170 P. 752 | Mont. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to recover damages for cattle alleged to have been killed by the railway company. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in his favor, and seeks to have reviewed an order of the trial court striking from his cost bill an item of $50 claimed as an attorney fee, and an item of $1.10 for “sheriff’s fee serving subpoenas. ’ ’ The defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying it a new trial.
1. The court below held that the statute allowing the attorney-
In Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Ellis, 165 U. S. 150, 41 L. Ed. 666, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 255, a statute of Texas having the same purpose in view and very similar in its provisions, was held to violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. That decision is conclusive upon us in this instance. (See, also, Mills v. Olsen, 43 Mont. 129, 115 Pac. 33.)
Section 4313 applies as well to an action brought for damages for animals killed by negligent operation of trains as to an action brought for damages arising from a failure to build or maintain fences or cattle-guards. If it applied only to cases arising out of the violation of the police regulation prescribed by section 4308, it would not be open to the attack made upon it; but because it applies equally to ordinary negligence cases, it falls within the class of legislation condemned by the supreme court of the United States in the Ellis Case, above.
2. Defendant complains of an order of the trial court denying its application to file an amended answer in which the statute of limitations was pleaded as a defense. The defense is one
3. It is alleged in the complaint and admitted in the answer
It is insisted that this section is unconstitutional in that, by its terms, the legislature has delegated law-making authority, viz., the authority to the court or jury to determine whether the statute shall be effective as a law of this state. If by a fair construction of the language of this section it must be said that the authority to make this statute effective, or a dead letter, is lodged in the discretion of the court or jury, then defendant’s contention must be upheld, for it is elementary that such authority belongs to the legislature, or to the people under the initiative and referendum, and cannot be delegated.
The statute imposing upon every railway company operating
(a) The character of the Act: We think that the statute is a general police regulation, analogous to one requiring fencing and cattle-guards, and as such its validity cannot be questioned. (Missouri Pac. Ry. Co. v. Humes, 115 U. S. 512, 29 L. Ed. 463, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 110; Minneapolis & St. Louis Ry. Co. v. Beckwith, 125 U. S. 26, 32 L. Ed. 585, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 207.) The statute was evidently designed to promote the welfare of the state by protecting its livestock industry — one of the principal industries of the commonwealth. At the time it was enacted, vast areas of Montana were given over exclusively to general range purposes. The lands were not fenced. Herds of cattle roamed about at will. The railroads were not then required to inclose their tracks, and, in the absence of some positive law requiring evidence of the fact to be preserved, the death of an animal killed by a railroad would ordinarily never become known to the owner.- As soon as the carcass was buried by the employees of the road, all trace of the wrongful act, if any, disappeared, and the owner was deprived of his property, and to all intents and purposes was without remedy. While it is true that keeping the book and making the required entries would not tend directly to increase the safety of domestic animals running at large, the fact that the record was available as evidence against the road would tend to promote a higher degree of care in its operation to the ultimate benefit of the industry, and thus, by indirection at least, the purpose of the Act was to be accomplished. That the state may, in the exercise of its police power, protect and promote -one of its principal industries cannot be gainsaid. Assuming the existence of the power, any reasonable means may be adopted for its exercise. If the purpose to be served is within the control of police power of the state, and the statute in question reasonably effectuates that purpose, the particular phraseology of the Act is of no great consequence.
In its facts this case is altogether dissimilar from Colvill v. Fox, 51 Mont. 72, L. R. A. 1915F, 894, 149 Pac. 496, Hill v. Rae,
In order to enforce the duty to keep this book and make the required record, the legislature was free to prescribe appropriate penalties; and the mode of enforcing the statute, whether at the suit of a private party or by public prosecution, and the disposition to be made of the amount collected, are merely matters of legislative discretion. (11 R. C. L. 891.)
- It cannot be said that this statute imposes liability notwithstanding the railway company is without fault. The liability is imposed as the means of enforcing obedience to the law. If the book is kept and the proper entries made, the rule of absolute liability does not obtain. In this respect the statute is different from the one considered in Bielenberg v. Montana Union Ry. Co., 8 Mont. 271, 2 L. R. A. 813, 20 Pac. 314, and more nearly like the one considered in Diamond v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 6 Mont. 580, 13 Pac. 367.
(b) History of the Act: From 1881 to the present time, the duty to keep the book and make the required record has been an absolute one. From 1881 to 1887 the penalty for nonobservance of the duty was expressed in language too clear to admit of a doubt as to its meaning. Every violation subjected the offending company to liability for double damages. Section 721 itself declares that for such a violation the company “shall be liable to the owner or owners of the animal or animals so killed or injured whether negligently done or not.” This language, if standing alone, would clearly evidence an intention to establish a rule of absolute liability in every case of nonobservance of the law. Long prior to the enactment of any of these statutes, experience had demonstrated that a police regulation without a penalty of some character for its breach was ineffectual for any purpose, and in view of this fact and the language quoted above,
(c) The title of the Act declares the purpose to be to provide for the payment of stock killed by railroads. In the absence of any certain, fixed liability for the violation of this Act, the stock owner had only his common-law action for damages for negligence, and the title would belie the purpose of the Act. In other words, if this Act does not create a liability, it accomplishes no purpose whatever.
(d) The apparent purpose of the Act: As already observed, the Act of 1881 fixed the measure of damages, and imposed the rule of double liability. In our opinion, by the concluding sentence of section 721 (4312) the legislature made a crude, clumsy attempt to substitute the rule of single liability or actual damages for the harsher rule of the original Act, leaving to the court or jury, as the case may be, a wide latitude for determining- the amount of recovery in any given case.
4. By the express terms of this Act, it was not necessary for
5. The penalty — absolute liability — is imposed to secure
6. There was an apparent attempt also to predicate liability upon the failure of the railway company to maintain sufficient
7. Costs: The trial court refused to allow plaintiff an item of
8. Interest was properly allowed. It was within the discretion
The order overruling the motion for a new trial is affirmed. The cause is remanded to the district court, with directions to reduce the amount of costs included in the judgment by $3.90, and as thus modified the judgment will stand affirmed. Each party will pay his own costs of these appeals.