Montana Union Railway Co. v. Langlois

9 Mont. 419
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 9 Mont. 419 (Montana Union Railway Co. v. Langlois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montana Union Railway Co. v. Langlois, 9 Mont. 419 (Mo. 1890).

Opinion

Harwood, J.

This is an action for an injunction. The complaint sets forth that the appellant is a railway corporation organized under the laws of the Territory of Montana; that it is the owner of, and operating as a common carrier, a line of railroad running from Garrison, in Deer Lodge County, and divers other stations, to its station known as South Butte, in Silver Bow County, Montana, the latter station being about one and one-half miles from the United States postoffice in the city of Butte, in said Silver Bow County; that at the said station"of South Butte the appellant is the owner of and in possession of a large number of railway tracks, yards, station grounds, and buildings ; that the appellant has at said depot or station building at South Butte a long platform for the accommodation of passengers whom the appellant transports to and from said station, and that said depot grounds are surrounded by a board fence, inside of which hacks and wagons are accustomed to drive for the purpose of conveying passengers to appellant's passenger trains, and receiving passengers from said trains; that at the time stated, and for a long time prior thereto, the appellant had a contract with the government of the United States, whereby the appellant was obliged to carry upon its trains the United States mail matter to said station at South Butte, and thence to the j>ostoffice at the city of Butte; that appellant contracted with Geoffrey and Thomas Lavell, in the name of Lavell Brothers, to carry said United States mail from said station at South Butte to the United States post-office at Butte City, and appellant further contracted with said Lavell Brothers to have an ample supply of hacks and omnibuses [425]*425at said station of South Butte, at the arrival of all trains, for the safe and comfortable transportation of all passengers who' desire such transportation from said station of South Butte to the city of Butte and points adjacent thereto. And in eonsider-j ation thereof the appellant granted and agreed with said Lavelll Brothers to give them the exclusive right to drive and stand! their hacks, carriages, and omnibuses along the edge of the said' platform. That respondents are the owners or drivers of hacks¡ and carriages, and at the times complained of, and against the! will and protest of plaintiff, have forcibly driven their hacks | and carriages into said depot yard of plaintiff, and driven and stood such hack adjacent to and against the platform aforesaid, and have forcibly kept from such platform the hacks of Lavell Brothers; that plaintiff, by its agents and servants, have often 1 protested to defendants against their conduct in that respect,| and repeatedly told defendants that they could not occupy said; platform privileges; but that plaintiff did offer defendants the I privilege of driving into plaintiff’s said depot at said station, ' and standing their hacks in said yard to deliver and receive passengers, provided the defendants would keep away from the said platform a distance of fifty feet, which place was clearly indicated to the defendants, and further that defendants might have the privilege of driving and standing their hacks and carriages at a point on said platform east of the passenger depot not occupied by the hacks of said Lavell Brothers; that notwithstanding these protests and concessions of plaintiff the defendants continue to drive and siand their hacks next to said platform, and within said fifty-feet limit; and defendants expressly decline to desist from driving and standing their hacks at said forbidden place, and expressly declare that they will persist in placing their hacks at the platform reserved as aforesaid to Lavell Brothers; that if the defendants continue to do these acts complained of, or any of them, the plaintiff will be prevented from carrying out its part of the said contract with Lavell Brothers, and the latter will decline to transport the said United States mail from the station aforesaid, and to the post-office at Butte City, and to care for plaintiff’s railway passengers as aforesaid; that plaintiff has not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law.

[426]*426Upon the facts set forth, the plaintiff prays that the defenants be restrained by injunction from driving or standing hacks, cabs, carriages, or busses at the said platform of plaintiff at the west side of its depot buildings, or within fifty feet thereof.

The defendants answer and admit that defendant, Charles Langlois, is the owner of a line of hacks, vehicles, and carriages, with which he is engaged in carrying passengers in and about the city of Butte, and to and from the station and trains of plaintiff, and that the other defendants named are in his employ as drivers of said hacks, carriages, etc. But the defendants deny that they, or either of them, ever in any manner interfered with the said plaintiff in the conduct of its said railroad or passenger business at South Butte, or elsewhere, or that they, or either of them, interfered with the comfort or convenience of passengers of plaintiff at said station.

The defendants further allege that plaintiff never had any contract with any of its passengers to carry or transport them further than its said station at South Butte, and that plaintiff’s contracts for transportation of its passengers to said station ends and is fully executed when such passengers are landed on said platform, and that all such passengers are obliged to procure and pay for their transportation from said platform to the city of Butte, or elsewhere. That the defendants, in their conduct in running their liné of hacks and carriages for the transportation of passengers and baggage to and from the said station, have always conducted the same in a quiet and orderly manner, and have not gone upon the platform of plaintiff nor solicited nor annoyed plaintiff’s passengers, but have driven their hacks and carriages up to said platform on the west side of said station and stood them there to receive and carry any and all such passengers as might wish to employ them so to do; that they never have at any time interfered, nor attempted to interfere, with the hacks of said Lavell Brothers at said station; that defendants have only driven their hacks up to said platform when there was a vacancy thereat, and had only refused to remove their hacks therefrom to make way for the hacks of said Lavell Brothers.

The defendants further allege that the portion of plaintiff’s platform which is west of the said passenger station as described [427]*427in plaintiff’s complaint is the portion of the platform where passengers alight from plaintiff’s trains at said station; that the portion of the said platform east of said station building, which plaintiff alleges it offered to allow defendants to drive their hacks to for the purpose of landing and receiving passengers, is used almost entirely for handling freight and baggage, and the ground alongside thereof is always used by baggage and freight wagons; that if said Lavell Brothers are allowed the exclusive use of said platform west of said station house, it will give the said Lavell Brothers the entire control of the business of carrying

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mont. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montana-union-railway-co-v-langlois-mont-1890.