
    LEWIS H. SMITH, Respondent, v. THE GOLD AND STOCK TELEGRAPH COMPANY and THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY, Appellants.
    
      Duty of a corporation, engaged, in a public business, to sene all impartially — when, regulations established by it will be held void as unreasonable — when an injunction will be granted although damages might be recovered in an action at law.
    
    In this action, brought by the plaintiff, a broker, to restrain the defendant, the Gold and Stock Telegraph Company, from removing from his office a “stock ticker,” which had been placed therein by it under a contract by which the plaintiff was required to pay a rental of ten dollars per month, a temporary injunction was granted restraining the defendant from so doing during the pendency of the action.
    
      Held, that the order should be affirmed.
    That the defendant, being engaged in a business public in its nature, it must serve the public impartially and render equal service to all those who complied with such reasonable regulations as might be prescribed by it.
    By the contract under which the ticker was put in the plaintiff’s office, he agreed that the defendant might discontinue its service, without notice, whenever, in its judgment, the plaintiff had violated any of the conditions of the contract.
    
      Held, that this was not a reasonable regulation and afforded no defense to this action, nor was the fact that an action at law for damages would lie in the plaintiff’s favor a defense thereto.
    Appeal from an order made at the Kings County Special Term continuing a temporary in junction during the pendency of this action.
    The action was brought by the plaintiff to restrain the defendants from removing from his office a stock * ticker ” or reporting instrument maintained and operated by the defendant, the Gold and Stock Telegraph Company, and from doing or failing to do any act which would in any way interfere with the receipt by plaintiff of the quotations of the New York Stock Exchange.
    The complaint, in addition to the formal allegations, avers that the Gold and Stock Telegraph Company placed one of its instruments in plaintiff’s office, in consideration of which plaintiff agreed to pay a rental of ten dollars per month. By one of the clauses of the contract the plaintiff agreed that the company might forthwith discontinue its service, without notice, whenever, in its judgment, any breach of the conditions of the contract should have been made by him. The complaint averred that irreparable damage to plaintiff would ensue upon a discontinuance of the quotation service and the removal of the stock “ ticker,” and that the defendants threaten and intend such discontinuance and removal.
    
      Dillon- ds Swayne, for the appellants.
    
      J. W. Hawes, for the respondent.
   Pi.ATT, J. :

It has been settled ¡for hundreds of years that an inn-keeper is bound to receive the guest who applies for accommodations. So is it well settled that a common carrier must receive and transport goods offered him for that purpose impartially and without discrimination between parties applying.

These obligations do not rest on contract, but on the ground that when one is engaged in a business, public in its nature, he must, if public policy requires, serve the public impartially. The occasions for the application of this familiar principle are by no means diminished by the formation of corporations which carry on a great part of the business of the country. And in applying these rules to a corporation, the charter of the corporation is not solely to be consulted in arriving at the measure of its obligations to the public. When the charter provides that a corporation shall engage in some specified public occupation, no doubt a reference thereto will be an easy way to establish its obligations to perform such service. But we do not accede to the doctrine that when engaged in a business concerning the performance of which its charter is silent, a corporation is freed from the obligations which ordinarily attach to a natural person engaging in such occupation.

Had defendants in the present action answered that collecting and distributing commercial intelligence being foreign to the objects for which they are incorporated, they had in consequence abandoned that branch of their business and withdrawn their tickers ” from all offices except the plaintiff’s, we should not hold that they could be compelled to carry on the business for his benefit. But so long as collecting and supplying quotations is carried on by them, as it is conceded to be at present, they should render equal and impartial service to those who comply with reasonable regulations.

What regulations are reasonable may not in all cases be easy to determine. But there need be no hesitation in saying that the clause in their contract permitting them to discontinue the service when in their judgment a breach of conditions has been had, is not a reasonable regulation and affords no defense to this action. No man can be judge in his own case, and to justify defendants in refusing to perform service, there must be a reason that the court can pronounce sufficient.

Nor is it a defense to the action that an action at law for damages would lie in plaintiff’s favor. It is easy to see that accurate proof of the amount of damage sustained would be impracticable ; and where a right is clear, the fact that a defendant is able and willing to pay for the liberty of infringing upon it, is not a very satisfactory ground for refusing an injunction.

The order continuing the injunction must be affirmed, with costs and disbursements.

Present — BaeNAEd, P. J., Dveman and Peatt, JJ

Order affirmed, with costs and.disbursements.  