149 Ark. 159 | Ark. | 1921
This action was brought by the appellees, residents and real property owners of the Fort Smith and Van Burén Bridge District (hereafter called bridge •district), against the bridge district and the Fort Smith Light & Traction Company (hereafter called traction company). The traction company is an Arkansas corporation engaged in the operation of a street railway in and between the cities of Fort Smith and Van Burén. The cars of the traction company run upon and over the bridge of the bridge district which spans the Arkansas River between the cities of Fort Smith and Van Burén. The appellees alleged that the bridge district was requiring of them and other owners of real property in the bridge district to pay a bridge fare or toll of 1% cents for each ticket purchased or five cents per passenger cash fare if no ticket had been purchased; that the traction company permitted the agents of the bridge district to collect the fares; that no charge was made against any person for crossing the bridge except those who were passengers of the traction company; that appel-lees and other real property owners of the bridge district were taxed for the construction and maintenance of the bridge, and this bridge fare against them was discriminatory and illegal because other passengers of the traction company who were not owners of real property in the bridge district were allowed to cross over the bridge on the traction company’s cars upon the payment of the same fare or toll as that paid by the appellees and other real property owners in the bridge district. The appellees further alleged that the bridge district was not collecting from the traction company any sum whatever for the use of the bridge; that all sums realized by the bridge district from the bridge fares collected from passengers on the cars of the traction company crossing the bridge were paid by the appellees and other passengers of the traction company, and not by the traction company; that the bridge had therefore been converted by the bridge district into a toll bridge contrary to the provisions of the act creating the bridge district.
The appellees instituted the action for the benefit of themeselves and all others similarly situated, and prayed that the bridge district and the traction company be restrained from charging and collecting the bridge fares mentioned.
The bridge district and the traction company answered separately, setting up substantially that the act creating the bridge district and act 233 of the Acts of 1913 amending, the same authorized the bridge district to grant a right-of-way over the bridge upon such terms as might be provided by contract between the bridge district and the public utility, which contract was required to be submitted to the electors of the bridge district through referendum; that a contract was entered into by the bridge district and the traction company which was duly submitted to the legal voters through referendum as provided by the act and was ratified and approved by them; that the bridge district and the traction company were complying with the terms of that contract, and they set np the contract as a justification for the charges of which the appellees complain and as a complete defense to their action. The contract was made an exhibit, and attached to the answers, and was proved and introduced in evidence.
The contract is too long to set forth in haec verba. It is in sections, and we will abbreviate and state in substance such of its provisions as we deem necessary.
In the first section the bridge district, for the considerations thereinafter named, grants to the traction company the right to use the free bridge and its approaches for the term thereinafter mentioned for the transportation of its passengers. This section specifically sets forth the things that the traction company is authorized to do in order to enable it to operate its passenger cars across and over the bridge and its approaches. It also specifically sets forth the things which the traction company is not authorized to do, confirming what had already been done by the traction company under a former contract and reserving in the bridge district the right to supervise and approve such improvements as the traction company should make in the future.
In the second section it is expressly agreed that, in consideration of the execution and performance of all of the terms of the present contract, any and all >alaims of the bridge district growing out of the use of the bridge and its approaches by the traction company prior to the execution of the present contract 'are waived. If the contract is not performed, then the bridge district does not relinquish its claim for rentals under former contract.
The third section contains reciprocal obligations by which the bridge district is to maintain the bridge and its approaches in good condition, and the traction company is to maintain in good condition its rails, wires, railway feeders, and ties on the approaches to the bridge.
The fourth section provides that the traction company shall not have exclusive use of the bridge, and that the trolley erected by the traction company may be used by any other public utility upon payment of just compensation, and that the use of the bridge by the traction company shall not interfere with the use of the bridge as a public highway.
By the fifth section the traction company agrees to maintain a schedule of cars, and the bridge district permits the traction company to stop its cars at both ends of the bridge to-receive and discharge passengers, “but in so doing there shall be collected, as hereinafter provided, a fare for the benefit of the bridge for every passenger who rides over the bridge or any part thereof, or any part of the approaches thereto. It is expressly agreed that the traction company shall aid the bridge district to collect the fare for the benefit of the district and shall do nothing which will tend to defeat the right of the district to collect the rental by way of fare as herein provided. The fare collected for the benefit of the district is the rental to be paid by the company for the use of the bridge. The method of collecting the fare in no manner changes the fact that said fare collected for the bridge district is a rental paid by the traction company for the use of the bridge. The company will therefore aid in every way the collection of a fare of 1% cents from each passenger, if the fare be a bridge ticket, •and, if the fare be cash, the >sum of five cents for each passenger. Said fare, when so collected, shall entitle the passenger to ride across and over the bridge and the approaches one way for e^ch fare. The traction company will not maintain any station for the taking up or setting down of passengers at any point on the bridge or on the approaches, and will not take up or set down passengers on the bridge or its approaches unless said passenger pays the bridge fare as above provided.”
By the sixth section the traction company agrees, “in consideration of the rights herein granted, that it will not permit any one except as herein provided to ride as a passenger on its said cars across the said bridge without permitting said bridge district to collect from each of said passengers a. bridge ticket or cash fare as provided in this contract. The bridge district, through its employees as herein provided, will take up and collect from each passenger either a bridge ticket for 1% cents or a cash fare of five cents for each passenger, and the employees of the traction company, if necessary, will aid the collectors of the bridge district in collecting such ticket or fare from each and every passenger as herein provided.”
Sections seven and eight relate to the means and methods used by the collectors of the bridge district in collecting the fares.
Section nine again provides that the fares when collected shall be full compensation for the use of the bridge and the approaches by the traction company and exempts certain employees of. the traction company from payment of fares, and then provides that the traction company will not give to any passenger who stops on the bridge or its approaches a transfer enabling him to ride on a ear after he has walked across the bridge.
Section ten provides for the printing of tickets at the expense of the traction company under the supervision .of the bridge district and the delivery of the printed tickets in packages to the bridge district and the purchase of these tickets by the traction company from the bridge district, the traction company paying 1% cents cash for each ticket. If, at the termination of the contract, the traction company has on hand any tickets, the bridge district agrees to redeem them at the price the traction company paid for same. This section also contains a provision to the effect that all sums of money paid by the traction company to the bridge district for tickets and the cash fares collected “shall be deemed rentals for the use of the bridge and is the funds and property of the bridge district.”
Section eleven provides that the tickets shall be in books containing twenty tickets each to be sold by tbe traction company at twenty-five cents per book, tbe tickets not to be transferred or transferable.
By section twelve tbe traction company binds itself to pay $50 per month toward tbe salary of bridge fare collectors if tbe cars crossing the bridge are operated by two men, or $100 per month if tbe cars are operated by one man.
Tbe thirteenth section makes tbe traction company responsible to tbe bridge district for any damage it may do to the bridge or its approaches.
By section fourteen tbe bridge district binds itself to charge all other pnblic utilities a reasonable toll or rental as tbe law requires for tbe use of tbe bridge.
Section fifteen prescribes tbe period of duration of the contract.
Section sixteen makes it tbe duty of tbe bridge district to keep tbe books and accounts with reference to tbe bridge tickets and bridge cash fares collected, and exempts tbe traction company from responsibility for any of tbe acts of tbe collectors or bookkeepers, who, under the terms of tbe contract, are the agents of tbe bridge district.
One of tbe appellees lived in Fort Smith, and tbe other in Van Burén. Their testimony was to tbe effect that each paid tbe traction company seven cents as passenger fare for transportation over its lines in tbe cities of Fort Smith and Van Burén, and an additional fare of 1% cents each to tbe bridge checkers 'on tbe free bridge while on the street cars if a ticket is used, or five cents cash without a ticket. They own real property in tbe bridge district and each pays annually tbe sum of $1.35 as a bridge tax. In buying a ticket from the traction company from Fort Smith to Van Burén they each had to pay 8*4 cents if they used a bridge ticket, or twelve cents without a bridge ticket, Tbe bridge fares are cob lected at each end of the bridge by collectors who get on the cars at the respective ends, ride across, and take np the fares at the other end of the bridge.
There was testimony to the effect that the conductors of the traction company on the cars had nothing to do with the collection of the bridge fares.
D. C. Green testified that he was the general manager of the traction company; that the traction company had a regular tariff of fares on each passenger on cars between the two cities. This schedule of fares is on file with the Corporation Commission as required by law. His testimony and the schedule show that the fares were as above indicated, and that children under twelve years of age were charged four cents. Green testified that the seven cents covered the transportation charges from any point in Yan Burén to Garrison Avenue in Fort Smith with free transfer privileges. In other _ words, a man gets on the car at the smelter in Yan Burén and pays seven cents and can transfer to any point within the city limits of Fort Smith. An additional fare of five cents is collected from each passenger crossing the bridge for a cash fare. The traction company did not charge any more than was set forth in its standard public schedule. This schedule was introduced in evidence by the appellees, and it showed that the fares were as above indicated.
There is a provision in the schedule under the title of “Bridge Contract” as follows: “Under contract as entered into with the Fort Smith and Van Burén Bridge District, bridge collectors selected and employed by the bridge district board the cars at or near the approach of the bridge and collect from each passenger crossing the free bridge between Fort Smith and Yan Burén five cents in cash or one bridge ticket, and the money thus collected from the passengers is retained by the bridge district.”
There was testimony on behalf of the appellees to the effect that the deputy sheriff, who was employed by the bridge district to clean and repair the bridge, some times in cases of necessity assisted the collectors in the , collection of fares.
The assistant secretary of the collector of taxes testified that he was the custodian of the records in the collector’s office and kept all contracts with public utilities using the bridge. There was no contract with any public utility other than the traction company. The district made charges against persons regardless of the kind of transportation for crossing the bridge. It charged taxicabs and other concerns! that carniied passengers for pay.
It was admitted that the contract in evidence had been ratified by the legal voters of the bridge district under the referendum provided by special act. Upon the above issues and facts, the court decreed “that the . aforesaid contract is ultra vires and void; that the taking of said fares by the district is contrary to law. Therefore, the said Fort Smith and Van Burén District, its commissioners, agents, employees and representatives are perpetually enjoined from taking, receiving, or attempting to take or offer to receive said fares under said contract.” From that decree is this appeal.
The bridge district was created under act 119 of the Acts of 1909, page 325. The act is valid. Shibley v. Fort Smith & Van Buren Bridge District, 96 Ark. 410; Nakdimen v. Fort Smith & Van Buren Bridge District, 115 Ark. 194: Section 2 of the -act provides in part as follows: “The commission (of the bridge district) shall have the power to grant a right-of-way over said bridge to any public utility upon such terms as the commission shall determine, provided, however, that the concessions which may be granted to public utilities shall not interfere with the reasonable use of such bridge as a public highway.”
Section 39 of the act is in part as follows: “The bridge district herein created shall have the power * * * to receive rents from the concessions heretofore author-feed from the public utilities for the purposes of construction, repair, and maintenance of the public improvement herein contemplated.”
Section 2 of the act was amended by the Legislature of 1913, act 223 of the Acts of 1913, page 1001, so as to read in part as follows: “The commission shall have the power to grant a right-of-way over said bridge to any public utility upon such terms as the commission shall determine, provided, however, that the concessions which may be granted to public utilities shall not interfere with the reasonable use of such bridge as a public highway. Provided, further, when the commission and the public utility shall agree upon a right-of-way or concession over the bridge to be enjoyed by any public utility, a contract setting forth fully the terms thereof shall be signed by the commission and the public utility subject to a referendum thereon.”
There are further provisions in the amendatory act providing for carrying the referendum into effect, and the amendatory act also provides: “That no exclusive privileges shall be granted under this section 'or any other provision of this act to any such public utility.”
In Nakdimen v. Fort Smith and Van Buren Bridge District, supra, construing section 2 of the original act, we said-: “We hold that the commission under section 2 of the act could only receive money for the grant of the right-of-way to the street car company, and the word ‘terms’ has reference to the time and amount of money paid, but that a discretion was left to the commission as to the amount of money to be charged therefor and the terms of the payment thereof.”
Learned counsel for appellees has made a vigorous attack upon the contract under review, the gist of his contention being that under the contract, as he construes it. the bridge district, has granted to the traction company a right-of-way over the bridge for which the bridge district “forces the travéling public to pay tribute and designates the money thus received rental paid by the
company.” To support Ms contention counsel relies mainly upon the .case of Perrine v. Chesapeake & Delaware Carnal Co., 9 Howard 172. In that case the canal company was granted a charter by Maryland, Delaware and Pennsylvania to cut and maintain a canal connecting the Chesapeake and Delaware bays. The charter gave the company the right to collect tolls on certain articles on vessels carrying commodities, enumerating the articles 'and the tolls thereon. Empty boats or vessels were required to pay $4, “except an empty boat or vessel returning whose load has already paid the tolls fixed, in wMch case she shall pass toll free.” The eleventh section of the charter provided: “The said canal and works to be erected thereon by virtue of this act, when completed, shall forever thereafter be esteemed, and taken to be navigable as a public highway free for the transportation of all goods, commodities or produce whatsoever on payment of the toll imposed by tMs act, and no tax whatsoever for the use of the water of the said canal, or the works thereon erected, shall at any time hereafter be imposed by all or either of the said States.” Perrine proposed to install a line of passenger boats through the canal, and the company required him to pay a toll of $1 for each passenger. Perrine resisted the payment of this toll, and the Supreme Court of the United States held that the company had no right under its charter to demand toll from passengers who passed through the canal, or from vessels on account of the passengers on board; that the company could only exercise the powers conferred upon it by its charter.
Counsel also relies upon the case of Reed v. Hanger, 20 Ark. 625. In that case the county court granted a charter to erect a certain toll bridge which provided “that the bridge should ever remain free and open to the citizens of the county.” It was held that the charter should be construed so as to give the citizens of the county the free use of the bridge whether they crossed on foot or otherwise, and also for the free passage of any means of transportation employed by tbem in tbeir lawful business.
As already observed, counsel for appellees, as a basis for tbe application of tbe doctrine of tbe above cases, assumes that tbe contract under consideration requires tbe traveling public generally, and not tbe traction company, to pay tbe bridge district for tbe rigbt-of-way over tbe free bridge exercised by tbe traction company. Tbis assumption wbicb tbe counsel tabes as bis premise and tbe argument based tbereon are plausible, but tbe premise is unsound, and bis argument, however forceful, necessarily leads to an erroneous conclusion. Therefore, it occurs to us that tbe doctrine of tbe above cases is not applicable to tbe contract under consideration, when correctly construed.
We shall not undertake to analyze and comment upon tbe various provisions of tbe contract. It evidenced an agreement by wbicb the bridge district is to receive a certain sum of money from tbe traction company for tbe right granted tbe latter to run its cars for tbe transportation of passengers over the bridge. Tbe original act expressly authorized tbe bridge district to charge tbe traction company for its right-of-way over tbe bridge. Nakdimen v. Fort Smith & Van Buren Bridge District, supra. By tbe same token tbe traction company, having thus acquired tbe rigbt-of-way over tbe bridge, could exercise it with all of its privileges, one of wbicb was to charge.passengers who used its facilities. Tbe amount charged tbe traction company by tbe district is a definite and fixed sum ascertained and measured by tbe number of passengers which tbe traction company transports in its cars over tbe bridge and tbe amount wbicb tbe traction company charges each passenger for such transportation. Tbe traction company is a common carrier, and bad a right to charge those whom it transported on its cars across tbe bridge according to tbe tariff of rates filed with .the Corporation Commission. Act 571 of tbe Acts of 1919, p. 411, §§ 5, 6 and 7. See Helena Water Co. v. Helena, 140 Ark. 597. Tbe money derived from this source through the sale and use of tickets, and, by the payment and collection of the cash fares in the absence of tickets, was primarily the property of the traction company and not of the bridge district. It became the property of the bridge district only because under the terms of the contract the traction company agreed to let the bridge district collect and use it in payment for the right-of-way privilege granted the traction company by the bridge district, and because the bridge district agreed to accept it as such.
It is not contended by the appellees, and could not be successfully contended under the issues herein joined, that the traction company did not have the right to charge those whom it transported over the bridge on its cars a fare of 1% cents where tickets were used, or a cash fare of five cents without tickets, as specified in its schedule of fares. As a common carrier, it could not be compelled to furnish the public its facilities of transportation over its line across the bridge without compensation. The only authority under the law authorized to determine whether these rates are just and reasonable has approved them. See § 6, act of 1919, supra.
There is no provision in the original act creating the bridge district nor in the amendatory act authorizing the commissioners of the bridge district to charge the general public for the privilege of crossing the bridge. On the contrary, the power conferred upon the bridge district is “to construct and maintain a free public highway.”
It is well established by our own decisions and the authorities generally that the right to exact tolls of the public for the privilege of crossing a .public bridge must be conferred by statute or it does not exist. Altheimer v. Plum Bayou Levee District, 79 Ark. 234; Nakdimen v. Fort Smith & Van Buren Bridge District, supra, and other cases cited in brief for appellees.
Therefore, if the appellees are correct in the assumption that by the terms of this contract the general public and not the traction company is required to pay the bridge district for the right-of-way which the traction company has over the bridge, then the contract is ultra vires and void. But, on the other hand, the original and amendatory acts confer upon the bridge district the authority to grant the traction company a right-of-way upon terms to be fully set forth in a contract between the bridge district and the traction company. Therefore, if the contract requires the traction company to pay the money, which it is authorized to receive from passengers, to the bridge district in payment for the concession or right-of-way granted by it to the traction company, and if the bridge district agrees to collect and receive this money as such payment, then the contract is valid. We are convinced that the latter is the only correct interpretation of the contract in the light of the decision of this court in Nakdimen v. Bridge District, supra, and the amendatory act of 1913, supra. The decree is therefore reversed, and the complaint is dismissed for want of equity.