Thompson-Houston Electric Co. v. Simon

25 P. 147, 20 Or. 60, 1890 Ore. LEXIS 95
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 25 P. 147 (Thompson-Houston Electric Co. v. Simon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson-Houston Electric Co. v. Simon, 25 P. 147, 20 Or. 60, 1890 Ore. LEXIS 95 (Or. 1890).

Opinions

Lord, J.

— This is an action to condemn a right of way foi a street and suburban railway operated for the carrying oí passengers. A demurrer was filed to the complaint, which was sustained by the court below; and the plaintiff refusing-to proceed, judgment was rendered therein, from which this appeal is taken. The contention of the plaintiff is, that our statute authorizing the condemnation of land for a right of way contemplates the exercise of such power as much by street and suburban railways propelled by horse-power or electricity as railroads where cars are propelled by steam. The argument is, that section 3239, Hill’s Code, which provides that “a corporation organized for the construction of any railway” may appropriate land for a right of way by [62]*62.the use of the phrase “any railway” ex vi termini includes street and suburban railway corporations organized to transport passengers only and propelled by horse-power or electricity, as well as railroads authorized to transport passengers and freight and propelled by steam; that the terms of the statute, viewed as a whole, indicate and import that it was intended to authorize railway corporations to condemn lands for the use of their road, whether they were organized to carry passengers or freight or both or whether they were propelled by steam or other power. To strengthen the construction, that it is not necessary that the railway corporation, however propelled, should be formed to carry passengers and freight to entitle it to exercise the power of emiment domain and condemn lands for its use, the language of section 3236 is relied upon as showing that this distinction is not observed with reference to navigation corporations authorized to construct portage railways, wherein it reads “ for the purposes of transporting freight or passengers across any portage on the line of such navigation,” “in like manner and with like effect as if such corporation had been formed for such purpose.” To this it is answered that every railway corporation for the construction of a railroad under the statute for the condemnation of lands, is a common carrier, and that such a statute being in derogation of common right, is not to be extended by implication. Section 3254 of the statute, authorizing the condemnation of land for a right of way, provides: “ Every corporation formed under this chapter for the construction of a railway, as to such road shall be deemed common carriers and shall be entitled to collect and receive a just compensation for transportation of persons or property over such road.” The argument is> that as a common carrier is a carrier of goods for hire, and while a common carrier may carry passengers and combine the two employments of carrying goods and passengers, as is almost universally done by railroads, yet as a corporation for the construction of a railway it cannot be deemed a common carrier unless it is formed to carry goods [63]*63and passengers; that the legislature in delegating the right of eminent domain intended only that such railroads should be entitled to exercise it as were common carriers of freight and passengers; hence, a corporation could not exercise the right of eminent domain in the construction of a railway organized to transport passengers only and not freight. Much of this argument is bas^1 on the technical definition of a common carrier, as one who undertakes for hire to transport the goods of such as choose to employ him from place to place; so that before a corporation can be deemed a common carrier it must of necessity include in its business the transportation of goods or freight from place to place. There is usually in a railway act some sections which have the effect of putting the railway company on the footing of common carriers. (2 Rob. Pr. 534.) But whether made so by general statute or by their charters, railroad companies are held to be common carriers. (2 Am. & Eng. Ency. 781.) And it is said when they are made so by the express provision of a statute, such provision will be merely declaratory of the law as it already existed. (Huthinson on Carriers, § 67.) A common carrier is such because his duties partake of a public character. “To bring a person,” says Judge Story, “within the description of a common carrier, he must exercise it as a public employment; he must undertake to carry goods for persons generally, and must hold himself out as ready to engage in the transportation of goods for hire, as a business, and not as a casual occupation pro Tiac vice.” (Story on Bail. § 435..) To constitute one, then, a common carrier, it is necessary that he should hold himself out as such. A carrier of passengers who undertakes to carry all persons who apply to him for transportation, is engaged in a public employment and is a public or common carrier of passengers.

“A common carrier of passengers,” says Judge Thompson, “ is one who undertakes for hire to carry all persons indifferently who may apply for passage. Railroad companies, the owners of ships, ferries, omnibuses, street cars and stage [64]*64coaches are usually common carriers of passengers.” (Thompson on Carriers of Passengers, 26, note 1.)

It is true that carriers of passengers are not common carriers as to the persons of those whom they carry. But common carriers are classified as carriers of goods and as carriers of passengers. The reason is their employment is quasi public, and the public have an interest in the faithful discharge of their duties. “Every common carrier,” said Mulkey, J., “has the right to determine what particular line of business he will follow. If he elects to carry freight only, he will be under no obligation to carry passengers, and vice versa. So if he holds himself out as a carrier of a particular kind of freight, or of freight generally, prepared for carriage in a particular way, he will only be bound to carry to the extent and in the manner proposed. He will, nevertheless, be a common carrier.” (Railroad Co. v. Ferry Co. 107 Ill. 451.) A common carrier, then, may be either a carrier of passengers or freight or both. The argument then, that the plaintiff is not the kind of a corporation authorized to exercise the power of eminent domain because it is only a carrier of passengers and not of freight, would not deprWe the plaintiff of its character as a common carrier, and as such to be deemed within the statute. This would result in giving to the statute a construction which would include both classes of carriers, but not necessarily that such carriers should combine both employments; it might be engaged in carrying passengers or freight or both, and still be deemed a common carrier.

But it is apprehended that the safer way to determine whether the word “railway” or “common carrier,” as used in the statute, is to be confined to railroads operated by steam or railroads operated by other power, such as street railways, is to look at the context and intent, and in that way ascertain whether the plaintiff is such corporation organized for the construction of a railway as is contemplated by the statute to be invested with the power to condemn lands for the use of its road. While it is true that [65]*65the word “railway” may include railroads operated by steam as well as those whose cars are propelled by some other power, yet it is common knowledge that such corporations as belong to the latter class are usually operated as street railways for local convenience. The plaintiff is an electric company, and as such, we know, belongs to the class of corporations operated as street railways for the benefit of the local public.

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Bluebook (online)
25 P. 147, 20 Or. 60, 1890 Ore. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-houston-electric-co-v-simon-or-1890.