bank of the river below the Barracks ?

The solution of this question will require an examination of several sections of act No. 118 of the acts of 1869, the statute creating the defendant company and conferring all the rights and franchises it enjoys.

[213]*213Section one provides that after the first of June, 1869, it shall be unlawful to land, keep, or slaughter any cattle, beeves, calves, sheep, swine, or other animals at any place within the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard, except that the Orescent Oity Live-Stock-Landing and Slaughter-House Company may establish themselves at any point or place hereinafter provided; and said section provides a penalty against any person doing business or doing any act in contravention thereof.

Section three provides “ that said company or corporation is hereby authorized to establish and erect at its own expense, at any point or place on the east bank of the Mississippi within the parish of St. Bernard or in the corporate limits of the city of New Orleans below the United States Barracks, or at any point or place on the west bank of the Mississippi river below the present depot of the New Orleans, Opelousas, and Great AVestern Railroad Company, wharves, sheds, yards, and buildings necessary to land, stable, shelter, protect, and preserve all kinds of horses, mules, cattle, and other animals from and after the time such buildings, yards, etc., aro ready and complete for business and notice thereof is given in the official journal of the State; and the said Crescent City Live-Stock-Landing and Slaughter-House Company shall have the sole and exclusive privilege of conducting and carrying on the live-stock landing and slaughter-house business within the limits and privileges granted by the provisions of this act, and cattle and other, animals destined for sale or slaughter in the city of New Orleans or its environs shall be landed at the live-stock landings and yards of said company, and shall be yarded, sheltered, and protected, if necessary, by said company or corporation.” This section further provides certain fees, and also for the collection of certain charges, and it prescribes a penalty for the violation of its provisions.

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Related

City of New Orleans v. Murat
44 So. 898 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
28 La. Ann. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berthin-v-crescent-city-live-stock-landing-slaughter-house-co-la-1876.