City of Lake Charles v. Lake Charles Ry., Light & Waterworks Co.

80 So. 260, 144 La. 217, 1918 La. LEXIS 1726
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 2, 1918
DocketNo. 23315
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 80 So. 260 (City of Lake Charles v. Lake Charles Ry., Light & Waterworks 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
City of Lake Charles v. Lake Charles Ry., Light & Waterworks Co., 80 So. 260, 144 La. 217, 1918 La. LEXIS 1726 (La. 1918).

Opinion

O’NIELL, J.

This proceeding is to compel by mandamus the granting of a suspensive appeal from an order dissolving an injunction on bond.

The act prohibited by the injunction was the charging of a higher fare on street cars than the rate fixed by municipal ordinance. It is alleged in the petition and admitted in the answer to the rule that the defendant increased the fare and was charging each passenger 7 cents, notwithstanding the commission council of the city had adopted an ordinance fixing the fare at 5 cents. The contention of the defendant was and is that the municipality was witnout legislative authority to fix or limit the fare that might be charged by the defendant in the exercise of its franchise to operate its street railway in the city. Much of the defendant’s brief is devoted to an argument of that question, which we think pertains only to the merits of the case now pending in the district court.

The only question to be decided in this proceeding is whether the act that was prohibited by the injunction might, if permitted to be done until a final judgment is rendered in the case, cause an irreparable injury.

According to article 307 of the Code of Practice, if the act prohibited by an injunction is not such as may cause an irreparable injury to the plaintiff, the judge may, in his discretion, dissolve the writ on a bond for such sum as the judge may deem sufficient to secure the payment of whatever damages the plaintiff may have sustained by the act if a definitive judgment be rendered against the defendant.

[1] The district judge, having concluded, when he dissolved the injunction on bond, that the act complained of was not such as might cause an irreparable injury to the plaintiff, was quite consistent in refusing to grant a suspensive appeal from his ruling; which would have kept the injunction in force as long as the suit would be pending, or very near that long. The precise language of article 307 of the Code of Practice, however, is well worth considering. It gives the judge discretionary power to dissolve an injunction,- only when the act prohibited is not such as may cause an irreparable injury to the plaintiff. The meaning would be quite different if the language were that the judge may dissolve an injunction on bond if the act prohibited is such as may not cause an irreparable injury to the plaintiff. As it is, the language of the Code does not give the judge authority to dissolve an injunction on bond if the act prohibited by the injunction is such as may cause an irreparable injury to the plaintiff. Of course, the district judge must determine whether the act prohibited is or is not such as may cause an irreparable injury to the plaintiff. But his judgment in that respect is subject to review by the appellate court. And the only effective process for bringing up the matter for review is by a resort to the supervisory jurisdiction of the appellate court. That is because the slow process of appeal would avail a defendant nothing if the district judge should refuse to dissolve an injunction on bond when he ought to dissolve it; and it would be a stultification of his own judgment for the district judge to grant a suspensive appeal from his order dissolving on bond an injunction which he should not have dissolved on bond.

For the reason which we have just explained, it would be impracticable and would serve no purpose to decide now whether the district judge should grant the suspensive appeal, without deciding whether he should have dissolved the injunction on bond. In fact, the only question that would be presented for decision on appeal, if the district court had granted' the appeal, is before us now; that is, whether the act prohibited by the injunction is such as may cause an irreparable injury to the plaintiff.

[2] The learned counsel for defendant give a definition of irreparable injury, which we [221]*221adopt, viz.: An irreparable injury is one for which the party injured cannot be compensated adequately in damages, or for which the damages cannot be measured by a pecuniary standard.

A bond of $25,000 was required by the court and furnished by the defendant for dissolving the injunction. The plaintiff does not complain of the amount of the bond. The complaint is that there is no practicable means of compensating the citizens (represented by the municipality in this suit) for the injury which they may suffer from being charged excessive car fare; and that the injury that may result from the defendant’s defying a municipal law or ordinance is one for which, to use the defendant’s definition, the municipality cannot be compensated adequately in damages; such injury being not measurable by a pecuniary standard.

In his answer to the rule issued herein, the district judge calls attention to the following pertinent facts: The municipality did not fix or limit the fare to be charged, in the ordinance granting the railway franchise held by the defendant. Some years later, however, that is, on the 28th of August, 1918, the city adopted an ordinance fixing the rate of car fare at 5 cents per single passage, without transfers, etc. No penalty was provided for a violation of the ordinance. The authority claimed for enacting the ordinance is a section of the city’s charter authorizing the municipal government “to fix the rate of carriage of persons * * * within the limits of the municipality.” The defendant, the only street railway company in the city, raised the car fare from 5 to 7 cents after the rate-fixing ordinance was enacted.

The respondent judge, in his answer to the rule, expresses the opinion that the ordinance is prima facie valid, though subject to attack in answer to this suit. His honor-gives his opinion, too, that the raising of the rate by the defendant was, prima facie, a violation of the company’s franchise obligation and an abuse of the franchise. For that reason the court granted the writ of injunction pendente lite. The writ was issued without bond, under authority of Act No. 173 of 1902, exempting state, parish, and municipal boards or commissions, exercising public powers or administering public functions, from furnishing bonds in judicial proceedings.

The judge says that he thought the injunction would cause serious loss and injury to the defendant if it should be decided finally that the rate-fixing ordinance was unauthorized or invalid, and that, without an injunction bond, the defendant would not be protected adequately against loss or injury. The judge says that he was of the opinion that the discretionary power to dissolve an injunction on bond, given in article 307 of the Code of Practice, was increased by Act No. 173 of 1902, in a case where the writ should issue without bond; and that the article of the Code should not be applied strictly in cases coming under the provisions of the statute of 1902.

[3] The statute exempting state, parish, and municipal agencies from giving bonds in judicial proceedings does not purport to amend article 307 of the Code of Practice, and our opinion is that it was not intended to modify the article of the Code. To give the statute the effect of amending or modifying article 307 of the Code of Practice, so as to allow a defendant to dissolve on bond an injunction against an act that might cause an irreparable injury to a state or municipal agency, would take away the advantage which the Legislature has given to state and municipal agencies in such cases. Our conclusion, therefore, is that the article of the Code has not been amended or modified by the statute of 1902.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 So. 260, 144 La. 217, 1918 La. LEXIS 1726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lake-charles-v-lake-charles-ry-light-waterworks-co-la-1918.