Canal & Claiborne Railroad v. Crescent City Railroad

44 La. Ann. 485
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1892
DocketNo. 10,846
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 La. Ann. 485 (Canal & Claiborne Railroad v. Crescent City Railroad) 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
Canal & Claiborne Railroad v. Crescent City Railroad, 44 La. Ann. 485 (La. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McEnebv, J.

The petition avers that the Oanal & Claiborne Railroad Company is a corporation; that in the year 1887 the Canal & Claiborne Streets Railroad Company, another corporation, acquired from the city of New Orleans, for itself and its assigns, in due form, a lawful grant to own and operate a street railway for the term of twenty-five years, on and over Oanal street and the other streets described in the petition and in a copy of the grant annexed to the petition. The term of the grant commenced to run from the 8tb of May, 1887. This grant was not only a legislative act of the city of New Orleans, but was in due form and by due authority embodied in a solemn contract by notarial act, made a part of the petition by copy. That during the month of July, 1888, for a valuable consideration, the plaintiff, by purchase, acquired an assignment of the grant, and from that date has been the full owner of all the rights and franchises contained in said grant, and still owns the same, having acquired all the rights of its vendor, the Canal & Claiborne Streets Railroad Company, the original grantee. Among other property so purchased and acquired is the track or railway on Canal street, run[487]*487ning from the intersection of St. Oharles street with Canal to the terminus at Wells street near the river, and back by another track or railway on the lower side of Canal street to the intersection of Bourbon street with Canal street.

That the Crescent City Railroad Company is carrying on a street railway and operates two lines of railway, one commonly known as the Annunciation line, running through Tchoupitoulas, Annunciation and other streets, having its lower terminus on Canal street, in the middle ground, near the intersection of Camp with Canal streets, and another line which it claims to have acquired from some alleged grantee for a street railway, commencing at the junction of Camp and Prytania streets, running along the streets named in the petition but coming back for its final or lower terminus to the point of commencement, that is, to the intersection of Camp and Prytania streets; and defendants claim that this grant, originally made to one Seymour and his associates, was by some subsequent action of the city authorities expanded so as to give the grantee and his assigns a right to extend a line to Canal street. This line is known as the Coliseum line.

That after the Crescent City Railroad Company got possession of this supposed grant and its expansion, they commenced running cars on this Coliseum line over the line and tracks of plaintiff on Canal street, without its consent and unlawfully, from the intersection of St. Charles street with the upper side of Canal street to Wells street, and back on the lower side of Canal street on your petitioner’s track to the intersection of Bourbon street with Canal; that this act was unlawful, without the consent of plaintiff and without any right or warrant of law; the first invasion of the tracks and rights of plaintiffs was with mule or horse cars of the ordinary construction and weight.

That the right of action to demand indemnity or damages, arising from this first invasion of plaintiff’s rights by the use of said mule or horse -cars, is reserved in the petition. That not contented with the wrong done by running its Coliseum cars over the track of plaintiff, defendants now attempt a further outrage and invasion of plaintiff’s rights, and are engaged in constructing a new railway through Erato street, so planned as to connect the Annunciation street line, whose cars could not, without such junction, run over plaintiff’s tracks, with the Coliseum street line, of which line the cars had the unlawful use [488]*488of plaintiff’s tracks, so that additional cars from the Annunciation line, that prior to said action could not reach plaintiff’s line or tracks on Canal street, can be diverted from the Annunciation street line, taken through the Erato connecting link, sent over the Coliseum line and thence on and over plaintiff’s tracks on Canal street; that they threaten and intend to run many, if not all, of their Annunciation street cars through said Erato street connection over the Coliseum line over the Canal street tracks of plaintiff, increasing the number of ears running on plaintiff’s track over the number formerly running from the Coliseum track ov&r the plaintiff’s line by at least fifteen additional cars, making trips over the lines at intervals not exceeding ten or fifteen minutes during the entire day.

That this is not the only wrong that is contemplated by the defendants ; but that the Orescent City Railroad Company has entered into a combination with the other defendant, the Electric Traction & Manufacturing Company, by which the said Electric Traction & Manufacturing Company is to operate or provide the rolling stock for the Crescent City Railroad Company on its lines, to be propelled over plaintiff’s track on Canal street. The new rolling stock to involve a change of motive power from car or mule propulsion to some form of electric propulsion by electric motor and storage batteries, with a construction giving the cars a weight of at least eight thousand pounds independent of any passenger load. That the Electric Traction Company intend to stock the road with these heavy cars and join the defendant railroad company in its assault upon the plaintiff’s rights and property. That the railway of plaintiff on Canal street was constructed and designed in accordance with the specifications and obligations contained in its contract with the city for the use of cars propelled by mules or horses of not over thirty-eight hundred pounds in weight, and is not constructed to bear the heavy rolling stock threatened to be put upon the structure, and is not adequate to bear and sustain a traffic carried on in cars of a character that without load weigh over four tons.

That the additional cars thrown on plaintiff’s tracks by the Erato street connection from the Annunciation line will crowd petitioner’s tracks on Canal street so that in the event that they do endure the additional cars and additional traffic without destruction, there will be practical eviction of plaintiff from the use of its own property in its tracks for its own legitimate use in the management and operation of its own lines for its own business.

[489]*489The relief demanded is an injunction prohibiting the defendants from running any cars coming through the new roadway on Erato street, connecting the Annunciation street line with the Coliseum line, and from any unlawful use, meddling or interference with the plaintiff’s line on Canal street by any additional cars running through Erato street from Annunciation street over the Coliseum line and over plaintiff’s tracks, and from running any electric motor of heavy weight, and from meddling and interfering in any manner with plaintiff’s rights in the complete dominion, control and use of its street railway line and property on Canal street.

The Crescent City Railroad Company, after pleading the general issue, averred that all the matters and things set up in the petition relative to the rights of the plaintiff to that part of the track on Canal street, and relative to the right of the Crescent City Railroad Company to use the same, were in issue between said Canal & Claiborne Streets Railroad Company and this defendant, in suit Claiborne Railroad Company vs.

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Related

Lincoln Traction Co. v. Omaha, Lincoln & Beatrice Railway Co.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 La. Ann. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canal-claiborne-railroad-v-crescent-city-railroad-la-1892.