114 N.Y. 300 | NY | 1889
In June, 1876, the defendant and one Quintard ■entered into a written contract which, among other things, provided that'Quintard should build at Long Island City upon the lands of the defendant a dock two hundred and fifty feet long .and forty feet wide, and erect thereon a pocket for holding and storing coal according to certain plans and specifications .annexed. The defendant was to have the use of the south side
The defense is that the contract was against public policy, and was, therefore, illegal and void. The defendant is a railroad corporation organized under the laws of the state, and was, therefore, a common carrier of passengers and freight, and was subject to the duties and liabilities of such. These duties and liabilities have often been the subject of judicial consideration in the different states of the union. In Illinois it has been held that a railroad corporation, although permitted to establish its rates for transportation, must do so without injurious discrimination to individuals ; that its charges must be reasonable. (C.& A. R. R. Co. v. People ex rel. Koerner, 67 Ill. 11; Vincent v. C. & A. R. R. Co., 49 id. 33.) In Ohio it was held that, where a railroad company gave a lower rate to a favored shipper with the intent to give such shipper an exclusive monopoly, thus affecting the business and destroy
In Hew York the authorities are exceedingly meager. The question was considered to some extent in the case of Killmer v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company (100 N. Y. 395), in which it was held that the reservation in the general act of the power of the legislature to regulate and reduce charges, where the earnings exceeded ten per cent of the capital actually expended, did not relieve the company from its common-law duty as a common carrier; that the question, as to what was a reasonable sum for the transportation of goods on the lines of a railroad in a given case is a complex question into which enters many elements for consideration.
In' determining the duty of a common carrier we must be reasonable and just. The carrier should be permitted to charge reasonable compensation for the goods transported. He should
The question as to whether there was unjust discrimination embraced in the provisions of the contract does not appear to have been determined by the referee, for no finding of fact appears upon thalt subject. Neither does it appear that he was requested to -find upon that question, and, consequently, there is no exception to the refusal to find thereon. Unless, therefore, we can determine the question as one of law, there is nothing upon this subject presented for review in this court.
Is the provision of the contract, therefore, providing for a rebate of fifteen cents per ton from the regular tariff rates an unjust discrimination as a matter of law ? Had this provision stood alone, unqualified by other provisions, without the circumstances under which it was executed, explaining the necessity therefor, we should be inclined to th'e opinion that it did
Therefore, in this case, the question is one of fact, and not ,of law, and inasmuch as the discrimination has not been found to be unjust or unreasonable, the judgment cannot be .disturbed.
The defendant, in its answer, alleged that the rebates .-accruing between the 1st day of January and the 31st day of October, 1879, were waived by the parties. The referee, upon request, refused to find that this was fhe case, and an exception was taken to such refusal.
Had w.e been sitting as a trial court, it is possible we should "have reached a different conclusion, but on review the evidence is too meagre and indefinite to justify a reversal.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur. '
.Judgment affirmed.