Oklahoma City v. Oklahoma Ry. Co.

1907 OK 158, 93 P. 48, 93 P. 18, 20 Okla. 1, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 18, 1907
Docket2
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1907 OK 158 (Oklahoma City v. Oklahoma Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma City v. Oklahoma Ry. Co., 1907 OK 158, 93 P. 48, 93 P. 18, 20 Okla. 1, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 10 (Okla. 1907).

Opinion

Williams, C. J.:

(after stating the facts as above). “When there is a grant and acceptance of a public franchise which involves the performance of a certain service, the person or corporation acepting such franchise can by mandamus be compelled to perform such service.” Merrill on Mandamus, §■ 27.

Section 13 of article 9 of the Constitution of the state of Oklahoma reads as follows:

“No railroad or transportation company, or transmission company shall, directly or indirectly, issue or give any free frank or free ticket, free pass or other free transportation, for any use, within this state, except to its employees and their families, its officers, agents, surgeons, physicians, and attorneys at law; to ministers of religion, traveling secretaries for railroad Young Men’s Christian Associations, inmates of hospitals and' charitable and eleemosynary institutions and persons exclusively engaged in charitable and eleemosynary work; to indigent, destitute and homeless persons, and to such persons when transported by charitable societies or hopsitals, and the necessary agents, employed in such transportations; to inmates of the National Homes, or State Homes for disabled Volunteer Soldiers, and of Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Homes, including those about to enter and those returning *6 home after discharge, and hoards of managers of such Homes; to members of volunteer fire departments and their equipage while traveling as such; to necessary care takers of live stock, poultry, and fruit; to employees of sleeping cars, of express cars, and to linemen of telephone and telegraph companies; to railway mail service employees, postoffice inspectors, custom inspectors, and immigration inspectors; to newsboys on trains, baggage agents, witnesses attending any legal investigation in which the railroad company or transportation company is interested, persons injured in wrecks, and physicians and nurses attending such persons: Provided, that this provision shall not be construed to prohibit the interchange of passes for the officers, agents and employees of common carriers and their families; nor to prohibit any common carrier from carrying passengers free with the object of providing relief in cases of general epidemic, pestilence, or other calamitous visitation; nor to prevent them from transporting, free of charge, to their places of employment persons entering their service, and the interchange of passes to that end; and any railroad, transportation, or transmission company or any person, other than the persons excepted in this provision, who grants or uses any such free frank, free ticket, free pass, or free transportation within this state, shall be deemed guilty of a crime, and the legislature shall provide proper penalties for the violation of any provision of this section bjr the railroad or transportation or transmission company, or by any individual: Provided, that nothing herein shall prevent the legislature from extending these provisions so as to exclude such free transportations or franks from other persons.”

The only question that is necessary to be determined in this case is whether or not said section absolves the respondent from its obligation and undertaking to the relator to furnish the tickets to the school children under the terms named, and to carry the policemen, firemen, mail carriers, and certain children free, as stipulated in said franchise. If it be determined that said section does not affect said obligations and undertakings in said franchise, then the peremptory writ should issue.

Section 6 of article 18 of said Constitution reads as follows:

“Every municipal corporation within this state shall have the *7 right to engage in any business or enterprise which may be engaged in by a person, firm or corporation by virtue of a franchise from said corporation.”

It could not be successfully contended that, if the relator were directly engaged in the business of operating said street railway line, it could not carry said school children at the rates and under the terms designated in said franchise, or its policemen and firemen, the mail carriers, and children under five years of age when accompanied by a parent or guardian, without charge, on account" of the provisions of section 13, art. 9, supra; for the term “railroad” or “transportation company55 or “transmission company,” as used in said section, would not include the relator.

Section 1 of article 9 of the Constitution reads as follows:

“As used in this article the term ‘corporation5 or ‘company5 shall include all associations and joint stock companies having any power or privilege, not possessed by individuals, a,nd exclude all municipal corporations and public institutions owned or controlled by the state.55

Now, if the relator, being authorized to operate a street railway system in said city, would be permitted under the provisions of this Constitution to furnish tickets to the school children under the terms and prices hereinbefore named, and to carry its policemen and firémen, the mail carriers, and certain children free, then, why would not a contract entered into to that end by-the relator be valid? The respondent herein is not furnishing “free transportation.55 Transportation and reduced rates to a certain class are in this case furnished not by the respondent. This is done by the city, the relator herein, which it has a right to do under the law.

In Re Grimes v. Minneapolis, Lyndale & Minnetonka Railway Company, 37 Minn. 67, 33 N. W. 34, the court said:

“Grimes and wife conveyed to defendant certain land for the purposes of its railway', and in consideration of the conveyance defendant agreed to ‘carry5 said Grimes and wife, and any of their children, ‘free of charge,5 in the passenger cars run upon its road. Plaintiff is one of the children mentioned. Held, that *8 the effect 'of defendant’s agreement is to entitle the plaintiff to be carried free of charge. The fact that his father purchased and paid for this right of free carriage is not important. The plaintiff’s right is as complete as if he had purchased and paid for it himself, and as a logical consequence, its infringement, whether tortious or otherwise, is a wrong to him for which he has his action.”

In Re Erie & Pittsburg Railway Company v. Douthet, 88 Pa. 245, 32 Am. Rep. 45:

“The agreement of the defendants was to give the plaintiff a pass over their railroad for himself and his family for his lifetime as the consideration of his release of the right of way over his land. The pass was given for a while, and then refused, and this action was to recover damages for their breach of contract.”

The court held in the above case that the plaintiff was entitled to recover.

In Re Curry v. Kansas & Colorado Pacific Company, 58 Kan. 18, 48 Pac. 583, the court said:

“The company cannot excuse itself upon the score of the interstate commerce act. That act forbids the gratuitous issuance of railway passes, not their issuance for a moneyed or other valuable consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1907 OK 158, 93 P. 48, 93 P. 18, 20 Okla. 1, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-city-v-oklahoma-ry-co-okla-1907.