29 Fla. 617 | Fla. | 1892
The Pensacola & Atlantic Railroad Company, appellee before this court, filed a bill against D. L. McKinnon, R. W. Storrs and E. W. Mooring, to restrain them from prosecuting certain suits at law before a Justice of the Peace and in the County Judge’s Court of Jackson county, State of Florida, against appellee. McKinnon instituted eight of these actions before a Justice of the Peace, and one before the County Judge, each for one hundred dollars. Storrs commenced three similar suits before the. Justice of the Peace, and Mooring two cases before the Justice of the Peace, and one in the County Judge’s Court, each for one hundred dollars, and these actions were pending when the bill was filed. These suits were instituted to recover an excess demanded and received by appellee over and above the rates fixed by the Railroad Commissioners of the State of Florida, for it to charge for the transportation of freight and passengers in this State. After the granting of an interlocutory injunction, Storrs
It appears from the bill that appellee is a railroad corporation organized under Chapter 3335, Laws of Florida, and has constructed a railroad one hundred and sixty-one miles long, from the city of Pensacola to River Junction, in this State, and the road was completed in April, 1883. It is .alleged that Railroad Commissioners, duly appointed and acting under the Railroad Commission law of this State, approved June 7th, 1887, Chapter 3746, have fixed rates for freight and passenger transportation on railroads doing business in this State, including that, of appellee, which they have determined to be just and reasonable for such roads to charge, and have by their orders directed said railroad companies not to charge more. '
Appellee states in its bill that it has not limited itself to the rates fixed by the Commission, either in the transportation of freight or passengers, and has on divers occasions charged more than the said rates so fixed by the Railroad Commission, but avers that the rates charged both for freight and passengers were just and reasonable, and in no instance has it charged for
The bill further alleges that said Railroad Commissioners have not the power to determine the justice or reasonableness of the charges for services by appellee, because such power involves the exercise of judicial ■functions, which the Commissioners are inhibited from exercising by Article II, Article V, Section 1, and Article Y, Section 80, of the Constitution of the State of Florida. It is also averred, that ‘ ‘ if said functions are not judicial, they are legislative, and not exercisable by the said Commissioners, under the Constitution of the State of Florida.” This presents the first point for our consideration of this record.
The second article of the Constitution distributes the powers of government into three departments — “legislative, executive and judicial” — audit provides that “ no person properly belonging to one of the departments shall exercise any powers appertaining to either of the others, except in cases expressly provided for by this Constitution. ’ ’ Section 1 of Article Y provides that ‘ ‘the judicial power of the State shall be vested in a Supreme Court, Circuit Courts, Criminal Courts, County Courts, County Judges and Justices of the Peace.” Section 80 of Article Y relates to the election of Clerks for Criminal Courts of Record that may be established in each county, and other matters which can have no bearing upon the questions involved here. There is
A further'objection is made in the bill to the rates which it is alleged the Commissioners have fixed and determined upon to be chárged by appellee for transporting freight and passengers over its road. This objection does not go to the right of the Commissioners to make and fix rates for appellee’s road, but it seeks to question the reasonableness and justice of the rates fixed, and it is averred that said rates are neither just nor reasonable for reasons which are set out in detail. The case made by appellee to show the rates are unreasonable and unjust is substantially this : It completed its line of road from the city of Pensacola to River Junction, a distance of one hundred and sixty-one miles, in April, A. I). 1883, at which time it began to operate the same, and has continued to do so to the time of the filing of' the bill, which was on the 25th day of June, A. D. 1888; that the Railroad Commissioners of the State of Florida, appointed and acting-under Chapter 3746, Laws of Florida, have fixed for freight and passenger transportation over the railroads doing business in the State of Florida, including that of appellee, rates which they have determined to be just and reasonable, and have directed the said several, roads, including appellee, not to charge any rates greater than those so fixed and determined by the
That during the year ending June 30th, 1887, the excess of the operating expenses of the said road (not including taxes, which amounted to $17,069.15) over the income from all sources from the operation thereof was $4,234.52, and during the period from June 30th, 1887, to March 1st, 1888 (to which latter date only the receipts and expenditures have as yet been compiled), the excess of operating expenses of said road over its income from all sources from the operation thereof has been the sum of $15,684.87.
It is further alleged that West Florida, through which said road runs, has only eight inhabitants to the square mile, and along the entire route of the road from Pensacola (a city of twelve to fifteen thousand inhabitants) to River Junction, there are but two towns exceeding one thousand inhabitants, and but three which exceed two hundred and fifty inhabitants, and the main staple for shipment is lumber, for the transportation of which- numerous streams vie with appellee’s road at a rate much cheaper than appellee can afford, so that the present proportion between the earnings and expenses of appellee will not apparently
That at the beginning of the partial operation of the road, from August, 1883, to February 1st, 1885, the local rates’ were as follows :
Agents — 1st class rates, 4J- cents per mile.
Agents — 2d class rates, 3-J- cents per mile.
Conductors — 1st blass rates, 5 cents per mile.
Conductors — 2d class rates, 4 cents per mile.
Round trip rate, 7 cents per mile.
That during the existence of these rates nearly 90 per cent, of the persons traveling on said road, traveled on the 3i cent rate, and those- rates were found to be entirely unremunerative, and the 3i and 4 cents, and the round trip rates were abolished on the first of June, 1885. That such change did not result, and has not resulted, in the decrease in the number of local passengers, but immediately upon such change the gross income from the transportation of such passengers, which had prior thereto been not only unremunerative, but practically of unvarying amount, increased fifteen per cent, for the ensuing year, which increase has been maintained with uniformity since that time.
That at the beginning of the completed operation of the road, appellee established rates of local freight at a
That not only are the said rates unreasonable and unjust as aforesaid, but they are also unreasonable and unjust when compared with rates permitted by the said Commissioners upon lines of railroad in the State of Florida, existing and operating- under the same conditions as those under which the appellee exists and operates, e. {/., upon the line of the Florida Railway & Navigation Company, which 'connects directly with appellee's road. The rates upon this road, including that part in direct connection with appellee’s road, are for class “R” of freight, as fixed by said Commissioners :
For 10 miles, 16 cents per 100,
For 30 miles, 16 cents per 100,
and upon the line of appellee’s road as follows :
For 10 miles, 8 cents per 100,'
For 30 miles, 8 cents per 100,
.and upon other classifications of freight made by said Commissioners the like unreasonable and unjust rates have been fixed for appellee’s road.
With the exception of the .averment that the rates fixed by the Commission for appellee’s road are unreasonable and unjust when compared with rates permitted by said Commissioners upon railroads in the State of Florida, existing and operating under the same-conditions as those under which appellee’s road exists and operates, the allegations of the bill, as to just and reasonable rates, are in substance the same as those contained in the fourth plea filed by appellee in the case of Pensacola & Atlantic R. R. Co. vs. State, 25 Fla., 310 ; 5 South. Rep., 833, and which was held not to be a good plea by this court. Upon substantially the same state of facts it was said they were “rather the expression of opinions and apprehensions than
The further averment that the rates so fixed by the Commissioners are unjust and unreasonable when compared with the rates permitted on other lines operating under same conditions as those under which appellee operates its road, can not be held to overthrow the reasonableness or justice of the said rates fixed by the Commissioners. The statute directs the Commissioners to make for each of the railroads doing business in this State a schedule of just -and reasonable rates of charges for the transportation of passengers and freights over each road. Under this statute each road is entitled to have a just and reasonable rate, but a rate reasonable and just in itself for one
In Chicago, B. & Q. R. R. Co. vs. Iowa, 94 U. S., 155, it is said: “It is very clear that a uniform rate of charges for all railroad companies in the State might operate unjustly upon some. It was proper, therefore, to provide in some way for an adaptation of the rates to the circumstances of the different roads; and the general assembly, in the exercise of its legislative discretion has seen fit to do this by a system of classification. Whether this was the best that could have been done is not for us to decide. Our province is only to determine whether it could be done at all and under any circumstances. If it could, the Legislature must decide for itself, subject to no control from us, whether the common good requires that it should be done.” The State statute, the vitality of which was questioned in this case, divided the railroads in the State into classes, according to business, and established a maximum rate for each class. A statute in Arkansas fixed the maximum fare for the transportation of passengers over railroads in that State, according to the length of the road. The Supreme Court of the United States, in Dow vs. Beidleman, 125 U. S., 680, held the statute to be valid. It is said in the opinion: “It is equally clear that the plaintiffs in error have not been denied the equal protection of the laws. The Legislature, in the exercise of 'its power of regulating fares and freights, may classify the railroads according to the amount of the business which they have done, or appear likely to do. Whether the
As we have already seen, appellee shows no defense to the actions at law, and hence no • foundation is laid to authorize the writ to restrain said suits. The authorities cited by counsel for appellee are not in conflict with this view. They go to the extent of holding that where a complainant shows a defense to numerous suits instituted against him at law by a large
The demurrer should have been sustained. It is therefore ordered that the decree of the chancellor overruling the demurrer be reversed, with directions that the case be remanded, and that an order be entered sustaining the demurrer.