S. A. L. Ry. Co. v. Tampa Southern R. R. Co.

121 So. 477, 97 Fla. 340
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 12, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 So. 477 (S. A. L. Ry. Co. v. Tampa Southern R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. A. L. Ry. Co. v. Tampa Southern R. R. Co., 121 So. 477, 97 Fla. 340 (Fla. 1929).

Opinion

Giblin (Circuit Judge) :

This cause had proceeded in the lower court to the taking of testimony upon the issues presented by the bill of com *342 plaint of the complainant (appellee) and the answer of the defendant (appellant). The defendant’s general demurrer to the bill had been overruled prior to the filing of th¿ answer. The order overruling the demurrer was not appealed from and its propriety is not to be reviewed here.

On the date set for the hearing of the testimony the defendant applied to the court for leave to amend its answer. Leave to file the tendered amendment was granted, except as to certain portions thereof which were not allowed to he filed. After the defendant had amended its answer the complainant applied to the court for leave to reply to the answer, as amended, or to amend its bill, to meet the averments of the answer, as amended. Such leave was granted and subsequently the complainant amended its bill by striking a certain paragraph thereof and inserting a paragraph in its stead and by adding two additional paragraphs.

In the order granting leave to the complainant to reply to the answer, as amended, or to amend its bill, it was provided that “in the event the bill is amended in lieu of the filing of a special replication, the defendant shall have twenty days from the filing of the amendment in which to plead, answer or demur as it may be advised.”

After complainant’s bill had been amended, the defendant, within twenty days, filed a general demurrer to the complainant’s bill, as amended, and a special demurrer addressed severally to each of the paragraphs incorporated in the bill by amendment.

The solicitors for the complainant then set down for argument before the court the special demurrer of the defendant. The general demurrer of the defendant to the entire bill, as amended, was not set down for argument.

Upon the hearing of the special demurrer it wás overruled by the court and the defendant was allowed twenty *343 days in which “to answer the said amendments”; and it is from this order that this appeal is prosecuted.

It is unnecessary to review at length the allegations of the complainant’s bill, but, for the sake of intelligible discussion of the questions here presented, it may be well to briefly state the character of the suit and the nature of the relief sought by the complainant.

It appears from the allegations of the bill that the complainant had been granted by the City of Sarasota the right to construct, upon a certain strip of land owned in fee simple by the city," a line of railway tracks and to connect such tracks with certain other tracks which had been previously constructed on said land and which were owned by the city, for the purpose of affording to the complainant access by trains and cars to certain water terminals located upon the land owned by the city and to enable the complainant to provide transportation facilities to such industries as should be established and located adjacent to the involved strip of land. It is alleged in the bill that the defendant, which had been previously granted by the city the right to use, and to operate trains and cars upon, the city’s tracks which were already constructed upon the strip of land, had, without the consent of the city or of the complainant, constructed certain dead-end spur tracks over and across the right of way which had been granted by the city to the complainant and had placed empty freight cars on such spur tracks for the purpose, and with the effect, of obstructing the construction by the complainant of the tracks it proposed to construct and preventing the enjoyment by the complainant of the privileges which had been granted to it by the city. Other pertinent facts were alleged.

The complainant seeks primarily to have the alleged interference by the defendant enjoined.

The amendment to the defendant’s answer, which occas *344 ioned the amendment of the complainant’s bill, contained the averment that the construction of the line of railway proposed by the complainant, which is a railroad company engaged in interstate commerce, was an extension of the complainant’s line of railroad and that the complainant had not procured, in accordance with the act of Congress, known as the Transportation Act of 1920 (Act of Congress of February 28, 1920, Chapter 91, Sec. 402, par. 18), a certificate “that the present or future public convenience and necessity require or will require the construction, or operation, or construction and operation, of such additional or extended line of railroad.”

The complainant made no attack upon the amendment to the answer, treating its averments as proper matters of defense, and to meet such averments amended its bill.

The first of such amendments consisted of the substitution of a paragraph for one which was stricken from the bill In the substituted paragraph (numbered X) the complainant alleged, among other things, that he proposed construction of the tracks in question was a part of the original project of the complainant for the construction of its railroad from a point' near the City of Tampa southerly to the City of Sarasota; that such original project contemplated, embraced and included the construction of the tracks which constitute the subject-matter of this suit'; and that such original project had been begun prior to the enactment of the Transportation Act. There were allegations designed to show that the work incident to the effectuation of the original project had been prosecuted with reasonable diligence, under the circumstances, in accordance with the original plan.

The Interstate Commerce Commission has held that where construction was begun in good faith prior to the effective date of the Transportation Act, and the work has *345 been prosecuted with reasonable diligence, under the circumstances, in accordance with the original plan, it follows that no certificate of public convenience and necessity is required. (In the matter of the Uvalde Northern Railroad Co., etc., 67 Interest. Com. Com’n. R. 554; In the matter of the Gulf Port Terminal Railroad Co., etc., 71 Interest. Com. Com’n. R. 759.) Detroit Terminal R. Co., v Pennsylvania Detroit R. Co., 15 Fed. 2nd Ed., 507 (which holds likewise) .

The allegations of the amendment designed to show that the complainant’s original project had been pursued with reasonable diligence since its initation were “that construction work on said project was begun in November, 1917, and suspended in December, 1918, by direction of the United States Director of Railroads, except on the main line into Bradenton and one spur north of Palmetto in Manatee County, until April, 1920, when it was resumed on the Ellenton Belt, and August, 1923, when it was resumed on the unfinished line into Sarasota.”

We think that such allegations, standing alone, or considered in connection with other allegations of the bill, as amended, are insufficient to show that the work had been prosecuted with reasonable diligence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 So. 477, 97 Fla. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-a-l-ry-co-v-tampa-southern-r-r-co-fla-1929.