Court Opinion

ID: 4920452
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-22 00:16:59.250873+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:02.490266
License: Public Domain

Browne, C. J.
This is a suit brought by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to restrain and enjoin the corporate authorities of the City of DeFuniak Springs from establishing or .maintaining a crossing over the railroad’s right of way as an extension of Seventh Street, from compelling the railroad to construct, maintain or establish the same.
The bill alleges, among other things, that the City Council of DeFuniak Springs passed an ordinance requiring the Mayor of the city to notify the complainant to establish and maintain a public crossing over Seventh Street, and that it intends to compel the complainant to establish and maintain a crossing over its right of way as an extension of Seventh Street.
The Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad Company orig*29inally owned the land upon which the City of DePuniak Springs now stands. Some time in 1883 the railroad company conveyed this land to T. T. Wright without reservin a right of way, although at this time the railroad was constructed and in operation through this land. Wright conveyed it to the Lake DePuniak Land Company, that laid out the city that is now DePuniak Springs.
The appellee, the Lduisville and Nashville Railroad Company acquired by purchase the Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad, its franchise and rights of way. The railroad runs over the entire length of Baldwin Avenue, a street that extends East and West through the City of DePuniak Springs, dividing the city into two parts. At the points in controversy it runs approximately in the center of the Avenue. It is impossible for the public to go from that part of the city lying on one side of Baldwin Avenue to that part lying on the other side without crossing the tracks and right of way of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company.
Where a railroad is operated over a street that divides the city into two parts so that it is impossible for the public to go from that part of the city lying on one side of the street to that part lying on the other side, without passing over the tracks and right of way of the railroad, the public has a right to cross the railroad tracks and right of way at any point unless prohibited by law, and such crossing by the public is not an appropriation “of private property or right of way in contravention of Article 16, Section 29 of the Constitution of Florida, and the city under its police power for the protection of the railroad and the safety of the public may prohibit the passage over the railroad tracks and right of way by the public except at such points as the city may designate, and may *30require the railroad to provide safe and convenient means of passage at such points. To hold otherwise would be to treat the railroad’s right of way as an impassable wall separating the city into two pai'ts. As was said in Northern Pac. R. Co. v. City of Spokane, 56 Fed. Rep. 915, “To now cut the city in twain by decreeing that the right of way is, in contemplation of law, a wall without gates or passageways, would be the perpetration of a monstrous wrong.”
The public has a right to go from one part of the city to the other, and this right is superior to the right of the railroads to maintain its tracks and operate its train through the city. The City Council has the right in the exercise of a sound discretion to determine at what points the public shall cross the right of way and tracks of the railroad company, and may establish such points as are required for the convenience of the public in the transaction of its business or for such other purposes as are common to the inhabitants of a city.
The decree of the Chancellor granting an injunction and other relief is reversed.
Taylor, Whitfield, Ellis and West, J. J., concur.