62 Pa. 218 | Pa. | 1869
The opinion of the court was delivered,
The bill in this case was filed by the plaintiffs against the respondents, setting forth that they, the plaintiffs, are “ merchants engaged in buying, selling and the transportation of-grain, lumber, coal, salt and other commodities,” and have ■invested largely in the construction of warehouses, cars, siding railroads, and other matters and things suitable and necessary for the transportation of merchandise on the railroad of the company, in accordance with the provisions of the charter of the same, and have been so engaged in the said transportation of merchandise for several years last past, and they charge that the defendants have established a tariff of tolls by which they demand of and from “individuals” rates of toll in excess of four cents per ton per mile, the amount limited in their charter, and' have collected of and from the plaintiffs tolls so in excess of the sums aforesaid allowed to be demanded by their charter; that they, the railroad company, have, in violation of their act of incorporation, engaged in commercial business, buying and selling grain, lumber, coal, &c., and are granting special privileges and greater facilities to their agents in the business than to others; that they collect tolls to an extent greater than are necessary, to enable them to pay dividends of 12 per cent, “of net profits on the capital expended;” and, lastly, that-they refuse to recognise the rights of the complainants to have their cars transported over their road for less tolls than those set forth in their freight tariff, subjecting them to pay the same tolls for freight per ton per mile, in their own cars, that they collect from others for freight carried in the company’s cars. There is no specific prayer for relief in regard to
It is very clearly shown by the master in the case, that there was no community of business between the plaintiffs, while in one particular a common injury to two of them was charged, viz.; to Woodward and Blair, in the alleged excess of charges per ton per mile for their cars passing over and being transported by the defendants on their road. The business of these two plaintiffs was otherwise diverse; the one being a dealer in grain, plaster and salt, and the other in coal and lumber. The third plaintiff was not the owner of any cars, nor a buyer or seller of either of the commodities dealt in by the other two. His business seems to have been that of a forwarder of goods, merchandise, produce, &c., and it is not shown wherein he had been specially injured by any matter charged in the bill, that ought to be redressed. The master has shown no ease for equitable interposition in his favor, nor do I discover any in the testimony. He had no cars, as already said, on the defendants’proad, and was, therefore, not charged excessive tolls, nor had he been engaged in trade, buying and selling commodities, and in this respect interfered with by the company. Even if they had been wrongfully engaged in trade, the individual interest was so essential to his being entitled to intervene, that without it he had no status in court at all, and he was not authorized to redress wrongs to the public, or to other individuals, by proceedings in equity. He therefore had no right individually, as we will show more fully herein, and none to complain that the company were transcending their franchises in the aggregate of tolls they were collecting. It seems to me he was an uninterested party in the case, and as to him, that the bill should have been dismissed: Adams’ Eq. 314; 13 Wright 310.
There was a demurrer to the bill for multifariousness, and for other causes, among them, that the plaintiffs were not the proper parties to intervene to restrain the company in the collection of tolls, amounting, in the aggregate, to a sum which would produce dividends in excess of 12 per cent., even if the fact stood confessed.
It is undoubtedly true, unless it appeared on the face of the bill wherein'there was a private injury to the parties complaining, that the bill as to this was demurrable; as it stands the charge is of an injury common to the whole public — a violation of a public franchise. This was a matter, therefore, for the public to redress, and not for individuals. The rule is well settled, that where the injury is no greater to a plaintiff than to the inhabitants at large, the remedy to redress the subject of complaint is with the public. This principle was applied to the remedy by injunction
As already intimated, there was nothing on the face of the bill which (exhibited a case of mere injury to the plaintiffs from the aggregate sums realized by the company from tolls on their road. This was not averred or charged. The charge is general, that the company have transcended their corporate rights in this particular. The authorities referred to, show very conclusively that the public by its properly constituted officials, is alone competent to redress this wrong if it exist against itself. If these parties might file a bill for this purpose, every other citizen of the Commonwealth might do the same thing, and ignore the constitutional conservators of the public peace and welfare. This would lead to infinite confusion and disorder. The representatives of the public are the proper parties to redress public wrongs or violations of public law, as private parties are to redress their own wrongs. We think the court erred in refusing to sustain the demurrer to this portion of the relief prayed.
As to the demurrer for multifariousness, we agree that it is a difficult point to determine what will constitute multifariousness, especially where the prayer is for injunction exclusively. The various matters alleged or charged against the respondent, are like the counts in a narr., which, if all good, although variant in their contents, but not misjoinders, a judgment on either will be sustained. I see not therefore, why in the less technical process of proceedings in equity, if plaintiffs sustain any charge in their bill, which, if charged singly, would be entitled to be followed by injunction, that the bill should be dismissed for mispleading. In practice it is not so, especially in injunction bills. Several causes of injunction, where there is a privity'between the plaintiffs and defendants, and which co-relate to the same general matter, or spring from a common cause, may undoubtedly be joined. This the authorities sustain. Neither does the charging of two sources of a right by a plaintiff, render the bill liable to the objection of multifariousness: Wel. Eq. Pl. 93, citing 13 Price 478 and McClel. 238, S. c. This goes a step beyond our preceding remark, which was intended only to present the case of a common ground, as being clear of multifariousness. I will not undertake, however, by argument to controvert the position taken on this point, proposing to sustain the conclusion I have arrived at on the question of the multifariousness of this bill, by what I find to be laid
In the case in hand, although the charges in the bill are of distinct matters in a general sense, yet they arise out of the business of the plaintiffs with the defendants. That is to say, the former complain that the latter in their business as a railroad injure them in several ways, which they specify and seek to prove. It can hardly be said, therefore, that the consequences of multifariousness —difference in the pleadings, proofs and decree — exist in this case. The proofs all relate to the management of the road and its effect on the plaintiffs. The decree must be an injunction, for that is the object of the bill, whether it shall contain one or several matters of restraint. Upon the whole we are not convinced that the court below erred in overruling the demurrer for multifariousness; nor in overruling the third and last ground of demurrer, which we will not now specially notice.
The bill of the plaintiffs claims three grounds of injunction •igainst the defendant. One of them we have shown was demurrable, and should have been so held. We hold it to be so now, and it is out of the case. The first of the remaining two, is a prayer to restrain the defendants from demanding and receiving from the plaintiffs, rates of toll “ exceeding four cents per ton per mile” for toll and transportation of freight in the cars of the plaintiffs.
This ground of injunction the master overruled, and was sustained by the learned judge on the authority of Boyle v. The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Co., 4 P. F. Smith 310, applying it to the terms of the charter of the defendant granted by Act of 12th of March 1832, and as unaffected by the 18th section of the Act of 1849. In the 14th section of the Act of 1832, the company is required to permit individuals to place cars on their road, subject to their limitations and restrictions as to construction, &c., for the transportation of passengers, goods, wares and commodities, and to take toll for freight and transportation at the following rates, viz.: “ On all goods, produce, merchandise and commodities transported upon the said railroad and its branches, any sum not exceeding four cents per ton per mile for toll, and three cents per ton per mile for transpoi'tation.” Nothing could be clearer than that there are two subjects of
Another ground of complaint in the bill is, that the company have engaged in commercial business; and are granting, providing and furnishing greater facilities and powers to their agents in said business, than they extend to the plaintiffs and other persons owning cars, and doing business on and over the road, and that this is an injury to the plaintiffs.
The first clause of this charge is out of the case, as the master reports it unsustained by proof. The examination into the testimony shows the entire propriety of this conclusion. As a ground for injunction this was denied by the court, and we need not further remark upon it.
But there is a question presented in the latter clause of this complaint, and that is whether the company are liable to be enjoined for furnishing facilities to their agents in buying and selling “ grain, coal, lumber, salt and other commodities in the county aforesaid.”
If seems to me, that considering the question in the light of the facts, there is nothing in the charter of the company which forbids them allowing their agents the privilege to buy or sell produce while in their employ, and in allowing to them the use of their warehouses or depots in that business. The learned counsel of the defendant in his argument at bar, very satisfactorily showed wherein there was no impropriety in this. If the servants of the company were partly compensated for their services in this concession to them of such privileges, I see nothing wrong in it. The public is not injured by their engaging in the purchase of its produce, nor is anybody injured in the true sense of the term, while it may be that competitors in the business may be at some disadvantage in their competition. But advantage in position in doing business is not unlawful. It is what all seek for, and if one is more fortunate than another, there is no law which will deprive him of the results of his foresight and good luek.
A rule in injunction cases is, that an injunction will not ordinarily be granted under a prayer for general relief, but must be expressly prayed: Hilliard on Inj. p. 43. And it seems to be settled, that whatever a complainant may prove, still the court will not decree more than he claims in his bill. The counsel under a general prayer ask for a different decree from that specifically prayed for: Horton’s Appeal, 1 Harris 70; Del. & Hud. Canal Co. v. The Penna. Coal Co., 9 Id. 131.
In the last case, Lewis, J., says “ the relief to be granted under this prayer (for general relief) must not only consist with the specific relief demanded, but must be sustained by the case made in the bill; and the allegations relied on, must not only be such as afford a ground of relief sought, but they must appear to have been introduced into the bill for the purpose, and not for the purpose of corroborating the plaintiffs’ right to the specific relief prayed, otherwise the court would take the defendant by surprise, which is contrary to its principles.” It would be difficult to believe that this clause, inserted as it is, in its general and indefinite form, without any prayer for relief, was introduced with any other view, than as a make-weight to some other branch of the case. We think the court ought not to have enjoined as to it in the state of the pleadings.
The same is true of the items in the injunction in regard to the alleged practice of the company in charging double rates on the excess over 18,000 pounds weight in individual cars; — from charging return wheel tolls on cars of private owners, and from charg
One or two matters still remain to be noticed.
The first injunction granted by the learned judge is, that the defendants be restrained and enjoined from charging more for toll and transportation on motive power, on freight carried on said road in the cars of individuals, than on "freight carried in the cars of said company, or the cars of any other company.
It seems to me this decree is ultra the bill. There is no such charge in it. Nor is it sustained, taking the master’s report for it. The bill charges that the company refuse to plaintiffs the right to have their cars transported over their road at less rates than those established by the toll sheet of the defendants to regulate their own charges. But it is nowhere charged that more is demanded. But suppose it were so, if the excess be no greater than the charter allows, it is not wrong to demand it. This amount is, as already stated, four cents for toll and three for transportation per ton per mile. This decree is predicated of the testimony only, and it contravenes the rules laid down, which require that the facts be charged in the bill. We see nothing else of which it is predicated.
True the master does say: “ That in some instances, freight carried in the company cars, is charged less than the company charges complainants and others using cars on the road for the same freight.” But the question may be well asked, must the company discriminate against itself — that is to say, charge excess of freight, to enable private car-owners to compete with it? The public would surely be the loser by such a rule. We think this decree wrong, as unsupported by the bill — and wrong unless the fact was
We should also notice, in passing, that the decree which in effect enjoins the allowance of drawbacks is also ultra the bill. As that may be a mode of discriminating between individuals or a mode of encouraging a new branch of trade and be wrong in the one aspect, while entirely right in the other, we hold that it should have been a substantial part of the bill, in order to support the decree. None of the decrees prayed for were ordered by the court, excepting one, which we hold the plaintiffs could not invoke. Those made, four in number, are not supported by the bill. It may be, that in a bill carefully prepared, charging clear, distinct grounds for interference in regard to some of the matters herein overruled because not charged as they should have been and without complication as to parties as in this bill, it might become necessary for the courts to control the company in some at least of its practices. As the case of the plaintiffs stands on this bill, we think it not entitled to be maintained, and it is therefore dismissed at the costs of the plaintiffs, without prejudice in regard to matters overruled as not properly charged in this bill.
Bill dismissed accordingly.