Railway Co. v. Smith

29 S.W. 752, 60 Ark. 221, 1895 Ark. LEXIS 151
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 752 (Railway Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railway Co. v. Smith, 29 S.W. 752, 60 Ark. 221, 1895 Ark. LEXIS 151 (Ark. 1895).

Opinions

Battle, J.

The demurrer of appellee to the answer of appellants presents four questions of law :

First. Is a person, who goes upon the train of a railway company for the sole purpose of paying an overcharge for transportation, if demanded, and bringing an action for the penalty prescribed by the statute in such cases, entitled to recover such penalty if the company demands and he pays the overcharge?

Second. Was appellee barred from recovering the penalty for such overcharge by reason of champerty ?

Third. Are appellants entitled to any relief in equity on account of a mistake ?

Fourth. Does their answer show that three cents a mile for the transportation of passengers is an unreasonable rate of compensation for the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway ?

LEighttorecover penalty 1. The first question is decided in the affirmative in Railway Company v. Gill, 54 Ark. 101. adhere to the ruling in that case.

% when champerty not a defense, 2. The “champertous” agreement between ap- . pellee and his attorney D. B. Locke, set out m the second paragraph of the answer, if available for any purpose, can only be set up when the agreement is sought to be enforced. The right of appellee does not grow out of it, but solely out of the fact that the railway company charged and received a greater compensation than that allowed by law. The company was not justified by the agreement in demanding and receiving the excessive compensation. How then could it be a good defense? No effort was made in this suit to enforce it. The right of action in this case is not dependent on or controlled by it. It could not, then, affect the right to the penalty. Burnes v. Scott, 117 U. S. 582; Allison v. Chicago etc. R. Co. 42 Iowa, 274; Small v. C. R. I. & P. R. Co. 8 N. W. 437; Brinley v. Whiting, 5 Pick. 348; 3 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, pp. 86, 87, cases cited.

3. Effect of mistake in overcharge, 3. The fact that appellants were mistaken as ^ to the distance for which transportation was charged does not relieve them. Equity will not extend aid to any one on account of a mistake which is the result of culpable negligence. In Duke of Beaufort v. Weld, 12 Clark & F. 248, 286, Lord Campbell said: In no case had a court of equity “been successfully asked to interpose in favor of a man who wilfully was ignorant of that which he ought to have known — a man who, without exercising that diligence which the law would expect of a reasonable and careful person, committed a mistake, in consequence of which alone the proceedings in court have arisen. No such a case is- to be found, and it would be a reproach to the law if there had been such a decision.”

In United States v. Ames, 99 U. S. 35, 47, Mr. Justice Miller said : “Ignorance of the facts is often a material allegation, but it is never sufficient to constitute a ground of relief, if it appears that the requisite knowledge might have been obtained by reasonable diligence.”

Whatever limitations there may be upon the rule as to diligence, stated in the authorities we have cited, it certainly applies where it is the duty of the party to make the inquiry and obtain the information. In this case appellants were prohibited from charging and collecting more than three cents a mile for carrying each passenger over the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway. It was their duty to the passengers traveling in their trains to ascertain the distance between the stations on their road,, in order to protect them against the payment of excessive rates of fare. One of the appellants, the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway Company, acquired its road on the 8th of June, 1875, and charged and collected the alleged excessive rates in January, 1891, more than fifteen years after it came into possession of the road. It surely was not excusable for any mistake which was not induced by the appellee and his confederates, if for any.

The demurrer was overruled as to so much of the answer as is in these words: “And defendant says that if it has made an overcharge against plaintiffs, it was induced to do so by the acts of the plaintiff and his co-conspirators, by the conspiracy and combination as aforesaid ; and it did so ignorantly, unintentionally, and by mistake, and that, therefore, it is not liable for violation of the statute, as charged herein.” If appellants were induced by the acts of appellee, and others acting in concert with him, to overcharge, they were allowed to set up that fact in their answer, and cannot, therefore, complain of the court depriving them of their defense in that respect.

4. Reasonableuess of passe”£errafes, 4. Section one of the act of the general assembly of the State of Arkansas, entitled ‘‘An act to regulate the rates of charges for the carriage of passengers by railroads,” approved April 4, 1887, under which this action was brought, provides that it shall be unlawful for any railway, whose line of railroad is over seventy-five miles long, to charge for carrying any passenger over such line, within this State, more than three cents a mile. Appellants allege in their answer that this rate is unreasonable as to the Little Rock & Port Smith Railway, is in violation of the constitution of the United States and of the State of Arkansas, and as a reason for so alleging say : ‘ ‘ This defendant would show that, under the terms and rates prescribed by said statute, it cannot keep up, maintain and operate its railway except at a heavy loss; that its line of railway is located wholly within the State of Arkansas, and is one hundred and sixty-seven miles in length, running between the cities of Little Rock and Port Smith; that the traffic and business over the same, both in passengers and freight, is so small and unremunerative that it cannot, and has not been able to, operate its railway under said statute as aforesaid without actual loss. Defendant therefore, says and charges that said statute forbidding this defendant from charging any one passenger a greater rate than three cents a mile, is entailing a great and daily loss upon this defendant, which will in the end amount to a total confiscation and destruction of its property, rights and franchises, because of its inability, under such rate, tQ pay the interest upon its just debts, and the cost of maintaining and operating its railroad in a safe and proper condition.”

Is the constitutional question sought to be raised by the defendant’s answer presented in such a manner as to make it the duty of this court to decide it? It is not, unless it appears that this cause cannot be disposed of without deciding it. As to the duty of courts to decide questions affecting the validity of acts of the general assembly, Judge Cooley says : “Neither will a court, as a general rule, pass upon a constitutional question, and decide a statute to be invalid, unless a decision upon that very point becomes necessary to the determination of the cause. ‘While courts cannot shun the discussion of constitutional questions when fairly presented, they will not go out of their way to find such topics. They will not seek to draw in such weighty matters collaterally, nor on trivial occasions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 752, 60 Ark. 221, 1895 Ark. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railway-co-v-smith-ark-1895.