57 Ind. App. 415 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1914
This was a suit by appellees against appellants, railroad corporations, to restrain them from refusing to carry them on their several lines of railroad between the city of Rockport and the city of Evansville, and from demanding fare from them and from refusing to issue passes to them on January 1, 1910, and from moving a passenger depot located near the home of appellees, and from refusing to discharge passengers thereat and from removing their railroad from appellees’ lands, and to compel appellant Evansville and Eastern Electric Railway to place on record a deed which had been given it conveying a right of way over appellees’ lands. A separate demurrer for want of facts was directed to the complaint by each appellant, and overruled. The issues were joined by the filing of answers in general denial. The cause was tried by the court, and a special finding of facts made with conclusions of law thereon. Judgment was for appellees upon the conclusions of law that they were entitled to free transportation on the lines of the railroads extending from the city of Rockport to the city of Evansville, owned by the Evansville and Eastern Electric Railway, and Evansville Terminal Railway, and operated by the Evansville Railways Company, so long as appellee George H. Vanada owns the real estate described in the complaint, and so long as the other appellees own and reside on said real estate, etc.
It is also averred that defendants and each of them ever since making the transportation contract have known of it and from July 1, 1908, to January 4, 1909, appellees were carried over all of the appellant roads on passes issued by the Eastern. Also that the Evansville Railways Company, with full knowledge of the transportation contract and the consideration for the same, on January 4, 1909, entered into a contract with both the Evansville and Eastern Electric Railway. and Evansville Terminal Railway Company by which it leased the roads of the two companies which together formed a continuous line from Evansville through Newburg to Rockport, and has ever since been operating the roads of the two companies. On January 12, 1909, the Evansville and Eastern Electric Railway with full knowledge and consent of each of the other defendants, issued passes to appellees for the year 1909, and in August of the same year demanded surrender thereof and it threatens to refuse to carry plaintiffs on its roads and will not give them passes for the year 1910.
At the time of the execution and delivery of the second contract and the deed now in suit, the statutes of Indian® provided and do now provide, that all common carriers
These statutes have never been construed by either of our courts, but the Supreme Court of the United States in deciding the case of Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Mottley (1911), 219 U. S. 467, 31 Sup. Ct. 265, 55 L. Ed. 297, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 671, in which a very similar question was raised, has
The legislature of this State in enacting the statute in
For the reasons stated the complaint is insufficient, and it is therefore unnecessary for us to consider the other errors assigned. Judgment reversed, with directions to sustain the demurrer of each defendant to the complaint.
Note. — Reported in 106 N. E. 388. As to wbo are passengers and when they become such, see 61 Am. St. 75. As to the validity and construction of an agreement by a railroad to' give passes in consideration of a conveyance of land, see 21 Ann. Cas. 597. See, also, 6 Cyc. 1915 Ann. 570-new.