Park Transportation Co. v. State Highway Commission

60 S.W.2d 388, 332 Mo. 592, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 436
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 19, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 388 (Park Transportation Co. v. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park Transportation Co. v. State Highway Commission, 60 S.W.2d 388, 332 Mo. 592, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 436 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*595 HAYS, J.

This is an appeal from a final decree of the Circuit Court of Cole County dismissing a suit brought to enjoin interference with the plaintiff’s motor trucks in- the hauling of what may be termed overlength loads upon the highways of this State. The decree of' dismissal was rendered upon demurrer to the bill. The suit is brought against the ' State Public Service Commission, the State Highway Commission, together with the individuals composing the *596 membership of each, and also the superintendent of the State Highway Patrol.

The plaintiff (appellant), a private business corporation of Missouri, is a licensed “contract hauler,” and as such is engaged in hauling road material by motor trucks upon the public highways, over irregular routes throughout this State, and now and then transporting from supply houses overlength loads of road material on its trucks for necessary use in the construction of the State’s highways at different times and places. The appellant’s claimed right to transport overlength loads of such material without special permits from the Public Service Commission has been and is denied, by the • respondents, its trucks stopped and delayed, its drivers arrested and ■summoned into court, and threatened with a continuation of such ■measures upon the trucks being so operated without such special permits. The State Highway Commission is alleged to have “arbitrarily notified appellant it would not issue permits for the making of such hauls from said supply houses to said points of use in road construction, but would compel all shipments of road material of above lengths and longer and other road material to be made by rail to the nearest railroad station to the points of highway construction. ’ ’ And that “said arbitrary attitude and ruling of said defendants deprive appellant of its property rights, its liberty and privileges, and the gains of its contracts, business and industry, without due process of law and without compensation, contrary to Section 7787 of Laws of Missouri, 1931, page 265, and Sections 4, 11, 21 and 30 of Article II of the Constitution of the State.” It is further alleged that if the aforesaid arbitrary construction of said statute be its proper construction, then the statute is violative of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and violative of said sections of the State Constitution also; and, if carried out as threatened, will deprive appellant of the rights above mentioned, to its irreparable injury.

I. To retain their vantage ground the respondents insist, first, that upon the facts injunction will not lie, because that remedy will not be granted to restrain the enforcement of a criminal law, absent a multiplicity of prosecutions or threatened irreparable injury, and because the uneonstitutionality of the law would furnish no ground for injunctive relief.

Though, as is contended, the general rule is that injunction will not lie to prevent a prosecution for the violation of a criminal statute (State ex rel. v. Woods, 155 Mo. 425, 56 S. W. 474), and the mere uneonstitutionality of a law furnishes no ground for injunctive relief (Ibid. l. c. 499), yet in such case injunction will lie where the threatened injury is irreparable and common-law remedies are inadequate. *597 [Shoe Co. v. Saxey, 131 Mo. 212, l. c. 221, 32 S. W. 1106; State ex rel. Chase v. Hall, 297 Mo. 594, 250 S. W. 64; In re Debs, 158 U. S. 565, 593.] The reason for the distinction is plain, for in the latter instance, as in this, restraint of prosecution is only incidental to the main object of the suit. Primarily where, as here, a valuable property right is sought to be protected from injury or destruction as the result of alleged misconstruction or maladministration of' a law which, as claimed, is valid on its face and if rightly construed and applied confers certain privileges, but, as arbitrarily and wrongfully construed by the agencies charged with its administration as alleged, operates against appellant in denial of its constitutional rights, injunction will lie. It is said in 32 Corpus Juris, 244: “It is no objection to a bill to restrain the enforcement of a statute that the act is not void on its face, but is complained of only because its operation in the particular instance works a violation of a constitutional right.” [Coal & Coke Ry. Co. v. Conley, 67 W. Va. 129, 67 S. E. 613; New Hampshire Gas & Elec. Co. v. Morse, 42 Fed. (2d) 490, 493, cit. Western Union Tele. Co. v. Andrews, 216 U. S. 165; N. Y. Cent. Ry. Co. v. U. S. (Interstate Commerce Commission Interveners), 288 Fed. 751, affirmed, 263 U. S. 603.]

“The declaration of unconstitutionality must be incidental to some relief sought, just as construction of a will, deed, or other instrument must be incidental to a prayer for relief.” [Coal & Coke Ry. Co. v. Conley, supra, l. c. 618.] Analogous or corollary exemplifications of this principle may be found in State ex rel. Becker v. Wellston Sewer District et al., 332 Mo. 547, 58 S. W. (2d) 988, and State ex rel. Neu v. Waechter et al., 332 Mo. 574, 58 S. W. (2d) 971, decided at the present term. These cases were extraordinary proceedings in mandamus, a remedy which in its result is the reverse of injunction of the type now in hand, and which involved such error in the administration of statutes, by the agencies charged therewith, as would injure property rights of the complainants in violation of the Constitution. The quality of the wrong resulting from a constitutional act unconstitutionally administered is the same, and the injury as real to the injured, as those flowing from the administration of an unconstitutional act in accordance with its terms; and we perceive no reason why the same form of redress should not be applicable alike to each.

II. We are thus brought to the statute in question, Section 7787 of the Laws of 1931, at page 265. which prohibits the operation on the highways of motor vehicles (load included) of width and height and of a length in excess of those therein specified. Specifically exempted therefrom are “vehicles temporarily transporting agricultural implements or road making machinery, or road materials *598 or towing for repair purposes cars that have become disabled upon the highway.” There is also a proviso authorizing the Highway Commission, when in its opinion the public safety so justifies, to issue special permits for the temporary operation of a vehicle which is overlength, each permit to be for a single trip or for a definite period, not exceeding sixty days, and designating the highways and bridges to be used. It is urged that appellant, by applying for a special permit under the proviso of the statute, is estopped to attack the construction placed by the respondents on the exception. We think there is no estoppel arising out of that matter, since it does not appear that respondents were misled or suffered any injury or disadvantage thereby or that the appellant received any benefit from the refusal of the permit. [Buck v. Kuykendall, 267 U. S. 307, 69 L. Ed. 623, 45 Sup. Ct. 324.]

III.

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60 S.W.2d 388, 332 Mo. 592, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-transportation-co-v-state-highway-commission-mo-1933.