New Orleans, Mobile & Texas Railway Co. v. Mississippi Ex Rel. District Attorney

112 U.S. 12, 5 S. Ct. 19, 28 L. Ed. 619, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1847
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 27, 1884
Docket599
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 112 U.S. 12 (New Orleans, Mobile & Texas Railway Co. v. Mississippi Ex Rel. District Attorney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Orleans, Mobile & Texas Railway Co. v. Mississippi Ex Rel. District Attorney, 112 U.S. 12, 5 S. Ct. 19, 28 L. Ed. 619, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1847 (1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion- of the court.

■ This case has been heretofore in this court upon a question qf jurisdiction, and is reported as Railroad Co. v. Mississippi, 102 U. S. 135. The Supreme Court of Mississippi, in accordance with our decision, reversed the judgment of the inferior State court, with directions to set aside all orders made subsequent to the presentation of the company’s petition and bond for the removal of the cause, and to proceed no further. The case was thereafter tried in the Circuit Court of the United States. The object of the suit is, by mandamus, to compel the railroad company, whose line extends from Mobile to New Orleans, to construct and maintain in the channel of Pearl River, where that stream is crossed by the company’s road, on the line between Mississippi and Louisiana, a drawbridge, which, when open, will give a clear space of not less than sixty feet in width for the passage of vessels. It would seem from the uncontroverted allegations of the petition that the bridge originally constructed by. the company across Pearl River had no draw, although the channel, at that point, according to the *17 Coast Chart, has about forty-five feet depth of water, and the river is nearly three hundred yards in width. But, in the an-. swer filed in the Circuit Court, it was averred, and the de-’ murrer to it admitted, that there was, at that time, á draw which gave a clear space, for the passage of vessels, of thirty-four to thirty-six feet in width.

By the final judgment,' a peremptory mandamus was awarded requiring the company to remove the present bridge, and in lieu thereof construct and maintain one, giving a clear' space of not less than, sixty feet in width. It is provided in the judgment that such drawbridge may be built “ either in the centre of the channel of Pearl River, or in thatmortion of the same within the territory of the State of Louisiana,” or of Mississippi, as may be most convenient for public use.”

The controlling question is, whether the railroad company is ’ under any legal obligation to construct and maintain a 1 drawbridge of the kind specified in the judgment of the Circuit Court.

The company was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly of Alabama, approved November 24th, 1866, with authority to construct a railroad from the city of Mobile to, any point on the line between Alabama and Mississippi; and also, in continuation thereof, a railroad through Mississippi and Louisiana, with such rights, privileges and franchises as might be granted to the corporation by the latter States. Laws of Ala. 1866-7, p. 6. Its existence as a corporation was recognized and approved by an act of the Legislature of Mississippi, approved February 7th, 1867, by which it was permitted to have, exercise, and enjoy, within that State, the rights, powers, privileges and franchises granted to it by the State of Alabama, subject to the conditions, provisions and restrictions presented in said act and by the general laws of Mississippi. By the same act the company was authorized to construct and maintain a railroad from any point on the line between Mississippi and Louisiana, thence towards and to any point on the line between Mississippi and Alabama, and extend the same, ms contemplated in its act of incorporation, from the western boundary of the State to New Orleans, and from its eastern *18 boundary to Mobile; It was given a right of way across - the Avaters, water-courses, rivers, bays, inlets, streets, highways, turnpikes or canals within Mississippi, subject, however, to the condition that “the said company shall preserve any water-course, street, highway, turnpike or canal which its said railroad may so pass upon, along, intersect, touch or cross, so as not to impair its usefulness to the public unnecessarily; or if temporarily impaired in and during the construction of. said railroad, the said company, shall restore the same to its former state, or to such state that its usefulness and convenience to the public shall not be unnecessarily or materially impaired or injured.”

But that part of the act which has special reference to the issues in this case, and upon the construction and effect of which depend the rights of the parties, is given in the statement preceding this opinion.

It will, be observed that reference is made to “ the central portion of the channel of the Pearl River,” and, also, to “ the principal entrance'of Pearl River into the Rigolet.” It was not disputed in argument that two distinct localities are here described. Pearl River is about 375 miles in length. It rises in the centre of Mississippi, and is navigable, by small craft, in good stages 'of water, as far as Jackson, the capital of the State. Running southwardly, it empties by one of its mouths into Lake Borgne, and by other mouths into the Rigolet — commonly called the Great Rigolet. The main or eastern branch of the Pearl, emptying into Lake Borgne, constitutes, for about one-hundred miles above its mouth, to the 31° of north latitude, the dividing line between Mississippi and Louisiana. 3 Stat. 348. The other branch, constituting a water-way between the main river and the Great Rigolet, is wholly Avithin the State of Louisiana. It is clear that the words “ in the central portion of the channel of the Pearl River ” have reference to the main or- eastern branch, Avhich constitutes the dividing line between Mississippi and Louisiana, and consequently, that it Avas in. the channel of that branch (if the road was located across it) that the company was required to construct ■ and maintain a' drawbridge, giving a clear space of not less than sixty feet in Avidth.

*19 But the company’s contention is, that the Legislature of Mississippi intended to relieve it from all obligation to construct a drawbridge in that branch of Pearl River, upon its locating the road at some point “south of or below the principal entrance of Pearl River” into the Great Rigolet; this, because, in that contingency, the act expressly declares that the company “ shall not be required to construct a drawbridge across any 'bayou leading into Pearl River, or across any small pass or mouth of the said river.” This construction of the statute necessarily implies that the Legislature of Mississippi —although carefully providing that the water-courses and other highways of the State, across which the road was constructed, should be preserved against material or permanent impairment of their usefulness to the public^ — was willing, in consideration merely of the road being located in Louisiana, south of or below the principal entrance of the Pearl River into the Great Rigolet, to have the mouth of the main or eastern branch of that river closed entirely against vessels engaged in commerce. We say “ closed entirely,” because the position of the company is, that the present drawbridge was constructed by it voluntarily, and without any legal obligation whatever to do so; and that it has the right, consistently with the restrictions imposed upon it by the Mississippi act, to span Pearl River with a bridge having no draw, and, consequently, with a bridge that would wholly prevent vessels passing from Lake. Borgne into Pearl River, or from Pearl River into Lake Borgne.

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Bluebook (online)
112 U.S. 12, 5 S. Ct. 19, 28 L. Ed. 619, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-mobile-texas-railway-co-v-mississippi-ex-rel-district-scotus-1884.