11 N.Y.S. 514 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
It appears from the complaint that the plaintiffs, as copartners, were miners, shippers, and dealers in coal from the 1st of May, 1885, until September, 1889, when this action was commenced. The mines from which their coal was obtained were located in the region of the Carbondale, Lackawanna and Wyoming anthracite coal-fields, in the state of Pennsylvania. During the same time, it is also alleged the defendant was, and continues to be, a corporation created under the laws of the state of New York, and engaged as a common carrier in the transportation of passengers and freight over its different lines, and those controlled by it, including a main line from Jersey City, in the state of New Jersey, to Buffalo and Dunkirk in the state of New York, and a branch line from Carbondale, in the state of Pennsylvania, to a junction with the main line at Susquehanna in that state. It is also alleged that the plaintiffs’ business, in part, consisted in shipping their coal, for sale, to the markets north, east, and west, reached by the defendant’s lines, and that the defendant’s lines of railway, and its connections, supplied the only means of shipment for the plaintiffs’ coal to these markets. It is then stated that the Delaware & Hudson Canal Company and the Hillside Coal & Iron Company, two other corporations, were mining coal in the same
The object of the complaint throughout has been to place the case made within the statute of the state of Pennsylvania. That intention is disclosed by closely following the verbiage of the act, in stating the obligations created, and the wrongs suffered, from the acts of the defendant, by the plaintiffs and their assignor. Important facts, it is true, are alleged, which would form material grounds for an action at common law for withholding from the plaintiffs and the assignor that equality of right which they were entitled to enjoy with these other patrons of the defendant; but these facts have,not been set forth to present any cause of action for damages suffered by the violation of that common-law equality, but as essential, .and only so far as they are essential, to place the case within the restraints and remedies of this statute. The concessions and rebates which were given to the other shippers, and denied to the plaintiffs and the assignor, the obligation to clean the cars, and the work of putting them in a suitable condition for the carriage of coal before they could be used, and. the omission and failure to allot to them their fair proportion of cars, when the supply was deficient, are all brought forward in such language as to directly apply the statute, and to entitle the plaintiffs to its own express measure of relief. Hot only that, but the express averment has been made as to each cause of complaint that it arose from an undue and unreasonable discrimination, made under, and controlled by, and in violation of, this statute of the state of Pennsylvania. Ho plainer or more distinct effort could be made than has been in this instance to place the right of recovery wholly within and upon the statute. And that has led to the omission of-other and different averments of facts, required for the creation of a right of action at common law. That causes of action within the statute have been alleged is reasonably free from all ground of controversy; but that alone, while it would maintain the action in the state of Pennsylvania, will not entitle the plaintiffs to succeed in the courts of this state, if the redress prescribed by the statute must be held to be penal in its nature, for the principle seems to be quite well settled that the courts of one state will not enforce the penal laws of another state. Upon the existence of this principle, there is no disagreement in the authorities; but numerous disagreements have arisen in the definition of what are to be regarded or held to be “ penalties. ” In this state, the liability created by statute for the payment of a debt, not owing by the defendant, but for the omission of an act or report required from him as a corporate officer, has uniformly been held to be a penalty. Bank v.