Garnett v. Jacksonville, St. Augustine & Halifax River Railway Co.

20 Fla. 889
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 20 Fla. 889 (Garnett v. Jacksonville, St. Augustine & Halifax River Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garnett v. Jacksonville, St. Augustine & Halifax River Railway Co., 20 Fla. 889 (Fla. 1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Westcott

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill in this case was filed by the appellants, Garnett and wife, setting up that the present terminus of the Jacksonville, St. Augustine and Halifax River Railway Company was at the head of the shell-road leading north of the gates of St. Augustine and about the line of the city limits; that said company is building their road into the city limits and intend to lay the said railroad on the side of a street next to the property of plaintiff, Mary J. Garnett; and that they propose to operate their road with steam locomotives; that “ she is the owner and seised in fee simple of .a large piece or lot of land within the city of St. Augustine, and having an extensive front on said street on which it bounds on the east for about nine hundred feet; that your orators reside on said property adjacent t^ said street and that they have divided and platted said land into lots for buildings and residences and for sale; that the said piece of land cost Mary J. Garnett $8,000 last winter,” the winter of 1882; that said street “ is one of the most public and most used for driving and walking in said city of St. Augustine, aud the only wide street in the city ; that said railroad is about to run right along and upon said street, taking a great portion thereof nearly its whole lengh for about a mile and that the said railway thereon will be a great public injury aud nuisance, and particularly to your orators; * * * that said street or avenue is the only" pleasant and attractive drive near St. [898]*898Augustine, and is so used by the population of said city and visitors thereto, and is therein a great public resort for health and pleasure; that it is also a portion of the city rapidly improving, has" many residences on each side of it and some very handsome villas; that the chief value of the property along said street is'by reason of the handsome drive, which is shelled, as residence property ; that by the building of said railway down said street, road or avenue the same will be utterly spoiled as a drive and as a residence street, horses will be frightened, vehicles damaged, property, life and limb endangered, and the adjacent property will be greatly and irremediably injured in value, and your orators will be greatly and immediately and irremediably damaged in the premises ; that they have to go to the business part of the town, by reason of the distance, in a conveyance drawn by a horse, and further, that they have a family of small children, and that said railway in front of their door will endanger the lives of their family; that the proposed line of the railway to be built on said street is not a part of the main line of said railway, is not a part of its line of public transportation, is not on the line or its right of way to its depot, is not demanded by any public necessity or convenience, but is only a branch, switch or spur, thrown out for about a mile on this public street; that said company pretend that they have permission from the City Council to operate a railway on said street for one year and that they are building the same to carry materials for a projected hotel.”

Plaintiff's allege tha^t the true intention of the said company is to get down their rail and maintain it then perpetually ; that there is no necessity to keep said railway, on said street for a year to transport material for one year.

Plaintiffs pray a perpetual injunction against the con[899]*899struction and operation of the road by the company so far as it “ would run in front of their property.”

Upon the filing of the bill a temporary injunction was granted.

The defendant answered admitting that it intended to construct a railway or track along the shell-road mentioned, on the side of the road next to the property of complainant, and that it intended to operate it with steam locomotives, but denies that it intends to lay the track on the part of said road which is shelled, or so as to obstruct that part of the road ordinarily used tor drives, or in any way to obstruct the side-walk.

Defendant ako admits all the allegations of the complainants’ bill touching the nature of the shell-road, except that it is the only pleasant and attractive drive near St. Augustine. It admits that this portioh of the city is rapidly improving, and that complainants have divided and platted their lands as they allege.

Defendant denies that by-the laying of the said railway the property of defendant will be injured in value, or that the "operation of the road will endanger the life, health or comfort of the plaintiffs, or the members of their families, to any greater extent or in any other way than does the building and operating steam railways generally through inhabited regions. (

Defendant makes the following exhibit to the answer:

“Resolved, That the Jacksonville, St. Augustine and Halifax Eailroad Company be and are hereby permitted to lay a temporary side-track or switch from the north end of the shell-road, the present southern terminus of said railroad, to the site of the new hotel soon to be erected near the old city for the purpose only of delivering lumber and other freight for the erecting and completion of said hotel, such side-track or switch to be parallel with the shell-road [900]*900and between the said shell-road and the side-walk on the west line thereof, to be so constructed as not to obstruct the side-walk or roads and to be removed by said railroad company within one year from date thereof; that the said railroad company shall keep in good repair the several crossings in front of residences along said road, and not to allow trains to be run at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour.

“ Passed in council at special meeting.

“John G. Long, President.

“July 20, 1888.”

The above resolutions are entirely satisfactory and agreed to by the J., St. Aug. and EL R. R. Co.

A. M. Lyon, President.

By EL S. Ming, Superintendent.

It is admitted that this resolution was passed by the City Council of the City of St. Augustine.

And defendant avers that it intends to construct and operate the said railroad in strict conformity, to and compliance with all and singular the terms and conditions of the said resolution and not otherwise.

It denies all statements of the bill to the effect that it intends to construct or operate said railway upon any other route, in any other mode, or for any other purpose than is" declared and prescribed in said resolution and denies all allegations in the bill to the contrary.

It denies that the construction and operation of the road in the manner and for the purposes stated would prevent the sale of the lots of the complainants or would be a public nuisance.

Upon the coming in of the answer, the injunction was dissolved, the plaintiffs submitting affidavits of several persons setting up, so far as plaintiffs are concerned, nothing [901]*901stronger in support of his equities than he has himself alleged.

In all bills for injunctions to prevent threatened nuisances,1 both the character of the nuisance, as well as the nature of the injury that will result therefrom, should be clearly set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Fla. 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garnett-v-jacksonville-st-augustine-halifax-river-railway-co-fla-1884.