Bradford Construction Co. v. Heflin

42 So. 174, 88 Miss. 314
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 42 So. 174 (Bradford Construction Co. v. Heflin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradford Construction Co. v. Heflin, 42 So. 174, 88 Miss. 314 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

Whitfield, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The chief contention in this case is that the construction company was a railroad corporation, within sec. 193 of the constitution, in operating the train in question. The argument, broadly stated, is about this: That sec. 193 of the constitution of 1890 can only be upheld, as not violative of the constitution of the United States, upon the ground that the business of railroad corporations, in operating their trains, is inherently dangerous, and that this inherent danger furnishes the chief basis for distinguishing between the employes of railroad corporations and the employes of other corporations, the nature of whose business is not inherently dangerous; that this was the ground of the decision ' in the Ballard case, 81 Miss., 555 (s.c., 34 South. Rep., 533); 62 L. R. A., 407; 95 Am. St. Rep., 476; that the true intent and meaning' of said sec. 193, looking to its spirit, and not to its letter, is that the words “railroad corporation” in that section should be made to embrace any person or any corporation, whether chartered as a railroad corporation or not, while it may be actually operating, at the time of any alleged injury, railroad trains; that we are not to look at the name of the corporation, or even at its charter, [345]*345as determinative as to whether such corporation falls within or without sec. 193 of the constitution, but that we are to look solely to the character of the employment, in which the employes of the corporation are engaged at the time of the injury, and that that is the determining feature, to wit, what the nature of the employment is, and not what the character or duties of the employer are, as set out in the charter of such employer- and that, if this is not the true test, then said sec. 193 violates the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, because under any other construction it would be made to apply to employes of railroad corporations whilst acting alone as common carriers of freight and passengers — that is, to railroad corporations, treated as commercial railroads, as the judicial phrase sometimes goes — and fails to protect the employes of other so-called railroad corporations, such as logging railroads, railroads used in connection with mines and lumber corporations, and various other enterprises.

It is said that a mining corporation, or a lumber corporation, which builds its own private railroad for use in connection with its lumber or coal business, is engaged in a railroad business as inherently dangerous, though it may be in a less degree, as a railroad corporation proper, a commercial railroad, and that, unless the employes of the former are protected by said sec. 193, said section is violative of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States. On this ground the counsel for the plaintiff assail said sec. 193, as interpreted in the Ballard case, as violative of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States for the reasons set out above. Curiously enough, the counsel for the railroad company also assail said sec. 193 as unconstitutional, in their reply to counsel for plaintiff, on the ground that the Ballard case did not go far enough, insisting that in the Ballard case the court ought to have held that the employes of railroad corporations meant the employes of railroad corporations while engaged as common carriers in trans[346]*346portation of passengers or freight, and could never apply to such employes of railroad corporations proper, if only they should happen to be engaged in the construction of a new road, or in the transportation of coal or gravel from mines or pits owned or leased by such railroad corporation proper; and, further, counsel contend that the court, in the Ballard case, should go further and declare that the employes of railroad corporations engaged as common carriers in the transportation of freight and passengers meant only, in said sec. 193, such employes of such railroad corporations as were actually engaged, at the time of the injury, in the operation of the cars, in the running of the trains, etc., and not any such employes as were not so engaged- — as, for example, telegraph operators, station agents, etc., or the employes of such railroad corporations' engaged in the construction of any work not connected in any way with the actual operation of the railroad trains — and because the Ballard case did not do that, because the Ballard case did not go on beyond what was strictly in the case, and decide these two points altogether out of the case, the railroad counsel complain, and desire to have said sec. 193 declared violative of the fourteenth amendment of the United States constitution. In short, counsel for the railroad company are aggrieved because the court did not in the Ballard case go beyond the points of decision, and write obiter dicta; and counsel for plaintiff are aggrieved because the court in the Ballard case, also, did not write obiter dicta in expanding along their line of thought the opinion beyond anything called for by the case made by the facts. It would seem unnecessary to remind counsel so eminent as those engaged on both sides in this cause, that a court could scarcely do a more unwise thing than to go a step not required by the case made by the facts in any cause that may arise. Certainly it is the object of this court not to write obiter dicta in any case.

What, now, are the answers — addressing ourselves to the precise question here involved — to be made to the contention of counsel for the appellee that the Bradford Construction Com[347]*347pany, in operating this train, was a railroad corporation, within the meaning of said sec. 193, for the reasons set out above ? The pleadings in the case treat the Gulf & Ship Island Hailroad Company and the Bradford Construction Company as separate corporations. They are so dealt with throughout the whole course of the trial in the court below. It appears that the Bradford Construction Company is a corporation chartered under the laws of West Virginia. It is authorized to own a railroad. It is not authorized to operate one. An individual may own a railroad. Almost any sort of an association of persons may own a railroad, and may own it without operating it. Ownership of a railroad may exist for many purposes other than the transportation of freight and passengers. The ownership and operation of a railroad are things as wide apart as the poles. A careful consideration of the methods by which railroad corporations and construction companies are chartered by the laws of West Virginia will show that the methods are wholly distinct, and that the Bradford Construction Company was chartered in West Virginia as a construction company, and not as a railroad corporation, in any proper legal sense of the words. The well-known usual powers granted in charters for construction companies are wholly different from those usually granted to railroad corporations properly known as such — chartered as such. It is so exceedingly plain that the Bradford Construction Company is not a railroad corporation that that matter cannot be seriously discussed; and it must be stated that learned counsel for plaintiff do not. so insist. They hesitate, of course, to claim that, as chartered, it is a railroad corporation; but their ingenious insistence is that in this particular case the Bradford Construction Company is, while operating the train in question, under the circumstances shown in the record, to be treated as if it were a railroad corporation, within the meaning of said sec.

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Bluebook (online)
42 So. 174, 88 Miss. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradford-construction-co-v-heflin-miss-1906.