City of Mobile v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad

124 Ala. 132
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 124 Ala. 132 (City of Mobile v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Mobile v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad, 124 Ala. 132 (Ala. 1899).

Opinion

DOWDELL, J.

— The bill in this case is filed by the city of Mobile, a municipal corporation under the laws of Alabama, against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, a corporation chartered under the laws of Kentucky and doing a railroad business in the State of Alabama and in the city of Mobile, as successor to the rights of the New Orleans, Mobile & Chattanooga Railroad Company, a corporation chartered by the State of . Alabama. It is averred in the bill that the complainant is the successor to the rights of the town and city of Mobile, in regard to public streets, as derived from its foundation by tlie French in 1711, through the English and Spanish regimes and the American occupation in 1814, down to the present time, under various and sundry corporate names. It is charged that’among such • rights, there was invested in the inhabitants, or sovereign in trust for them, the ownership of the streets and [135]*135full right of access to the shores and waters of the Mobile Liver; that public maps, whether French, English, Spanish or American, recognized and showed such dedication of the shores to the public, and the East and West streets down to the channel, as in use at the respective times. It is charged in particular that what are now called Government, George, Charleston, Savannah and Augusta streets are and long have been public streets, and were, until recently, open and publicly used to tidewater, and are so shown on all early public maps. Government and Church streets were parts of the esplanade of the fort founded hv the French, existing under different names until 1812, and at the eastern or river end fully dedicated and used for landing and street purposes during that period; that Charleston, Savannah and Augusta streets were dedicated and accepted under their names between 1830 and 1837; that the original shore line was at or near the present Water street, but it is alleged that early in American times and largely before 1830 the city front was advanced out eastward]y, to and beyond Commerce street from at least St. Louis street .on the north to Monroe street on the south, and later the city was built out further south, the streets being built out in ratio by the municipal authorities and laid down on the said maps. Copies of said maps were attached as exhibits to the bill. All of said streets named in the bill and exhibits, it is charged, were used by the public, for many years prior to 1869, and were recognized as public streets to the water’s edge; that to the river front is and has always been due the commercial importance of Mobile. It is further alleged and charged that in or about 1866 to 1871, the New Orleans, Mobile & Chattanooga Railroad Company was projected and built through Mobile to the southwest, and its projectors obtained, or pretended to obtain certain alleged franchises from the then existing municipal authorities, especially in 1870, the alleged right to enclose a tract extending east of Commerce street to the river, and running from a line 100 feet south of the north side of Government street southwardly almost to Monroe street, as it had, also in 1869, pretended to obtain the alleged right to enclose from Charleston street south to Elmira and [136]*136extending from Royal street to the river. Acting thereunder or otherwise said Railroad Company enclosed a portion of Government street and all of Church street east of Commerce street, and also Augusta and Savannah streets from Royal street to the Mobile river, building on much of the land depots and shops-; but it is charged in the bill that said municipal authorities had no constitutional right to make such pretended grant or grants and that such action ivas illegal and ultra viren. It is shown- that the defendant has succeeded to such enclosures and purprestures and is in the use or enjoyment thereof, except the east half of Water street between Charleston and Elmira, which was surrendered to the city by agreement in 1880, and still claims to own the sainé.-1 It is also shown by the bill that tidewater formerly came up to Water street at what is now its intersection with Charleston street, and that as the land ivas reclaimed east of Water ' street, the - said Charleston street ivas extended also eastwardly by public use and the bmps; that recently, within three years past, the defendant enclosed Charleston street east of Water street, and by itself'or tenants erected buildings thereon without authority and maintains the same. It is also charged that the use of the portions of Government and George street's 'east of Commerce street, and of Charleston street east of Water street, and of Augusta and Savannah streets between Royal and Water streets, denies them to the public, and is an Unlawful appropriation of public property to private use, and constitutes a nuisance, affecting complainant and the public. - It is also shown that it amounts to' depriving the public of the river end of at least five important streets and the appropriation of them to one corporation; that if only the trustee for the bondholders, under the act of Feb. 24th, 1881 (SessionActs 1880-1, p. 102), can act as to'wharf property, which is not conceded, complainant avers that it is-notwithstanding injured at least out to where the vvharf line begins, and that such appropriation is a nuisance and should be abated. The special prayer of the bill is to perpetually enjoin the defendant from obstructing Government street to the east of Commerce' street and north of the south line of Government street eon-[137]*137tinned from Water street to tlie Mobile river; from obstructing Church- street east of Commerce street, Charleston street east of Water street, and Augusta and Savannah streets between Royal-and the river, and to compel the defendant to remove all obstructions from such public-streets. There is also prayer for general relief.

The. defendant answered the bill and also filed pleas thereto, in which it alleged its right and authority to obstruct all the streets named in the bill except Charleston street, by virtue of section five of the amended charter of the New Orleans, Mobile & Chattanooga Railroad Company, approved February 12th, 1867, and by virtue of certain ordinances adopted pursuant to said section five of the amended charter by the mayor and aldermen and common council in September, 1869, and December, 1870. As to where the said streets named in the bill end at Mobile river, the defendant, pleads the act of the general assembly of Alabama, approved February 24th, 1881 (Session Acts 1880-1, p. 402), entitled “An act to amend sections 2, 5, 8,10,13,14, 20, 24, 28, 33, of ‘an acr, to adopt and carry into effect the plan .for the adjustment and settlement of the existing indebtedness of the late corporation known as the mayor and aldermen and common council of the city of Mobile, which is recommended in the report of the commissioners of Mobile made and laid before the general assembly of Alabama on the 26th of November, 1880, as provided in section 16 of an act of the general assembly of Alabama, entitled “An act to vacate and annul the charter and dissolve the corporation of the'city of Mobile, and to provide for the application of the- assets thereof in discharge of the debts of said corporation,” approved Feb. 11th, 1879,’ ” approved December 8th, 1880, as- a bar to the right of the city of Mobile to have obstructions removed from said streets where they end at the river or wharf fronts.

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Bluebook (online)
124 Ala. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-mobile-v-louisville-nashville-railroad-ala-1899.