Smith v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

Ryan, C. J.

The right of action went with the repeal of the statute which gave it. Dillon v. Linder, 36 Wis., 344; Rood v. Railway Co., ante, p. 146.

The learned counsel for the respondent, always candid as well as able, did not deny the doctrine of those cases; or express dissent from the construction given, in the latter case, to the peculiar language of sec. 13, ch. 57 of 1876.

He made a point, however, upon sec. 7 of that statute, which was not suggested in Rood v. Railway Co.. Ch. 57 of 1876, as well as ch. 273 of 1874 and ch. 334 of 1875, puts a limit to certain charges by railroad companies. And sec. 7 of the former declares that railroad companies violating that provision shall forfeit to persons paying rates in excess of it, three times the actual damage sustained, to be recovered in a civil action; that all prosecutions shall be made at the expense *689of the state; that it shall be the duty of the railroad commissioner to investigate complaints made to him of such violations; and that, on finding such a complaint well founded, he may, in his discretion, report the facts to the attorney general, who shall thereupon prosecute the complaint at the expense of the state, for the benefit of the party aggrieved, j The learned counsel contended that the action of sec. 7 is given absolutely to the injured party; and that the discretion given to the railroad commissioner does not control the action, but only the question of expense, whether the state or the party shall bear it. The court cannot accept this view. The section is peculiar; but all its provisions are manifestly dependent. It expressly declares that all prosecutions under it shall be at the expense of the state; plainly excluding prosecutions by injured parties at their own expense, without authority of the railroad commissioner. It appears to give a state officer discretion to enforce a pecuniary penalty, on behalf of the. state, but payable on recovery to the injured party. This is certainly a strange provision, of doubtful validity perhaps. But the language of the section can bear no other construction.- The change of language from the statutes of 1874 and 1875, present to the mind of the legislature in reviewing the subject of the three statutes, is marked and significant. It appears to give emphasis to the narrowed nature and scope of the new right of action given on the repeal of the old.

It is apparent that the right of action thus given is essentially different, in this respect, from the absolute right of action given to injured parties by sec. 6 of ch. 273 of 1874, and sec. 3 of ch. 334 of 1875. But it is otherwise different. The provisions of 1874 and 1875 give the action against agents of the corporations, as well as against the corporations themselves. The provision of 1876 gives the action against the corporation only. This appears to account for the discretion given by the latter statute to the railroad commissioner, as a part of his supervising power over railroad corporations; and for the re*690peal of the private action given by the two former statutes against the corporations and their agents. Obviously the actions of 1874 and 1875 were given as a private, personal right. The action of 1876 appears to be given as matter of state control over quasi public corporations, though the penalty goes to the injured party. That disposition of the penalty was probably intended to encourage injured parties to complain to the proper officer of the state. But the change of the action was manifestly designed to relieve servants of the corporations from liability, and to protect the corporations themselves from being harassed by actions at the personal discretion of parties claiming to be injured. The private actions of the two former statutes appear to have gone for the private wrong alone. The quasi public actions of the latter statute appear to go upon the public right also; redressing the private wrong indeed, but redressing it only by the state, when it shall be deemed material to public policy to redress it. The wisdom and justice of this provision may be questionable. But with that the court has nothing to do. It can only administer statutes as the legislature sees fit to pass them.

So the ingenious argument of the learned counsel, that the actions of the three statutes are identical, and- that the preservation of the action in the last statute operates to preserve the action given by the first, notwithstanding the repeal, appears to rest upon erroneous premises.

But were the three rights of action severally given by the three statutes identical in nature and scope, it could not well affect this judgment. The action given by each of the statutes is for violation of the provisions of that statute itself. The action given by sec. 7 of 1876 is against “ any railroad corporation who shall violate any of the provisions of this act as to extortion or unjust discrimination, or the provisions hereof establishing rates.” This is an express limitation of the right of action given to violations of the provisions of that statute only; for rates paid in excess of the new rates established by *691that statute only. It excludes, in terms, application to violations of former statutes, for rates in excess of the rates of former statutes. No.construction, however forced, could apply such language to the provisions of another statute; or distort it, so as to imply the preservation of penalties and actions given by a section of a previous statute, expressly and absolutely repealed by the very statute in which it is used. In Dillon v. Linder and Rood v. Railway Co., this court has sufficiently expressed its views of the hardship of preserving penalties given by repealed statutes, and of the directness and precision requisite in a saving clause of penalties and penal actions.

The question here is entirely different from that arising upon the repeal of a provision and its reenactment, in the same statute. In that case, the provision repealed and the provision reenacted are identical; not like, but indistinguishable; not kindred, but the self-same. In that case, too, there is no interval of a moment, in theory or in fact, when the identical provision is not in force. The repeal and the reenactment take effect together as a single enactment; changing the place of the provision in the statute book, but not disturbing its. identity or continuous effect. The doctrine applying in. that case has no bearing on the question here. .Here the new provision and the old are not only not identical, but are essentially different. The old provision is repealed, and a new provision replaces it. It is not the repeal and reenactment of the same identical thing: but the repeal of one thing, and the enactment m yrmcipio of another thing; the substitution of a new remedy for an old one, abandoned and extinguished.

The position taken in this case is not aided by the position taken in Rood v. Railway Co., nor the position there aided by the position here. The two positions rest upon essentially different premises, and there is nothing in either to support the other. They are not unlike parallel lines, with incapacity of meeting on common ground. Judgment cannot go upon two defective grounds, each independent of the *692other, and neither capable of supporting the other or the judgment.

The judgment for the repealed penalty cannot be upheld. The record will however be remitted without direction to dismiss the complaint, for the reason assigned in Rood v. Railway Co.

By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the court below for further proceedings according to law.