Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Campbell

43 L.R.A. 225, 45 S.W. 2, 91 Tex. 551, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 312
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1898
Docket582
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 43 L.R.A. 225 (Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Campbell, 43 L.R.A. 225, 45 S.W. 2, 91 Tex. 551, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 312 (Tex. 1898).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

The defendant in error Campbell brought this suit against M. G. Howe as receiver of the Houston, East and West Texas Railway Company, against Appleby and Downey as his successors in the receivership, and against the Houston, East and West Texas Railway Company, to recover, under the statute, a penalty for failing to furnish cars upon demand and actual damages resulting from the default. The petition showing that the receivership had been closed and the receivers discharged, a demurrer by them was sustained and the suit was dismissed as to them. The case as to the railroad company was tried before a j ury, who returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the statutory penalties, but under the instructions of the court found for the company on the second cause of action. The railroad company appealed, and the plaintiff filed cross-assignment of errors. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment for the penalties, but reversed it in so far as it denied the plaintiff the right to recover actual damages, and remanded the cause for a trial of the issues growing out of that ground of action.

The railroad company has applied for and obtained a writ of error to the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, and the whole case is before us for review.

We will first dispose of the judgment for the penalties, and will here state briefly the facts which bear upon that question. The plaintiff was engaged in the business of manufacturing stove wood to be shipped to Houston. At his solicitation a switch had been put in on the company’s road at a point which was subsequently known as Campbell’s Switch. It was not made a regular station, and the company had no agent there. Livingston was the nearest regular station, and there was a station agent at that place. The statute under which the recovery of the penalties Was sought, in this case was passed in 1887, and is now embodied in our present Revised Statutes as follows:

“Art. 4497. When the owner, owners or managers of any freight of any kind shall make application in writing to the superintendent or person in charge of transportation, to any railway company operating a line at the point the cars are desired upon which to ship any freight, it shall be the duty of such railway company to supply the number of cars required at the point indicated in the application within a reasonable time, not to exceed six days from the receipt thereof, and shall furnish such cars to the persons applying therefor in the order applied for, without giving preference to any person.
“Art. 4498. Said application for cars shall state the number of cars desired, the place at which they are desired and the time they are desired; provided, that the place designated shall be at some station or switch on the railroad.
*557 “Art. 4499. When cars are applied for under the provisions of this chapter, if they are not furnished, the railway company so failing to furnish them shall forfeit to the party or parties so applying for them the sum of twenty-five dollars per day for each car failed to be furnished, to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction, and all actual damages that such applicant may sustain.
“Art. 4500. Such applicant shall at the time of applying for such "car or cars deposit with the agent of such company one-fourth of the amount of the freight charge for the use of such cars unless the said road shall agree to deliver said cars without such deposit, and said applicant shall within forty-eight hours after such car or cars have been delivered and placed as hereinbefore provided, it shall be the duty of the applicant to fully load the same, and upon failure to do so he shall forfeit and pay to the company the sum of twenty-five dollars for each car not used. And if the said applicant shall not use such cars so ordered by him and shall so notify the said company or its agent, he shall forfeit and pay to the said railroad company in addition to the penalty herein prescribed the actual damages that such company may sustain by the said failure of the applicant to use said cars.
“Art. 4501. When cars have been supplied and loaded it shall be the duty of the railway company to deliver the same to the party or parties to whom they are consigned within a reasonable time, and the party or parties to whom the cars are consigned shall unload the same within forty-eight hours after delivery and notice, or forfeit to the railway company the sum of twenty-five dollars per day for each car so left unloaded, to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction.
“Art. 4502. It shall be necessary for the party or parties bringing suit against any railroad company under the provisions of this law to show by evidence that he or they had on hand at the time any demand for cai’s was made the amount of lumber, cotton, wool, hides or other freight necessary to load the cars so ordered; provided, that the provisions of this law shall not apply in cases of strikes or other public calamity.”

The statute imposes a heavy penalty, and it is an elementary rule, that such statutes must be strictly construed. This does not imply that the courts are authorized to refuse to give effect to the intention of the Legislature, but it proceeds upon the theory that it is not reasonable to presume it is their intention to impose a punishment, except in so far as that purpose is clearly manifested by the language employed in the statute. It results as a corollary from this rule, that the penalty will not be awarded in a case which does not come strictly within the terms of the statute. Such is the established canon of construction in this court. Schloss v. Railway Co., 85 Texas, 601, and cases there cited.

Does the present case come within the terms of the statute? As a condition precedent to the recovery, article 4500 provides that “such applicant shall at the time of applying for such car, or cars, deposit with *558 the agent of such company one-fourth of the amount of such freight charges for the use of such cars,” etc. The words “the agent” do not mean any agent. They clearly imply that a particular agent is meant; and the only reasonable construction is, that it is the agent at or for the point of the proposed shipment, with whom the deposit was to be made. We cannot interpret the terms as meaning the nearest agent (when the company has no agent at or for the point) without importing into the language words which are neither necessarily nor reasonably implied. They mean the agent at or for the station -where the cars are desired, and hence the law cannot be applied to a switch, where the company has none. In a remedial statute the construction might possibly be dif- • ferent, but in a penal act the question is not what the Legislature ought to have provided, nor what they may possibly have intended to provide, but what is the reasonable and clear meaning of the words employed.

But it is insisted that the proviso contained in article 4498 shows that the statute was intended to include a place of the character of that in question in this case. But we cannot accede to that proposition. The object of the provision was, in our opinion, merely to exclude what may have been thought a possible construction of the act without such provision.

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Bluebook (online)
43 L.R.A. 225, 45 S.W. 2, 91 Tex. 551, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-east-west-texas-railway-co-v-campbell-tex-1898.