Northern Central Rwy. Co. v. Laird

91 A. 768, 124 Md. 141, 1914 Md. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 91 A. 768 (Northern Central Rwy. Co. v. Laird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Central Rwy. Co. v. Laird, 91 A. 768, 124 Md. 141, 1914 Md. LEXIS 8 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant is a corporation, incorporated under the laws of the State of Maryland and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, owning a line of railroad within said States and operating other lines in said States and in the- State of New York. Included within the lines owned and operated by it is the road from Baltimore, Maryland, to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, known as the Baltimore Division. A large number of trains are operated upon this road, many of which are interstate trains carrying passengers, freight and United States mails between Maryland and other States of the Union. These trains carry Washington and Baltimore passengers to and from Chicago, St. Louis and other points in the west, southwest and northwest, as far as the Pacific Coast, and to and from Buffalo and points north, not only in the United States, but in Canada, and many of said trains taire through cars to and from Chicago, St. Louis, Buffalo and Hiagara Palls. On April 1st, 1913, Albert M. Griffin and others residing between Cockeysville and Parkton, stations on the appellant’s road in Baltimore County, Md., filed their complaint with the appellees, alleging that the local service they were receiving from the appellant company was inadequate.

At such time the early morning service from Parkton consisted of train Ho. 200, scheduled to leave Parkton at 6.50 and to arrive in Baltimore at 8.16, and Ho. 70, scheduled to leave Parkton at 7.32 and to arrive in Baltimore at 8.45. The last return trains were those leaving Baltimore at 7.20 and 11.54 P. M.

The petition of Griffin and others alleged that the patrons, from Cockeysville to B'altimore have excellent service, and in their petition complained of the discrimination in favor of those located between said points, and suggested that *143 Parkton be made the terminus for all local trains instead of Cockeysville, but asked, if good reasons be assigned by the appellant company for its refusal to do so, that it be compelled to make the following changes in the schedule:

“(1) Start train bio. 100 from Parkton, arriving at Calvert Station at about 6.45 A. M.

“(2) Start bTo. 104 from Parkton, arriving at Calvert Station at about 7.45 A. M.

“(3) Make tbe milk train bio. 200 express from Cockeysville to Baltimore, putting off at Cockeysville passengers for intermediate points.

“(4-) Make bio. 205 express to Cockeysville, and then local to Parkton.

“(5) Add one additional accommodation train to Park-ton, leaving Baltimore about 9.30 P. M.”

Upon notice of such complaint being served upon the appellant, it answered, saying that the changes in service asked for “are of such a character that they could not be made without such interference with the passenger service on its lines, both through and local, as would cripple that service and do great injustice not only to its through traffic but to its local traffic to stations other than those between Cockeysville and Parkton, referred to in the complaint aforesaid, besides involving a great expense in addition to that of its present service, which would not he justified by any possible return from the service demanded.”

Thereafter, on March 13, 1913, a hearing was had upon the complaint filed, at which the parties appeared and testimony was taken. Thereafter the appellant- filed with the Commission what is termed in the proceedings before it, an offer of satisfaction. This offer, however, was not filed, as stated in the opinion of the Commission, until the Commission had reached its conclusion upon which it thereafter passed its order of April 7. The offer was addressed to the Public Service Commission and in it tbe appellant stated that since the above mentioned complaint was filed the company’s *144 officers had endeavored to work ont a plan that would give additional accommodations to travelers to and from Baltimore City using stations between Parkton and Cockeysville with due regard to local travel at Cockeysville and points south, and to through travel over the company’s lines and its freight traffic; and had found the following to be the only practicable changes that could be made in the schedule:

“(1) Southward. Start train No. 100 from Parkton (instead of from Cockeysville) at 5.30 A. M., stopping at points between Parkton and Cockeysville and running from Cockeysville to Baltimore on its present schedule, reaching Calvert Station at 6.45 A. M."

“(2) Pun train No. 121 (which now ends its run at Cockeysville) to Parkton, leaving Baltimore at about 10 P. M. and reaching Parkton at about 11.30 P. M., stopping at stations between Cockeysville and Parkton.

“(3) Such changes to be made at the time of the general spring change of schedule toward the latter part of May, in order to avoid the great expense of issuance of new timetables in the short interval, and the difficulties attending a mere partial readjustment of train services during said interval.

“(4) That this company accordingly now undertakes by way of satisfaction of said complaint to make the- changes in the last paragraph mentioned at the time therein set forth.

“(5) That these are the only changes that this company can make in the premises with a due regard to its duties a? a common carrier towards its passengers generally, both through and local, and its shippers, through and local.”

Thereafter, by its order of April 7, 1913, above mentioned, the Commission ordered:

“1st. That the Northern Central Railway Company start its train No. 100 from Parkton (instead of from Cockeysville as at present operated) at 5.30 A. M., stopping at stations between Parkton and Cockeysville, and running from Cockeysville to Baltimore on its present schedule, reaching Calvert Station at 6.45 A. M.

*145 “2nd. That said Rorfhern Central Railway Company run its train Ro. 121 (which now ends its run at Cockeysville) to Parkton, leaving Baltimore at 10 P. M. and reaching Parkton at about 11.30 P. M., stopping at stations between Cockeysville and Parkton.

“3rd. That the aforegoing changes in the operation of train Ro. 100 and train Ro. 121 he put into effect at the time of the general spring change of schedule in the month of Mary, 1913..

“4th. That said Rorfhern Central Railway Company be, and it is hereby, required to operate its train Ro. 200 from Parkton to Baltimore (said train leaving Parkton at 6.50 A. M. and scheduled to arrive in Baltimore at 8.20 A. M.) on its published schedule time, and said company is further ordered to cease and desist from placing said train Ro. 200 on a sidetrack or otherwise detaining it when running on its own schedule timo, and from holding it back at a point of origin in order to give right of way to through or interstate trains which have been delayed at points beyond the run of train Ro. 200, and which, by reason of such delay, can only he run to destination by displacing train Ro. 200 and depriving it of the time allotted to it by said published schedule.

“5th. That the rule of operation of train Ro. 200, contained in paragraph 4 of this order, shall apply generally to local trains operated by said company.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Public Service Commission v. Byron
138 A. 404 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A. 768, 124 Md. 141, 1914 Md. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-central-rwy-co-v-laird-md-1914.