United States v. Erie Railroad

235 U.S. 513, 35 S. Ct. 193, 59 L. Ed. 335, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1838
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 5, 1915
Docket552
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 235 U.S. 513 (United States v. Erie Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Erie Railroad, 235 U.S. 513, 35 S. Ct. 193, 59 L. Ed. 335, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1838 (1915).

Opinion

Me. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

Indictment in two counts against the railroad company for carrying otherwise than in the mails certain letters in violation of § 184 of the Penal Code of the United States. The section is as follows :

“Sec. 184. Whoever, being the owner, driver, conductor, master, or other person having charge of any stagecoach, railway car, steamboat, or conveyance of any kind which regularly performs trips at stated periods on any post route, or from any city, town, or place to any other city, town, or place between which the mail is regularly carried, and which shall carry, otherwise than in the mail, any letters or packets, except such as relate to some part of the cargo of such steamboat or other vessel, to the current *516 business of the carrier, or to some article carried at the same time by the same stagecoach, railway car, or other vehicle, except as otherwise provided by law, shall be fined not more than fifty dollars.”.

The counts are similar except as to the letter carried. The indictment alleged that the railroad between designated points- (Jersey City, N. J., and Montgomery, N. Y.) regularly made trips; that it had made a contract with the Western Union Telegraph Company by which provision was made for a joint operation of telegraph lines over the right of way of the railroad company; that the business was under the supervision of a joint superintendent named E. P. Griffith, and that the telegraph office at Montgomery — both for railroad and commercial business — was in charge of G. A. Osborne, the station agent of the railroad; that on June 27, 1912, the railroad carried otherwise than in the mails the following letter:

“June 27, 1912.
“Mr. G. A. Osborne,
“Agent, Erie Railroad and Manager. W. U. T. Co.,
“Montgomery, N. Y.
“Dear Sir: The revenue of the W. U. T. Co.’s receipts at Montgomery, N. Y., would indicate that the new telegraph service, such as day and night letters, had not been thoroughly presented to the people of Montgomery. At many of the Erie Railroad stations similar to Montgomery very handsome increases in telegraph receipts'have been shown on account of this new service and as’ the Erie Railroad participates in the telegraph revenues from its railroad stations it is desired that their revenue from the telegraph company shall increase as well as the revenue from its freight and passenger traffic, and I -hope you will do everything to make such showing.
“Yours truly,
“ (Sd.) E. P. Griffith,
“Supt.-.of Telgh.”

*517 The letter upon which the second count is based was as follows:

“Mr. G. A. Osborne,
“June 27> 1912-
“Agent Erie Railroad Co. and Manager W. Ú. Tel. Co.,
Montgomery, Orange County, N. Y.
“Dear Sir: I forwarded to you by train mail on June 20th a copy of the new Western Union Telegraph Company’s tariff book, which shows a considerable number of changes in telegraph rates, particularly with respect to the old 40-cent rate having been reduced to 30 cents to a considerable number'of points, and I would ask that you familiarize yourself with the new rates in order to avoid check errors. The misquoting of rates creates a large number of error sheets and correspondence, and not only confuses the auditing department of the W. U. Tel. Co., but also delays settlements between the Telegraph Company and the Erie Railroad.
“As you are aware, the Erie Railroad receives a percentage of the W. U. Tel. Co.’s telegraph.receipts at .all Erie railroad stations, where the agent of the railroad, under contract with the telegraph company, also acts as the agent or manager of the telegraph company, and that the handling of Western Union telegrams, in making up of Western Union reports, from which the railroad company’s proportion of receipts are figured, and all of the accounting and correspondence relative to Western Union matters are as much the current business of the railroad as handling accounts or reports made in connection with the freight shipments or sale of tickets for the railroad, the railroad company receiving a revenue from all.
“Your attention is specially called to modification of Rule No. 8 for the instructions to all New- York State offices only and to be used instead of Rule 8, printed in the tariff book, printed copy of which I enclose herewith.
“Yours truly,
“ (Sd.) E. P. Griffith; “Supt. of Telgh.”

*518 The indictment was demurred to by the railroad company on the ground that the matters set forth therein were not sufficient in law to constitute a.crime. The demurrer was sustained, the court expressing itself to be “clearly of the opinion that the ‘current business of the carrier’ referred to in section 184 is the kind of business in which it appears from the indictment the carrier was engaged, and that the sending of the letters in question was in accordance with law.”

The opinion of the court exhibits the point in the case, to which, though a short one, considerable argument has been addressed by counsel. The solution of it is in the contract between the companies.

It is a very elaborate document, regulating the relations of the railroad and telegraph companies by a variety of provisions and details. By it the railroad company leased to the telegraph company the right to maintain the telegraph line it (the railroad company) then had, and operate the same and the right to build new lines. One wire was to be provided for railroad use and one for commercial use, though joint wires were to be used where nothing more was required.

Article 6 of the agreement is especially relied on by the railroad company. It provides that at all telegraph offices now or hereafter maintained at the stations of the railroad company it shall, at its own expense, furnish office room, light and heat for telegraph service and also at its own expense provide ¿n operator and other employés, who, acting as agents for the telegraph company, shall receive, transmit and deliver, exclusively for the telegraph company, such commercial and public messages as may be offered and shall . charge the telegraph company’s tariff rates thereon and shall render to the telegraph company monthly accounts thereof, the railroad company to pay all of such receipts to the telegraph or other employés but not to be responsible *519 for the failure of its operators to pay over such receipts.

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Bluebook (online)
235 U.S. 513, 35 S. Ct. 193, 59 L. Ed. 335, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-erie-railroad-scotus-1915.