State v. Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad

86 Miss. 172
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 86 Miss. 172 (State v. Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad, 86 Miss. 172 (Mich. 1905).

Opinion

Truly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is prosecuted from a decree dissolving an injunction. The bill of complaint filed by the appellants sought to enjoin the Gulf & Chicago Railway Company, the successor by consolidation of the Gulf & Chicago Railroad Company and the Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad Company, as the lessee of the Gulf & Chicago Railway Company, the consolidated corporation, from constructing and operating its line of railway without passing through the town of Pontotoc, the county site of Pontotoc county, in this state, as required by sec. 181 of the constitution, and sought also to prevent the appellees from abandoning a portion of the railroad formerly operated by the Gulf & Chicago Railroad Company, which ran to, and upon which had previously been maintained a depot at, the town of Pontotoc. The prayer of the bill of complaint was that an injunction should issue against the said railroad companies, who were made defendants, “temporarily restraining them, and each of them, from constructing and [183]*183operating the said proposed line of railroad, passing within three miles of the said county seat, without passing through the same, and upon final hearing that they be perpetually enjoined from building and operating a railroad along said route, and commanding them to broaden and standardize the said line of railroad extending into the said county seat of Pontotoc county, as it has been established for years, and as the said consolidated corporation agreed to do from the point north of the said county seat from which said narrow-gauge line has been abandoned, and that the said defendants be required to operate the said line into the said county seat as a part of the line built and to be built from Decatur, Mississippi, to Jackson, Tennessee, and that they be commanded to extend the line on through the said county seat, as required by said sec. 187 of the constitution of the state of Mississippi, and as required by law, and by the order of the complainant, the Mississippi Railroad Commission.” This bill was filed and injunction issued on the 2d day of August, 1904. Answer was duly filed; motion to dissolve on bill, answer, and proof was heard; the injunction was dissolved; and from that ruling of the chancellor this appeal is prosecuted in order “to settle the principles of the cause.”

Por many years prior to the institution of this suit the Gulf & Chicago. Railroad Company had operated a line of narrow-gauge railroad from the town of Pontotoc, in the state of Mississippi, to the town of Middleton, in the state of Tennessee. That road ran in a northerly direction, traversing-a portion of the county of Pontotoc and the counties of Union and Tippah, crossing the state line at or near the town of Broomfield, in the county of Tippah. This road was in active operation, carrying both freight and passengers, at the date of the incorporation under the laws of this state of the Gulf & Chicago Railway Company. This latter road, by proclamation of the governor, was, in due form, incorporated on the 17th day of April, 1903, and the incorporators were by such authorization em[184]*184powered “to organize a railroad company with tbe terminal points of said road at Decatur, in tbe state of Mississippi, ánd Jackson, in tbe state of Tennessee; tbe said line of railroad to extend in a northerly direction from tbe town of Decatur, in tbe county of Newton, passing through the counties of Nesho-ba, Winston, Choctaw, Webster, Chickasaw, Pontotoc, Union, and Tippah into the state of Tennessee, crossing tbe state line at or near tbe town of Broomfield, in tbe county of Tippah.” Subsequently an application was made to tbe railroad commission of tbe state of Mississippi, asking for its consent and approval to tbe consolidation of tbe Gulf & Chicago Railway Company, a Mississippi corporation, tbe Gulf & Chicago Railway Company, a Tennessee corporation, and tbe Gulf & Chicago Railroad Company, a corporation existing under tbe laws of both states. In this petition for permission to consolidate, it was averred that “tbe lines of railroad owned and operated and controlled and projected by tbe constituted companies composing said consolidation were and are in no ways parallel or competing lines. On tbe contrary, tbe consolidation was effected for tbe single purpose of furthering tbe general plan of building and equipping and thereafter operating a single-track, standard-gauge line of railroad, extending in a general northerly direction from tbe town of Decatur, Mississippi, to tbe city of Jackson, Tennessee. Tbe present constructed narrow-gauge railroad, acquired from tbe Gulf & Chicago Railroad Company, and running between tbe towns of Pontotoc, Mississippi, and Middleton, Tennessee, will be broadened and standardized, and will thereupon become a part of tbe line of railroad operated by tbe consolidated corporation.” Acting on this representation, tbe commission passed an order permitting and approving tbe proposed consolidation of tbe corporations, tbe order reciting that “it appearing to tbe satisfaction of tbe commission that said corporations do not own or operate parallel or competing lines of railroad.” After tbe consolidation was consummated in pursuance of this permission, tbe [185]*185Gulf & Chicago Railway Company, the corporation resulting from the consolidation, leased the entire property, including the narrow-gauge railroad which it had acquired from the. Gulf & Chicago Railroad Company, to the Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad Company. Thereupon the said lessee began the construction of a line of railroad .over the route mapped out by the charter of its lessor from Decatur, Mississippi, to Jackson, Tennessee. When this line approached, but before actually reaching, the town of Pontotoc from the north, it diverged from the line of narrow-gauge railroad which was then in actual operation, abandoning a mile or more of that line, with the intention of following another, and, according to the testimony of its locating engineer, a cheaper and more feasible, route. This projected line, as surveyed, left the original town of Pontotoc over a mile distant, but traversed an extension of said town, and located a depot on the new route, three-fourths of a mile distant from the site of the old depot, but still within the corporate limits of the town as they then existed. When it became manifest that the intention of the railroad company was to abandon this portion of the narrow-gauge line, and that its new line, while passing within three miles of the original town of Pontotoc, would not pass through its corporate limits, this proceeding was instituted by the appellants, praying for an injunction, which was granted, forbidding the construction of the new road over the projected route, and further asking that on final hearing a mandatory injunction should be issued, compelling the broadening and standardizing of the narrow-gauge line, as set forth in the petition for consolidation, and forbidding the abandonment of any portion thereof. Upon the hearing of the motion to dissolve, much proof was taken tending to establish, on the one hand, that the location of the depot upon the original site on the narrow-gauge line of the Gulf & Chicago Railroad Company at the town of Pontotoc, which had been destroyed by fire, and not rebuilt, in flagrant disregard and defiance of the order [186]

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Bluebook (online)
86 Miss. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mobile-jackson-kansas-city-railroad-miss-1905.