Wallamet Iron Bridge Co. v. Hatch

19 F. 347, 9 Sawy. 643, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2048
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 F. 347 (Wallamet Iron Bridge Co. v. Hatch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallamet Iron Bridge Co. v. Hatch, 19 F. 347, 9 Sawy. 643, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2048 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Deady, J.

This is a bill of review, filed May 27, 1883, and brought to reverse the final decree given in this court on October 22, 1.881, in a suit between the parties hereto, commenced by the de[348]*348fendants herein, on January 3, 1881, to obtain an injunction restraining the plaintiff herein from further constructing a bridge across the Wallamet river, at the foot of Morrison street, in Portland, upon the ground that such a bridge as said plaintiff was then engaged in building was an unnecessary and unlawful hindrance and obstruction to the navigation of said river,—particularly with seagoing vessels,—because of the insufficient character and improper position of the piers and the lack of width in the draw; that said bridge would be a public nuisance, injurious, and damaging to the rights and interests of defendants herein, as the owners and lessees of valuable wharf property in Portland, a short distance above the site of said bridge, and contrary to' the act of congress of February 14, 1859, (11 St. 383,) which provides “that all the navigable waters of said state [Oregon] shall be common highways.” An application was made to the district judge on the bill, and affidavits, and counter-affidavits for a provisional injunction, and after a hearing, in which the corporation maintained its right to build the bridge in question, under and jby authority of an act of the legislature of Oregon, of October 18, 1878, authorizing the Portland Bridge Company, a corporation formed under the laws of Oregon, or its assigns, to build a bridge, “for all purposes of travel and commerce, ” across the Wallamet river, between Portland and East Portland, “at such point or location on the banks of said river” as it might select, “on or above Morrison street, of said city of Portland:” “provided that there shall be placed and maintained in said bridge a good and sufficient draw of not less than 100 feet in the clear, in width, of a passage-way, and so constructed and maintained as not to injuriously impede and obstruct the free navigation of said river, but so as to allow the easy and reasofiable passage of vessels through said bridge.”

. On March 28, 1881, an order was made continuing the application for an injunction until the April term, and until the circuit judge should be present; and restraining the corporation in the mean time as prayed for in the bill. Hatch v. Wallamet I. B. Co. 7 Sawy. 127; [S. C. 6 Fed. Rep. 326.] On April 11, 1881, the corporation put in its answer to the bill, alleging that it was a corporation duly formed under the laws of Oregon, and the assignee of the Portland Bridge Company aforesaid; and admitted that it was building the bridge, as alleged, under authority of the act of the legislature aforesaid, except that the draw was 105 feet in the clear, instead of 100, and that the piers were sufficient and at right angles with the current; and denied the same was or would be any hindrance or obstruction to the navigation of the river, or any injury to the defendants herein. At the April term the application for a provisional injunction was further heard upon the bill, answer, and further affidavits and counter affidavits, before the circuit and district judge, the counsel for the plaintiff herein then conceding that the law of the case had been correctly [349]*349ruled on tlie former hearing before the district judge, (Hatch v. Wallamet, I. B. Co., supra,) and that tlie only question in the case for the consideration of the court was whether, under the circumstances, the proposed bridge was an unreasonable use of this common highway; and on April 17th an order was made allowing the provisional injunction restraining the corporation, as prayed for in the bill. Hatch v. Wallamet I. B. Co. 7 Sawy. 141; [S. C. 6 Fed. Rep. 781.] Subsequently, the cause was put at issue by the filing of a replication to the answer, and testimony taken by both parties, and at the October term it was finally heard before the circuit judge, who, on October 22,1881, gave a decree therein for the defendants herein, perpetually enjoining the corporation as prayed for in the bill, and also requiring it to remove the material already placed in the river in the construction of the piers. From this decree an appeal was allowed to the plaintiff herein on October 22, 1883.

An application was made for leave to file the bill of review, without first performing the decree requiring plaintiff therein to remove the unfinished piers from the river. The application was based upon a petition or allegation in the bill, stating the grounds thereof. Upon notice to the adverse party it was heard and allowed upon the ground that the performance of the decree, in this respect, would involve large expense and the destruction, so far, of the subject of the litigation, so that if the decree is reversed for error, the plaintiff herein will, nevertheless, suffer an irremediable loss, as in the case of the cancellation of a bond in obedience toa decree. Story Eq. Pl. § 406; Davis v. Speiden, 104 U. S. 83. But I think the better method of making the application is by a separate petition for that purpose, against which the adverse party may show cause and the matter be fully heard and determined thereon. Tlie right to file the bill may depend upon a question of fact not determined or affected by the proceedings or decree in the case, as the pecuniary ability of the party to pay a given sum of money, and therefore the application should be made in such manner as will best enable the parties to be fully heard in the premises. The rule requiring the performance of the decree is said to be “administrative” rather than “jurisdictional,” and therefore a bill filed without such performance or leave would give the court jurisdiction to review the decree; and if the adverse party did not move to strike it from the files, he would be held to have waived the objection. Davis v. Speiden, supra, 85.

The defendants herein demur to the bill, for that there are no errors in the record, nor any sufficient matter alleged in the same, to require a reversal of the decree. The bill contains an assignment of errors, 11 in number, most of which are predicated upon the reasons given in the opinion of the court allowing the provisional injunction, rather than the decree itself, and all but one are simply variations of the allegation that the court erred in deciding that the act of congress of February 14, 1859, was in any degree a limitation or re[350]*350straint upon the power of the state to obstruct or authorize the obstruction of the navigation of the river, by the construction of a bridge of any character across the same. The exception is the assignment No. 4, which alleges that the court erred in deciding as a matter of fact that the bridge in question is or will be a nuisance and serious impédiment to the navigation of the rivqr. This' is a proceeding to review the former determination of this case and obtain a reversal of the decree then given therein for errors of law apparent on the face of the record,—the pleadings, proceedings, and decree,— without reference to the evidence in the case. Story, Eq. Pl. § 407; Shelton v. Vankleeck, 106 U. S. 532; [S. C. 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 491.] No question is made but that the allegations of the original bill are sufficient to authorize the decree; and the law presumes that the evidence was sufficient to sustain it.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. 347, 9 Sawy. 643, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallamet-iron-bridge-co-v-hatch-uscirct-1884.