Cincinnati Street Railway Co. v. Snell

193 U.S. 30, 24 S. Ct. 319, 48 L. Ed. 604, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 978
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 23, 1904
Docket124
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 193 U.S. 30 (Cincinnati Street Railway Co. v. Snell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati Street Railway Co. v. Snell, 193 U.S. 30, 24 S. Ct. 319, 48 L. Ed. 604, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 978 (1904).

Opinion

Mk. Justice White

delivered the opinion .of the court.

Snell, the defendant in error, sued the railwajr company, the plaintiff in error, in the Common Pleas Court of Hamilton *33 County, Ohio, to recover for alleged personal injuries. Availing of a section of the Ohio statutes, Snell moved that the cause be transferred for trial to the Court of Common Pleas, of an adjoining county, and reserved an exception to a denial of such request. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the railway company.

Error was prosecuted by Snell to the Circuit Court of Hamilton County, and the judgment being affirmed in that court the case was taken to the Supreme Court of Ohio. The error complained of was the refusal of the trial court to grant a transfer of the cause. The railway company insisted in both courts that the transfer had been rightly refused on technical grounds, and because the state statute upon which the transfer was asked was repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The Supreme Court of Ohio decided that under the state statute the court should have transferred the cause and that the statute which required this transfer was not repugnant .to the Fourteenth Amendment. CO Ohio St. 256. The case was then- brought .to this court by the railway company, and was dismissed because the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State was not final. Cincinnati Street Railway Company v. Snell, 179 U. S. 395. The cause thereupon proceeded in the state court and was transferred from Hamilton County to the Common Pleas Court of an adjoining county, where a trial was had, which resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of Snell. The railway company prosecuted error to the Circuit Court of the county, and, failing to secure a reversal in that tribunal, carried the case to the' Supreme Court of Ohio, by which court the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. In all the courts the railway company reiterated its contention concerning the repugnancy to the ■ Constitution of the United States of the statute providing for the transfer of the cause, and its claims on this subject were expressly overruled. This writ of error Ivas thereupon allowed.

Section 5030 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio, upon which the application for the transfer of the cause was allowed, is as follows:

*34 “ When a corporation having more than fifty stockholders is a party in action pending in a county in which the- corporation keeps its principal office, or transacts its principal business, if the opposite party make affidavit that he cannot, as he believes, have a fair and impartial fecial in that county, and his application is sustained by the several affidavits of five credible persons residing in such county, the court shall change the venue to the adjoining county most convenient for both parties.”

The Supreme Court of Ohio, in disposing of the objection that the statute was repuguant to the equal protection and the due process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, among other things, said:

“ Ve are unable to adopt that view. It has never been regarded as essential to the validity of remedial procedure that it should be applicable in all of its provisions to all persons or parties, alike. Different situations and conditions often render appropriate and necessary different provisions, the necessity or propriety of which restó largely in the legislative discretion.
ijs % ;¡; ‡
“ Generally, actions against individuals must be brought in the county where the defendant resides or may be personally served with process; and generally, actions against corporations are required to be brought in the county in which the corporation is situate, or has its principal office or place of business, or an office or agent; while insurance companies may -be sued in any county where the cause of action or any part of it arose, a mining corporation in any county in. Avhich it owns or operates a mine, and a railroad company in atíy county into which the road runs.’ Of a like nature are regulations- for changes of- venue. They are designed to secure to parties a fair and impartial trial of their causes, which is the ultimate and highest purpose of judicial proceeding; and the extent to which such regulations may go, for the accomplishment of that purpose, is addressed to a sound legislative discretion, in view of the nature of the case to be provided for, and the probable conditions likely to arise.” •

And- in further commenting upon the effect of the remedy *35 which the statute afforded upon the substantial rights of the. parties, the court observed:

“ In neither case, however, is ariy party deprived of theequal protection of the law, for each is assured of a fair trial, with equal opportunities to establish and enforce his rights ; nor is the remedy by due course of law denied, because in the forum to which the cause is removed, the trial is conducted in the same way, under the same mode of procedure, as in that-from which it was changed, with all remedial rights of the parties' unimpaired. The only complaint is that the trial will be attended with some inconvenience and additional expense; but in that respect both parties are equally affected, and must necessarily be so in any change of venue for any cause ; and the . objection is, we think, insufficient to annul a statute, otherwise unobjectionable, which, in the legislative estimation, was demanded in order to secure the impartial administration of justice.”

None of the errors assigned or arguments 'advanced to sustain them pretend that any unequal law governed the trial of the cause in the courts below or- that the result of such trial was a denial of the equal protection of the laws. The sole' contention is that the equal protection of the laws was denied because an' equal opportunity was not afforded to secure a transfer of the cause from the court in which it was originally brought to the court in which it was ultimately tried. , Thus, it is argued that the plaintiff Snell under the statute was given the right to have the cause transferred whilst a like right was not conferred on the corporation ; that the existence of prejudice justifying the transfer was made by the statute to depend upon the domicil and number of stockholders in the corporation, while no equivalent light was given the corporation growing out of any prejudice which might have existed against the corporation, it being moreover asserted that the causes stated in the statute as basis for the transfer furnish no just ground for the classification made by the statute. The entire ground, therefore, relied on to show that the statute is repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment rests upon the assumption that such amendment not only secures that the *36 rights and obligations of persons shall be measured by equal laws, but also that the provisions of the amendment control the States in the creation of courts and in the provisions made for the tidal of causes in the courts which are created.

This proposition, however, was long since decided to be untenable.

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Bluebook (online)
193 U.S. 30, 24 S. Ct. 319, 48 L. Ed. 604, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-street-railway-co-v-snell-scotus-1904.