Mobile O. R. Co. v. Zimmern

89 So. 475, 206 Ala. 37, 16 A.L.R. 1352, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 12, 1921
Docket1 Div. 173.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 89 So. 475 (Mobile O. R. Co. v. Zimmern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobile O. R. Co. v. Zimmern, 89 So. 475, 206 Ala. 37, 16 A.L.R. 1352, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 78 (Ala. 1921).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Appellee, to whom we shall hereafter refer as complainant, filed the bill in this cause for an injunction. To state his bill in short, he avers that he is engaged in the business of buying, selling, and exporting coal in the city of Mobile; that he constantly purchases and ships from the mines in this state coal in large quantities, consisting of hundreds of carloads; that many persons depend on him for a supply of coal; that he loads many ships under contract; “that in order to sell cargoes of coal for vessels, it is necessary that he should, and he does constantly contract for the loading of said vessels within a period of a day or two under contracts stipulating for the payment of large demurrage in the case of any delay in the loading of said vessels;” that this coal cannot be obtained except by purchase from the mines; that he is constantly shipping coal over the defendant’s railroad; that a considerable part of his business consists in furnishing coal to public utilities, to gas companies, street railroad companies,^ electric lighting companies, etc.; that defendant is a common carrier, a public service corporation; that defendant regularly confiscates and appropriates to its own use complainant’s coal shipped over its line, in violation of its duty as a common carrier, and without regard to the loss and inconvenience to which conxplainant is thereby subjected; that complainant is dependent upon the defendant railroad company for the transportation of his coal. On this bill, duly verified, the Ghief Justice of this court ordered a preliminary injunction, in accordance with complainant’s prayer, restraining the defendant .railroad company from further converting any coal shipped over its line to complainant.

Omitting details, defendant answered that its line of railroad reached and served many communities in Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Illinois which are dependent upon it for transportation facilities and for which it does an enormous business; that it needs great quantities of coal to operate its trains; that it had outstanding contracts for sufficient coal, but that strikes and labor troubles had made it necessary to the movement of its trains that it should make use of some parts of coal shipments over its road, without which it would have been impossible to transport freight, including coal shipped to complainant; that it has used a few carloads of complainant’s coal, but it has fairly distributed its exactions among all shippers of coal; that it has offered to pay complainant for his coal its invoice price at the mines, plus 10 per cent.; that it has not greatly interfered with complainant’s business, and that it will not be necessary to appropriate any more of complainant’s coal for some months to come, “though, of course, this respondent cannot know what conditions the future may bring forth, and on account of strikes and other causes entirely beyond the control of this respondent an emergency may again arise where it will be absolutely necessary for this respondent to appropriate some of the coal consigned to complainant to keep its trains running, and in order to enable re *39 spondent to deliver to complainant the other coal consigned to complainant and shipped over the railroad line operated by this respondent ; that, for this reason, an injunction such as is prayed for by complainant might result in this defendant being unable to operate entire trains for days at a time, and thus result in untold damage and suffering, not only to the general public, but to the complainant himself, who would, in such an emergency, be deprived of receiving a great part of the coal consigned to him and shipped over the line of respondent; that at no time in the past has it been, and in all probability at no time in the future will it be, necessary for this respondent, even in the greatest emergency, to appropriate for use in operating its trains more than a very small fraction of the coal consigned to complainant”; that its practice in respect to the appropriation of coal shipped over its line is one that has been indulged by all railroads in this coimtry for -50 years or more, “and is a practice which, from the very nature of the case, will necessarily have to be indulged from time to time in the future, as occasion arises.” This statement will suffice, we believe, to disclose the nature of the controversy between the parties to this cause.

The parties offered affidavits tending to sustain their respective contentions, and upon a hearing the court denied defendant’s motion to dissolve the temporary injunction. The court’s ruling on the motion to dissolve is now assigned for error.

Defendant says in its brief that it is “not asking the court to condone, authorize, license, or recognize as valid the taking of complainant’s coal in the manner and under the circumstances complained of,” but only that the court will not enjoin such taking on the facts presented by the record. We will notice as briefly as may be several considerations advanced in support of defendant’s position.

[1, 2] In the first place, defendant contends that the court of equity will not enjoin mere trespasses to personalty, unless in case of insolvency, for the reason that there is a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law. On the question thus presented and on the allied question that arises where a single defendant, by repeated acts of trespass, makes it.necessary for the plaintiff to pursue his legal remedy by a succession of actions, we quoted at some length the language of Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence in the case of Tidwell v. Hitt Dumber Co., 198 Ala. 236, 73 South. 486, L. R. A. 1917C, 232. That language, which we need not repeat, tended to support the equity of complainant’s bill in this cause, and shifted somewhat the previous attitude of this court, bringing it more into line with the current of modern opinion. But we have of old no authority denying the power of equity in a case such as is here disclosed ; for defendant, abusing the law which conferred upon it corporate life and functions, has not only trespassed against complainant’s property rights, but, assuming to exercise a power which resides only in the sovereign state, has taken complainant’s property, at the same time avowing its purpose to repeat the process if occasion arises, leaving complainant to such compensation as it may recover by negotiation or repeated actions at law. We do not affirm that there may not be conditions, arising without the fault of the carrier, in which it may refuse to accept goods for transportation, but in general the court may compel the carrier, in the exercise of its public duty, to accept goods tendered to it for shipment, and thus impose upon it the absolute duty to deliver them at their designated destination. If then the court may not, to quote again defendant’s answer and brief, condone, authorize, license, or recognize as valid defendant’s taking of property consigned to it, in the circumstances shown by the record, and yet is powerless to interfere despite defendant’s announced intention, in effect, to do the like again on what it may deem proper occasion, its jurisdiction would hardly seem to deserve the name of equity. The conclusion thus reached will be aided incidentally, as we proceed in our statement of the other points involved.

[3] Complainant is insisting upon a right acquired by contract and protected by the policy of the law, and the court is not free to consider the relative conveniences, of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 475, 206 Ala. 37, 16 A.L.R. 1352, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-o-r-co-v-zimmern-ala-1921.