Lumber Co. v. Railroad

53 S.E. 823, 141 N.C. 171
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 53 S.E. 823 (Lumber Co. v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lumber Co. v. Railroad, 53 S.E. 823, 141 N.C. 171 (N.C. 1906).

Opinion

*175 Connor, J.,

after stating tbe facts: In tbe complaint some reference is made to an agreement entered into by tbe Wilmington & Weldon Railroad Co., to whose rights and contracts tbe defendant succeeded, and tbe predecessor of plaintiff in regard to hauling logs. Tbe cause was beard and determined, as appears -from tbe record, upon tbe sole question whether, during tbe periods named in tbe complaint, defendant company demanded and received payment from plaintiff a rate of freight in excess of that charged other persons or corporations for tbe same service under substantially similar conditions. Tbe learned counsel in bis brief says: “Tbe action is not in tort, but ex contractu. Plaintiff charges that tbe defendant required it to pay $2.50 per thousand feet for hauling logs in car load lots a distance of forty miles, when defendant bad a regular, established and published rate for other portions of its line * * of $2.10 for the same service and tbe same rates applied at Wilmington for all who would agree to give tbe defendant tbe output of their mills.”j Tbe defendant denied tbe allegations upon which plaintiff’s alleged cause of action is founded. It says further, that assuming tbe law to be as contended by tbe plaintiff, it has not shown by any competent testimony that, at tbe date of shipments made over its road, defendant was charging and receiving from other persons a less rate of freight than that charged plaintiff for a like service in the transportation of like traffic contemporaneous in point of time and under substantially similar circumstances. The record contains exceptions to the ruling of His Honor presenting every phase of these controverted questions. It will be observed that the foundation of plaintiff’s claim is not, that the rate charged plaintiff was, except in so far as it was related to the lower rate charged, unreasonable. The gravamen of the complaint is that the rate was discriminating and by reason thereóf, unlawful. Plaintiff claims that it has a right to demand of defendant, (1) that it haul the logs at a reasonable rate; (2) *176 that it haul them at the same rate charged other persons for hauling logs over the same distance at the same time and under substantially similar circumstances. This right, it charges, defendant has infringed and thereby demanded and received for hauling its logs, between the dates named, the amount sued for, in excess of the amount which it was entitled to receive. That in good conscience, defendant should repay this amount and it sues as for money had and received to its use. The agreement referred to in the complaint is eliminated by plaintiff’s averment that it is suing to enforce its right at common law, of which section 3749 of the Revisal is but declaratory, to have equality in rates, etc. It will be observed, as said by Clark, C. J., in Lumber Co. v. Railroad Co., 136 N. C., 479 (487), that this statute is substantially like that portion of the English “Traffic Act,” known as the “Equality Clause” and the “Interstate Commerce Act.” These and similar statutes are said by many of the courts to be but declaratory of the common law, which required all public carriers to serve all persons at reasonable rates and upon equal terms under similar circumstances. However that may be, the fundamental purpose underlying all of this legislation, both in England and this country, is, as said by Mr. Justice White, in Railroad Co. v. Interstate Commission, Supreme Court Reports, Vol. 26, p. 272, that “Whilst seeking to prevent unjust and unreasonable rates to secure equality of rates as to all and destroy favoritism, these last being accomplished by requiring the publication of tariffs and by' prohibiting secret departures from such tariffs, and forbidding rebates, preferences and all other forms of unjust discrimination, to this extent and for these purposes, the statute is remedial and is, therefore, entitled to receive that interpretation which reasonably accomplishes the great public purpose which it was enacted to subserve. * * * What was that purpose? It was to compel the l_ carrier as a public agent to give equal treatment to all.” *177 Eeferring to provisions in charters of railway companies having for their purpose the guarantee that all persons should have equality of right in the use of facilities afforded by common carriers, Tindall, C. J., in Parker v. Great Western R. R. Co., 49 E. C. L., 252 (p. 287), says: “Acts .passed under such circumstances should be construed strictly against the parties obtaining them, but liberally in favor of the public.” Blackburn, J., in Great Western R. Co. v. Sutton, L. J., 1869, N. S., 38, 177, after reviewing the several acts of parliament on the subject, says: “I think the construction of the proviso for equality is equally clear and is that the company may, subject to the limitations in their special acts, charge what they think fit, but not more to oné person than they do, during the same time, charge to others under the same circumstances.” The evil intended to be remedied is the prevention of unjust discrimination, or to put the proposition affirmatively, to secure to every person constituting a part of the public, an equal and impartial participation in the use of the facilities which the carrier is capable of affording and which it is its duty to afford. It is an elementary rule that statutes shall be so construed as to repress the evil and advance the remedy. AVe held in this case — Railroad Discrimination case, 136 N. C., 479 — that upon the facts set out in the complaint and substantially the same testimony, that the discrimination was unlawful. In other words, that defendant could not rightfully charge the plaintiff $2.50 per thousand feet for hauling its logs, if it, at the same time,' for the same service under substantially similar circumstances, carried logs for other persons at $2.10 per thousand feet in consideration of the shipment of the manufactured products over its road. This proposition, the learned counsel does not ask us to reconsider. He contends that the plaintiff has neither alleged nor ifi’oven such a state of facts. We have discussed the law only in so far as the general principles governing the right of plaintiff and duty *178 of defendant enable ns to approach the decision of the several exceptions of defendant to specific rulings of His Honor. The first exception is to the refusal to dismiss the action because the complaint did not set forth the exact dates of the shipments of logs by plaintiff over defendant’s road and did not state the same dates and times that defendant had charged and received a lower rate for shipment of logs from other persons. The argument upon this exception made by defendant’s counsel in his brief takes a rather wider range than the causes of demurrer assigned in the record. He says that it is not charged in the complaint that any service of a like kind was rendered contemporaneously by defendant for any other person at a lower rate than was charged plaintiff. The complaint appears to have been drawn with a “double aspect;” that is, eliminating the reference to the agreement, it charges that the rate charged plaintiff was unreasonable.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.E. 823, 141 N.C. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumber-co-v-railroad-nc-1906.