State ex rel. Mattoon v. Republican Valley Railroad

17 Neb. 647
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 17 Neb. 647 (State ex rel. Mattoon v. Republican Valley Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Mattoon v. Republican Valley Railroad, 17 Neb. 647 (Neb. 1885).

Opinion

Cobb, Ch. J.

This is an original application to this court for a writ of mandamus requiring the respondent, the Republican Valley Railroad Company, to build within the corporate limits of the city of Blue Springs a depot, and to lay down the necessary side tracks. and switches, and to stop its trains thereat for the proper transaction of business. The relator alleges that that part of respondent’s railroad which runs from Beatrice in a south-easterly direction to a point in section 29, township 2, range 7 east, where it intersects the [653]*653respondent’s main, or east and west, line, was built in the-years 1880-1; that it was built and runs through the said city of Blue Springs; that at the time of the construction of said railroad Blue Springs was a village of one thousand inhabitants; that it contained five stores carrying general stocks of merchandise, two stores carrying stocks, of hardware, two lumber yards, four implement houses,, one pump and wind-mill house, three blacksmith shops, three drug stores, two hotels, two liyery stables, two harness shops, two barber shops, two restaurants, two millinery-shops, two printing offices, three land agents, one bank,, with an average deposit of $50,000, two coal dealers, two. butcher shops, one auction house, two saloons, one bakery,, one jewelry store, three wagon shops, eight contractors and builders, two stock buyers, one grain dealer, one grist mill,, one plow factory, one school with three departments, with a proportionate number of ministers, lawyers, and doctors.

The relator also alleges that at the time of filing the said relation, the said Blue Springs was a city of the second class of over fifteen hundred inhabitants, with a thickly settled country contiguous thereto, and to and from which large numbers of people desired to be carried by the respondent company, and to and from which large amounts of freight, produce, stock, and merchandise are annually consigned by way of the respondent’s line of road; but that, the respondent has neglected, failed, and refused to establish or erect any depot or station house at said Blue Springs,, or to stop all or any of its trains thereat for the receipt or-discharge of either passengers or freight upon or from its. said railroad.

The relator further alleges that he is engaged in the business of buying grain and selling agricultural implements and farm machinery at said Blue Springs, and that in the carrying on of his said business he has large amounts of grain to ship from said point, annually, and has consigned to him large quantities of freight; that by the refusal of [654]*654the respondent to receive and discharge said freight at said Blue Springs, he is prevented from enjoying the same privileges and accommodations over the defendant’s line of road as are merchants at other points on said line of railroad, etc. There are other allegations in said relation which it is not deemed necessary to notice in order to an understanding of the points decided by the court.

The respondent by its answer denies that it built its line of railroad through the village of Blue Springs, and alleges that said line of road, as located and built, was a distance from the corporate limits of said village of 988T®¡$¡-feet, and that the depot built at Wymore is only 5,4791-feet from the corporate limits of said village of Blue Springs; denies that there is any necessity for the location of a depot building nearer to Blue Springs than the location at Wymore, and alleges that it is impracticable for respondent to have and operate its line with a depot at both places, etc. Also that the Omaha & Republican Valley Railroad runs through Blue Springs and has established a depot there for the accommodation of the public, “ and that they have no depot at Wymore.” And also that the city of Wymore has now .........inhabitants, and is far more important as a commercial point than Blue Springs, having and doing a great deal more business than Blue Springs.

A considerable part of the respondent’s answer, as well as of its evidence, is directed to the point of the impracticability for topographical and engineering reasons of running its main or east and west line through Blue Springs. That proposition is not controverted or denied by the relator, nor do I see its relevancy to the case as presented by the relation. It may be admitted that so far as the main line is concerned, the respondent ownes no duty to the relator.

So far then as the case is presented by the pleadings, it involves these two questions:

1, Is the depot of respondent at Wymore sufficiently near to the business portion of Blue Springs as to afford [655]*655her inhabitants and merchants, and particularly the relator, all the facilities and accommodations which the respondent owes them as a common carrier, one of whose lines runs through the last named city, without discrimination against the business and inhabitants thereof? If not, 2, Is it practicable to operate respondent’s branch line of railroad between Wymore and Beatrice with depots and regular services thereat, both at Wymore and Blue Springs?

The more important and quasi public question of the power of the courts in the absence of legislation to compel the respondent to establish and maintain a depot at Blue Springs, -is raised by respondent in its brief, and that question will be first considered. ■

Eelator in his brief contends that the legislature of the state has imposed upon the respondent the duty of furnishing side tracks and depots, and stopping its trains for the receipt and discharge of passengers and freight, and the proper transaction of business at all places upon their road, etc., and he cites section 121, of chapter 16, Comp. Stat., in support of that proposition. The section reads as follows: “Sec. 121. Every such railroad corporation shall start and run their cars for the transportation of passengers and property at regular times to be fixed by public notice, and shall furnish sufficient accommodations for the transportation of passengers and freight, and shall take, transport, and discharge all passengers to and from such stations as the trains stop at, from or to all places and stations upon their said road, on the due payment of fare or freight bill.”

I do not think that this section furnishes authority for the interference of the courts to compel the establishment of a depot or station at any point on the line of respondent’s road, but on the contrary, it is quite apparent upon the face of the section that every duty thereby imposed is qualified by the words, “to and from such stations as the trains stop at,” and its application limited to established depots.

But in the opinion of this court it has authority to grant [656]*656relief in cases such as that presented, in this case, yet for-the source of its authority it must look to the principles of the common law rather than to legislative enactments. The respondent is a common carrier of persons and merchandise.. At common law it was the duty of a common carrier by land to deliver freight personally to the consignee; but when railways took the place of conveyances drawn by-animals, necessity required the relaxation of this rule so as. to allow of the substitution in place of personal delivery a delivery at the warehouse or depot provided by the companies for the storage of goods. Vincent et al. v. C. & A. R. R. Co., 49 Ill., 33.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Neb. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mattoon-v-republican-valley-railroad-neb-1885.