114 Ark. 486 | Ark. | 1914
Appellant railway company was convicted of violating the statute (Act No. 67, Acts 1913, approved February 20, 1913), which requires all railway companies operating roads one hundred miles and over in length to use crews of six men composed of an engineer, a fireman, a foreman and three helpers, while doing •switching in terminals or yards in cities of the first and second class. The act contains four sections and reads as follows:
“An Act for the better protection and safety of the public.
“Section 1. That no railroad company or corporation owning or operating any yards or terminals in the cities within this State, where switching, pushing or transferring of cars are made across public crossings within the city limits of the cities, shall operate their switch crew or crews with less than one engineer, a fireman, a foreman and three helpers.
“Sec 2. It being the purpose of this act to require all railroad companies or corporations who operate any yards or terminals within this State who do switching, pushing or transferring of cars across public crossings within the city limits of the cities to operate said switch crew or crews with not less than one engineer, a fireman, a foreman and three helpers, but nothing in this act shall be so construed as to prevent any railroad company or corporation from adding to or increasing their switch crew or crews beyond the number set out in this act.
“Sec. 3. The provisions of this act shall only apply to cities of the first and second class, and shall not apply to railroad companies or corporations operating railroads less than one hundred miles in length.
“Sec. 4. Any railroad company cr corporation violating the provisions of this act shall be fined for each separate offense not less than fifty dollars, and each crew so illegally operated shall constitute a separate offense.”
Appellant violated the terms of the statute for a day in switching cars in the city of Hot Springs, and on the trial of the case the court imposed the minimum fine. It is conceded that the terms of the act were violated, but appellant challenges its constitutionality on four grounds, namely, that the provisions with reference to the length of miles of road within the reach of the statute constitutes an unjust classification and in effect denies the equal protection of the laws, to railroads one hundred miles in length; that the statute is arbitrary and unreasonable as a police regulation in requiring the specified number of employees without necessity therefor; that the act operates as an interference with interstate commerce; and lastly, that the penalty imposed is so excessive that it in effect deprives the’ company of the opportunity to contest its validity without subjecting itself to unreasonable penalties.
It is insisted that the classification upheld in the former ea®e does not justify the (classification prescribed in the present act for the reason that the conditions are different, the former being a classification with respect to crews of trains while operating out on the road, whereas the present statute only applies to switching in the yards or terminals. We are of the opinion that the reason found in the other case for that classification applies with equal force to the present case, for it may be seen that there is more work demanded in switching cars on a road many miles in length, where the trains are run more frequently and consist of more cars, than on a short line doing perhaps only a local business.
“It is almost impossible, in some matters, to foresee ■and provide for every imaginable and exceptional case,” said the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Osan Lumber Co. v. Union County National Bank, 207 U. S. 251, ‘‘and the Legislature ought not to be required to do so at the risk of having its legislation declared void, although appropriate and proper upon the general subject upon which such legislation is to act, so long as there is no substantial and fair ground to say that the statute makes an unreasonable and unfounded general Classification, and thereby denies to any person the equal protection of the laws. In a classification for governmental purposes, there can not be an exact conclusion or inclusion of persons and things.”
In view of the elaborate 'discussion of the questions by this court, and by the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case which we have referred to as decisive of all the questions involved, a further discussion is unnecessary at this time. We find that appellant’s attack upon the validity of the act is unfounded.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.