52 Fla. 646 | Fla. | 1906
(after stating the facts) : The return of
The demurrer raises the question of the sufficiency of the return as a defense to the writ.
In the opinion on the demurrer to the alternative writ in this case, 51 Fla. 543, 41 South. Rep. 529, we said: “The respondent having voluntarily performed this service for the Western Union Telegraph Company may not deny it to another company applying for similar service under like conditions. The order of the Railroad Commissioners is a general order, and we think fully authorized by the Constitution and Chapter 4700, Acts of 1899. Nor is this duty affected by the fact that the service was performed for the Western Union Telegraph Company under an agreement or contract. The rates prescribed in this general order for the services to he rendered are general in their nature and apply to all telegraph and telephone companies which seek to have the services performed and are not challenged on the ground of unreasonableness.”
We understand from the admissions in the return of the respondent that it has been for some years past and is
The facts admitted in the return as to the service being rendered by the respondent for the Western Union Telegraph Company and refused to other companies under like circumstances, show that such service is rendered as a common carrier, and the averment in the return that the service is being rendered under a contract and not as a common carrier cannot avail the respondent as a defense to the writ. There is no showing that the service being rendered for the Western Union Telegraph Company is different from that rendered to other shippers of the same subjects of transportation except that delivery is made between stations on the respondent’s line of road. The respondent offers to transport the employes, poles-, wire, etc., of the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company, from and to regular stations, at its local rates, thereby admitting them to be proper subjects of transportation.
The respondent, a common carrier, admits that it is voluntarily transporting and delivering -between stations on its line, employes and freight for one incorporated public telegraph company to maintain lines of wire along the
Under Section 30 of Article 16 of the Constitution "the Legislature is invested with full power to pass laws * * * to prevent unjust discrimination * * * by persons and corporations engaged as common carriers in transporting persons and property or performing other services of a public nature.” Chapter 4700, Acts of 1899, provides that the Railroad Commissioners shall make reasonable and just regulations for the observance of rates fixed by them "as to charges at any and all points for the neeoessary handling and delivery of all kinds of freight
It is clear that where a railroád company in its capacity as a common carrier renders services to one corporation so as to enable it to serve the public, and, without sufficient excuse, refuses similar services to another corporation lawfully authorized to likewise serve the public, It is an unjust discrimination; and the Railroad Commissioners have the power under the Constitution and Laws of this State to make just and reasonable rules and regulations to prevent such unjust discrimination. See State v. Jacksonville Terminal Co., 41 Fla. 377, 27 South. Rep. 225; State ex rel. Cumberland Telephone and Telegraph Co. v. Texas & P. Ry. Co., 52 La. Ann. 1850, 28 South. Rep. 284; State ex rel. Attorney General v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 51 Fla. 543, 41 South. Rep. 529. See, also, Augusta Brokerage Co. v. Central of Georgia R. Co., 121 Ga. 48, 48 S. E. Rep. 714; Tift v. Southern Ry. Co., 123 Fed. Rep. 789; Agee & Co. v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 142 Ala. 344, 37 South. Rep. 680.
The power of the Railroad Commissioners to make the
The rights of the respondent under the contract which was made in 1902, are subject to the constitutional and statutory provisions above quoted, and the enforcement of the order of the Railroad Commissioners will not violate valid contractual rights of the respondent. City of Tampa v. Tampa Water Works Company, 45 Fla. 600, 34 South. Rep. 631, affirmed in 199 U. S. 241.
The respondent rests its defense upon its claim that in rendering the stated service to the Western Union Telegraph Company it is not acting as a common carrier, and therefore it is not required by law to render a similar service to other telegraph companies; bul, as we have seen, the facts as to the character of the service admitted in the return constitute the service that of a common earner, and this service being voluntarily performed for one gives others under like conditions a right to demand it for theml selves.