Martin v. O'Brien

34 Miss. 21
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 34 Miss. 21 (Martin v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. O'Brien, 34 Miss. 21 (Mich. 1857).

Opinion

HáNDX, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill filed by the appellant in the Chancery Court of Hancock county, enjoining the appellees from the erection and establishment of a wharf upon the sea-coast, at the town of Shields-borough, in this State, alleged to be an infringement of an exclusive privilege granted to the appellant. The appellant’s right is set forth in the bill substantially as follows:—

That by various acts of the legislature, the town of Shields-borough was incorporated, and by the Act of 1848, its limits were enlarged to the extent of about five miles along the coast, and the municipal authorities of the town were empowered to grant licenses within its corporate limits for the erection of wharves, for such length of time, under such regulations, and upon such terms as they might think fit, which act was repealed by the Act of 1850, and a new act then passed conferring upon the corporate authorities the same powers in relation to wharves as the Act of 1848; that on the 1st March, 1854, a new act of incorporation was passed, incorporating the town as a city, and providing for its municipal government and officers to consist of a mayor and aldermen, having jurisdiction over the same territory as was embraced in the preceding acts; and [28]*28by the 14th section of that charter, the mayor and aldermen were empowered “ to grant licenses for the erection and keeping wharves, for the landing or shipping of any goods, &c., for such time, and under such rules and restrictions, and with such privileges, exclusive or others (otherwise), as they might think proper; and to establish the rates of wharfage, to be collected by the wharfinger, and to impose a fine, not exceeding fifty dollars, for every violation of the act, upon any person or persons who shall keep a wharf for the landing and shipping of any goods, &c., and directly or indirectly demand, take, or receive any compensation therefor, without having previously obtained a license, as herein provided; that, under these various acts of incorporation, the appellant — from the year 1846 to the time of filing the bill — had been the proprietor of a public wharf at the town, under licenses from the corporate authorities, it being the only public and licensed wharf there, and it having answered all the wants of the town in that respect, and that he continued to exercise the exclusive privilege of keeping a wharf there, under license from the authorities, until it was entirely destroyed and swept away by a storm, in September, 1855, which destroyed all the wharves at that place, to his great loss; and that he at that time had a license and contract with the corporate authorities for the exclusive right to keep a public wharf there for toll, until the 22d November, 1861; that the wharves on the seacoast are of but short 'duration, constantly liable to destruction by storms, and to the ship-worm, which destroys them in two or three years, and have to be rebuilt at least once in every four years; and that one of the principal objects in having the town incorporated, was that there might be some proper authority over the subject of wharves, by which one might be kept up suitable to the wants and necessities of the place.

It is further alleged that, after the destruction of the appellant’s wharf, the mayor and aldermen, on the 1st December, 1855, passed an ordinance, by which the appellant was authorized to build and put up, within three months from that date, in front of the city and in the place where the wharf which had been destroyed was erected, a new toll wharf, where all goods, freight, wares, merchandise, horses, cattle, and carriages should be landed, fixing the tolls to be charged by him; provided that, if the appellant accepted the terms [29]*29offered, he should be bound to keep the wharf in good repair, and should not suffer it to be out of repair for more than forty-eight hours, unless it should be injured or destroyed by storms, in which event it was to be repaired within three months, under a prescribed penalty, and the exclusive right to erect and keep a toll wharf within the specified limits of the city wks granted by the ordinance to the appellant for a term of years, to expire on the 1st January,. 1866, which was accepted by him, by his giving bond with security to keep the wharf in good repair, and to rebuild it within three months if destroyed, and paying the sum of twenty-five dollars for the privilege granted. The clause of the ordinance in relation to the nature of the right granted to the appellant, is in these words:

“ Be it further ordained, that from and after the 1st December, 1855, until the 1st day of January, 1866, it shall not be lawful for any person or persons whomsoever, excepting the said John Martin, his executors, administrators, or assigns, to build, erect, or put up any wharf, for the purpose of landing or shipping any freight, goods, wares, merchandises, horses, cattle, carriages, &c., not their own property, within that part of the corporate limits of the said city of Shieldsborough, extending westerly along the sea-coast from the house formerly known as the house of Jesse Cowand, to the western boundary of said corporation: to which extent of coast the exclusive privilege of building, erecting, or putting up a public toll wharf is hereby granted to the said John Martin, his executors, administrators, and assigns, until the 1st day of January, 1866; and any person or persons, who, in violation of the present ordinance, shall build, erect, or put up any wharf in the limits herein mentioned, for the purpose of landing or shipping any freight, goods, &c., not their own property, shall forfeit and pay the sum of fifty dollars, to be recovered, &c., .... and in addition thereto, shall be liable to the said John Martin in an action of damages for the violation of his privileges; provided, that only one public toll wharf shall be built, erected, or put up within said limits.”

That, in pursuance of this contract, he constructed a new wharf at the place designated, the best and most valuable one ever erected in the city, at a cost of twenty-five hundred dollars, having in all respects complied with his part of the contract.

The bill then charges that the appellees, who are residents of the [30]

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Bluebook (online)
34 Miss. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-obrien-miss-1857.