State v. Wrightsville & Tennille Railroad

30 S.E. 891, 104 Ga. 437, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 7, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 891 (State v. Wrightsville & Tennille Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wrightsville & Tennille Railroad, 30 S.E. 891, 104 Ga. 437, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 342 (Ga. 1898).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

It appears from the record, that the Wrights-ville & Tennille R. Co. refused to "issue to some of its patrons through bills of lading beyond the terminus of its own line. Complaint of this action was made by the Augusta Southern R. Co. to the railroad commission of Georgia, and that commission cited the Wrightsville & Tennille R. Co. to appear before it to answer the complaint. After a hearing, the commission decided that the railroad company had violated rule 32 of the commission, and ordered it to issue to its patrons through bills of lading beyond the terminus of its line. After the passage of this order, another of the patrons of the Wrightsville & Tennille R. Co. applied to it for a through bill of lading from Bruton, a point on its line, to Tennille, thence over the Augusta Southern road to Augusta, and thence over one or more roads in South Carolina to Savannah, in this State. The Wrightsville & Tennille R. Co. refused to issue this bill of lading, but did issue one through to Savannah over its own line and that of the Central of Georgia Ry. Co. The railroad commission, through the attorney-general of the State, brought this action for the recovery of a [438]*438penalty of $5,000, as provided in section 2196 of the Civil Code. The railroad company' demurred to the petition, on the grounds that it set out no cause of action; that the railroad commission of Georgia had no right to require of defendant company the issuing of through bills of lading to points beyond its own terminus; and that the acts complained of related to shipments. of freight going beyond the boundaries of the State of Georgia and through the State of South Carolina before reaching their destination. The court sustained the demurrer, and the State excepted.

The point made by' the pleadings is, whether the railroad commission of Georgia has power, under the law, to compel a railroad to issue a through bill of lading over its line and beyond its terminus. We have carefully read rule 32 of the commission, which is alleged to have been violated by' the defendant company, and we find that it is substantially' in the language of the act of 1874, codified in sections 2212-2214 of the Civil Code. If, therefore, the defendant company' violated rule 32, it also violated the law as declared in these sections of the code, which are as follows: “All railroad companies in this State shall, at the terminus or any intermediate point, be required to switch off and deliver to the connecting road having the same gauge, in the yard of the latter, all cars passing over their lines, or any portion of the same, containing goods or freights consigned, without rebate or deception, by' any' route, at the option of the shipper, according to customary or published rates, to any' point over or beyond such connecting road, and any' failure to do so with reasonable diligence, according to the route by which such goods or freights were consigned, shall be deemed and taken as a conversion in law of such goods or freights, and shall give a right of action to the owner or consignee, for the value of the same, with interest, and not less than ten per cent., nor more than twenty-five percent., for expenses and damages; provided, that should the defendant, in any suit brought under this section, set up as a defense, that the plaintiff has accepted a rebate, or practiced fraud or deception touching the rate, it shall be a complete reply to such defense if the plaintiff can prove that defendant, or its agents, have allowed a rebate or [439]*439rebates, or practiced like fraud or deception from the same competing point against the rival line.” “Where any railroad in this State joins another at any point along its line, or where two of such roads have the same terminus, either line, having the same gauge, may, at its own expense, join its tracks by proper and safe switches with the other, should such other road or company refuse to join in the work and expense.” “No railroad company shall discriminate in its rates or tariff of freights in favor of any line or route connected with it as against any other line or route, nor, when a part of its own line is sought to be run in connection with any other route, shall such company discriminate against such connecting line or in favor of the balance of its own line, but shall have the same rates, and shall afford the usual and like customary facilities for interchange of freights to patrons of each and all routes or lines alike; any refusal of the same shall give a like right of action as mentioned in section 2212 of this code.” Section 2212, it will be observed, simply requires railroad companies, at the terminus or any intermediate point, to switch off and deliver to the connecting road of the same gauge all cars passing over their lines which contain goods or freight consigned by any route, according to customary or published rates, to any point beyond such connecting road. Section 2213 allows one railroad company, at its own expense, to join its tracks by switch with another. It is clear that neither of these sections confers upon the railroad commission the power to compel railroad companies to issue through hills of lading. In the petition in this case, there is no complaint that the defendant railroad company refused to deliver to the Augusta So. R. Co. freight consigned to it, or to allow the Augusta So. R. Co. to join its tracks to the tracks of defendant company, or to allow the Augusta So. R. Co. to draw its cars from its own tracks to those of defendant company, or vice versa. Had any of these complaints been made, the case of Logan & Co. v. Central Railroad, 74 Ga. 684, relied upon by the attorney-general, would have been applicable; but that decision, in our opinion, does not apply to the facts of the case under consideration any more than it did to the facts of Coles, Simkins & Co. v. Central R. Co., 86 Ga. 251. In the case of [440]*440Logan & Co. v. Central Railroad, the railroad company refused to receive freight in cars from another road and the owner of the freight was compelled to haul it in drays from one road to the other.

„ Proceeding now to a consideration of section 2214 of the Civil Code, it will be seen that this section prohibits one railroad company from discriminating “ in its rates or tariff of freights in favor of any line or route connected with it as against any other line or route,” and declares it shall have the same rates for all lines “ and shall afford the usual and like customary facilities for interchange of freights to patrons of each and all routes or lines alike.” In our opinion, these words do not confer upon the commission the power to compel railroad companies to make contracts. They refer to the reception of freight by one railroad from another or its delivery from one to another. It allows patrons of a railroad to designate the route over which they desire their goods to be shipped, and, if they so desire, to send them over roads connecting with the receiving road. To illustrate by the facts of this particular case: Beall seems to have preferred to ship his cotton from Bruton, on defendant’s line, to Tennille, the terminus of the line, thence over the Augusta Southern to Augusta, Georgia, thence through South Carolina by connecting roads to Savannah, in this State. This clause of the act prohibited the Wrightsville & Tennille R. Co. from interfering with the execution of this preference. Under this clause, the defendant company could have been compelled to receive Beall’s cotton, transport it to Tennille, and deliver it to the Augusta So. R. Co.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 891, 104 Ga. 437, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wrightsville-tennille-railroad-ga-1898.