Vason v. South Carolina Railroad

42 Ga. 631
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 Ga. 631 (Vason v. South Carolina Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vason v. South Carolina Railroad, 42 Ga. 631 (Ga. 1871).

Opinion

McCay, J.

1. That the use of steam engines to draw trains of cars through Washington street, in the city of Augusta, thus connecting the various railroads entering the city at different points, is authorized by the contracts and ordinances of the city is not disputed. Indeed, it is too plain for dispute. The only question there can be on this point is the authority of the city to do this. It seems to us that this too is very plain. The Act of February 15th, 1856, authorizes the City Council to permit the connection of all railroads in the city, by common tracks, depots, or otherwise, on such terms and conditions as may be fixed by the City Council. The Act incorporating the Columbia and Augusta Railroad Company, authorizes it to construct a road to be used with steam, animal or other power, crossing the Savannah river and connecting with the Georgia Railroad: Provided, the consent [635]*635of the city authorities of Augusta be first obtained. And the Act of October 26th, 1870, in express terms, ratifies and confirms these several contracts and ordinances, by which the City Council has at various times and by various contracts and ordinances, permitted and sold this right to use the street railroad in the manner complained of.

But even without this, assuming the chartered rights of these roads to connect through the city, much might be said in favor of the right of the City Council, under its general power over the streets and over nuisances in the city, etc., to allow the connection in this special manner, at least so far as to purge the act, when done, of any quality of a public nuisance, subject to abatement.

2. Without doubt, the use of steam locomotives, puffing, blowing, whistling, clattering and crushing through the streets of a city or along a public highway in the country, comes within the definition of a public nuisance. It is an annoyance to the citizens in general. It is dangerous to human life, and requires constant care and watchfulness from all who are in the vicinity of it to keep free from damage from it. But there are two kinds of nuisances: public and private. A public nuisance damages all persons who come within the sphere of its operations, though it may vary in its effects upon individuals. A private nuisance is one limited in its effects to one or a few individuals.” Revised Code, 2946. For the latter, the persons injured have a right of action for damages. For the former, no such right exists, unless there be special damages to one in which the public do not participate. Revised Code, section 2947. The reason for this distinction is an obvious one. The public is the re-dresser of its own wrongs. What the public suffers from, the public tnay punish, or not punish, at its discretion. There may come more good than evil from it, and the public may see fit to permit it. But a private nuisance stands on a different footing. Each individual injured has his right of redress for the damages he has received. And even as to pub-[636]*636.lie nuisances which give special damages to individuals, in which the public do not participate, it is not fair for the public to put its burdens upon a few without compensation. Hence, for the special damage, the person injured has his redress. Revised Code, section 2947.

The proceeding now before the Court is not an action for the damages which any one has received from a nuisance. It is an effort to abate the use made of this railroad as a nuisance to the public. Were this an action for damages, we might discuss the meaning of that clause of section 2949 of the Revised Code, which declares that “ the fact that the act done is otherwise lawful does not keep it from being a nuisance.” But very clearly the reference there is to private nuisances, or to such public nuisances as individuals may receive special damage from, in which the public do not participate. "Very much might be said'in favor of the doctrine, that even the Legislature cannot, by a law, authorize an act so as to deprive the citizen of an action for the special damage he receives from it, unless he be otherwise compensated. But in the case before us, Mr. Vason appears in behalf of the public. Under the facts in the record, if this is a nuisance at all, it is a public nuisance. He has so attacked it. Whatever damages it causes are “ damages to all persons who come within the sphere of its operations, though it may vary in its effects on individuals.” Revised Code, section 2946.

By section 4478 of the Revised Code, “any person who shall erect, or continue, after notice to abate, any nuisance which tends to annoy the community, or injure the health of the citizens in general, or to corrupt the public morals, is indictable, and may be punished by fine and imprisonment.” How the nuisances subject to abatement as public nuisances, are described in almost the same language: “ Any nuisance which tends to the immediate annoyance of the citizens in general, is manifestly injurious to the public health and safety, or tends greatly to corrupt the morals and manners of the people may be abated,” etc. Such a nuisance as may be [637]*637abated as a public nuisance, it is an indictable offense to erect, or to continue after notice.

A crime is the violation of a public law: Revised Code, section 4227. Can that be a violation of a public law which a public law has specially authorized ? Will the public abate, as a public nuisance, an erection which the public, by a statute, has expressly permitted to be erected ? Whatever wrong there is in an act, which makes it a public nuisance, is a wrong to the public, and it is absurd to say that a thing is a public wrong which the public has, by special law, permitted to be done. And such is the uniform current of authorities, both in England and America: Rex vs. Pease, 4 Barn. & Adol., 19; 9 Barb., 350; 18 Barb., 222; 15 Barb., 193; 10 Barb., 26; 13 Barb., 646; 6 Barb., 313; Roscoe’s Crim. Ev., 659; Bacon’s Ab. Tit. Nuis, A.; 8 Gray, 197; 11 Richardson, 114. See, also, Hilliard on Torts, 1 volume, 550, 551; Sherman & Redfield on Negligence, 416. The only reply that can be piade to this list of authorities is, that these cases refer to an indictment for a nuisance, and this is, in the main, true. But our proceeding to abate is only another mode of doing what it was one of the principal objects of an indictment, at common law, to do, to-wit: to abate the nuisance. It was a part of the judgment of the Court, on conviction of the offender, if the nuisance was continuous, to direct the sheriff to abate the nuisance: Wharton’s Amer. Crim. Law, sec. 2369; 2 Ralls’ Ab., 84, sec. 15; 2 Burns’ Jus., 222; 1 Hawk’s Bl. Cro., 365; Taggart vs. The Commonwealth, 9 Harris, 527.

Indeed, there was no other way by which a public nuisance could be abated, by process of law. There was an old writ, called an assize of nuisance, by which a private nuisance against a freehold might be abated, but as to public nuisances, an indictment was the only remedy, except by the act of a person taking the law in his own hands: 2 Bouv. Inst., 577, 579. Our statute, defining an abatable nuisance, defines an indictable nuisance, save that it adds “ immediate,” [638]

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ga. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vason-v-south-carolina-railroad-ga-1871.