Morley v. Saginaw Circuit Judge

41 L.R.A. 817, 117 Mich. 246
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 L.R.A. 817 (Morley v. Saginaw Circuit Judge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morley v. Saginaw Circuit Judge, 41 L.R.A. 817, 117 Mich. 246 (Mich. 1898).

Opinions

Moore, J.

This is a petition for a mandamus to require the respondent to vacate an order made by him. The petitioners were appointed by the circuit court for the county of Saginaw, in chancery, receivers of the Union Street-Railway Company of Saginaw, Mich., upon the application of the Boston Safe-Deposit & Trust Company, complainant in a cross-bill in Union Street-Ry. Co. v. City of Saginaw, 115 Mich. 300. The receivers were directed to take control of the road, and operate the same. At this time there was in the employ of the road, as a street-car conductor, John C. Smith, and he continued to act in that capacity after the appointment of the receivers. About April 1st the receivers adopted the Mehling box system of collecting car fares from passengers. This box is a metal'safe, of convenient size, carried by the conductor, into which the passenger is required to deposit his fare, at which time the conductor presses a button which rings a bell and registers the fare. At the end of the day the box, with the transfer tickets, is handed by the conductor into the office, and becomes his settlement with the company. The use of this box was distasteful to the conductor John C. Smith, who filed a petition in which he represented his long employment upon the road; the fact that he was required to carry one of these boxes; that he had no means of knowing that they were accurate; that their use made him responsible to the company for plugged or counterfeit coins; that passengers objected to their use, and when the conductors, following the rules adopted by the company, required the passengers to deposit their fares in the boxes or leave the car, it gave rise to controversies which resulted in injury to the conductors; and that he had been injured by a passenger who objected to paying his fare. He also represented that when attempting to use the boxes [248]*248of the company in good faith, according to the rules, he had been laid off from work for a number of days; and he asked for an order that the receivers might be required to pay him for the time so lost, and that the use of the boxes be discontinued. The receivers answered the petition, and claimed that the use of the boxes was a reasonable and proper regulation, and that Mr. Smith persistently and purposely refused to properly .use them, and did so after being warned that, if he did not properly use the boxes as directed, he would be laid off. Proof was offered before the court from which it pretty clearly appears that there would be no difficulty in operating the boxes if the conductors were so inclined, and that there was no practical difficulty in the way of their use, either on the part of the passengers or the conductors. The court made an order granting the prayer of the petition, not for the reasons set up therein, but, to state it in his own language, used at the time he granted the order:

“ It seems to me, in this matter, that the fact of the' receivers publishing notices in the car that no conductor shall handle money, connecting that with the fact that he shall be liable and responsible for any plugged money or counterfeit money that is placed in these boxes, compelling the public to place the fares in these boxes, and for the further reason that it is objectionable to the public to be compelled to put the money in the boxes— For these reasons it seems to me that, coupling the advertisement with the request to the public, it means that the conductors are not to be trusted; that they are not to handle the money; that there is some honest person somewhere who can handle the money, and count it correctly, but that these men are liable not to do so. It is an insinuation of dishonesty. In my opinion, it is saying to the public, ‘We have men in our employ whom we cannot trust, whom we are unable to trust, and I warn you that here is a man who is liable to appropriate to his own use money that he may collect that belongs to this railroad.’ It tends to ostracise from society people who are so engaged, — so employed. Children talk of it on the street. People discuss it, — that they are not proper persons to associate with; they cannot be trusted in handling five-cent pieces. [249]*249I think this box is not a proper regulation; that it is not a thing to be used in the manner in which it is used; and an order may be made discontinuing the use of it.”

We think the conclusion reached by the learned judge is wholly unwarranted by the facts. Conductors of street cars deal with a great number of- persons, some of whom are entering and leaving the cars frequently. It often happens that change must he made, and there are opportunities for mistakes. It is not unreasonable to assume that, like persons in all callings, some of the employés of street-car companies will yield to temptation, when presented. Every one at all familiar with business upon a large scale knows that it is desirable to have it so systematized that mistakes or fraud in its conduct shall not occur. Officials, both of the State and Nation, and officers charged with the. management of banks, railroads, and other corporations,. are surrounded by checks and safeguards calculated to do away with the possibilities of frauds or mistakes. . The cash register is to be found in most places of business. Upon the elevated roads in the large cities, the passenger pays his fare before he enters upon the platform, over which he must pass to get admission to his train. Every one recognizes these checks and safeguards as proper to be used, and no one has a right to regard them as an imputation upon the honesty of any individual using them. Their use is simply a recognition of what we all know to be a fact, with humanity constituted as it is, — that, in the conduct of a large business by many persons, there is a liability to make mistakes, and a possibility of the commission of frauds. The Great Teacher, in that prayer which is the model of all prayers-, prayed, “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.” It can readily be seen how the unintelligent or dishonest might object to these checks and safeguards, but it is difficult to understand how the honest and intelligent should object to any practical method which would reduce the probability of mistakes, or the opportunities for the commission of fraud, to the minimum.

[250]*250It is urged on the part of the respondent that, as the receiver is an officer of the court, the control of the court over him is plenary, that whatever he does is done under the direction of the court, and that he is bound to observe the order of the court; citing 5 Thomp. Corp. § 6941. It is true that receivers are officers of the court. It is also true that less discretion is given to passive receivers, whose duty consists simply of taking possession of property, and converting it into money, and distributing it, than is allowed to an active receiver, who is required to manage a going concern like a system of street railways or a railroad. Such an officer, to be successful, must possess large executive ability, and must be clothed with considerable discretion. High, Rec. § 392. He may do such things, in the ordinary course of business, as to him, in good faith, seem necessary to render the business of the road profitable and successful. He is not only the arm of the court, but he represents, in a sense, the creditors and the stockholders of the road. If they, had the time to do so, very few courts possess the necessary knowledge to enable them to successfully manage a system of street railways. It is said in Continental Trust Co. v. Toledo, etc.. R. Co., 59 Fed. 514:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 L.R.A. 817, 117 Mich. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morley-v-saginaw-circuit-judge-mich-1898.