86 W. Va. 570 | W. Va. | 1920
Tbe indictments charge against each defendant singly a violation of section 17, eh. 15-0, Code 1918, re,ad with section 6 of the same chapter, a demurrer to which the circuit court overruled and certified its action here for review. Section 6 forbids discrimination in rates charged and received by public service corporations subject to the provision of the chapter for the transportation of persons or property and other service of a public character, and requires such corporations to charge, demand and receive,, without discrimination, the same rate for doing a like and contemporaneous service for any and all persons under the same or substantially similar circumstances and conditions; and section 17 declares “every officer, agent, employee or stockholder of any such public service corporation, and every patron, passenger, shipper or consignee, or other person, who shall violate, any provision of this act, or who procures, aids or abets any violation of any such provision by any such public service corporation” to be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof punishable as prescribed by that section.
The indictments sufficiently disclose the public service, character and function of Tyler Traction Company, the owner or operator of an electric railroad extending from Sistersville to Middlebourne,, wholly within Tyler County, and organized and equipped for and engaged in the transportation of passengers for hire from one station to another along the line of its railroad and between the two above mentioned terminal stations. The specific charge preferred in each indictment is that each of the defendants, within one ve,ar prior to the finding of the indictment, was, together with other unnamed persons, a passenger in one of the cars of Tyler Traction Company from one station to another along the line, of its railroad, “and then and there being such passenger, did unlawfully and wilfully procure, aid and abet the said Tyler Traction Company in transporting him * * * as a passenger in and by a certain electric
■ These indictments, it is argued, are insufficient because (1) there is no direct or positive charge of the commission of an offense by Tyle,r Traction Company, and (2) none that it carried defendants or any other persons as passengers, or (3) that it had or charged and collected a definitely prescribed and fixed rate for the carriage of any particular class of passengers, and (4) none of any act done by any of the defendants in aiding and abetting the traction company in the violation of the provisions of the statute, and (5) the indictments do not show the distance or between what stations Tyler Traction Company transported defendants or other persons as such passengers.
The. first objection, judged by the argument adduced to support it, is based upon the erroneous theory of the existence of the relation of principal and accessory between the traction company and each of the defendants growing out of the use of the words “aid and abet” found in the statute, and in the in.dictments. There is and can be no such relation under any reasonable construction or interpretation of the two sections or of the chapter, read and considered in its entirety, so far as its provisions are relevant to the matters involved in the indictments. Even if the doctrine contended for by defendants has any bearing "or effect in proceedings under an indictment for a misdemeanor, such as a violation of the sections is declared
The averments of the indictment already quoted sufficiently answer the second, third and .fifth propositions urged by defendants. These averments are emphatic and understandable in one way only, and being so disclose the actual relationship of carrier and passenger between the railroad on the one hand and the persons so carried to their destinations on the other, including defendants, who paid nothing of value for the service rendered to them, and those who did pay the regular rate charged, demanded and received by the railway company for such service; • and that the service so rendered to defendants and others was a like and contemporaneous service under similar circumstances and conditions. If in the opinion of the trial court the language used in the, indictments is not sufficiently specific and informatory to enable an ordinarily intelligent person to comprehend its meaning and purport, defendants may ask and the court require a more explicit statement of the facts necessary to render the charge intelligible. State v. Railroad Co., 68 W. Va. 193; State v. Lewis, 69 W. Va. 472; State v. Sixo, 77 W. Va. 243; State v. Hurley, 78 W. Va. 638.
There are two offenses of which a passenger 'may be guilty under section 17: One for procuring transportation without the payment of the rate prescribed by the, carrier for that service; the other by aiding or abetting the procurement of the service. The first offense is direct and personal and ordinarily results from the active personal participation of the passenger, whose activity accomplishes the end desired by the attainment of free transportation for himself contrary to the express requirement of the statute. In other words, he, procures through his own agency a privilege which he knows the carrier is forbidden to confer upon himself and others to whom it renders the same or like, service under similar circumstances and conditions without demanding and receiving therefor a fixed and definitely prescribed rate of compensation. It seems plain from the averments of the, indictments that defendants resorted to
If the defendants, conscious of the illegality of their acts, did, as charged, wilfully and unlawfully procure free transportation by the carrier, they are, guilty as charged. Though the word “aid” does not necessarily embrace or imply guilty knowledge or wrongful purpose, yet when supplemented by “abet”, as both are used in the, statute and indictments, they jointly indicate such knowledge and purpose and the intention to encourage the commission of the offense. Such are the usual definitions of these te.rms in felony indictments where there are accessories either before or after the fact. As already noted, the indictments present two phases, the personal procurement of carriage by the railroad company and the encouragement of the agents of the latter to join in the violation of the law. If the proof sustains either charge, other averments thereby be
Deeming the indictments sufficient, we direct the certification of our decision to the circuit court for its guidance.
Affirmed.