State ex rel. Ketcham v. St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway Co.

42 N.W. 21, 40 Minn. 353, 1889 Minn. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 9, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 N.W. 21 (State ex rel. Ketcham v. St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Ketcham v. St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway Co., 42 N.W. 21, 40 Minn. 353, 1889 Minn. LEXIS 93 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Collins, J.

Action of mandamus to compel the defendant railway companies to connect their respective lines of road at a place of crossing in Grant county. The defendants appeal from an order of the court-refusing a new trial, and from a judgment requiring them “to immediately provide ample facilities for transferring cars from their respective tracks, one to the other, at the crossing or intersection” specified. The proceeding is under the provisions of chapter 14, Laws 1887, generally known as the “Freedom of Traffic Law,” and was brought upon the relation of the county attorney of said county; it being made his duty by section 5 of said chapter to prosecute all offenders, and to enforce, by proceedings in court, all of the provisions and penalties of the act. The defendants contend and rest their case upon three propositions, insisting that, if either be sustained, the order and judgment from which they appeal must be reversed. They allege — First, that the act in question was not legally and constitutionally passed by either senate or house; second, that, if it should be declared properly passed, it was repealed at the same legislative session upon the passage of an act entitled “An act to regulate common carriers, and creating the railroad and warehouse commission, * * * and defining the duties of such commission in relation to common carriers,” now chapter 10, Laws 1887; and, third, that, if legally passed and not repealed, the law is unconstitutional.

It must be admitted that, if there be merit in either of these positions, the appellants are right, and the judgment cannot stand. The only one of these assertions which, in our opinion, we need to [355]*355consider at this time, is in regard to the repeal of chapter 14, under which this proceeding was instituted, by chapter 10, before mentioned. From the session laws and the record before us it appears that the freedom of traffic act was presented early in the legislative session, as senate file 46, while the bill in regard to common carriers was introduced near the close of the session, as senate file 557. The first named met with much opposition and some reverses, but was passed shortly before the adjournment, and received the governor’s approval March 5th. The latter (chapter 10) was approved two days later, March 7th. It is of common history that the subject-matter found in and covered by it had been exhaustively discussed, during the session, in committee and upon the floor of each branch of the legislature, while the members had under consideration the many bills which had been introduced, designed to cover the same ground, and which had been advanced to various stages upon the calendars; and that chapter 10, as finally passed, is the result of the earnest conferences of those who were specially devoted to legislation of that character. The policy of the state in committing a general supervision of railways to a board of commissioners, whose duties are definitely specified and in whom great power and authority is confided, seems clearly manifested, and made a conspicuous feature of the act. The design seems to have been to vest in the persons who might occupy the very responsible positions created by the law, ample power to promptly and with little circumlocution examine and adjust such complaints as might be made by the patrons of these vast corporations in regard to the management, the business facilities afforded, and the rates charged by them for the transportation of passengers and freight. The necessity of such an act', and the right of the people to legislate in reference to the matters therein embraced, cannot now be questioned. As was well said in State v. Chicago, Mil. & St. Paul Ry. Co., 38 Minn. 281, 297, (37 N. W. Rep. 782,) the question was settled “in accordance with public policy and public necessity; for no modern civilized community could long endure that their public highway system should be in the uncontrolled, exclusive use of private owners. The only alternative was either governmental regulation or governmental ownership.” This law superseded others in regard to the [356]*356same subject. It not only gave to the board advisory powers of the same character as those conferred by the federal congress upon the commissioners appointed to carry out the provisions of the “ Interstate Commerce Act,” but it went much further, and authorized that a schedule of rates for transportation might be fixed by which the roads should be guided, and that, when so fixed, the action of the board should be final and conclusive. State v. Chicago, Mil. & St. Paul Ry. Co., supra; Ry. Transfer Co. v. Railroad Commission, 39 Minn. 231, (39 N. W. Rep. 150.) In these facts, and in granting to the board such unlimited and exclusive authority, and in specifying so minutely the powers and privileges it possessed and could exercise, we find abundant evidence that it was the intent and purpose of the law-makers to confide to the sound discretion and good judgment of its members the rights and welfare of the people, as well as the interests and prosperity of the corporations. We nowhere discover a design to cripple the roads, or a disposition to demand of them unreasonable things, but there clearly and unmistakably appears a determination to provide for a supervision and control of the management, so that the public should not be oppressed by unjust discriminations, unequal rates, and unfair restrictions, and that ample facilities should be afforded for the transaction of business.

From this it is manifest that there was uppermost in the minds of the legislators a desire to reduce the various laws then existing, relating to the rights and duties of common carriers, to a comprehensive system, and an idea to secure a speedy enforcement of the system by and through a commission consisting of but three men, prohibited from engaging in other business, and whose chief legal adviser should be the attorney general of the state. Keeping this in mind, we pass to an examination and comparison of such sections of these two enactments as seem to have a bearing upon this case. Section 1, c. lé, provides that all railway companies in the state “shall provide ample facilities for transferring cars from their track to any other joining, crossing, or intersecting railway track,” except in special cases, which cases may be determined by the board of commissioners; which board had, in fact, existed in this state for several years prior to the introduction and passage of the law. In subdivis[357]*357ion a, § 3, c. 10, we find it declared that “all common carriers subject to the provisions of this act shall, according to their respective powers, provide at the point of connection, crossing, or intersection ample facilities for transferring ears” from th'eir tracks to those of a connecting, crossing, or intersecting road. The subdivision goes further, and provides for the accommodation and transfer of passengers and freight, and the interchange of traffic at such points, without discrimination in rates or charges. The design of both of these enactments is to compel intersecting roads to connect in the usual manner, by spur tracks and switches. It may be admitted that under chapter 14 this is made imperative, unless an exception be granted .by the railroad commissioners, and that under chapter 10 the duty is dependent upon the action of the board when complaint is made that ample facilities for transfer are withheld at any particular point.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.W. 21, 40 Minn. 353, 1889 Minn. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ketcham-v-st-paul-minneapolis-manitoba-railway-co-minn-1889.