Pensacola & Atlantic Railroad v. State

25 Fla. 310
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 25 Fla. 310 (Pensacola & Atlantic Railroad v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pensacola & Atlantic Railroad v. State, 25 Fla. 310 (Fla. 1889).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.:

There are before us, on appeal from judgments of the Circuit Court, several actions instituted by the State against the appellant to recover penalties under the statute approved June 7th, 1887, and commonly known as the Railroad Commission Act. The cases from Gadsden county, in the Second Circuit, were brought last July, and the penalty adjudged in each of them is $2,500 ; that from Jackson county was commenced last April, and the penalty denounced in it is $2,000. Upon the conclusion of the argument made before us at the present term, we announced that the decision of these cases would, iu view of the public interests involved, be disposed of at an early day.

The pleadings are similar in substance. The declaration in one of the Gadsden county cases, which we take as a type of all, alleges that the railroad company is a body corporate organized under a special statute of this State, approved March 4th, 1881, (chapter 3334), and operating a railroad from Pensacola to River Junction, both of which [312]*312points are in the State, and that on a certain day in April of the year 1888, it did “ wilfully charge, collect and demand and receive ” of a person, naming him, for transporting him as a passenger from River Junction to Marianna, another point on the road, a distance of twenty-six miles, the sum of $1.25, and that this sum was more than three cents per mile, the rate prescribed by the Railroad Commissioners, and that the sum so collected was more than a fair and reasonable rate of toll or compensation for the transportation of the passenger, and that eighty cents, the sum which the company was allowed by the above rate prescribed by the Commissioners (and a special rule as to amounts ending in other figure than 5 or 0) to charge, collect and receive, was a just and reasonable rate of compensation ; and that by thus wilfully collecting and receiving the stated excess over and above what it was allowed by the Commissioners’ rules to charge, collect and receive, the railroad company became and was guilty of extortion, and of a violation of the rules and regulations prescribed and published by the Commissioners, by which rules and regulations the Commissioners made, among others, a schedule or tariff of just and reasonable rates for the transportation of passengers on appellant’s railroad.

It is also alleged that the Commissioners gave notice to the principal officer of the railroad company of this violation, and directed the company to make reparation, to the passenger for the injury and wrong so done him, by refunding to him the excess of lorty-five cents, within thirty days, as prescribed by the statute, but it failed and refused to do so, and thereby forfeited to the State and incurred a penalty of five thousand dollars.

To this declaration the railroad company interposed four pleas, and the State demurred to them as insufficient in law. The demurrer having been overruled, and the com[313]*313pany not electing to plead over, judgment was entered, the Circuit Judge fixing the penalty at the amount indicated above.

Section 13 of Article XVI of the Constitution of this State is as follows : The Legislature is invested with full power to pass laws for the correction of abuses, and to prevent unjust discrimination and excessive charges by persons and corporations engaged as common carriers in transporting persons and property, or performing other services of a public nature, and shall provide for enforcing such laws by adequate penalties or forfeitures.

Whether or not there is in this section a grant of any power which the Legislature did not have before, it is unnecessary for us to decide. There is, however, upon the face of it au apparent purpose to correct abuses. It shows that the Convention in adopting and the people in ratifying the section were impressed with a belief that there existed a necessity for the enactment of laws correcting abuses, preventing unjust discriminations .aud excessive charges by common carriers in transporting persons and property-, and that confidence in the sufficiency of the common law remedies as agencies by which the individual citizen could find protection against or relief as to these evils had failed. As to the necessity for the command thus made by the people to the law-making power, the judicial department is concluded by the existence of the section.

To effect the end proposed by the Constitution, the first Legislature assembled under it, enacted the Railroad Commission Law, which was approved June 7th, 1887, it being Chapter 3746' of our statutes. This statute provides for the appointment of three Commissioners and (section 5) that they shall “ make and fix reasonable and just rates of freight and passenger tariffs, to be observed by all railroad companies doing business in this State on the railroads [314]*314thereof,” and just and reasonable regulations as to charges for the necessary handling and delivery of freights at any and all points, and for preventing discrimination in the transportation of freight and passengers, and reasonable- and just rates of charges for the use of railroad cars carrying freight and passengers on said railroads, no matter by whom owned or carried ; and just and reasonable rules and regulations to be observed by said railroad companies on said railroads, to prevent the giving of any rebate or bonus directly or indirectly, and from misleading or deceiving the public in any manner as to the real rates charged for freight and passengers. It also confers power upon the Commissioners to designate and fix by rules and regulations the difference in the rates of freight and passenger transportation for longer or shorter hauls, and to ascertain what shall be the limits of longer and shorter distances.

There is in the above section also a provision to the effect that nothing in the act shall abridge or control the rates for freight which come from or goes beyond the State and for which less than local rates for carrying the same is charged.

.By the sixth section the Commissioners are authorized and required to make for each railroad corporation a schedule “ of just and reasonable” rates of charges for the transportation of passengers and freights and cars, and “ said schedule shall in an}7 suit brought against any such railroad corporation wherein is involved the charges of any such corporations for the transportation of any passengers or freight? or cars, or unjust discrimination in relation thereto, be deemed and taken in all courts of this State as sufficient evidence that the rates fixed therein are just and reasonable rates of charges for the transportation of passengers and freight and cars upon the railroads.” The Commissioners are required to publish these schedules, and the railroad [315]*315companies to post them in a manner stated, and any such schedules purporting to be printed and published shall be received and held in all suits as prima facie the schedule ot said Commissioners without further proof than its production with a certificate from the Commission of its being a true copy of the schedule prepared by them for the railroad company or corporation therein named, and that it has been duly published as required by law, stating the name of the newspaper, the date and place of publication.

This section also enacts that the Commissioners shall? from time to time, and as often as circumstances may require, change and revise the schedules.

Sections 7 to 18 inclusive, provide for s

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Bluebook (online)
25 Fla. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pensacola-atlantic-railroad-v-state-fla-1889.