Macon Consolidated Street Railroad v. Mayor of Macon

38 S.E. 60, 112 Ga. 782, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 60 (Macon Consolidated Street Railroad v. Mayor of Macon) 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
Macon Consolidated Street Railroad v. Mayor of Macon, 38 S.E. 60, 112 Ga. 782, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 91 (Ga. 1901).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

The Macon City and Suburban Railway Company laid one of its lines of railway in one of the streets of the City of Macon, under and by virtue of a contract between it and the city. Subsequently the Macon Consolidated Street Railroad Company acquired the rights and franchises of the Macon City and Suburban Railway Company. Thereafter, on July 26, 1899, the legislative body of the city passed a resolution requiring the street-railway company to remove its tracks from the side to the center of a named street. On May 29,1900, this resolution was repealed, the change required to be made by the first resolution never having been made. On June 19, 1900, the city rescinded its action of May 29, 1900, and served the railway company with notice that it must move its tracks as required by the original resolution of July 26, 1899. This action was taken pursuant to a recommendation of the street committee. Thereafter the street-railway company brought its petition for an injunction to restrain the Mayor and Council of the City of Macon from requiring the petitioner to move its tracks. The injunction having been refused, the petitioner exeepted.

1. It is contended on behalf of the street-railway company that the resolution requiring it to change the location of its tracks is unreasonable, and that for this reason its enforcement should be enjoined. It has not been, and we do not think it could be with any degree of ■ plausibility, contended that the City of Macon did not have authority to require the railway company to make any reasonable change in the location of its tracks in a .given street. The State has delegated to the City of Macon authority over its streets. It has a right, under its charter, to grant to a street-railway company authority to lay its tracks in these streets; but any such grant is necessarily subject to the power of the city to make any reasonable regulation of its use.- “ A railroad company which secures the right to use the streets of a city takes such right subject to all reasonable regulations and ordinances enacted by the city in the exercise of its police power.” Elliott’s Roads & Streets, § 807. See also Booth, St. Rwy. L. § 222. “ The power of a municipal corporation to make police regulations includes authority to make reasonable provision for the .peace, safety, and convenience of- its inhabitants. Such regulations usually concern the use of streets, either by indi[784]*784victuals or by corporations with railway cars.” 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (1st ed.) 1167. These principles are well settled, but it is equally settled that, having granted a railway company permission to lay its tracks in the streets, the municipal authorities can not prevent the successful enjoyment of the franchise. In cases, therefore, of municipal regulation of the manner in which a street-railway company may enjoy the privilege granted to it to use the streets, the question often arises as to whether the regulation is a legitimate exercise of the police power of the city, or whether it really'amounts to an unwarranted interference with the franchise. "As applied to the control of street-railways, the police power is the continuing and paramount authority of the legislature, within its constitutional prerogatives, and of municipal corporations, under their delegated powers, to establish regulations which promote the public welfare, do not unreasonably interfere with the franchise, management or business of the company, or violate the obligations of any valid contract.” Booth, St. Rwy. L. § 220, p. 302. Every municipal regulation which does not amount to a deprivation or impairment of the franchise will be upheld, unless it is unreasonable and arbitrary. The discretion of the municipal authorities as to these matters is very broad, and it will not be interfered with save in the case just mentioned. Is a regulation by a city requiring a street-railroad company to remove its tracks from one part of a street to another a legitimate exercise of its legislative power? We think it is, provided the proposed change is not arbitrarily and capriciously required by the city, but is really necessary for the convenience and welfare of the public. See, in this connection, Elliott’s Roads & Streets, § 760; Booth, St. Rwy. L. § 62. The municipal authorities must necessarily, in the exercise of their discretion, be left to determine the necessity and propriety of the proposed change. The courts will not readily interfere with the governing authorities of a city in the performance of a discretionary act. It is only where it “ has passed the boundary of legislative and judicial discretion, and is exercising the municipal power arbitrarily to the injury and oppression of the citizen,” that judicial interference will be justified. City of Atlanta v. Holliday, 96 Ga. 546. See also Wells v. Mayor, 43 Ga. 67; Danielly v. Cabaniss, 52 Ga. 212 (4); Mayor v. Camak, 75 Ga. 429; City of Atlanta v. Street Railroad Co., 80 Ga. 276; Burckhardt v. City of Atlanta, 103 Ga. 302.

[785]*785la the present case, however, under the contract between the city and the predecessor of the plaintiff, and by which it is of course bound, the city expressly reserved the right to require that such changes be made under the direction of its engineer and street committee. It is true that the entire meaning of the contract is by no means clear, but, construing it all together, it is clear that the city reserved the right to require the changes to be made. Whether under the contract the railroad company must pay the entire cost of removal, or whether the city'is required to share such expense, is not a question raised by the present record. Under the evidence introduced at the hearing, the court was well warranted in finding that the requirement made of the plaintiff was not capricious, unreasonable, or arbitrary, but that the proposed change was necessary for the convenience and safety of persons living along the street as well as of the general public.

2. It is contended, however, that even conceding that the city had the primary right to require the change in location of tracks to be made, it is estopped to make any such regulation, by virtue of an agreement made between the plaintiff company and the mayor and council, subsequently to the passage of the resolution of July 26, 1899, that .the change would not be required of the company, provided it would cease to use a switch connected with the line, and construct a certain kind of turnout on the opposite side of the street. It appears that, pursuant to this agreement, the company dismissed a petition it had pending to enjoin the city from enforcing its resolution of July 26, 1899, and that it has proceeded in good faith to carry out its part of the agreement. It may be that the mayor and council, in endeavoring now to enforce a relocation of the track, has not kept absolute good faith with the company in the matter of this agreement. Be this as it may, we are clear that the agreement itself was beyond the power of the mayor and council. They are the representatives of the public, and are placed in power to conserve the interests of the public. They are, for this purpose, invested with certain governmental and legislative duties, and these can not be bargained away. This agreement is an attempt on the part of the mayor and council to tie their hands, as well as those of their successors, with respect to a matter of great public interest. It is, in' effect, a contract on their part that they will not in the future, no matter how much the pub-

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 60, 112 Ga. 782, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macon-consolidated-street-railroad-v-mayor-of-macon-ga-1901.