Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. McFadden

152 S.E. 809, 156 S.C. 147, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 14, 1930
Docket12891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 S.E. 809 (Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. McFadden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. McFadden, 152 S.E. 809, 156 S.C. 147, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 93 (S.C. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Carter.

The purpose of this action, commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Chester County, March 21, 1927, is to enjoin and restrain the defendants, their agents, servants, and employees, from hindering the plaintiff or its employees from the “peaceful and complete removal,” of a certain *152 overhead bridge in the Town of Ft. Lawn, S. C., described in plaintiff’s complaint. In their answer the defendants denied that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief sought, and, upon issues being joined the matter was tried by his Honor, Judge J. K. Henry, without a jury, July, 1927, who, after taking and considering the testimony offered in the case, decided the case adversely to the plaintiff’s contention, refused the injunction and other relief prayed for in plaintiff’s complaint, and ordered the complaint dismissed. From the said order issued in the cause by his Honor, Judge Henry, and entry of judgment thereon, the plaintiff has appealed to this Court, upon grounds stated in plaintiff’s exceptions, to which we shall hereinafter advert.

The facts alleged in plaintiff’s complaint pertinent to the appeal, stated in substance, are as follows:

■ That the plaintiff, Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, is a railroad corporation, operating a railroad $nd engaged in interstate commerce, has and operates a line of railroad through the town of Ft. Lawn, S. C.; that the defendants, T. L. McFadden, as intendant, and T. B. Kell, E. Christopher, J. S. Barton, and R. L. Gooch, as wardens, constitute the mayor and town council of the said Town of Ft. Lawn, a municipal corporation under the laws of this state; that on July 28, 1923, .the said town, by its town council, enacted the following ordinance:

“State of South Carolina, Chester County.
“Whereas, State Highway No. 9 of the State Highway Commission’s road system, leading through the Town of Fort Lawn, Chester County, S. C., crosses the Seaboard Air Line’s Catawba Valley Line of Railroad on an overhead bridge in the said town, which the said Railroad Company is required to keep in good and sufficient repair for all public travel over the said highway in the Town of Fort Lawn, S. c.
“Whereas, the State Highway Commission of South Carolina proposes to change the location of the said High *153 way No. 9, through the 'Town of Fort Lawn, S. C., and locate it so that it will cross said railway line on an overhead bridge some distance further north of the present site, and abandon the present site, and
“Whereas, the town council of Fort Lawn, S. C., is willing to have the said road and bridge re-located by the State Highway Commission, and to have the said railroad company to abandon the present bridge as soon as it made satisfactory agreement with the State Highway Commission regarding the erection and maintenance of the proposed new bridge.
“Now, in consideration of the above premises and the proper agreement on the part of the Seaboard Air Line Railway being made with the State Highway Commission relative to the erection and maintenance of the proposed new bridge on said Highway No. 9, through Fort Lawn, S. C., the town council of Fort Lawn, S. C., does hereby consent and agree to allow the said railway company to abandon the present bridge and release the said railway company from its present obligation to maintain the same as soon as proposed new bridge shall have been erected and put in proper condition for public travel over the said road and bridge according to the agreement with and the specifications of the State Highway Commission.
“In witness whereof the proper officers have caused the name and seal of the Town of Fort Lawn, S. C., to be affixed hereto this the 28th day of July, 1923.
“Town oe Fort Lawn (L. S.)
“By T. L. McFadden, Mayor.
“- Clerk.
“Signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of D. Ferguson, R. W. Wilks.”

In plaintiff’s complaint it is further alleged that, in pursuance to the terms of the said alleged ordinance, the County of Chester, the South Carolina State Highway Department, and the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, August 9, *154 1923, entered into a contract for the erection of a new bridge on the Calhoun highway over the said railroad tract of the plaintiff in the said Town of Ft. Lawn, and the cost of the construction of said bridge was to be borne by the State Highway Department and by the plaintiff; that subsequent to the making of the said alleged contract, the County of Chester, pursuant to said agreement, erected at the new location a substantial bridge, and that the same was opened for traffic as a part of State Highway No. 9, known as Calhoun Highway, in January, 1926; that thereafter, about April 20, 1926, after the terms of said contract were complied with by the plaintiff, the plaintiff sent its employees to said town to remove the old bridge which, under the contract, was to be abandoned by the said town and which the plaintiff was to remove, and which had become unsafe for use by the public ; that when the employees of the plaintiff attempted to remove the said bridge, the town authorities of said town, Ft. Lawn, interfered and threatened to arrest all of the said employees, exhibited warrants for that purpose, and prevented the removal of said structure, notwithstanding the fact that prior to the construction of the new bridge the town authorities of said town and citizens thereof had urged the plaintiff to build a new bridge and to straighten the alignment of said highway through the said town, and, also, had agreed to the removal of the old bridge prior to the passage of the said alleged ordinance; that plaintiff has fully performed its part of said contract, and since June, 1926, has continuously endeavored to get the town authorities of the said town to allow it to peaceably remove the said old structure, but that such authority has been refused.

In their answer the defendants admitted that the plaintiff, as a railroad corporation, own and operate the line of railroad in question, and that the defendants, except T. L. McFadden and E. Christopher, constitute the mayor and town council of the said Town of Ft. Lawn, but denied the passage of the alleged ordinance, and denied the other material *155 allegations of the complaint, and alleged in their answer that the bridge referred to in the complaint as the “Old Bridge” across the said railroad track of the plaintiff leading into said town, Ft. Lawn, has been in existence “for more than twenty years and was erected by the plaintiff when the railroad was built through the Town of Fort Lawn in order to render it possible to travel a road which had been open to the public for a hundred years or more; that the closing of the said

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.E. 809, 156 S.C. 147, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaboard-air-line-ry-co-v-mcfadden-sc-1930.