Minturn v. Larue

17 F. Cas. 465, 1 McAll. 370

This text of 17 F. Cas. 465 (Minturn v. Larue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minturn v. Larue, 17 F. Cas. 465, 1 McAll. 370 (circtndca 1858).

Opinion

MCALLISTER, Circuit Judge.

The bill in this case is exhibited in behalf of Edward Mintum, a citizen of the state of New York, who alleges himself to be the proprietor of a ferry established across the Bay of San Francisco, with its termini at the town of Oakland and the city of San Francisco. The bill prays for an injunction against the defendants, who, it is alleged, are infringing the exclusive privileges which complainant claims to hold in the said ferry. A motion is made upon the bill and affidavits filed by both parties, for the issue of the writ prayed for. In the affidavits of both parties are introduced matters collateral to the merits, and [466]*466which cannot be subjects of legitimate consideration in the discussion of this case. Instead of being distinct affirmations' or denials of facts material to the issue, they are argumentative, denunciatory, and partake more of the character of written, discussions, than of sworn statements of facts constituting the true merits of the cause. Perhaps the appropriate course would have been for the court to have suppressed them as tending to introduce confusion, and constitute a dangerous precedent in the practice of a court of chancery. But as neither party moved for their suppression, content with calling the attention of the court to the character of these documents, it was agreed by both parties that the affidavits should be read; the propriety of the admission of them, or portions of them, discussed on the final argument of the motion, and the disposition of them left to the court Now, there is a large proportion of these documents the court feels bound to discard from its consideration. Whether the charter of the town of Oakland was obtained by fraudulent practices from the legislature of this state? Whether the ordinance of the trustees of the town of Oakland, passed for the establishment of the ferry, was the result of conspiracy? Whether the contract between the town of Oakland and Carpentier, the assignor of complainant, was the offspring of fraudulent connivance? Whether the ferry has been so grossly mismanaged as to constitute an imposition on the public? Whether the proprietorship of the ferry has been a source of profit or not? Whether all good citizens demand that the monopoly of complainant should be arrested? "Whether public opinion among the citizens of Oakland emphatically requires it to be done? These matters, and all akin to them which have been embodied in the affidavits, or directly intimated in them, must be disregarded, and this case decided by an application of well-settled legal" principles to the "issue made. The complainant asks for the extraordinary interposition of this court for the protection of what he considers a legal statutory right; and if given, it must be. by the application of principles, independent of all other considerations. He claims as assignee of one Charles Minturn,'himself the assignee of one Edward E. Carpentier, who is the alleged grantee of the ferry from the town of Oakland.

The defendants, independently of the defects alleged by them to exist in the title of the complainant, set up by way of defense, a claim under "a'direct transfer to them of the premises in dispute, from the town of Oakland, subsequent in date to the assignment to complainant by Charles Minturn. They also set up as a defense, the fact, that the steamer they are running has been duly licensed and enrolled for the coasting trade, under the laws of the United States, and as such is entitled to navigate the waters of the Bay of San Francisco. In the view the court entertains of this case, it will be unnecessary to investigate the character of this latter defense. The complainant Minturn, contends that the documentary title exhibited, vested in him an exclusive privilege to the ferry for the term of twenty years from the date of the contract between the town of Oakland and the said Carpentier. That such contract, under which he claims, vested in him such an interest as excludes any one from the right to run a boat on the route between the city of San Francisco and the town of Oakland, and concludes the town of Oakland from conferring on any one the right to do so during the period of time said contract shall exist. He further contends, that he has exhibited a prima-facie case, and that it entitles him to an injunction; that the court will not look to the extent and validity of the complainant’s title, but postpone the consideration of them to a future stage of the case. There is a class of cases where the court will, although not satisfied with, but entertaining doubt as to the complainant’s title, grant an injunction forthwith, before answer. But this is done to prevent irreparable mischief. Wnere the injury sought to be enjoined, is the transfer of negotiable paper by an irresponsible party; a destructive trespass to the inheritance; the repetition of a nuisance, or the commission of some act not reparable in damages, the court ex necessitate will order an injunction to keep the parties in statu quo until its doubts have been removed by the facts elicited in the future investigation of the cause. This is not such a case.- The title of the complainant is set forth in his documentary proof; and all the materials for its investigation by ascertaining their legal effect, are before the court. It involves no inquiry into complicated facts. It depends alone upon the construction of the charter which gave it birth. Why should the court decline to pass upon it, but postpone the investigation into the construction of it, intermediately enjoining the adverse party -from running their boat?

The complainant asks for an injunction to enjoin from the alleged infringement of what he claims to be his statutory right 'Now, the power of this court to interpose, depends upon the fact that his right is clear and without doubt, his possession actual, and when his legal title is not put in doubt 1 Johns. Ch. 611. In Livingston v. Van Ingen, 9 Johns. 585, Chancellor Kent says, “Injunctions are always granted to secure the enjoyment of statute privileges of which the party is in the actual possession, unless the right be doubtful.” The same doctrine, that before the court will interfere by injunction the right of the complainant should be free from doubt, is enunciated by Savage, C. J., in North Kiver Steamboat Co. v. Livingston, 3 Cow. 755. It may be therefore assumed that the right of the complainant must be legal, clear, and beyond reasonable doubt. The question,, then, into its validity and ex[467]*467tent becomes not only a necessary but preliminary inquiry to the issue of an injunction.

Now, the source of complainant’s title is to be found in the charter of the town of Oakland. He claims under assignment from Edward B. Carpentier, grantee of that town. No interest could pass from the latter to its grantee save what was vested in it by its ■charter, and none other could pass from it to the grantee under whom complainant claims, whatever may be the terms of the instrument executed by them. As to the character of this interest it must be that of a vested interest, or property; or it is a franchise; or lastly, it may be termed, as characterized by one of the solicitors for the complainant, “a legislative power.” The decisions of the New York courts upon the interest conveyed to the city of New York in the ferries which •cluster around it, are based upon the transfers made of them to it by the old charter of the British crown, and the legislature, from time to time, of the state of New York. These transfers are alienations containing all the operative words of conveyance known to deeds transferring the fee in real estate; and their legal effect is fixed by well settled principles.

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Related

North River Steam Boat Co. v. Livingston
3 Cow. 713 (New York Supreme Court, 1824)
President, Directors, & Company of Croton Turnpike Road v. Ryder
1 Johns. Ch. 611 (New York Court of Chancery, 1815)
Livingston v. Van Ingen
9 Johns. 507 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1812)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 465, 1 McAll. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minturn-v-larue-circtndca-1858.