Pullman Co. v. Linke

203 F. 1017, 11 Ohio Law Rep. 63, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1785
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 12, 1913
DocketNo. 1,505
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 203 F. 1017 (Pullman Co. v. Linke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullman Co. v. Linke, 203 F. 1017, 11 Ohio Law Rep. 63, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1785 (S.D. Ohio 1913).

Opinion

SATER, District Judge.

The question for decision is: Was the, sleeping car in question, under the facts disclosed, subject to attachment?

[1018]*1018The plaintiff is an Illinois corporation. Prior to November 20, 1909, it had furnished a sleeping car, “Eufaula,” to be used and which m fact was regularly used by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company for the accommodation and transportation of passengers between the cities of Columbus, Ohio, and Washington, D. C., and intermediate stations. The car, as a part of one of the railroad company’s trains, on the date named left 'Columbus, its initial starting point, on its east-bound trip, carrying passengers who had purchased from the railroad company continuous transportation and from the plaintiff through sleeping car accommodations on such car to points beyond as well as within Ohio; 'some of them being destined for Washington City. When the car reached Newark, Ohio, at 7:50 p._ m., it was detached from the train and shoved by an engine on a side track to be attached to the railroad company’s through train due at 8:10 p. m., coming from Chicago, 111., and bound for eastern points, including the city of Washington. The side track physically connected the railroad company’s tracks leading to Columbus with its main east and west bound tracks. While the car was on the side track with its passengers aboard, awaiting the arrival of the train from Chicago, which was on time, Linke, as sheriff of Licking county, Ohio, who was armed with a writ of attachment which had been issued in an action brought in the state court against the plaintiff by Gillett, levied upon the car, chained it to the track, and, notwithstanding the protests of passengers aboard and the railroad company’s employes, refused permission to such employés and those of the plaintiff to place the car in the east-bound train to be carried to its destination. When the yard crew, in obedience to instructions from their superiors, were about to couple to the car, Linke produced a revolver and threatened to shoot any one that interfered with the car or attempted to move it. A suggestion was made by the station master, out of regard for the passengers, that, if a sleeping car was to be seized, the levy be postponed until the following morning, when a west-bound car which would have completed its journey, save a distance of about 33 miles from Newark to Columbus, could be taken; but Linke, and Gillett and his counsel, declined to act upon such suggestion. The passengers in the car, to continue their respective journeys, were compelled to abandon it and take such places as could be found for them in the New York sleepers in the east-bound train. The train was delayed about ten minutes on. account of the attachment of the car and transferring the passengers. Gillett and his counsel actively aided and abetted the sheriff in his seizure and detention of the car. Subsequently, to avoid the car’s continued interference with traffic, it was removed to another track, where it still remains. The plaintiff, having other property within the jurisdiction of the state court subject to attachment, appeared thereafter in that court for the purpose of its motion only, and moved for a dissolution of the attachment. The motion was sustained, but before the court- had acted upon it Gillett filed an amended petition and caused a second writ of attachment to be issued and levied upon the car. This attachment was also dissolved. Before its dissolution, Gillett, whose counsel all the while remained [1019]*1019the same, instituted a second suit on the same claim and caused another writ of attachment to issue whereby the car was again seized. This action is still pending in the state court, and the car has thus been continuously held by virtue of a writ. The plaintiff in an appropriate manner demanded the return of the car, but the defendants at all times refused and still refuse to surrender it, and still retain it in their possession awaiting the determination of the suit pending in the state court in which the last writ of attachment was issued. The plaintiff brought this action against Einke, Gillett, and his counsel, charging the malicious and willful seizure of the car and its conversion to their own use and praying recovery of the car’s full value.

[1] That the statute under which the seizure was made is a valid state law, enacted to enable creditors to collect their debts and for no other or ulterior purpose, and evinces no conscious purpose to regulate directly or indirectly interstate commerce, is not controverted; nor is it claimed, nor can it be successfully asserted, that the acts of Congress relating to interstate commerce were intended to abrogate the attachment laws of the state. Within their proper sphere, the federal acts are paramount; but beyond that, the state law, whose purpose is wholesome, is operative as against all that come within its provisions. Davis v. C., C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 217 U. S. 157, 30 Sup. Ct. 463, 54 L. Ed. 708, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 823, 18 Ann. Cas. 907. In that case the warning is sounded that interference with interstate commerce by the enforcement of attachment laws of a state must not be exaggerated. But when there is incompatibility between the obligations an interstate carrier has to its creditors and the obligations it has to the public, either from the nature of its services or under the acts of Congress, the instrumentalities of interstate commerce transportation are, for the time being, “immune from judicial process,” and are “put apart in a kind of civil sanctuary,” being, under such circumstances, exempt from attachment and, of course, from execution as well, by reason of the provisions of such acts for continuity of transportation and avoidance of transshipment of freight and passengers. Davis v. C., C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 217 U. S. page 176, 30 Sup. Ct. 468, 54 L. Ed. 708, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 823, 18 Ann. Cas. 907.

[2] A sleeping car company, it is true, by furnishing.sleeping cars under a contract with a railroad company to be used by" the traveling public, does not thereby assume or acquire the status of a common carrier of g;oods or passengers (Lemon v. Palace Car Co. [C. C.] 52 Fed. 262; Elliott, Railroads, § 1616; Beale, Innkeepers & Hotels, § 342; Hutchinson, Carriers, § 1130; 25 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 1110, 1111), unless declared to be such by some constitutional or statutory provision. It merely furnishes accommodations to the passengers of another company and performs only an auxiliary function in their transportation; but it is nevertheless engaged in a public calling. 6 Cyc. 656; Elliott, Railroads, § 1618. Section 1 of the interstate commerce act as amended June 29, 1906, 34 Stat. E. 584, provides that the term “common carrier” as used in that act shall include sleeping car companies. By virtue of this statutory provision, the plaintiff’s status at the time of the seizure of the car was in legal con[1020]*1020templation the same as that of an interstate carrier.- The car,; morer over, was an instrumentality of commerce and was when seized actually employed as such in interstate transportation.

[3]

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Related

Pullman Co. v. Strang
132 S.E. 399 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
203 F. 1017, 11 Ohio Law Rep. 63, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullman-co-v-linke-ohsd-1913.