Our statute law, Revisal, sec. 2642, enacts that no railroad or other transportation company, etc., shall charge more for the transportation of property than the rate appearing in the “printed tariff of such company in force at the time snch service is rendered, or more than is allowed by law.”
Section 2643 provides the method by which a claim for an overcharge shall b.e prepared and established a maximum period of sixty days within which the same shall be refunded; and section 2644 imposes a penalty in case the said overcharge is not returned within the time allowed; the penalty, in any case, not to exceed one hundred dollars.
On the trial below there was testimony on the part of plaintiff tending to show that an overcharge had been made against them by defendant company, arising, in part, by an erroneous classification of some trees and shrubbery, shipped from Oronly, N. 0., to Petersburg, Va., over lines of defendant, and on to Cincinnati, Ohio, by other lines; that demand for such overcharge had been made and filed as directed by the statute, and, defendant had failed and refused to return the amount.
The claim was submitted to the jury, and verdict rendered on the following issues: >
1. “Did defendant collect, or cause to be collected, from plaintiff an-overcharge in freight on goods described in bill of lading, shipped from Oronly, N. 0., to Cincinnati, Ohio ? If so, how much?” Answer: “Yes; $1.89.”
2. “In what amount, if any, is defendant indebted to plaintiff as a penalty, as prescribed by law?” Answer: “$100.”
*182With other testimony on these issues, plaintiff put in evidence a book issued by defendant company entitled “How to Ship,” Exhibit B; also rate issue, No. 4211, Exhibit 0; and from these documents, as we gather from the testimony set out, it seems that goods shipped, as these were, boxed and value limited to 3 cents per pound, are rated as fourth class, and that the charge thereon, as fourth class, from Cincinnati to Cronly was 65 cents per cwt.
We speak tentatively as to the contents of these documents, because, though they are marked as Exhibits B and C in case on appeal, they are not in the record; but the testimony set out makes it sufficiently clear that they contain the facts as stated.
There was also evidence to the effect that plaintiff had been charged a much larger rate, and on a different classification from that described in these papers, and a greater rate than that allowed 'by law.
Defendants offered no evidence. Deferring to this testimony, the Judge, on the first issue, charged the jury, in substance, that the rate from Cronly to Cincinnati should be the same as that from Cincinnati to Cronly; and if the jury should find, from the greater weight of evidence, that defendant’s book, “How to Ship,” classified these goods as fourth class and established a rate therein from Cincinnati to Cronly at 65 cents, then the .amount charged above that rate would be an overcharge, and the jury should so render the verdict.
In this we think there was error to defendant’s prejudice, which entitles it to a new trial of the issues.
It does not at all necessarily or conclusively follow that because a rate is established from Cincinnati to Cronly, that the same rate should prevail from Cronly to Cincinnati. There may be and frequently are facts and conditions which *183affect tbe rate in one direction wbicb do not exist and have no bearing or just influence on the rate in the opposite direction. And it is laid down in Judson on Interstate Commerce, sec. 137, that “There is no necessary connection between rates on traffic of the same kind or class in one direction and rates in the opposite direction, as special circumstances, such as flow of traffic, may justify higher rates in one direction than the other. Especially is this the case where the distance is of great length.”
Such a rate may, under some circumstances, be evidence on the question as to whether there has been a charge greater than that allowed by law; but the charge of the Court referred to makes the rate in one direction conclusive as to the other; and in this, as stated, there is error, which entitles the defendant to a new trial.
We have purposely refrained from adverting to the ques■tion discussed in the briefs, as to whether, on the facts of this case, the State legislation under which plaintiffs proceed and the relief sought by them .are inhibited by the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution and the legislation by Congress in the exercise of this power. It’ is a question of great and far-reaching importance, and we deem it best that it should be considered and passed upon when the facts are fully ascertained .and the issues properly determined.
It may be well to note that should these or similar questions be presented as the results of another trial and the exhibits referred to are again relied Upon and in evidence, the documents themselves or copies-thereof should accompany the record.
A careful examination of these papers may, and no doubt will, be required for an intelligent discussion of the subject.
Eor the error above referred to there will be a new trial, and it is so ordered.
New Trial.