Hudspeth v. Hall

38 S.E. 358, 113 Ga. 4, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 25, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 358 (Hudspeth v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudspeth v. Hall, 38 S.E. 358, 113 Ga. 4, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 138 (Ga. 1901).

Opinion

Lumpkin, P. J.

This case was before this court at its March term, 1900. See 111 Ga. 510. As appears from the opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Little, the litigation in the trial court had resolved itself into a controversy, between Mrs. Hudspeth and R. L. Hall, concerning the right of the latter to operate a ferry over Flint river at a point a short distance below that at which she had established a public ferry. He contended that, as he was the [5]*5owner of the land on both sides of the river at the point in question, he had a right to conduct a ferry for the accommodation of the public, notwithstanding he had not been granted a franchise which authorized him so to do. We held to the contrary, and affirmed the judgment of the lower court, with direction that the trial judge so amend his order granting an injunction as to afford Mrs. Hudspeth full protection in the premises. Our decision was rendered July 13, 1900. On July 28, R L. Hall joined with W. H. Hall in presenting to the board of county commissioners of Baker county a petition in which they represented themselves to be the owners of “the land on both sides of the Flint river about two hundred yards below the ferry operated by Mrs. Hudspeth in the town of Newton, in said county,” and in which they stated that they were “ desirous of establishing a public ferry across said river on said lands ” at a point “ about two hundred yards below the ferry of said Mrs. Hudspeth.” They also in their petition expressed the belief that “the establishment of said ferry would be of great utility to the people of both Baker and Mitchell counties,” and upon this ground applied for “a ferry franchise” authorizing and empowering them to “ establish and operate a public ferry across said river at said place for the full term of ten years from” the date last mentioned. On the same day, the board of county commissioners met, passed upon this petition, and granted the franchise therein applied for. Subsequently the board, at the instance of petitioners, passed a further order in terms authorizing them to maintain a “public free ferry ” at the point above designated. Stirred into renewed activity by the result of these proceedings, Mrs. Hudspeth filed an amendment to her original petition, wherein she charged that, for various reasons assigned, the franchise applied for by R L. and W. H. Hall had been improvidently granted, and in which she prayed, among other things, that they be enjoined from exercising the same. This amendment was met by an answer whereby they took issue with Mrs. Hudspeth as to the propriety of affording her the relief she sought. At the interlocutory hearing had upon this new phase of the case, his honor of the trial bench passed an order enjoining the defendants “ from opening or operating any kind of a ferry on or over the lands of” Mrs. Hudspeth, which were adjudged to “ extend two hundred and ten yards from the center of the public road where is established her ferry to the south, on the east side of [6]*6Flint river,” and further enjoining them “from running any private ferry within three miles of” her ferry. An injunction any more sweeping in its operation his honor declined to grant. Not satisfied with this outcome, Mrs. Hudspeth sued out a bill of exceptions to this court, and again appears before us as a plaintiff in error.

1. Her chief cause of complaint appears to be that the court below refused to grant the injunction for which she prayed, notwithstanding “ the undisputed evidence showed that plaintiff’s facilities were ample and all-sufficient at her ferry to accommodate the whole public, and more too, and that another in that vicinity was not a public necessity, nor a public convenience, in the sense that conveniences is meant in the law.” In this connection, she contends that as “ there was no public necessity for such other ferry,” and as she “had expended large amounts of money to equip her said ferry for the purpose of accommodating the public,” the “ county authorities had no right to afterwards render her property valueless by granting another franchise to another person to establish a public free ferry so near to” her ferry as to render the operation of the same unprofitable. She furthermore undertakes to call in question the expediency of the action taken by the county commissioners in granting a franchise to operate “a public free ferry at a place where,” as the undisputed evidence showed, “ there was no public highway— no public road leading to or from said ferry; ” especially in view of the fact that the evidence did not disclose “ any intention to establish a public road or highway to and from defendants’ ferry.” From the foregoing explanation of the position taken by Mrs. Hudspeth with regard to the franchise granted by the county commissioners, it will be perceived that she does not attempt to attack their action as ultra vires, or to question their good faith in the premises. Indeed, she relies wholly upon her contention that they did not act wisely or advisedly in the matter, since, as she ventures to assert, there was really no public necessity for establishing a ferry at the point chosen, or elsewhere in that vicinity. We shall deal with the case accordingly. If, for any reason, the grant of ferry privileges to the defendants was void, her right to collaterally attack it upon that ground admits of no doubt. If, on the other hand, the county authorities had power, in their discretion, to grant such a franchise, Mrs. Hudspeth can not, in her capacity as owner of a public ferry, be heard to complain of their action; for, as is evident, she held [7]*7no exclusive privilege of conducting a ferry, and if “injured by the establishment and maintenance of another public ferry ” in conformity to law, she could claim no right to recover damages, because she would, at least in legal contemplation, sustain none. This much was definitely settled when the case made its first appearance before us. See volume and page of Ga. Rep. above cited. As the writer observed in the case of Keen v. Waycross, 101 Ga. 592, “the law recognizes in no one a right to create or maintain a monopoly.” On the contrary, the creation or encouragement of a monopoly is opposed to public policy. City of Atlanta v. Stein, 111 Ga. 789. It would therefore be idle to say that the county authorities owed Mrs. Hudspeth any legal duty of shielding her against the inevitable consequences of legitimate competition. See Railroad Co. v. Ellerman, 105 U. S. 174, cited approvingly in Keen’s case, supra. Clearly, their duty was to serve, not Mrs. Hudspeth in her capacity as owner of a ferry, but the public; and it follows that official action in the premises looking solely to the welfare of the community at large was eminently proper. Furthermore, even upon the assumption that she had any standing in court upon the theory that her property rights were invaded by the action taken by the county commissioners, it is evident that she did not make out a case entitling her to the relief sought. The evidence introduced on the hearing below leads, we think, irresistibly to the conclusion that the opposition free ferry will prove itself a great public utility and convenience. Conceding, however, for the sake of the argument, that the granting of a franchise to operate this new ferry was lamentably inexpedient and unwise, judicial intervention upon this ground alone would be wholly without justification.

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 358, 113 Ga. 4, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudspeth-v-hall-ga-1901.