Wunderlich v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co.
This text of 79 So. 80 (Wunderlich v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a rule nisi, requiring the railway and light company (hereafter called the company) and the commissioner of public [627]*627utilities of New Orleans to show cause why they should not be enjoined from changing the routing of certain of the street ears. Plaintiffs, of whom there are seven individuals and business corporations, appear as citizens and taxpayers, and complain that change has been made without legal authority, in disregard of the contract between the city and the company, and in violation of the Constitutions of the state and the United States, and they pray for an injunction, prohibitory and mandatory, restraining the parties named from changing or destroying the contract in question, restraining the company from operating the Peters avenue cars down Dryades street from Julia, as it is now doing, and commanding it to operate them as heretofore and in accordance with its franchise, from Dryades and Julia streets, out Julia to St. Charles, down St. Charles to Canal, out Canal to the river front, and back, on Canal street to Carondelet, and further commanding it to remove the switch, put in by it at Canal and Carondelet streets, and restore the Canal street pavement to its former condition.
Tire commissioner and the company move to dismiss the appeal, on the grounds that this court is without jurisdiction ratione materim, for this, to wit: That no ordinance has been declared unconstitutional, and the amount in dispute, and the interests of each of the plaintiffs, does not exceed $2,000; that plaintiffs have taken an appeal to the Court of Appeal, thereby abandoning this appeal ; that the appeal herein is from an interlocutory order which works no irreparable injury.
Considering the grounds thus stated, in inverse order as compared with the statement:
In the instant case, plaintiffs pray for no moneyed judgment, and, although they allege that they are each interested to an extent exceeding $2,000, that allegation is not sustained by proof, nor do we think it susceptible of proof.
It is therefore ordered that this appeal be dismissed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
79 So. 80, 143 La. 626, 1918 La. LEXIS 1503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wunderlich-v-new-orleans-ry-light-co-la-1918.