110 Ky. 961 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Opinion oe the court by
Reversing.
Appellee, J. F. Walker, shipped over appellant’s road from Cave City to Louisville tobacco prized in casks, for which it charged him 29 cents a hundred pounds for freight. He also shipped tobacco from Glasgow, by way of Glasgow Junction, to Louisville, for which it charged him 36 cents a hundred. Gave City and Glasgow Junction are stations on appellant’s road between Bowling Green -and' Louisville, and at the time of these shipments, appellant charged 20 cents a hundred pounds for transporting tobacco from Bowling Green to Louisville. Glasgow is 10 miles from Glasgow Junction, and is on a branch road running out from the main line at Glasgow Junction. Appellant charged 6 cents a hundred pounds for transporting tobacco from Glasgow to Glasgow Junction, and 30 cents for transporting it from Glasgow Junction to Louisville. Appellee filed this action on February 24, 1899, to recover for the excess charged him for the short haul over and above the amount charged for the longer haul from Bowling Green, and recovered judgment for |205.32. It is insisted for appellant that the action does not lie, and that there -can be no recovery, because it does not appear that appellee has been damaged. In Hutcheson v. Railroad Co., 22 Ky. L. R. 361 (57 S. W., 251), we held that the action could be maintained, and upon a reconsideration* of the question, adhere to the ruling in that case. If a carrier charges a shipper more than the law allows him to charge, the excess so paid may be recovered by the shipper. If there had been a statute fixing the charge from Cave City
Part of the shipments were made more than two years before the suit was brought, and appellant relied on the statute of limitations. Section 819, Ky. St., among other things, provides as follows: “Indictments under this section shall be made only upon the recommendation -or request of the railroad commission filed in the court having jurisdiction of the offense and all prosecutions and actions under this law shall be commenced within two years after the offense- shall have been committed or the cause of action shall have accrued.” It will be observed that the first part of the clause quoted refers to “indictments under 'this section,” but the latter clause, in -reference to civil actions is broader, and includes all “actions under this law.” This section is a part of the act .approved! April 5, 1893, entitled: “An act providing for the creation .and regulation of private corporations.” Acts 1891-93, p. 612. The next section of the act (Ky. St. section 820) relates to the subject -of the long and short haul. The preceding sections (sections 816-818) refer to extortion, discrimination, and preferences by carriers. It was evidently intended to place all these matters on the same plane, and to provide the same limitation for all of them. We are therefore, of opinion that the trial court did not err in holding the plea of limitation good as to all matters occurring more than two years before the action was begun.