Blanchard v. Abraham

40 So. 379, 115 La. 990, 1906 La. LEXIS 447
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1906
DocketNo. 15,806
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 40 So. 379 (Blanchard v. Abraham) 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
Blanchard v. Abraham, 40 So. 379, 115 La. 990, 1906 La. LEXIS 447 (La. 1906).

Opinion

LAND, J.

Plaintiff, as the duly licensed lessee of a public ferry across Bayou Lafourche at Itaceland, parish of Lafourche, enjoined defendant from maintaining and operating a free pontoon bridge within 400 feet from his public ferry landing. The petition set forth the lease of said ferry privi-. lege for two years at the price of $2,350, and alleges that the action of defendants has already damaged plaintiff in the sum of $784.46, and if not restrained will render his franchise entirely valueless. The plaintiff made the police jury a party to the suit.

The preliminary writ of injunction issued as prayed for, and defendants, after a vain attempt to dissolve on bond, filed their answer, first excepting that the petition disclosed no cause of action. Defendants denied that they were operating a free bridge as alleged, but averred that they had united for their own convenience, and had built and conducted, at a cost exceeding $500, a pontoon bridge over Bayou Lafourche at or near Raceland, solely for their own use. They further averred that the bridge was constructed at the joint expense and cost of the defendants, “each of them subscribed an amount as near proportionate as possible to what his expense would be in crossing the bayou over regular toll ferries during the year,” and that they employed a keeper [509]*509during the day to open the pontoon for the passage of boats, so as not to obstruct navigation, and that at night the pontoon was secured to one of the banks, so that vessels could pass freely. Defendants aver that the bridge was intended only for the use of subscrioers, and that they had given positive orders to their keeper not to permit any other persons to pass, and that at no time had they operated a pay or toll bridge. The answer contains many averments as to the legal right of the (defendants to maintain the bridge, and they allege that any law or ordinance to the contrary is violative to their constitutional rights, state and federal. Defendant prayed that plaintiff’s demand be rejected and the preliminary injunction dissolved, with damages.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff, perpetuating the injunction and condemning the defendants to pay cost. Defendants have appealed.

There is little or no dispute as to the facts of the case. The toll ferry at Raceland was duly established by. ordinance of the police jury, and was duly leased unto plaintiff as alleged in his petition. The operation' of the pontoon bridge in the immediate vicinity diverted the patronage of the toll ferry to such an extent as to. render plaintiff’s franchise valueless. The combination of the defendants at the time of the trial included 174 subscribers, who paid various sums, ranging from $1 to $100, for the privilege of crossing the pontoon bridge. The subscription list was open to the public, and was not confined to the original subscribers. The answer ingenuously admits that among the subscribers the amount of each subscription was proportioned to the expenses of crossing over regular toll ferries.

It is conceded that Bayou Lafourche is a navigable stream wholly within the limits of the state of Louisiana.

The police power of the state over ferries and bridges has been delegated to the police juries of the several parishes. Section 2743 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, provided as follows, viz.:

“The police juries of the several parishes of the state (the parish of Orleans excepted)* shall have the exclusive privilege of establishing ferries and toll bridges within their respective limits.”

This section was amended and re-enacted by Act No. 202, p. 391, of 1902, so as to make the ninth paragraph, partly quoted above, read as follows, viz.:

“The police juries of the several parishes (the parish of Orleans excepted) shall have the exclusive privilege of establishing ferries and toll bridges within their respective limits, of fixing the rates of ferriage and toll to be charged thereon, and of generally regulating the police of the same. This privilege shall not extend to any ferries or bridges already established, until the expiration of their charters; nor to any ferries or bridges within the control of municipal corporations, save and except with the consent and approval of the counsel of the municipal corporation, who shall have authority to waive their jurisdiction in favor of the police jury: Provided no toll shall ever be charged on such bridge, and the said police juries shall have the right to lease the ferries within their respective parishes for any number of years not to exceed five and the lessees of said ferries shall give bond and security annually, payable to the president of the police jury, in such sum as may be required, for the faithful performance of their duties as public ferrymen.”

In 1896 the Legislature passed an act to protect lessees of public ferry privileges on streams in this state, and made it a misdemeanor for any person, not a lessee of a public ferry, to transport for pay or hire any person or persons in skiff or other craft, across any stream in this state, within a distance of two miles of any public ferry landing.

On January 26, 1905, the policy jury of the parish of Lafourche passed an ordinance making it unlawful for any person or combination of Iversons to construct or operate a free ferry or bridge- — that is to say, a ferry or bridge whereon no toll is charged — within three miles of any public toll ferry or [510]*510toll bridge constructed or operated by authority of the police jury of the parish of Lafourche. This ordinance was adopted more than two months prior to the institution of this suit.

We think it a self-evident proposition that the exclusive right of the police jury to establish and lease out public ferries and bridges is inconsistent with the right of individual citizens to operate ferries or bridges to such an extent as to render the exercise of such exclusive right nugatory. Ferries and toll bridges are leased for the purposes of public revenue, and no one would bid for the license to collect tolls, unless reasonable protection was guarantied against individual competition. The lawmaker, assuming that no person would make it a business to transport other persons across a stream free of charge, deemed it sufficient to forbid such transportation “for pay or hire.” The police jury, however, in the exercise of its delegated power to establish, lease, and regulate ferries and bridges, prohibited the construction and operation of a free ferry or bridge within a certain distance of any licensed ferry. As a matter of principle we do not think that it makes any difference whether the defendant’s bridge is free of toll, since the evil is the same. As a matter of fact, we are convinced by the evidence and all the circumstances of the case that every one who used the bridge paid for the privilege, and that it was open to all persons to contribute. It matters not whether the payment be called a subscription or a toll paid in advance.

Defendants cite Chapelle v. Wells, 4 Mart (N. S.) 426, where it was held that a section of a legislative act which prohibited any person from establishing a ferry within the limits conferred on the plaintiff did not prevent the defendant from using his own boat to cross the river, or lending it to his neighbors without charge for the same purpose.

In Chiapella v. Brown, 14 La. Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 379, 115 La. 990, 1906 La. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanchard-v-abraham-la-1906.