47 S.E. 654 | N.C. | 1904
This is an action for the penalty (fifty dollars per day) incurred under The Code, section 1964, as amended by chapter 444, Laws 1903, for refusal by the defendant to receive for transportation a carload of lumber, tendered May 7, 1903, and which remained unshipped the two succeeding days, May 8th and 9th.
The defendant moved to dismiss because the complaint did not state a cause of action. This is predicated, we understand, upon the ground that the statute giving the penalty was not pleaded, and that a renewal of the tender on the 8th and again on the 9th of May was not specifically alleged. Being a public statute, it was not requisite to plead it. It is enough to set out the facts. Comrs. v. Comrs.,
The only point in the defendant's brief necessary to be considered is the refusal to instruct the jury that, upon all the evidence, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. This is placed upon the ground that the car being tendered for transportation to Pittsburgh, Pa., "the imposition by the State of a penalty for refusing to receive the car *383
because not loaded in such a manner as to be received by connecting carriers, was an interference with interstate commerce." There was an issue tendered by the defendant to that effect, and the jury found upon the issues submitted that the car "was properly loaded and safely secured for its transportation to Pittsburgh, Pa." That in such case the State can impose a penalty for refusal to receive, or delay in beginning the shipment, is fully discussed and decided in Bagg v. R. R.,
There were other exceptions taken, but they are without merit or are not set up in the defendant's brief. State v. Register,
No error.
Cited: Walker v. R. R.,
(538)