61 Ala. 559 | Ala. | 1878
In the case of the State, ex rel. Harrell, v. The Mobile and Montgomery Railway Company, 59 Ala. 321, we construed, in part, the act “ regulating the charges for transportation of freight upon railroads within this State,” approved April 19th, 1873, Pamph. Acts, 62. In that statute it is declared, “ that all railroad companies in the State .... may, for the transportation of local freight demand and receive not exceeding fifty per cent, more than the rate charged for the transportation of the same description of freight over the whole line of its road.” In the case referred to, it is said, “ we can not assent to the argument that the fifty per cent, additional, which the statute allows the corporation to charge for transportation of local freight, means fifty per cent, on tiie charge over the whole line of the' railroad, irrespective of the distance the local freight may be carried. The language of the statute forbids that construction. “ Fifty per cent, more than the rate charged . . . . over the whole line of its road,” are the words of the statute. Pate is the emphatic word of the sentence. In this connection it is employed in the sense of proportion,— a standard of valuation; a rule or measure of assessment. That is, an assessment according to a given standard. The charge for transportation over the whole line is so much, which is equivalent to so much per mile. Local freight
It is contended for appellant that the Mobile and Montgomery Eailway Company is not bound by the statute above considered. The Mobile and Montgomery Eailway Company is the successor of the Mobile and Montgomery Eailroad Company, which was formed by the consolidation of two other incorporated railroad companies, and had conferred upon it the powers, privileges, immunities and franchises of each of said original corporations. Those original companies, and the Mobile and Montgomery Eailroad Company had unlimited power and discretion in the matter of levying tolls and charges. They were organized under special charters granted to each. Under the act “to authorize the Governor of the State of Alabama to endorse, on the part of the State, the first mortgage bonds of the Mobile and Montgomery E. E. Co.,” approved February 25th 1870— Pamph. Acts, 175 — the Governor endorsed the bonds of the said company to the extent of two and a half million of dollars, which bonds were received and used by the company in the repair and completion of its road. The eighth section of this act declares “that the endorsement of the bonds of the Mobile and Montgomery Eailroad Company, as herein provided for, is conditioned, that on and after the time fixed for the completion of the said railroad from Tensas to Mobile, ■the said Mobile and Montgomery Eailroad Company shall
Section 15 of the act “ to furnish the aid and credit of the State of Alabama for the purpose of expediting the construction of railroads within the State,” approved February 21, 1870, Pamph. Acts, 149, enacts “that as a condition on which the aid is granted by this act, the several railroad companies shall not charge more than four (4) cents per mile for each passenger travelling over their lines; and shall not charge more than twenty-five (25) per cent, higher rates for carrying local freight than they will for carrying through freight.”
The act “ to constitute the purchasers of any railroad hereafter sold under the authority of any law of this State a body corporate and politic,” approved December 17,1873 — Pamph. Acts, 56 — provides “ that in each and every case in which any railroad may hereafter be sold by the State of Alabama, or by any commission, officer or agent of said State, or under any proceeding, judicial or otherwise authorized by law, the purchasers at any such sale may constitute themselves into a body politic and corporate, and shall have and possess all the powers and franchises which belonged to the company or corporation originally owning the railroad so purchased, including the power to purchase and hold real estate and the franchise to be and exist as a corporation under such name as the purchasers may select and adopt,” &c. This act was amended March 20th, 1875 — see Pamph. Acts, 132 — by adding new sections thereto. Sections two and three define, and probably enlarge the meaning of the word purchasers, as found in the before recited act, and contain a proviso, “ that the rights of any and all persons vested before the taking effect hereof shall not be impaired, or affected thereby.” Section four shows clearly that what is meant by constituting themselves a body politic and corporate under the statute amended, is, in effect, a reincorporation, but a reincorporation with “ the powers and franchises which belonged to the company or corporation originally owning the railroad.” That is, as to ownership of property, and liability for debts and engagements of the former company, it is a new corporation. The franchise, faculties, powers, are but a continuation of the old. These, the new corpora
But before the appellant railway company constituted itself a corporation under the act approved December 17th, 1873, the tariff of tolls fixed by the act approved February 21st,,
It is contended, that while the Mobile and Montgomery Railroad Company may have been bound by the limitations on its power to charge for transportation of local freight under the eighth section of the act approved February 25th, 1870, copied above, this did not authorize the imposition of the penalties declared in the act of April 19th, 1873; and that, to the extent of those penalties, the later statute impairs the obligation of the contract. There are several answers to this objection. First, it took away no chartered right of the company. It only provided a penalty for the violation, by the corporation, of its duty, as declared by the law under which it existed, and exercised its corporate powers. It had no authority to violate this law; and hence, the statute neither weakened nor impaired any power granted to the corporation. Second, the act which imposed the penalties, conferred on the railroad the right or privilege of increasing materially, and beneficially to itself, its tariff of tolls for transportation of passengers and local freight. Ve probably might presume this grant was made at the request of the railroad corporations affected by it; and, as intimated above, that the railroad accepted the grant, by availing itself of the privilege the law tendered to it, by increasing its rate
Another reason may be urged why the present appellant is bound by the statutes above, which fix the rate of railroad charges. It was incorporated, as we have shown, after we came under the dominion of the constitution of 1868. By section one, article thirteen, of that constitution, it is ordained that “ corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special act, except for municipal purposes. All general laws and special acts passed pursuant to this section, may be altered, amended or repealed.” The last sentence of the section above quoted, with the first somewhat modified, is retained in the constitution of 1875, section one, article fourteen. "We hold that the Circuit Court did not err in holding the appellant amenable to the statutes fixing a maximum tariff of rates for transportation of freight.
We have shown above that any demand and payment of charges for transportation of local freight, above fifty per •cent, increase on the rate of the same description of freight ■over the whole line of the railroad, is- excessive and illegal. It is in positive disregard and violation of the mandate of the law. It is contended for appellant, first, that inasmuch as the statute has declared the rate of tolls, and has given a penalty for its violation, this remedy is exclusive, and none other can be resorted to. Second, that the payments were voluntarily made, and therefore can not be recovered back. We do not think there is any thing in either of these objections. In regard to the first, any violation of a statute, or disregard of a statutory duty, by which another suffers pecuniary loss, gives to the injured party a right of action for the damages sustained. — Satterfield, Ex’r. of Grey, v.
It is contended for appellant that the penalties imposed by the act approved April 19th, 1873, Pamph. Acts, 62, were repealed by the act “ to prevent excessive charges by railroad companies,” approved March 17th, 1875, Pamph. Acts, 243. The language of the former statute is, " any railroad company, manager, agent or officer, violating the provisions hereof, shall be liable to the party injured thereby in double the amount of the overcharge; but in no case shall the penalty be less than twenty dollars.” The language of the latter statute is, " that any officer, manager or agent of any railroad company, lessee, association or corporation managing or operating any railroad in this State, who violates the provisions of an act entitled 'an act regulating the charges for transportation of freight upon railroads within this State,’ approved April 19th, 1873, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined not less than one hundred, nor more than five hundred dollars for each offense.” There are no words in the statute expressing the intention to repeal the former law, but the argument is that the later enactment is repugnant to the former, and therefore repeals it by implication. The former statute imposes a penalty, to be recovered in a civil suit by the party injured against the railroad company, its manager, agent or officer. The latter enactment seeks to uphold the police authority of the State, and declares a violation of the statute to be a misdemeanor in the officer, manager or agent, by whom it is violated. And, to so frame the statute as to embrace all conceivable infractions of the law, the statute makes the officer,, manager or agent alike liable, whether he derives his au thority from the railroad company, from a lessee thereof, or from an association or corporation managing or operating the road. Such is our construction of the statute, and we do not think the legislature intended to declare that the railroad corporation, lessee, or any association or corporation that might be managing or operating the railroad, should, as such, be indictable. We hold there is no repugnancy in the two statutes, and the later enactment does not repeal the former.
There is nothing in the argument, that the repeal of the
The clause, “ not exceeding fifty per cent, more than the rate charged for the transportation of the same description of freight over the whole line of its road,” found in the act of April 19, 1873, does not mean the pro rata allowance which may fall to this road, under the distribution of the products of transportation of through freights proper; those freights which, in their transit, pass over more than one railroad, and merely traverse this road, as a stage in a more extended shipment. We know that much of the freight falling within this description, travels the entire length, or greater part of its journey without change of cars, and in this way, much labor and expense are avoided in the matter of loading and unloading cars. We know, too, that it is the policy of railroad corporations to so connect their lines, as to effect a long, continuous, connected line of transportation; and that under such arrangement, the saving of labor and increase of business resulting from such connection, enable each road to accept as its share of the sum realized from this branch of its business, a sum which would fall much below fair remuneration for receiving, loading, transporting, unloading and delivering the same quantity and description of freight, whose departure and destination were each within the limit of the one road. Hence, we hold that the words, “over the whole line of its road,” mean and only mean freight which is taken on at one terminus, and discharged at the other. Thus construed, they furnish an equitable standard by which to graduate the charge for transporting local freight; for it, like the other, involves the labor of receiving, loading, transporting, discharging and delivering. It results that all the testimony of rates on what may be called through freight; that is, freight brought from, or carried to, a point beyond the termini of appellant’s road, was improperly received; and in this the Circuit Court erred.
The allowed increase is “ fifty per cent, more than the rate charged for the transportation of the same description of
Various exceptions were reserved to the admission of evidence, and to charges given and refused, but it is believed the foregoing opinion covers the material points raised by the record, and will furnish a solution of the questions likely to arise on another trial.
Reversed and remanded.