Arkansas & Louisiana Railway Co. v. Harris

36 S.W. 186, 62 Ark. 452, 1896 Ark. LEXIS 200
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 30, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 36 S.W. 186 (Arkansas & Louisiana Railway Co. v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas & Louisiana Railway Co. v. Harris, 36 S.W. 186, 62 Ark. 452, 1896 Ark. LEXIS 200 (Ark. 1896).

Opinion

Battle, J.

During the year 1893, Milton Harris, resided at Nashville, in this state, and dealt in country produce. He purchased apples, hides, chickens, and eggs, and shipped them over the road of the Arkansas. & Louisiana Railway Company. In this time, the railway company did not keep posted at its depot freight office at Nashville, in a conspicuous place, plainly and legibly printed schedules of its rates of freight and charges ; and the consequence was, whenever Harris, wished to find out what the charges for shipping any of his property on the railroad was, he asked the agent of the company for the information, and received it. Finally growing weary of this manner of doing business, he, on the 12th of December, 1893, gave to the agent of the company the following notice:

“State of Arkansas, County of Howard, Town of Nashville. To W. B. McDonald, agent of the Arkansas & Louisiana Railway Company, Nashville, Ark.: You are hereby notified that the Arkansas & Louisiana Railway Company has failed to comply with section seven (7) of the statute approved March 24, 1887, requiring a schedule of the rate of freight charges to be posted up in the depot freight office. I am the party aggrieved by this violation of the law, and I demand that said company make proper reparation to me for each and every day the law has been violated during the year last past. Given under my hand this 12th day of December, 1893. Milton Harris, by W. S. Curran, his attorney.’’

And, failing to receive the desired reparation within fifteen days, and being out of business, he brought this action against the railway company to recover the statutory penalty of $50 to $1000 for each and every day in the year 1893 the company had failed to keep the schedule of rates of freight and charges posted at the Nashville depot freight office, and recovered judgment for $12,000, and the defendant appealed.

While the evidence adduced in the trial of the action was sufficient to show that no schedule was posted at any time during the year 1893 at the depot freight office at Nashville, and that the notice in writing which we have set out in this opinion was given, and the other facts which we have stated, there was no evidence that Harris received any actual injury. He testified, and could not tell when he first examined to see whether or not the schedule had been posted, nor how often he had looked. He testified that he usually went to the agent of the company, and inquired as to rates of freight, which were always given to him upon request. Upon such evidence, was he entitled to recover a penalty?

This action is based on sections seven and twelve of the act entitled, “An act to prevent unjust discrimination and exhorbitant charges by railroads,” etc., approved March 24, 1887, which are sections 6307 and 6312 of Sand. & H. Digest, and are as follows :

“Sec. 7. That all railroad corporations in this state shall [be] and are hereby required to keep posted up at every depot freight office under the control of, or used by, any such railroad corporation, in a conspicuous place therein, plainly and legibly printed schedules, which shall state: First, the different kinds and classes of property to be carried; second, the different places between which property shall be carried; third, the rates of freight and charges for carriages between such places and for all services connected with transportation of such property, from its receipt until it is delivered or forwarded, and each day of failure to post up such printed schedule shall constitute a separate offense. Such schedule shall be posted at least five days before the same shall go into effect, and the same shall remain in full force until another schedule shall, as aforesaid, be posted. And every person and corporation engaged as aforesaid shall receive, load, unload, transport, store, and deliver to the consignee thereof any and all property offered for shipment at and for charges not greater than those specified in such schedule as may at the time be in force, and shall, on demand, issue to shippers duplicate freight receipts, which shall state the class of freight shipped, the weight, and charges, etc.
Who may recover penalty for failure to post freight schedule.
“Sec. 12. That any railroad corporation that shall violate the * * * * seventh * * sections of this act ***** shall forfeit and pay for every such offense any sum not less than fifty dollars nor exceeding one thousand dollars and costs of suit, to be recovered by a civil action by the party aggrieved, in any court having jurisdiction thereof, * * * but all such actions shall be brought within one year after the cause of action accrues, or within one year after the party complaining comes to the knowledge of his or her rights, and no such action shall be maintained unless it is alleged and shown that, before bringing his action, the party complaining brought the matter to the attention of the railroad company by a notice or statement of facts in writing, accompanied by the papers showing such violation, if any he has, and a demand for reparation, delivered to some agent of the railroad company, and that said railroad company, for fifteen days after the reception of said notice, neglected or refused to refund any overcharge or make other proper reparation.”

The schedule mentioned is required to be posted for the benefit of those desiring and seeking to ship their property over railroads. So much of section 7 of the act as prohibits the charging of more than the rates fixed by the schedule, and the information afforded by the posting, clearly indicates that this is its sole object. No other person can be benefited thereby, or injured by the failure to post.

But who is entitled to the penalty allowed by section 12 of the act for a failure to post the schedule? The statute says the party thereby aggrieved; and that he is not, unless the railroad company neglects or refuses to make “proper reparation” within fifteen days after demand and notice has been made and given in the manner prescribed by law. The proper interpretation of the word “reparation,” as used in this connection in section 12, will enable us to decide this question ; for no one to whom reparation is not due can be entitled to the penalty. What is meant by it?

No reparation can be made for a failure to post a schedule in the past by a present posting. The posting is for the purpose of affording information to those desiring and seeking to ship property after the posting. It can be of no service to any one as to shipments made. As to him no reparation can be made, except by compensation for the injuries he has suffered from the failure to post. Compensation, then, for injuries or wrongs suffered by reason of the failures to comply with the act to which penalties are annexed is what is meant by “reparation.” Section 7 .furnishes an illustration, and that is overcharges paid by the shipper through ignorance •of the regular rates of freight caused by the failure to post the schedule. The refunding of the amount paid in excess of' the regular rates and interest would be a proper reparation in that case. The shipper who has looked for the posted schedule, and failed to find it, may be injured by time lost and trouble incurred in the search, and may be entitled to compensation therefor, and to nominal damages if no actual injury has been suffered.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 186, 62 Ark. 452, 1896 Ark. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-louisiana-railway-co-v-harris-ark-1896.