Chicago & Alton Railroad v. People ex rel. Attorney General

152 Ill. 230
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 152 Ill. 230 (Chicago & Alton Railroad v. People ex rel. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & Alton Railroad v. People ex rel. Attorney General, 152 Ill. 230 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case was before us at a former term, and is reported as People ex rel. v. Ghicago and Alton Railroad Co. 130 Ill. 175. The case was then submitted to us on a demurrer to the petition for a writ of mandamus. The substance of the prayer of the petition was, that a writ of mandamus should be issued commanding the railroad company to establish a passenger and freight depot in the town of Upper Alton, upon its line of railway between the station of Godfrey and the station of Wann, and to stop its trains, both freight and passenger, or a sufficient number thereof to accommodate the public, and discharge passengers and freight thereat when requested. We there said: “The petition undertakes to show the public importance and necessity of the station asked for in two ways : First, by alleging the facts and circumstances which tend to prove it; and secondly, by directly averring it. It cannot be doubted, we think, that the facts alleged make out a clear and strong case of public necessity. * * * Then, as we have already said, the petition directly avers, and the demurrer admits, that the accommodation of the public living in and near said town requires, and long has required, the establishment of a passenger and freight depot on the line of its road within said town. Unless, then, there is some explanation for the course pursued by the defendant which the record does not give, we cannot escape the conviction that its conduct in the premises exhibits an entire want of good faith in its efforts to perform its public functions as a common carrier, and an unwarrantable disregard of the public interests and necessities. It cannot be admitted that the discretion vested in the defendant in the matter of establishing and maintaining its freight and passenger stations extends so far as to justify such manifest and admitted disregard of its duties to the public.” And the judgment of the circuit court was thereupon reversed for the error in sustaining the demurrer to the petition, and the cause was remanded for further proceedings. Upon the remandment of the case there was answer and replication, and a trial of the issues before the court, without a jury. The court found the issues for the petitioner and overruled a motion for a new trial. It then rendered final judgment, awarding a writ of mandamus against the railroad company, commanding it to establish and maintain a station on the line of its road at Upper Alton, and to stop at said station, daily, a sufficient number of trains to accommodate the public, and to receive and discharge at said station such freight and passengers as shall be there offered, in like manner as at other stations on the line of its road where like amount of freight and passengers was being received and discharged by it at the time of the filing in the court of the petition herein. The record was then again brought here by appeal, and various assignments of error made.

We have examined the entire testimony in the record itself, and find the facts of the case to be substantially these : The Chicago and Alton Eailroad Company owns and operates a line of railroad running from East St. Louis to Chicago. Alton is a city on the line of its railroad that is quite a manufacturing point and does a large business, and occupies the fourth place of importance in the freight and passenger traffic of the company. The company runs its passenger trains daily between St. Louis and Chicago, which pass through Alton, and also an accommodation train between Alton and St. Louis, makipg five trains daily, each way, on the company’s road between Alton and St. Louis. The Indianapolis and St. Louis railroad (now the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Eailroad Company, usually called the “Big Pour,”) runs into Alton. It also has an accommodation train running between Alton and St. Louis, and with its regular trains and its accommodation train has a number equal to those of the Chicago and Alton Eailroad Company between those points, making ten trains daily on each road between Alton and St. Louis.

Upper Alton is a village whose territorial limits adjoin those of Alton on the east. It is principally a residence town, being practically an adjunct to Alton. It has a population of about 1700, including -the students from abroad who attend Shurtleff College and the Wyman Institute, two educational establishments there. It has no manufactories, except a blacksmith shop, and wagon factory that uses no machinery but makes some wagons, no coal or lumber yards, no hotel, no bank and no large stores. It has some twelve or fifteen business houses, that do in the aggregate a business of about $100,000 or $125,000 a year, and of that amount one-third is bought by the merchants from stores in Alton, the remainder mostly from St. Louis. It is connected with Alton by a steam motor lii: e and a horse railroad. Both lines start at Upper Alton from the square, on which most of the stores are located, and run to within a block of the union depot at Alton, at which depot all trains on both railroads at Alton arrive and from which they depart. The motor line consumes about twenty minutes, and the street car line thirty minutes, making a trip between the places, and the distance between the points on each street railroad is about two and three-fourths miles.

In the extreme eastern limits of the city of Alton both the Chicago and Alton and the “Big Pour” Railroad Companies have a station called “Stutz” or Upper Alton, at which most of their trains stop. It is on the line of the horse railroad running between Alton and Upper Alton, about one and one-third miles from the business part of Upper Alton, half a mile outside of its territorial limits, and it takes fifteen minutes to go on the street railroad from its business center to Stutz station. The travel from Upper Alton is from ninety to ninety-five per cent to St. Louis. This Stutz or Upper Alton station affords facilities to take, or depart from, any of the trains which leave this station daily for St. Louis and return thereto.

During the boating season on the Mississippi river, usually seven or eight months, a steamboat runs daily between Alton and St. Louis, leaving Alton at seven o’clock in the morning and returning at half-past five in the evening. ■ The trip on the fiver being pleasant and cool, free from dust and much cheaper than by rail, causes the boat to be largely patronized by the people of Alton and Upper Alton. Freight by the boat is so much cheaper than by rail that during the river season seventy-five per cent of the merchandise that is bought in St. Louis for Upper Alton comes by way of the boat.

East of the territorial limits of Upper Alton, and a quarter of a mile east of the “cut-off” hereinafter mentioned, and about one mile from the business portion of the village, the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company has a depot for and called Upper Alton, but its passenger trains are very seldom patronized by the people of the village because they do not run at convenient hours, the trains leaving the depot for St. Louis at 6:00 A. M. and 4:30 P. M., and the train arriving there at 9:30 P. M., because they do not sell commutation tickets, and also because there is no street railroad to the depot. Consequently passengers from Upper Alton prefer to take the street railroad to Stutz station, in Alton, where they can have convenient trains, or take the motor line and go to Alton and take the boat. There are quite a number of residents in Upper Alton who are engaged in business in St.

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Bluebook (online)
152 Ill. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-alton-railroad-v-people-ex-rel-attorney-general-ill-1894.