BUTCHERS'BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION v. Crescent City Live-Stock Landing and Slaughter-House Co.

77 U.S. 273, 19 L. Ed. 915, 10 Wall. 273, 1869 U.S. LEXIS 1065
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 77 U.S. 273 (BUTCHERS'BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION v. Crescent City Live-Stock Landing and Slaughter-House 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
BUTCHERS'BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION v. Crescent City Live-Stock Landing and Slaughter-House Co., 77 U.S. 273, 19 L. Ed. 915, 10 Wall. 273, 1869 U.S. LEXIS 1065 (1870).

Opinions

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

stated the case in detail, and’delivered the opinion of the court.

All persons-and corporations, .except-the Crescent City Live-stock Landing and Slaughter-house Company, are prohibited, by an act .passed by the legislature of the State of [285]*285Louisiana, to land, keep, or slaughter any cattle, beeves, calves, sheep, swine, or other animals, or to have, keep, or establish any stock-landings, yards, pens, slaughter-houses, or abattoirs at any point or place within the city of New Orleans or the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard, or at any place on the east bank of the river within the corporate limits of the city, or at any point on the west bank of the same above the railroad, depot therein mentioned and designated.

Said act was passed on the eighth day of March, 1869, and is entitled An act to prbtect the health of the city of New Orleans, to locate the stock-landings and slaughterhouses, and to incorporate “ the Crescent City Live-stock Landing and Slaughter-house Company.” Though approved on the day mentioned, still the act did not go into operation till the first day of June following, but it appearing that the company created and organized under the act intended to enforce the prohibition,.the plaintiffs in-the suit first mentioned, on the twenty-sixth of.May of that year, filed a petition or bill of complaint in the Sixth District Court of New Orleans against that company, alleging that for more than thirty years past there had existed in the parish of Orleans and the adjacent parishes the lawful trade of butchering domestic animals to supply with meat the markets of the city and the adjacent parishes, and that the regular pursuit of that trade involved the necessity of collecting, feeding, and sheltering such animals before they were slaughtered, and of preparing and preserving their meat for use or sale for food, and their hides, tallow, and other valuable parts of the animals for the market; that a thousand persons throughout that period have been engaged in that trade without interruption and unmolested prior to the organization of that company'by any ordinance, regulation, or enactment from any public authority; that they, the petitioners, are duly incorporated under a law of the State, and that for more than two years they have been and are in the lawful exercise of that trade and employment, and that they have constructed and erected for that pur[286]*286pose, aud now hold within those parishes, places for landing cattle and for sheltering the same, and slaughter-houses for butchering the animals for market, and have secured 'stalls and such other privileges in the market-places as arc necessary and convenient to the prosecution of the business; that the respondents, though they must well know that the-act is in violation of the Constitution of the United States, openly declare that it is their intention to execute its provisions and to compel the complainants to abandon the objects of their incorporation, and to destroy the value of their investments, and render it necessary for them to relinquish their lawful pursuit and the prosecution of their legitimate business.

Wherefore they pray that the respondents may be enjoined from'any such interference with the petitioners, and from' interfering, directly or indirectly, by suit or otherwise, with their customers in purchasing, slaughtering, or butchering animals of any kind used for meat, during the pendency of the suit, and also for process, and that they, the complainants, may have judgment against the respondents in damages for the sum of ten thousand dollars.

On the same day the respondents in that suit instituted in the Fifth. District Court of New Orleans a counter suit against, the complainants in the suit commenced - against them in the Sixth District Court of the same municipality. They allege in their petition that “the sole and exclusive privilege of conducting and carrying on the live-stock landing and slaughter-house business in that city and its.environs is vested iu their company, as is fully set- forth in the act of their incorporation; that the corporation named in their petition, as respondents, are about to land, shelter, aud protect cattle, &c., intended for slaughter, and to conduct and carry on the live-stock landing and slaughter-house business within the limits of the city as prohibited by law and in violation of their exclusive rights and privileges. Wherefore they pray that the respondents, the- complainants in the suit pending in the Sixth District Court, may be enjoined aud prohibited from landing, stabling, and sheltering cattle, [287]*287&c., and other animals destined for sale and slaughter in that eity^, and from conducting and carrying on the live-stock landing and slaughter-house business within the limits of the parishes described in their charter, and from molesting and interfering with the petitioners in the exercise and enjoyment of their exclusive rights and privileges; and they also claim damages in the sum of four thousand dollars, and for general relief.”

Judgment in the first suit was rendered for the petitioners, and it was ordered that the injunction previously issued in the case against the respondents-should be made perpetual. Pursuant, to the- suggestion of the respondents in that case, that there was error to their prejudice in the final judgment of the Sixth District Court, it was ordered “ that a suspensive appeal be granted herein to the defendants, returnable to the Supreme Court of the State.”

Hearing was ajso had in the suit commenced in the Fifth District Court by the Crescent City Live-stock Landing and Slaughter-house Company against The Butchers’ Benevolent Association of New Orleans, and it was ordered, adjudged, and decreed in that case that there be judgment in favor of the petitioners, and that the corporation respondents, their president and members, be forever enjoined and prohibited, as prayed in the petition.

Exceptions having been filed to certain rulings of -tne court, it was also ordered, on motion of the respondents, that they, the respondents, be allowed a suspensive appeal to the Supreme Court of the State, as in the preceding case.

Separate suits were also commenced in the Seventh District Court of the city against the Crescent City Live-stock Landing and Slaughter-house Company by Hotair Imbau et al., and by the Live-stock Dealers’ and Butchers’ Association' of New Orleans, as appears by the transcripts filed here in those cases. Injunctions were prayed and granted against the respondents in both of those cases, and they, the respondents, were allowed suspensive appeals to. the Supreme Court of the State from the respective judgments.

Suit was also commenced in behalf of the State by the [288]*288Attorney-G-eneral against Paul Esteben et al., in which it is alleged that they have, without authority of law, formed themselves into a corporation by the name of the Live-stock Dealers’ and Butchers’ Association of New Orleans; that they, as such corporation, are about to lease or purchase a certain tract of land partly in the city and partly in the parish of St. Bernard, and that they are about to commence the erection of buildings and structures thereon for the purpose of collecting, landing, and sheltering beef-cattle designed for food, to be sold in the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard, contrary to the act of the General Assembly of the State.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 U.S. 273, 19 L. Ed. 915, 10 Wall. 273, 1869 U.S. LEXIS 1065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butchersbenevolent-association-v-crescent-city-live-stock-landing-and-scotus-1870.