Rio Grande Railroad v. City of Brownsville

45 Tex. 88
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 45 Tex. 88 (Rio Grande Railroad v. City of Brownsville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rio Grande Railroad v. City of Brownsville, 45 Tex. 88 (Tex. 1876).

Opinion

Moore, Associate Justice.

The importance of the questions involved in this case would have well justified a more thorough and careful preparation of the record than it seems to have received. The judgment entry recites that the motion to dissolve the injunction was submitted to the court on affidavits, and that the case on its final hearing was decided by the court — a jury having been waived — “on the petition, answers, affidavits, and evidence offered” by the parties. Tet neither the affidavits nor the matters deposed to in them are incorporated into or made part of the statement of facts. There are a number of affidavits copied in the transcript, but they are in no way identified, so as to warrant our saying that they. are the same referred to in the judgment entry. The appellant has omitted to file an assignment of errors, and no appearance is made in this court for appellee. The case consequently has been submitted by appellant without an assignment of errors, and without objection to it on this account by appellee.

It is the practice of the court when cases are thus submitted to exercise its discretion, and dismiss them for want of an assignment of errors, or to consider and decide such errors as are plainly apparent on the face of the record, which go to the foundation of the action. We think the ends of justice will be best subserved by,taking the latter course in this case.

By the judgment, appellant is perpetually restrained and enjoined from any further construction of its road in and along any of the streets and alleys of the city of Brownsville, from appropriating or attempting to appropriate any of said streets [91]*91or alleys to the use of its railroad, and from running any locomotive or railroad car over or on any of the streets or alleys within the limits of said city, as set forth in appellee’s petition.

The grounds upon which appellee’s action is founded, and upon which the judgment is rendered, are, 1st. That appellant was only hy its charter “to construct its road as far as the city limits of the city of Brownsville.” 2d. Said company had no authority to come within the limits of the city of Brownsville; and in assuming the right to do so, it was acting in defiance of the ordinances of the city. That no agreement had been made by appellant with appellee for such appropriation of said streets and alleys, nor had appellant paid or offered to pay appellee anything for such privilege.

If it plainly appears from the record that the judgment cannot he supported upon either of these grounds, it has no foundation upon which to rest, and must be reversed, notwithstanding appellant’s failure to file an assignment of errors. It is to he observed, however, that the judgment will not be reversed in such case for mere technical errors in the form and manner of enforcing a valid cause of action of which the court has jurisdiction, or in the rulings of the court on questions arising during the progress of the trial, which relate to the enforcement and maintenance of the action or defense, and which do not go to its essential foundation and merits.

A corporation being a mere creature of law is endowed with and can lawfully exercise only such powers and functions as are conferred upon it by its charter or with which it has been otherwise empowered by law. If, therefore, appellant was only authorized to construct its road to the limits of the city of Brownsville, hy its entry within the city and location and construction of a portion of its road in and along its streets, and digging up and defacing the same, so as to appropriate them to its use, thereby blocking up and obstructing their use by the general public, it has unquestionably been [92]*92guilty of a trespass, and subjected itself to the penalty of the law. It seems to be the better opinion, however, that it is the general, rather than the local public, to whom the streets and other public places belong. And therefore whether tire technical fee be in the adjoining owner, in the original-proprietor, or in the municipality, in trust for public use, any unauthorized obstruction of the public enjoyment is an indictable nuisance or a wrong for which relief may be had by the proper officers of the State in its name, by bill in equity for injunction, or by other appropriate action or proceeding. (Dill. Municipal Corp., sec. 520.)

But it has been held that when the power and authority to control and surpervise its streets is conferred on the municipal corporation, it may, in its corporate name, institute appropriate judicial proceedings to prevent or remove such obstructions. (Id.) And as it does not plainly appear that such power is not conferred by its act of incorporation on ajipellee, we cannot say that it has not the right to institute and maintain in its corporate name a suit of this character.

Whether the facts alleged in the petition show that ample remedy for the alleged injury cannot be had at law, or justify the interposition of a court of equity and the granting of a writ of injunction, would, perhaps, present a more serious question, if the case was before us on an assignment of errors. (Dunning v. Aurora, 40 Ill., 481; Higbee v. Railroad Co., 20 N. J. Eq., 435; Railroad Co. v. Pruden, Id., 530; White v. Flannigan, 1 Md., 525; Elwell v. Greenwood, 26 Iowa, 377; People v. Vanderbilt, 26 N. Y., 287.)

But taking it for granted that the city of Brownsville may maintain a suit in its corporate name against appellant for obstructing its streets by appropriating and using them to construct a part of its road within raid city, when, by its charter, it has no authority to extend its road within the city limits, and that the acts complained of are of a character -which, if wrongfully done, a court of equity should restrain by injunction, it still remains to be seen whether appellant [93]*93was only authorized by its charter to construct its “road as far as the city limits of said city of Brownsville.”

The record does not show that the charter of appellant was before the court on the hearing of the case; and as it is a private act, we cannot take judicial knowledge of its contents. The section of the act defining the line of the road and fixing its terminus is set out in appellant’s answer, but as the answer is not under oath, we attach no weight to it, and we will look merely to the admissions in appellee’s petition to determine whether, under its charter, appellant had authority to extend its road within the city.

■It is alleged in the petition “ that by an act of the Legislature of the State of Texas, approved August 13, 1870, the said Rio Grande Railroad Company was incorporated and declared a body politic and corporate, and invested by said act with the right, power, and authority to construct, equip, maintain, and own a railroad and telegraph line from Point Isabel, on Laguna Madre, to Brownsville, on the Rio Grande.” And it is from this admitted grant of authority to construct a road to Brownsville, that appellee alleges, as an inference or conclusion, that appellant has authority to construct its road only to the limits of said city. But is this inference correct? Do the premises justify or warrant the conclusion? We think not. Li forming our opinion we leave out of consideration the fact that Brownsville is designated in the charter as on the Rio Grande, and that it might he argued that it is shown thereby that the road was intended to go to the river.

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45 Tex. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rio-grande-railroad-v-city-of-brownsville-tex-1876.