Burrus v. City of Columbus , 105 Ga. 42 ( 1898 )


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  • Fish, J.

    At the trial the case was heard by the court upon the petition, demurrers, answers, and the evidence. Each, of the several defendants having in its answer denied the charges of combination and confederacy, and no evidence being offered in support of the same, the Empire Mills Co. having in its answer denied that it intended to lay the side-track in question and the plaintiffs offering no evidence to substantiate this charge, and the Central of Georgia Railway Co. having admitted that it intended to build this track, and that at the time of the service of the temporary restraining order it had actually begun to do so, the real issue at the interlocutory hearing was between-the plaintiffs and the railway company. It is unnecessary to consider whether or not there is a misjoinder of parties defendant in the case; for, in our opinion, in no view of the case, as made by the petition or the evidence, were the plaintiffs entitled to an injunction. It is perfectly clear, from the evidence, that the railway company is duly authorized by the law to build and operate the side-track in question.- The fee to the streets in the city of Columbus is in the State. Dawson’s Compilation, 470, 474; Kavanagh v. Mobile & Girard R. Co., 78 Ga. 271. By an act of the General Assembly of this State the Mobile & Girard Railroad Co. was authorized to construct, maintain, and operate this side-track. Acts of 1890-91, p. 254. *45The evidence shows that, under and by virtue of a regular judicial sale, had in accordance with a decree of the United States circuit court for the middle district of Alabama, the decree of the court confirming such sale, and a deed in pursuance thereof, executed on the 7th.day of March, 1896, the Central of Georgia Railway Co. became the owner of all the property, rights, and franchises of the Mobile & Girard Railroad Co. The right to construct, maintain and. operate this side-track was a franchise of the Mobile & Girard Railroad Co., and passed to and became a franchise of the Central of Georgia Railway Co., by virtue of the judicial sale and the decree of the court confirming the same. New Orleans &c. R. Co. v. Delamore, 114 U. S. 609; People v. Kerr, 37 Barb. 393. It is to be presumed, in the absence of any allegations or evidence to the contrary, that the defendant railway company is proceeding to avail itself of the rights conferred by this franchise in a legal manner and in compliance with the requirements of the law. It is, therefore, clear that it can not be deprived of these rights by injunction. To hold that, upon such allegations as are contained in the plaintiffs’ petition and such evidence as was offered in its support, the railway company can be prevented from building and operating this track, would be to hold that a court can destroy the lawful franchise of a railroad company, in order to prevent the consequential damages which will ensue to private property by reason of its exercise. Such is not the law. It is true that the legislature can not confer upon a railroad company the power to take or damage private property without compensation ; but no such question is made in the case at bar. The law applicable to. cases where property is taken or damaged by the exercise of the power of eminent domain is not the law that is invoked in this case. So far as can be ascertained from the meager allegations of the petition and the scanty facts contained in the evidence offered to sustain it, the plaintiffs seem to be proceeding upon the theory that the laying and operating of the side-track in the street upon which their property is located will be a, nuisance which will subject their property to irreparable injury, and that they are therefore entitled to an injunction which will perpetually prohibit the railway company from con*46structing the track. . But that which the law authorizes to be-done, if done as the law authorizes it to be done, can not be a. nuisance. 1 High on Injunctions, §767, and cases cited; Hinchman v. Paterson Horse Railroad Co., 2 C. E. Green, 75; Hogencamp v. Same, Ib. 83; Elliott on Roads and Streets, 484, and cases cited. See also Davis v. East Tenn. Ry Co., 87 Ga. 611; Savannah R. Co. v. Woodruff, 86 Ga. 98, 99.

    2. But aside from this, we do not think that the allegations of the petition or the facts developed by the evidence were such as to require the grant of an injunction, and consequently there was no abuse of discretion in denying it. It is well established that the mere allegation of irreparable injury is not sufficient to authorize the granting of an injunction, but facts must be alleged upon which the charge of irreparable injury is predicated, in order that the court may be satisfied as to-the nature of the injury. 1 High on Injunctions, §34, and cases cited. In 10 Encyclopsedia of Pleading and Practice, 954, the rule is thus stated: “A general allegation that the acts-apprehended will be irreparable, unattended by such a statement of facts as enables the court to see that such will be the result, is insufficient. The pleader must not content himself' with a mere averment of his conclusions, but must show how the irreparable injury apprehended is to arise, by giving a full and detailed statement of the facts, the nature and condition of his-property, etc., so as to enable the court to determine the necessity for an injunction.” In Bailey v. Simpson, 53 Ga. 525, this court said: “The allegation that, without injunction, the complainant’s injury would be irreparable, is of no value, for a state of facts.is not presented from which such injury is likely to accrue.” Whether the damage is or is not irreparable, is a conclusion of law which, the court draws from the facts and circumstances as set forth in the petition. Justices v. Griffin, 11 Ga. 246. Hence, “facts must be set forth, 'specifications of the injury made, so that an intelligent mind may understand how and to what extent there will be injury.” Coast Line R. Co. v. Cohen, 50 Ga. 462. If it is necessary for the pleadings-to set forth the facts, so as- to enable the court to determine the necessity for an injunction, most assuredly it is necessary that-*47the evidence should do so. As to Threatt, one of the two plain-' tiffs in the case, the evidence did not even sustain the allegation that he owned property upon' the street in question. Only two witnesses testified for the plaintiffs, and there was nothing in the testimony introduced by the defendants which tended to strengthen the plaintiffs’ case. One of these witnesses, Kincaid, simply testified that “he was a citizen of the City of Columbus and that he lived upon Ninth street, and that the placing of the track upon the said street would be to great damage1 to property-owners and would result in irreparable loss to the-property-owners on Ninth street.” It will be seen that he stated a mere opinion of his, without stating any fact upon which he predicated -it, except the -isolated fact of the placing of the track upon the street, and that his conclusion, that irreparable loss would result from the placing of the track there, is applied, indiscriminately, to all the property-owners upon that street. Olearly his evidence was of no value to the plaintiffs. Burrus, the other witness and one of the plaintiffs, testified that “he was a citizen of Oolumbus and that he lived on Ninth street in said city; that he was the owner of and possessed of property on Ninth street; that the track proposed to be laid was immediately opposite his residence and in front of his residence, and that the placing of the track there would be to his great damage and be an irreparable loss.” While he stated that he owned and possessed property on Ninth street, he did not state any particular whatever as to the nature or condition of this property. So far as appears from his evidence, he may or may not own the property which he occupies as a residence. Granting, however, that he really owns the property upon which he resides, how the track is to be constructed in the vicinity of this property, what are the particulars in which it will affect this property or the use of the same, how near the track would be to his residence, and, in short, how and in what way it “would be to his great damage and be an irreparable loss,” are all matters which are left to conjecture. The_ facts upon which he-bases his conclusion of irreparable loss, as contained in his evidence, are too meager. We do npt think that a court would be authorized to conclude that the mere “placing” of a railroad-*48track, in any manner, anywhere in a street of unknown width, immediately opposite and in front 'of a private residence, which i§ situated at any conceivable distance from the street, would necessarily cause the owner, and occupier of the residence to sustain irreparable damages. The evidence wholly failed to present to the court a state of facts from which it could intelligently determine whether or not irremediable damages would . ensue to the property of this plaintiff, if the railway company constructed the track in question upon Ninth street. If, therefore, there had been no evidence in the case except that offered by the plaintiffs, the court below would not have abused its discretion by refusing the injunction applied for.

    Judgment affirmed.

    All the Justices concurring, except Little, J\, disqualified.