Morgan's Louisiana & T. R. & S. S. Co. v. Railroad Commission

33 So. 214, 109 La. 247, 1902 La. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1902
DocketNo. 14,137
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 33 So. 214 (Morgan's Louisiana & T. R. & S. S. Co. v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan's Louisiana & T. R. & S. S. Co. v. Railroad Commission, 33 So. 214, 109 La. 247, 1902 La. LEXIS 145 (La. 1902).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, C. J.

The plaintiffs alleged: That the railroad commission is a corporation organized and existing under the constitution and laws of the state of Louisiana, and domiciled in the parish of East Baton Rouge, and the said commission derives any and all authority, power, and character as such commission, in respect to the matters complained of, from and under articles 285 to 2S9, both inclusive, of the constitution of this state, of the year 1898.

That petitioner the Southern Pacific Company . is a railroad corporation. That it is, and has been since the year 1884, engaged in operating lines of railway in the state of Louisiana, being:

(.1) The line of railway known as Morgan’s ■Louisiana & Texas Railroad & Steamship Company, which begins at the city of New Orleans, and runs through the parishes of Jefferson, St. Charles, Lafourche, Terrebonne, Assumption, St Mary, Iberia, and St. Martin, to the town of Lafayette, in Lafayette parish; thence through the parishes of St. Landry and Avoyelles to Cheneyville, in the parish of Rapides, together with branch lilies from its main line, commonly known as the Houma, Lafourche & Thibodauz, Salt Mine, St. Martinsville & Cypremont Branches, and which said railroad reaches the city of New Orleans on the left bank of the Mississippi river by means of a ferry transfer connecting its terminus on the right bank of said river with its wharves and delivery depots on the left bank of said river, and that the total length of the railways of said Morgan Company, exclusive of side tracks, amounts to 282 miles, or thereabouts, all located within the limits of the state of Louisiana, and that said railways belong to petitioner, Morgan’s Louisiana & Texas Railroad & Steamship Company.

(2) A line of railroad beginning at Lafay[249]*249ette, in the parish of Lafayette, and running to the border line of the state of Texas, together with the branches running from Midland to Eunice and from Midland to Gueydan, — a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Louisiana.

(3) A line of railroad beginning at Salt Mine Junction, in the parish of Iberia, and running to the town of Abbeville, in Vermilion parish, belonging to the Iberia & Vermilion Railroad Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Louisiana.

That on the line of railroad owned by said Morgan Company, and operated by said Southern Pacific Company, is and has long been situated the town of Morgan City, which is located on the east bank of Berwick Bay, an estuary of the Gulf of Mexico; that said line of railroad passes through Morgan City in a direction approximately at right angles to Berwick Bay, and crossing said bay at a point where it is less than 700 yards wide enters and passes through an unincorporated settlement of about 175 families known as “Berwick,” which is in constant communication with Morgan City by means of a ferry across said estuary, and constitutes practically a suburb of Morgan City.

That petitioners have long operated and owned at said Morgan City an important station, situated upon or near the shore of Berwick Bay, fully equipped with waiting rooms, platforms, switches, and switch engines, and all other appliances, and all officials and employes necessary for the carrying on of a large freight and passenger business. Said station and its equipment are and have always been sufficient for the prompt and proper handling of all passengers and freight traveling or consigned to or from Morgan City, or from any of its suburbs or surrounding country, including Berwick City, and no complaint has ever been made thereof to said commission or otherwise. That the inhabitants of Berwick have easy communication with Morgan City by means of a steam ferry running between Morgan City and said suburb, parallel to said railroad, at about 100 yards distant therefrom, and across a distance of less than 700 yards; said ferry being easily reached at both ends from both the stations hereinafter referred to and all other points within Morgan City and its suburbs by the public streets; and the inhabitants of Berwick have thus better facilities for reaching' a regular railroad station for freight and passengers, thoroughly equipped and maintained with all necessary employés and appliances, than have or can have the average population along the lines of other roads of petitioners, or of any other railroad similarly situated in the United States, and their facilities are equal to those of any other settlement similarly situated in the United States.

That nevertheless petitioners have caused to be placed at Berwick, and have for a long time maintained at that point, a suitable passenger station, consisting of white and colored waiting rooms, and have had their passenger trains Nos. 5 and C stop there daily for passengers, the amount of travel to and from Berwick not justifying the stopping of other trains at that point; and passengers there boarding said trains are charged only the rates that would be charged if tickets were sold by an agent there. Petitioners have also arranged that freight for Berwick, when so desired, shall be unloaded at Morgan City station, and there carefully checked, and then placed in a freight car and sent across the bayou to Berwick platform daily by the Morgan City switch engine; the freight in said car being distributed in separate piles for the various consignees, and being thus fully protected from the weather; and this method has long been in, operation, with ho' loss or injury or inconvenience of any kind to the population of Berwick. That said platform at Berwick is situated on heavy grades, and that it would be both expensive and detrimental to the freight-train service for freight trains to stop and load or unload freight at that point, resulting in delays and increased expense and risk both to freight destined to Berwick, and to all other freight handled by petitioners.

That stations with far less facilities and accommodations, known as “flag stations,” are and long have been common throughout the United States, and throughout the state of Louisiana, at points where the business is more remunerative and larger than at Berwick, and have been recognized as proper and reasonable by many courts, and especially by the supreme court of Louisiana. That all station facilities, not only at Berwick, but [251]*251throughout petitioners’ lines have been properly fixed and established by petitioners, with due regard to all financial and commercial conditions and laws which enter into, affect, or control the operation and management of railroads, both in the state of Louisiana and elsewhere, and which have been recognized as fair, just, and proper by all persons, commissions, courts, and bodies expert in or intrusted with such matters; and such facilities are properly adjusted with due regard to the earnings and expenses of operation, the revenue from rates, the amount of passenger and freight business, the value of the commodities transported, the volume of traffic, the amount of net earnings of the properties concerned, the original and annual cost of facilities, including the salaries of employes, the operating expenses, taxes, and fixed charges and capitalization of same, and all other circumstances fairly and justly affecting the question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 So. 214, 109 La. 247, 1902 La. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgans-louisiana-t-r-s-s-co-v-railroad-commission-la-1902.