222 U.S. 444 | SCOTUS | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case involves a consideration of the statute of North Carolina passed oh in No. 487, and was argued and submitted therewith. The question, then, only is whether the principles there expressed apply to it.
The action was brought by defendants in error, a co-partnership, against the plaintiff in error, a railway company and a. common carrier, for penalties under the statute, which is. set out in the opinion in No. 487, to' recover the sum of $50 a day for fifteen days for failing and refusing for such time to receive a carload of shingles tendered to the company at JEtutherfordton, North Carolina, for shipment to one James Haddox, at Scottsville, Tennessee.
The case was tried.before a jury, which rendered a verdict for the plaintiff firm (defendants in error) for the sum of $350, upon which judgment was duly entered. It was
The statute is attacked on the same ground as in case. No. 487. The facts, as recited by the Supreme Court, are as follows: Defendants in error having received an order for- a carload of shingles from Haddox at Scottsville, Tennessee, applied at Rutherfordton to the railway company for a car. It was furnished and loaded, shipping instructions given, prepayment of the freight tendered and a bill of lading demanded. The agent of the company refused to give the bill of lading or ship the goods, assigning as a reason that he did not know where Scottsville was nor the road to it. Defendants in error demanded that the goods be shipped, and told the agent that they would pay any additional amount found to be due, and requested that when the agent got ready to ship to telephone them and they would come over and pay the freight due. Another agent “came to take over the agency,'and being told, on inquiry of plaintiffs (defendants in error), about the-carload of shingles and what the trouble was,” he asked for instructions, which were given him, and on July 19th the freight was paid, the bill of lading given, and the shingles shipped as directed, “arriving at their destination without further let or hindrance.” Defendants in error testified that they had received no pecuniary injury by reason of the delay, and that the first agent “still had charge of the depot when the shingles were shipped.”
There was evidence offered on the part of the railway company that Scottville was an industrial siding on the Knoxville & Augusta Road eight or ten miles out of Knoxville, established for the convenience of persons shipping brick from that point, and that bills of lading for goods shipped to and from that point were made out at Rockford, a regular station, two miles distant. It was testified that since the consolidation of the East Tennessee & Virginia Railroad with the old Richmond & Danville, the
The statute was attacked by the railway company in its requests for certain instructions, the refusal to give which was sustained by the Supreme Court. The court intimated that, as had been held in a former opinion, the commerce clause of the Constitution was not involved in the case on the ground "that the penalty [under the statute] accrues before the ‘freight is accepted for transportation/ and on the principle applied in the case of Coe v. Errol, 116 U. S. 517.” But the court, conceding, arguendo, "that the goods when tendered for transportation to another State, as to matters involved in such transportation, and in reference to these penalty statutes, should be considered and dealt with as interstate commerce,” was of opinion that the contention of the railway company could not be sustained, and concluded, after a careful discussion of cases in this court and in the state court, that the statute did not burden interstate commerce, and that, "in the absence of inhibitive congressional legislation, or of interfering action on the part 'of the Interstate Commerce Commission, the statute in question is a valid regulation in direct and reasonable enforcement of the duties incumbent on defendant as a common carrier.”
We have shown in the opinion in No. 487, ante, p. 424, that there need not be directly “inhibitive congressional legislation,” but congressional legislation which occupies the field of regulation and thereby excludes action hy the State. Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. State of Washington, ante, p. 370.
The facts in this case are somewhat different from those in No. 487 and require to be noticed. The majority of the court found that it did not appear from the testimony that the railway company had not filed its schedule of rates with the Interstate Commerce Commission to Scottville, Tennessee, the court observing that it could'"hardly be
We have set forth in No. 487 our reasons for holding otherwise.
Judgment reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.