New England Express Co. v. Maine Central Railroad

Appleton, C. J.

On the first of January, 1885, the defendant corporation contracted with the Eastern Express Company to give them a certain specified space in the car attached to the passenger train, and “ devoted to the carriage of the United States mail and the baggage of passengers transported upon said passenger trains,” and to transport the agents and the property they may carry on certain conditions ; especially agreeing that they would not “ grant or let any similar space in any car or cars attached to the passenger trains, or run with them upon the defendant road, to any other persons as express carriers during the continuance of that contract,” and until its termination, Dec. 31, 1869.

The plaintiffs, a corporation duly organized, and similar in its objects to the Eastern Express Company, made application to the defendants for privileges or rights similar to those granted said company, and on Aug. 27, 1865, “after seasonable notice of their intentions, offered at Bangor packages and other property such as is usually carried by express companies, to the proper persons in charge of the passenger trains upon the defendant road, and at the time *194and place, when and where the Eastern Express Company load their freight, to be transported upon said road in their passenger train, and were ready to pay or secure the payment of a reasonable sum for such service, and to comply with all usual and reasonable terms applicable to the transportation of express matter, and the defendants refused to receive and transport said parcels, and property upon said passenger train,” though they were transporting express matter for the Eastern Express Company, on then passenger train at that time.

It is admitted that the defendants are common carriers of passengers and merchandise. It is obvious that the contract with the Eastern Express Company is one conferring upon it a monopoly.

Common carriers are bound to carry' indifferently, within the usual range of their business, for a reasonable compensation, all freight offered, and all passengers' who may apply. For similar equal services, they are entitled to the same compensation. All applying have an equal right to be transported, or to have their freight transported, in the order of their application. They cannot legally give undue and unjust preferences, or make unequal and extravagant charges. Having the means of transportation, they are 1 able to an action, if they refuse to carry freight or passengers without just ground for such refusal.

The proprietors of a stage-coach, who hold themselves out as common carriers of passengers, are bound to receive all who require a passage, so long as they have room, and there is no legal excuse for a refusal. And it is not a lawful excuse, that they run their coach in connection with another coach which extends the line to a certain place, and have agreed with the proprietor of such other coach not to receive passengers who come from that place on certain days, unless they come in his coach. Bennett v. Dutton, 10 N. H. 481.

It is true, that by the rules and regulations adopted by the directors of the defendant corporation, passengers and their baggage only (except the United States mail) are to be transported in passenger trains, and merchandise is to be transported in merchandise trains. *195No one can complain of these rules if adhered to. They are entirely unobjectionable. The complaint is of their continual violation, or rather of the interposition of a special and exceptional rule in the shape of a contract, by which they agree to carry the baggage of the Eastern Express Company, and contract not to take that of any other express company. If they can carry for one company and refuse to cany for another, they may equally and as well justify the carrying of A., and the refusal to carry B., both being unobjectionable as passengers, being ready to comply with all their requirements, and they having ample space for the accommodation of both.

The defendants cannot escape their common-law liabilities or avoid the performance of their duties to the public by fencing off a part of a car for the Eastern Express Company. They none the less carry the merchandise, though apart by itself. If this was for-the purpose of mutual convenience, it would not increase nor diminish the duties or liabilities of a common carrier. If it was for the purpose of evasion, and to enable them thus evasively to give unjust preferences, the court will long hesitate before it will give effect to shifts and evasions for the sole purpose of eluding the law.

The charter of the Androscoggin and Kennebec Railroad Company was approved March 28, 1845; that of the Penobscot and Ken. R. R. Co., April 7, 1845. The act authorizing their consolidation was approved April 1, 1856, and the defendant corporation composed of the above railroad companies, was duly organized September 24, 1862. By the act of consolidation the new corporation is made subject to the liabilities, and is obliged to perform the duties of the two corporations of which it is the consolidation.

By § 6 of the charter of each of the original corporations, “ A toll is hereby granted and established for the sole benefit of said corporation, upon all passengers and property of all descriptions, which may be conveyed or transported from time to time by the directors of said corporation. The transportation of persons and property . . . the weights of loads, and all other matters and tilings in relation to said roads, shall be in conformity with such rules, *196regulations, and provisions as the directors shall from time to time prescribe and direct.”

A toll is granted. But a toll implies uniformity of compensation* for equality of service. It is for the sole benefit of the corporation and not to enable the corporation to give discriminating preferences. It is to be upon “ all passengers, and property of all descriptions,” thus negativing the right to confer special favors on one or more, or to refuse to some what has been granted to others similarly situated. All passengers and property upon tendering the established toll have a right to the services for which it is the prescribed compensation. It is true, the directors may establish rules and regulations. But rules and regulations imply uniformity of action in relation to the subject-matter to which they apply, not the right to give exclusive and peculiar privileges to some, which are denied to others.

So by § 12 of the charter of the original corporations they each, “ after they shall commence receiving tolls, shall be bound at all times to have said railroad in good repair, and a sufficient number of suitable engines, carriages, and vehicles for the transportation of persons and articles, and be obliged to receive at all proper times and places, and convey the same, when the appropriate tolls shall be paid and tendered.” The language is most general. The right to prefer and discriminate, and by discrimination to benefit one and ruin another, is not given. When “ the appropriate tolls are paid or tendered,” the corporation is obliged to receive and convey, not whomsoever or whatsoever they may choose, but “ persons and property ” indifferently, coming within the prerequisite of the payment or tender of “ appropriate tolls, and within just, impartial, and uniform rules, which alone the corporations were authorized to make.

The very definition of a common carrier excludes the idea of the right to grant monopolies "or to give special and unequal preferences. It implies indifference as to whom they may serve, and an equal readiness to serve all who may apply, and in the order of their application. The defendants derive them chartered right from the State. They owe an equal duty to each citizen. They are allowed *197to impose a toll, but it is not to be so imposed as specially to benefit one and injure another. They cannot, having the means of transporting all, select from those who may apply, some whom they will, and reject others whom they can, but will not carry. They cannot rightfully confer a monopoly upon individuals or corporations. They were created for no such purpose. They may regulate transportation, but the right to regulate gives no authority to refuse, without cause, to transport certain individuals and their baggage or goods, and to grant exclusive privileges of transportation to others. The State gave them a charter for no such purpose.

Such is the common law on the subject. The legislation of the State has been in accordance with and in confirmation of these views.

By c. 193, § 1, approved Feb. 29,1868, “ all express-men and all persons engaged in express business shall have reasonable and equal terms, facilities, and accommodations, for the transportation of themselves, their agents and servants, and of any merchandise and other property, upon any railroad owmed and operated within the State, and for the use of the depot and other buildings and grounds of such corporation, and at any point of intersection of two railroads, reasonable and equal terms and facilities of interchange.”

The defendants cannot object to this statute, unless they had, before its passage, an unlimited right to impose unreasonable and unequal terms, to give special privileges, to confer monopolies, selecting from the great public, from whom they acquired their powers and franchise, who shall be the special and selected objects of their bounty, and who shall not. The wildest and most extravagant supporter of vested rights will hardly claim this. It would imply madness or crime on the part of a legislature granting such rights. If, then, the defendants have no such right, the grant of a monopoly to one corporation at the expense of the general public is alike a violation of the common as of the statute law, and cannot be upheld.

The plaintiffs were willing and offered to pay reasonable freight for the services demanded, and to comply with all just and reason*198able rules and regulations the defendants had or might establish; but the defendants refused to receive and transport, the freight offered, in accordance with the plaintiffs’ request.

The defense is not that there was want of room or inability to transport the plaintiffs’ freight as desired; or that the accommodation granted the Eastern Express Company was exceptional, granted only on a special occasion, or urgent necessity, and afforded only to meet such accident or to supply such necessity; but it is that they may lawfully select one individual or corporation upon whom they may confer exclusive and valuable privileges to the exclusion and injury of the rest of the community.

. It is argued that the contract between the defendant corporation and the Eastern Express Company, it being made before the passage of the act of 1868, is a bar to the plaintiffs’ right to recover. But such cannot be the case, unless the defendants had the right to grant “terms, facilities,.and accommodations” unreasonable and unequal as between the different express companies desiring the transportation of their goods, merchandise, &c., over their railroad. But this cannot be claimed. Further, if such a contract were to be held an answer to the plaintiffs’ claim, on the ground that the legislature had no right to impair its validity, then it would follow, that they might be ousted of their control and jurisdiction during the whole existence of the defendant corporation; for the defendants might have made their contract coextensive in time with their corporate existence.

Provisions similar to those of 1868 exist in England, and the courts have ever held all acts of undue preference void, while they have sustained the railroad corporations, when they have only the interests of the proprietors and the legitimate increase of the profits of the railway in view. It is not a legitimate ground for giving preference to one of the customers of a railway company, that he engages to employ other lines of the company for the carriage of traffic distant from, and unconnected with the goods in question; and it is undue and unreasonable to charge more or less for the same service, according as the customer of a railway thinks proper *199or not to bind himself to employ the company on other and totally distinct business. In re Baxendale v. The G. W. R. R. Co. 94, E. C. L. 308. But in that case a difference of charge was sustained upon goods from and to the same places, between persons who sent large quantities at a time, and stipulated to send given large quantities every year, and others who declined to do so. “ The advantages there stipulated for and by the company,” observes Willes, J., “ related to the carriage of the goods upon the same line, and directly affected the rate at which they could be probably carried. In fact those advantages made a difference similar to that between the selling of goods wholesale and retail, the profit of carrying goods in large quantities and at the less rate at which they were carried, equalling or exceeding the profit upon the goods sent in smaller quantities at the greater rate at which they were carried.” In re Carton v. Bristol & Exeter R. R. Co. 95, E. C. L. 655, Willes, J'., says, “ As to the third branch of the case, viz., that a lower charge is made by the company to persons residing at Bridgewater for the carriage of goods, than is made to the complainants, no satisfactory reason seems to me to have been given for that reduction. It is not shown that it is rendered necessary for the purpose of meeting and overcoming competition. . . . The inequality of charge cannot be without a reason ; and I am at a loss to see any other possible reason than a desire on the part of the defendants to displace the complainants as carriers, so that they themselves may become the sole carriers on their line of railway.” Whore a statute requires a railway company to carry for all who may apply and upon equal terms, they have no right to impose increased prices upon express carriers who send freight by the company’s trains, in aggregate quantities made up of small parcels directed to different individuals. Pickford v. Grand Junction Railway, 10 M. & W. 399. Much less have they a right to carry for one express company and refuse to carry for another, when they have the ability to carry for both.

In re Mariott v. The London & South-western Railway Co., 87 E. C. L. 498. The defendant railway company made arrangements *200at one of their stations with A., the proprietor of an omnibus running between the station and K., to provide omnibus accommodations for all passengers by their trains to and from K., and allowed A. the exclusive privilege of driving his vehicle into the station-yard for the purpose of taking up and setting down passengers at the door of the booking-office. “ I am of opinion,” observes Cock-burn, C. J., “that in giving an undue and unreasonable preference to and in favor of Williams, brings the company within the provisions of the statute in question. (18 Yict. c. 31, § 2.) I see no reason why this preference should be given to one omnibus and to the exclusion of another. ... I therefore think the rule should be made absolute, to the extent of enjoining the company to admit the complainant’s omnibus into the station of this railway at all reasonble times, for the purpose of receiving and setting down passengers and goods, in the same manner, and to the same extent as other public vehicles of a similar description are admitted into the yard for that purpose.” In Piddington v. S. E. Railway Co., 94 E. C. L. 109. The defendants made an increased charge upon “ packed parcels.” The jury negatived that they incurred an additional risk or expense on the carriage thereof. “ Here,” remarks Byles? J., “ the defendants charge double for certain packages, though the goods are of a like description, and the jury have found there is no increased risk or expense incurred by them in the carriage of them. That seems to me to be an express violation of the 17th section.” In Sandford v. Railway Co., 24 Penn. 378, it was held that express companies had as good a right to the benefits of a railroad as the owners of the packages which they carried personally had, and that a contract giving to an express company an exclusive right of transportation on the passenger trains was illegal and void, both at common law and by the statutes of the State. “ Whenever,” observes Lewis, C. J., “a charter is granted for the purpose of constructing a railroad, the corporation is clothed with the power to take private property, in order to carry out the object, it is an inference of law from the extent of the power conferred, and the subject-matter of the grant, that the road is for the public accommodation. The *201right to take tolls is the compensation to be received for the benefits conferred. If the public are entitled to these advantages, it results from the nature of the right that the benefits should be extended to all alike, and that no special privileges should be granted to one man or set of men, and denied to others. The special stipulations inserted in charters, for the purpose of securing these rights, are placed there in abundance of caution, and affirm nothing more than the common right to equal justice, which exists independent of such provisions. . . . The supposed necessity for such provisions, in charters granted in this country and in England, proves nothing more than that the law-makers in both countries were aware of the difficulty in holding large corporations to those common obligations of justice which individuals feel bound to acknowledge without legislative enactment.”

The plaintiff is entitled to maintain his action.

Defendant defaulted.

Damages to be assessed by the judge at nisi prius.

Kent, Barrows, Danforth, and Tapley, JJ., concurred. Cutting and Walton, JJ., did not concur.