Cincinnati, Georgetown & Portsmouth Railroad v. Poland

10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 617

This text of 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 617 (Cincinnati, Georgetown & Portsmouth Railroad v. Poland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati, Georgetown & Portsmouth Railroad v. Poland, 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 617 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

The three above named eases were argued and submitted together on demurrers to the petitions.

The plaintiff, the Cincinnati, Georgetown & Porstmouth Railroad Company, claiming to be an interurban railroad company, seeks to enjoin the.state tax commission from certifying to the Auditor of State that it is a “railroad company” and should pay 4 per cent., on its gross earnings, and from taking any action or making report to the Auditor of State whereby it will be charged and required to pay a tax in excess of 1.2 per cent., which is chargeable as against interurban roads.

. The state tax commission holds plaintiff to be a “railroad company,” and not “interurban road,” because its charter shows it to have been- incorporated as a railroad company.

The matter is submitted upon demurrer to the petition, which alleges that plaintiff was incorporated October 27, 1880, under the railroad laws of Ohio, for the purpose of constructing a railroad under the laws of Ohio from Cincinnati to Portmouth, and for the purpose of purchasing the property formerly owned by the Cincinnati & Portmouth Railroad Company.

.Plaintiff operated its railroad from 1880 until some time in 1902, as a narrow gauge railroad, using steam as a motive power and running from its station at Carrel street and the corner of Railroad street, eastern Cincinnati, to Georgetown, forty-two miles distant.

In 1902 it changed its gaug'e to the standard gauge, and at the same time acting under the authority of an act of the General Assembly, passed May 21, 1894 (91 Ohio Laws, 397), Section 3310-1, Revised Statutes (General Code, Section 8758), further changed its motive power from steam to electricity. At that time it constructed a large power house at Highland Parle, and installed therein the proper machinery to generate electricity to furnish power with which to operate, and also two sub-stations, one in Hamilton county and one in Brown count/, for the-purpose of enabling it to properly distribote the electricity for service in operating its cars. In addition to the power houses, substations and appurtenances, it erected the necessary poles, lines, and placed the necessary wires throughout the entire length of [619]*619its road for the purpose of conducting and distributing the electricity, and also erected a trolley line with proper supports therefor, so that electric cars could be used with trolley poles thereon connecting with the trolley wires, and the electricity conducted to the motors of said cars for the propulsion thereof.

It is further alleged that it has since extended its lines to different points named in the petition, among which is from Coney Island junction to Coney Island in Hamilton county, a pleasure resort on the Ohio .river; that the contract with the city of Cincinnati required it to use electricity as a motive power after its construction; that it entered into a traffic arrangement with the Cincinnati Traction Company and the Cincinnati Street Railway Company, whereby its passenger cars passed on to the tracks of the Cincinnati Traction Company, into and through the streets of the city of Cincinnati, into the interurban station; that in 1902 it ceased running trains, consisting of baggage and mailcars and coaches drawn by steam locomotives, and has since operated single electric cars with electric motors attached to the trucks thereof.

In substance, all its cars are run and operated precisely as interurban cars; it operates mail and express cars precisely of the same pattern as the passenger cars. It operates an electric freight locomotive having electric motors attached to trucks, and the greater part of its freight business is thus conducted. But it has, and uses to some extent, a steam locomotive for drawing heavy freight trains, but it claims that the use of steam power for said purpose is incidental, and is made necessary by certain grades on its line, and constitutes a very small portion of its branch lines.

The question presented by the demurrer to the petition in each case is whether the plaintiff shall be classed, for purposes of taxation, under the excise tax law, as a “railroad company,” or as an “ interurban railroad company. ’ ’ The tax upon the gross receipts of a railroad company is'4 per cent., while that upon interurban railroads is 1 1-10 per cent.

The plaintiff company contends that it is to be regarded as an interurban railroad, while the tax commission has held that it is to be considered as a railroad company, and taxed as such. Its [620]*620decision is based upon the theory that it was chartered as a railroad company.

There is no doubt.that interurban railroads are recognized as a distinct and separate class of railroads, as distinguished from what has always been known and recognized by law as ‘ ‘ commercial” or “steam railroads.” The distinction between the two classes of railroads has been based, not only because of the primary difference in the motive power used in the propulsion of their cars, but as well in the method or manner in which their business is carried on. “Commercial” or “steam railroads” as a class have, from- an early period, been recognized as. a distinct class, the business of such roads having been carried on in a manner peculiar to this class of road?, and which has been conducted in a materially different way from that in which the business of the interurban railroad business has been carried on.

Interurban railroads, as a class, are doubtless the result or outgrowth of the development of street railways and the application of electricity as a motive power. (Elliott Railroads, Section 1096bb; Montgomery Amusement Co. v. Montgomery Traction Co., 139 Fed., 350.)

Following on the heels of the urban street railways, whose cars were propelled by electricity, came the extension of this peculiar class of railways, accompanied by their method of operative power and their mode and character, beyond the limits of municipalities and into interurban territory. They were called interurban, because at first they were local roads between cities. The mode of operation and the character of this business was much like that of street railways. In the beginning they operated exclusively in territory distinctively local, and confined their business to the limitations in passenger traffic between cities or municipalities of limited area and distance. In their inception their traffic was of a wholly different nature and character than that of steam railroads. • At first they were designed to cover territory not reached by the commercial or steam railroads, although in some instances for short distance they may have covered the same territory'as did the steam railroads.. But their traffic even in such cases was distinctively interurban and local in character. Then and since their traffic is designed to accom[621]*621modate rural territory in the same manner in which street railways serve the people of cities, the people in which localities not being able to use the steam railways in the same way. Their tariff or passenger charges were much less than that of áteam roads because the cost of operation was less.

In the early period of the history of interurban roads their method of .obtaining their franchises and of securing their rights-of-way was entirely unlike that of the commercial roads.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-georgetown-portsmouth-railroad-v-poland-ohctcomplfrankl-1910.