94 P. 123 | Kan. | 1908
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The firm of Sinclair & Wallace shipped a car-load of stock from Kincaid, Kan., to Kansas City, Mo., over plaintiff in error’s road. Transportation to Kansas City was furnished one of the firm, who accompanied the stock, but the railway company refused his request for free passage back to Kincaid and he was obliged to pay his return fare. The firm then brought this action, under chapter 354 of the Laws of 1905, to recover double the fare paid and an attorney’s fee. The action was begun in a justice court and transferred to the district court, where it was tried to a jury. Plaintiffs recovered judgment for $5.10, and $35 attorney’s fee. The railway company brings error.
Plaintiffs’ bill of particulars alleged that the stock was shipped from Kincaid to Kansas City, Mo., and that the demand was for return transportation between
“Assuming, but not deciding, that the law is valid as a regulation of shipments between points in Kansas, it certainly is without effect as to shipments from one state to another.”
The act under consideration in the present case relates to the transportation by railroad companies of shipments of live stock, and provides penalties for the violation thereof. (Laws 1905, ch. 854.) It requires any railroad company doing business within the limits of the state, and shipping any live stock by the car-load, to furnish the shipper or his employee transportation to the point of destination on the train in which the stock is shipped and back again to point of shipment on passenger-trains, free of expense to the shipper.
The validity of the act is assailed by defendant on numerous grounds which we deem it unnecessary to consider, for the reason that, like the act of 1897, it could not apply to, and does not purport to affect, the conduct of railroad companies in shipments of live stock from a place within to a place without the state —shipments which are interstate in character.
Plaintiffs in their brief and on the oral argument make two suggestions: that the shipment was not interstate, because the stock was actually unloaded at the
As the judgment should have been for defendant, the cause is reversed and remanded for further proceedings.