Loíza Sugar Co. v. Hernaiz
Loíza Sugar Co. v. Hernaiz
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Petition for a preliminary injunction. After filing the complaint in an action for the acknowledgment of a servitude brought against Luis Hernaiz and José Alhandoz, the Loiza .Sugar Co., the plaintiff, moved the court for an order restraining the defendants from interfering with the plaintiff in the use of a railroad that the plaintiff had constructed over the lands of the defendants for the transportation of sugar cane. The court sustained the motion and set a day for hearing the parties. Thereupon defendant Alhandoz filed a motion for the dismissal of the petition. The court overruled that motion and after hearing the parties and the evidence granted the preliminary injunction prayed for and fixed the amount of the bond to be given by the plaintiff.
Defendant Alhandoz appealed to this court and assigned seven errors in his brief.
In arguing the first assignment the appellant contends that the petition for the injunction should have been denied (a) because it was not duly verified, and (5) because it did not state facts sufficient to determine the right of the petitioner to the relief prayed for.
The pertinent parts of the affidavit read as follows:
“That I have read the preceding petition for an injunction and know its contents, and that the facts alleged in paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 are known to me of my own personal knowledge, the facts alleged in paragraph 4 being known to me on information received from persons whom I consider truthful.”
The appellant alleges that the affidavit does not comply with the requirements of section 118 of the Code of Civil Procedure, because the affiant does not swear that the allegations are true.
The lack of facts alleged by the appellant consists in that the petition does not aver that the petitioner is without an adequate remedy in law, and in that irreparable damage does not result from the facts stated.
In the petition for an injunction it was alleged succinctly that the plaintiff was the owner of the sugar factory and of a railroad system for the transportation of sugar cane to the factory; that the defendants were the owners of a certain property over which the plaintiff’s railroad was constructed in 1893 under a contract duly entered into with the former lessees and ratified by the present owners of the said property; that on a certain date one of the defendants objected to the operation of the railroad and prevented the plaintiff from hauling approximately 1,500 tons of sugar cane ready to be ground, and that the transportation of the said sugar cane “by any other route could be done only with considerable increase in the cost of hauling, great delay and serious loss in the amount and condition of the said sugar cane, all of which will cause necessarily considerable damage to the petitionex*, the compensatory amount of which is very difficult to estimate, assuming that such compensation would afford adequate relief.”
It is not necesasry to allege literally that “the party is without an adequate remedy in law” in petitioning for an
"The term ‘irreparable’ has acquired in the law of injunctions a meaning which, perhaps, is not qúite in keeping with the derivation of the word or its literal 'signification. There are injuries incapable of being repaired which a court of equity does not regard as irreparable. And, on the other hand, there are injuries that may be repaired which it will, nevertheless, treat as irreparable, if the person inflicting or threatening them be insolvent or unable to respond in damages. As ordinarily used the term means that which cannot be repaired, restored, or adequately compensated for in money, or where the compensation cannot be safely measured. ” 14 R. C. L. 346.
“When irreparable injury is spoken of, it is not meant that the injury is beyond the possibility of repair, or beyond the possibility of compensation in damage's, but it must be of such constant and frequent occurrence that no fair or reasonable redress can be had therefor in a court of law.” 6 Encyc. of U. S. Sup. Ct. Rep. 1041-3.
The other assignments refer to the admission and weighing of the evidence. A clear statement and thorough discussion of it would lengthen this opinion unnecessarily. It raises only one question really worthy of consideration, and that is the duration of Hernaiz & Co., with whom the contract for the construction of the railroad was entered into or by whom it was ratified, but as its decision perhaps would prejudge the final decision of the action, we shall refrain from considering it. The whole matter shows conclusively that the district court did not abuse its discretional power, and it is known that the granting of a temporary injunction lies within the sound discretion of the court, which should be exercised in favor of the party who might be the most injured. Morfi v. Fajardo Development Co.,
It seems proper to add that defendant Hernaiz took no part in the action and did not appeal from the order granting the injunction, and that the other defendant, the appellant, in discussing some of the errors assigned, insists in claiming that the writ should not have been issued because it was not proved that Hernaiz objected to the operation of the railroad.
By virtue of all of the foregoing the order appealed from must be
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.