Hedding v. Gallagher

64 L.R.A. 811, 57 A. 225, 72 N.H. 377, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 31, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 64 L.R.A. 811 (Hedding v. Gallagher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hedding v. Gallagher, 64 L.R.A. 811, 57 A. 225, 72 N.H. 377, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 87 (N.H. 1903).

Opinion

Walker, J.

Tbe Boston & Maine Railroad, having been joined as a plaintiff by amendment, claims that by virtue of its ownership of tbe station at Manchester, subject to tbe rights of tbe public to use it for tbe purposes of transportation, it is entitled to-exclude tbe defendants therefrom, wbo come there merely for tbe purpose of soliciting from its passengers tbe carriage of their baggage to points within tbe city of Manchester. Tbe defendants contend that whatever the railroad’s rights of ownership may be, ■ it cannot deny them tbe privilege of entering tbe station grounds and building for tbe prosecution of their business, because it has expressly granted that privilege to Hedding; that it has no right to authorize or employ one job-teamster to solicit tbe carriage of baggage in its station and to exclude all other job-teamsters from its grounds ; in short, that it cannot discriminate between carriers-of that class, wbo seek tbe opportunity of soliciting from- passengers alighting from tbe cars tbe privilege of transporting their trunks and parcels from tbe station to other parts of tbe city. It is-not claimed in behalf of tbe defendants that they have any legisla *379 tive or contractual right to occupy the station and its approaches; but the right is said to arise from the discriminating feature of the railroad’s contract with Hedding.

In reply to this position, the railroad argues that if the alleged discrimination against the defendants did not violate any of their antecedent and subsisting rights, with reference to their occupation of the station, the discrimination was not illegal and the contract with Hedding is immaterial, so far as its right to prosecute this suit is concerned; that the fundamental question relates to the rights of job-teamsters to solicit business on the premises of the railroad, after notice to desist; that if they had that right, the contract with Hedding did not deprive them of it and they could not be enjoined from exercising it, and if they did not have it, the contract did not give it to them, because the discrimination was not illegal as against them.

Upon this summary of the respective contentions of the parties, the question is presented whether truckmen have at common law or by statute the right to enter upon and occupy a railway terminal station for the purpose of soliciting business. If they have that light, the railroad cannot exclude all, or all but one of them, from its station ; if they do not have it, the further question arises whether they can acquire it under, or because of, a special license granted to one of their number. The last question has been answered in the affirmative upon a former transfer of this case, before the railroad became a party (69 N. H. 650); and while the present plaintiffs may not be entitled as a matter of right to a rehearing of the question, and while the railroad, though made a party plaintiff, according to a more or less uniform practice might be bound by the former decision (Amoskeag Mfg. Co. v. Head, 59 N. H. 332, 337; Weare v. Hearing, 60 N. H. 56), the importance of the controverted points and of a correct ascertainment of the respective rights of the parties, after prolonged litigation, seem to justify, if they do not require, a further consideration of the case upon its present transfer. And while little, if any, doubt could be entertained that the demurrer should be overruled upon the allegations of the recent amendment of the bill, to the effect that the presence of the defendants in the station obstructs and interferes with the public business of transportation, the practical value of such a decision would be so small that, in view of the fact that the case has been pending for a long time and has been argued by counsel upon the broader and more fundamental question of the legal rights of the parties, both under the contract and independent of the contract, it is deemed expedient to base-the decision upon a consideration of the latter question.

“ It shall be the duty of the proprietors of every railroad to pro *380 vide suitable' crossings, stations, and other facilities for the accommodation of the public.” P. S., c. 159, s. 1. “The proprietors of ■every railroad shall furnish to all persons reasonable and equal terms, facilities, and accommodations for the transportation of persons and property over their railroad, and for the use of depots, ■buildings, and grounds in connection with such transportation, and for the interchange of such traffic at points of connection with ■other railroads.” P. S., e. 160, s. 1. The corporate duties thus declared by the legislature, and subject to which the corporation holds its real estate, it owes to the public having occasion to •employ its facilities for the transportation of themselves or their property. It is obliged to provide reasonable accommodations at its station in Manchester for the use of the traveling public who are brought together at that point. But it owes this public duty, not to all persons indiscriminately, but to those only who stand in some contractual relation with it as passengers. A trespasser in its station could not complain that it did not furnish suitable and reasonable means for the accommodation of its patrons; for to him it does not owe the duty of funishing facilities for transportation. Harris v. Stevens, 31 Vt. 79. If it is conceded that it is the duty of the railroad to furnish arriving passengers with reasonable means and opportunities for removing their baggage from the station, and that such means and opportunities include the presence at the station of soliciting agents for the carriage of baggage, it would not follow that it owed the defendants the duty of affording them adequate facilities for the solicitation of business from the passengers. It cannot be assumed that the passengers’ convenience under their contract of carriage over the railroad requires the presence of the defendants as independent carriers ■ at the station •on the arrival of trains. The railroad may furnish or permit adequate means for the convenience of its passengers in this respect, without the voluntary assistance of the defendants. If it is its duty to have men present on the arrrival of its trains, ready when requested to remove the baggage of passengers from its premises, no substantial reason is suggested why it may not perform that duty through such agents as it sees fit to employ, or why it should be obliged to submit to the irresponsible interference of unemployed third parties in doing the work required of it.

Nor is it apparent how the railroad’s duty to its passengers in this respect gives rise to a right in all local job-teamsters to perform that duty or any part of it. The right of its passengers to have men present to solicit the carriage of baggage, or to receive such solicitation from them upon the arrival of trains, if it exists at all, does not require the presence of independent local truck-men. Whether the soliciting agents are independent local truck- *381 men, or whether they are men specially permitted by the railroad: to perform that service in its station, is an unimportant detail in the reasonable performance of the public duty to passengers of providing adequate facilities for the transfer of baggage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 L.R.A. 811, 57 A. 225, 72 N.H. 377, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedding-v-gallagher-nh-1903.