125 F. 445 | 8th Cir. | 1903
This case was tried to a jury in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Arkansas, and at the conclusion of all the testimony the trial court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, which action on its part is said to have been erroneous, and is assigned for error. The complaint on which the case was tried contained two counts. In the first of these counts Jesse A. Harp, the plaintiff in error, alleged, in sub
The facts developed at the trial below, concerning which there was practically no controversy, are these: From September, 1900, to February 15, 1902, and thereafter, the Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf Railroad Company, the defendant in error, operated a line of railroad extending from El Reno, in the territory of Oklahoma, thence eastwardly through the territory of Oklahoma, the Indian Territory, and the state of Arkansas, to Memphis, Tenn. Coal fields existed along this line of road from South McAlester, in the Indian Territory, eastward to a point between Hartford and
The fundamental question which this state of facts presents would seem to be whether the defendant company, by setting out coal cars on its house track at Hartford, and permitting them to be loaded from wagons for a period of several months, under the circumstances above detailed, thereby obligated itself to continue that practice, and was guilty of a legal wrong when it discontinued it in August, 1901. Undoubtedly a common carrier must accept and transport all commodities that are tendered to it for carriage which it holds itself out to the world as engaged in carrying, provided a reasonable compensation for the service is also tendered. Unlike a private carrier, it is not entitled to choose its patrons or customers, but, being a quasi public servant, must serve everybody who chooses to employ it, and must treat them impartially, charging each the same rate for substantially the same service, and affording to each the same facilities for shipment. A common carrier, however, is not bound by the
In the second count of his complaint, as before shown, the plaintiff sought to recover damages because, as he alleged, the defendant had given an undue and unreasonable preference to other shippers of coal at the Hartford station. The facts upon which this charge was based were likewise undisputed, and are as follows: The order prohibiting the loading of coal from wagons into cars standing on the house track extended to all shippers of coal without discrimination, and was not confined in its operation solely to the plaintiff or any one else. But while the embargo existed other mine owners who had constructed spur tracks to their mines, as well as tipples for the convenient and speedy loading of cars, were supplied with cars, and during the period in question it seems that some of the parties who had constructed private spur tracks did load some coal from wagons into cars that had been set out on such private spur tracks. This was done, however, as the evidence discloses, only to a limited extent, and for the purpose of disposing of such coal as was taken out at first in the process of opening a miné. The practice was not continued when a mine was fully opened and tipples had been located and built. The charge of giving other mine owners an undue preference is founded
The views which we have thus far expressed are confirmed by the decision in Oxlade v. North Eastern Railway Company, 15 Common Bench (N. S.) 680, which is frequently cited as an authority and may be justly esteemed a leading case. The decision in that action was under the canal and traffic act of 1854 (17 & 18 Vict. c. 31), which in broad terms declareci “that every railway company * * * shall afford all reasonable facilities for the receiving and forwarding and delivering of traffic * * *; and no such company shall make or give any undue or unreasonable preference or advantage to * * * any particular person or company * * *; nor shall any such company subject any particular person or company or any particular description of traffic, to any undue or unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage in any respect whatsoever.” It appeared that the railway company made a practice of carrying coal in very large quantities, but for convenience in handling the large amount of traffic over its road it made a practice of carrying coal for colliery owners only, from the pit’s mouth to stations where such colliery owners had cells appropriated to their use for the reception and sale of their coal. The complainant was a, coal merchant, and on a certain day he tendered 16 cars or trucks loaded with coal to the railway company at one of its stations, to he forwarded to three other stations on its road where the complainant had no cell or siding appropriated to his special use for the reception of his coal trucks and the sale of coal. The railway
On the trial of this case in the lower court one of the questions which appears to have been discussed and decided by the learned trial judge (vide 118 Fed. 169, 172) was whether the defendant company was under an obligation to put in a switch or spur track for the plaintiff’s convenience at such place as he desired. In their brief counsel for the plaintiff in error say that they will not discuss this question, because the plaintiff did not bring his action on account of any failure of the defendant company to put in a switch, but for the other alleged wrongs heretofore considered. Besides, the evidence does not show, we think, that the defendant did decline to put in a switch or spur track for the plaintiff on the same terms that it was in the habit of putting in such tracks for other shippers. This latter question, therefore, according to the concession of counsel, is not before this court for determination or consideration.
Another question, however, has been debated by counsel for both parties at some length, and that is whether the Arkansas statute, above cited, and other statutes of the state of a like nature, have any application in determining the rights of common carriers and shippers of coal as respects coal which is tendered to the carrier for shipment to points outside of the state. The plaintiff in error maintains the affirmative of this proposition, while the defendant in error maintains the negative; contending in effect, that the local law is applicable only as respects coal that is tendered for shipment to points within the state, and that if intended to apply to shipments to other states and territories would be invalid as amounting to a regulation of interstate commerce. We have found it unnecessary to consider or determine that question, holding, as we do, that the acts proven to
We are of opinion that the case was rightly decided below, and the judgment is accordingly affirmed.