Citizens Coach Co. v. Camden Horse Railroad

33 N.J. Eq. 267
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 N.J. Eq. 267 (Citizens Coach Co. v. Camden Horse Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Coach Co. v. Camden Horse Railroad, 33 N.J. Eq. 267 (N.J. 1880).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Magie, J.

An act of the legislature, approved March 23d, 1866 (P. L. of 1866 p. 640), created the Camden Horse Railroad Company, with a capital stock of $50,000, and the privilege of increasing the same to $100,000. The company was, by that act, empowered to construct, use and maintain a railroad over certain streets in Camden, the track to be of the width of the wagon track then established by law, and to be laid level with the surface of the streets and in conformity with the grades then or thereafter established. Upon the requirement of the city council of Camden, the company were to pay a tax to the city, not exceeding an amount specified in the act. The company was also empowered to construct or purchase suitable vehicles for the transportation of passengers and property over the railroad, and [271]*271was authorized to demand and receive for such transportation such sums as it should think reasonable and. proper, not exceeding, however, a certain sum fixed by the act for each trip of a passenger. The act also gave to. the company an action against any person who should “ willfully or maliciously impair, injure, destroy or obstruct the use of said railroad,” and permitted the recovery of three times the damage sustained by the company. The company was also empowered to borrow the money necessary to build or equip said road, and to secure the payment thereof by a mortgage on the “ road, lands, privileges, franchises and appurtenances of or belonging to said corporation.”

The company thus incorporated shortly afterwards built a railroad through some of the streets of Camden, in substantial accordance with the requirements of the act above referred to. It has since built other roads or branches through other streets in Camden, under the powers given by the above-mentioned act or supplements thereto. It has continued to operate the railroads so built ever since.

In October, 1876, the Camden Horse Railroad Company filed a bill in the court of chancery against the Citizens Coach Company, setting out the facts of the incorporation and organization of the horse railroad company above stated, and the construction of its railroads. ' The bill charged that the defendant therein had been incorporated on July 29th, 1876, under the general law of this state entitled “An act concerning corporations,” approved April 7th, 1875, for the purpose of carrying pássengers and property in and about Camden, for compensation, and that it had continually, since its organization, made use of the railroads of the complainant, in the pursuit of its business, by driving its coaches upon and along the railroad track, to the obstruction and hindrance of the use of the railroad by its owner, the complainant. The bill also distinctly alleged that the complainant was entitled to the exclusive use and enjoyment of said railroad, as against the said coach company or any other person seeking to use the same in the business of transporting persons or property. The prayer of the bill was that the coach company should be enjoined from using with its coaches, in the pursuit of [272]*272its business of carrying passengers in and about the city of Camden, the railroad of the complainant.

The Citizens Coach Company, the defendant, filed its answer to this bill, denying that it had made such continuous or obstructive use of the complainant’s railroad as was charged, and further, denying the right of complainant to the exclusive use and enjoyment of the railroad in the transportation of passengers.

Upon the issue thus formed proofs were taken, and upon the pleadings and proofs the chancellor concluded that the complainant was entitled to relief, and an injunction was decreed, restraining the defendant from using with its coaches, in the pursuit of its business of carrying passengers in and about the city of Camden, the railroad of the complainant, in competition with the complainant in its business of carrying passengers and property thereon, and from obstructing or hindering complainant in the use of its railroad tracks. The decree further provided, however, that it was not to be construed as restraining defendant from using the tracks incidentally to the use of the street.”

From that decree the Citizens Coach Company has appealed to this court, and now contends not only that the evidence in the cause did not justify the court below in holding that it was using the railroad tracks obstructively, but that no right exists in the railroad company to exclude its coaches from the use of the railroad track, although engaged in carrying passengers for hire in competition with the railroad company.

The first contention it is unnecessary to stop to consider. The evidence seems to be ample of such a continuous and obstructive use of the railroad track by the coaches of the coach company as greatly to interfere with and impede the horse railroad company in its use of its track. Whether this alone would justify an injunction before action at law might be questionable.

But the main question in this case is presented by the other contention of the appellant. It is a question of very great importance, not only to the parties to this cause and those interested in them as stockholders or otherwise, but also to the stock and bondholders of the numerous horse railroad companies [273]*273organized and operated in this state under grants substantially similar to that in question in this case. It requires the consideration and determination of the nature and extent of the rights acquired by a horse railroad company under such legislation as appears in this case, with respect to the public highways on which the rails of its track are laid.

The question of the rights of such a company with respect to the owners of the land under the highway on which the track is laid has been the subject of much judicial consideration. The question has arisen upon the demand of the land-owner to be awarded compensation for the occupation of his land by the railroad. He has contended that such an occupation of the public highway imposed upon his land a burden greater than that which it sustained before, and which amounted to a taking of his land, or some interest therein, for which he was entitled to compensation. On the other hand, the railroad companies have contended that the occupation of the highway by the track and its use by the cars was no other or different use than that public use to which the highway was originally devoted.

A similar question had arisen in the early periods of the history of railroads designed to be operated by steam-power. With a limited and imperfect knowledge of the extent of development to which such roads were destined to attain, or with an exaggerated or distorted view of their character as public highways, it was long contended that such railroads might occupy the soil of ordinary public highways without making compensation to the land-owner. Much difference of judicial opinion and decision may be found on this subject. In this state, in the case of Morris and Essex R. R. Co. v. Newark, 2 Stock. 352, Chancellor Williamson expressed the opinion that the legislature might authorize a railroad operated by steam to be laid on the public highway, and that if the occupation did not entirely destroy the use of the highway in the ordinary mode, it was not such a taking of private property as required compensation to be made. On the other hand, the supreme court, about the same time, in the case of Starr v. Camden and Atlantic R. R. Co., 4 Zab. 592,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.J. Eq. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-coach-co-v-camden-horse-railroad-nj-1880.