City of Council Bluffs v. Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad

45 Iowa 338
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 45 Iowa 338 (City of Council Bluffs v. Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Council Bluffs v. Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad, 45 Iowa 338 (iowa 1876).

Opinions

Miller, Ch. J.

I. The evidence submitted to the Circuit Court establishes the fact that passenger and express cars used upon appellant’s road were, prior to the allowance of the injunction, in the westward bound trains run across the river to Omaha, without any transfer of their burdens being made at the western terminus of appellant’s road at Council Bluffs. Its eastward bound trains of passenger and express cars received their passengers and express matter at Omaha, and there was no change of cars at the western terminus of appellant’s road in Council Bluffs. The cars of defendant were drawn to and from the terminus of its road over the bridge spanning the Missouri river by the engines of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, or by the engines of a transfer company, whose business, it appears,' is to transfer passengers, freight and cars from the transfer grounds in Council Bluffs across the .bridge to the depot of the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha. Both the petition and answer state the eastern terminus of the Union Pacific Railroad to be within the corporate limits of Council Bluffs, at a point known as the “Union Pacific Transfer Grounds,” which is also the western [345]*345terminus of appellant’s railroad. From this point to the depot o'f the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha, the cars of defendant with their burdens were transported across the bridge as above stated. It thus- appears that the passengers and express matter transported by the defendant were not transferred from and to its cars at Council Bluffs, but were carried in the cars of defendant to and from Omaha. The plaintiff insists that the acts of the defendant in permitting its cars to be thus drawn to and from Omaha as above stated are in violation of the provisions of chapter 6 of the Laws of the Fourteenth General Assembly, prescribing “ the duties of railroad companies having termini at or near Council Bluffs,” and also in violation of an alleged contract between the plaintiff and the defendant by virtue of the ordinance of the city granting the right of way for its road upon certain streets and its occupancy thereof under the ordinance. On the other hand, the defendant maintains that the statute referred to is in conflict with the Constitution of the United States, inasmuch as the State thereby attempts to regulate, interfere with and control commerce among the States, and that the city ordinance im-. poses no obligation on defendant, in the nature of a contract, to transfer passengers and freights within the city, as it possessed the right, under the laws of the State, to occupy and use such streets with its railroad, without the assent of the city and free from the restrictions and conditions imposed by the ordinance. The case is thus made to present questions involving the validity of the statute of the State above mentioned, and the effect of the city ordinance, which, it is claimed by plaintiff, is violated by the acts complained of in the petition. We will proceed-to the consideration of these questions.

The first three sections .of the statute in question prescribe the duty of the railroad corporations contemplated therein. The first section applies to-railroad companies incorporated under the laws of the State, roads which operate their lines in this State terminating at or near Council Bluffs and making connection there with any railroad extending to a point on the boundary or within the State of Iowa; the second-[346]*346applies also to railroad corporations not organized under the laws of this State, which have constructed railroads terminating within the State, or which have authority to' bridge or ferry the Missouri river, for the. purpose of having continuous lines of their road, and for connecting with other railroads of the State of Iowa.” Those corporations contemplated in the third section are all such as have made or shall hereafter make “ any contract with any municipal corporation in this State.” The corporations contemplated in the first section are prohibited therein- “ from making any transfer of freight* passengers or express matter to .or with any other railroad company either by delivering or receiving the same, at any other place than in the State of Iowa,” at the point where the connecting railroads terminate. The second section imposes a like prohibition upon the contemplated-railroads therein, and requires them to erect and maintain, at the point of termination of their respective roads, within the limits of this State, all depots, stations and other buildings necessary for the transfer required by the statute, within the State. The third section prohibits the corporations referred-to from violating any contract.made with a municipal corporation of the State, and requires them to perform specifically the obligations imposed by such contract. ■

The statute, as plainly appears from its language and as disclosed by its history, as well as the. public history of the controversy concerning-the true point of the eastern terminus of the Union Pacific Railroad, is intended to compel the corporations whose railroads terminate at Council Bluffs to make all transfers with connecting lines inside that city.

i bailboadstutes aTransfer- - It may be well first to inquire as to what are the acts prohibited and required by the statute — what is the meaning ^ language, transfer of freight, passengers or exPress matter,” used in the statute to express the acts required to be done, within the city of Council Bluffs? There -is- little difficulty in answering this -question, for the language to be interpreted is of frequent use and well understood when applied to the carrying business-of-the country. It expresses the- act of [347]*347removing freight, passengers' and express matter, and, in the connection in which it occurs in the statute, implies the removal of these subjects of transportation from the custody of one common carrier to that of another — from one railroad to another — for the purpose of completing their transportation to the place of destination. This may be, and is usually, done by railroad companies in the prosecution of their business in two different ways. In the one case, passengers and freight are removed from the cars of one company to those of another at the point of connection, and in the other, the cars themselves, with their burdens of passengers and freight, are transferred to and upon the connecting road and the subjects of transportation are thus carried to or toward their places of destination. In the case before us the course last indicated was pursued by the defendant, which constitutes the ground of complaint on the part of the plaintiff. It must be understood that our conclusions as to the law of the case are based upon the state of facts as established by the pleadings and evidence, namely: that the cars of the defendant with their burdens have been and are being transferred at Council Bluffs, the terminus of its road, to another railroad and upon it drawn to Omaha, where they are discharged of their contents, and after being loaded with eastern-bound passengers and freight are returned to the defendant’s road. Transfers of passengers and freight from and to the cars of the defendant, from and to other railroads in the manner of transfer first above indicated are made at Omaha instead of at Council Bluffs. "We have then the case of two transfers, one of cars and their burdens from defendant’s railroad to the Union Pacific Railroad at Council Bluffs, the other of passengers and freight, by change of cars, at Omaha. The plaintiff insists that the prosecution of the defendant’s business in this manner is in violation of the statute of the State above referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Iowa 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-council-bluffs-v-kansas-city-st-joseph-council-bluffs-railroad-iowa-1876.