Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. v. People

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of debt, brought to recover penalties under the act to prevent extortion and unjust discrimination in the rates charged for the transportation of passengers and freight on railroads in this State, etc., approved May 2,1873. The suit was commenced May 21. 1874. The declaration contained twenty counts, the first nineteen of which were for extortion, and.the twentieth for unjust discrimination.

The defendant pleaded three special pleas, to which a demurrer was sustained, and the defendant electing to abide by the pleas, the court, a jury being waived, heard the evidence, and fixed the penalty for a violation of the statute at $1000, and'gave judgment therefor, from which the defendant brings this appeal.

It is urged that the court below erred in not carrying back the demurrer, and sustaining it to the declaration.

Appellant insists that the declaration is defective, in not averring that a schedule of reasonable rates of charges for the transportation of passengers and freight had been established as provided for by the 8th section of the act, and that the defendant had demanded and received compensation in excess thereof.

'Che statute provides, in section 1, that, if any railroad corporation in this State shall charge, collect, demand or receive more than a fair and reasonable rate of toll or compensation for the transportation of passengers or freight, etc., the same shall be deemed guilty of extortion, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be dealt with as thereinafter provided.

And in section 2, that, if any such railroad corporation shall make any unjust discrimination in its rates or charges of toll or compensation for the transportation of passengers or freight, etc., the same shall be deemed guilty of having violated the provisions of the act, and, upon conviction, shall be treated as thereinafter provided.

Section 4 provides that, any such railroad corporation guilty 'of extortion, or of making any unjust discrimination as to passenger or freight rates, etc., shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined in any sum not less than $1000 nor more than $5000, for the first offense; and for the second offense, not less than $5000 nor more than $10,000; and for the third offense, not less than $10,000 nor more than $20,000; and for every subsequent offense, and conviction thereof, shall be'liable to a fine of $25,000.

Section 8 directs the Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners “to make for each of the railroad corporations doing business in this State, as soon as practicable, a schedule of reasonable maximum rates of charges for the transportation■ of passengers and freight and cars on each of said railroads ; and said schedule shall, in all suits brought against any such railroad corporations wherein is in anyway involved the charges of any such corporation for the transportation of any passenger or freight or cars, or unjust discrimination in relation thereto, be deemed and taken in all courts of this State as prima facie exidence that the rates therein fixed are reasonable maximum rates of charges for the transportation of passengers and freights and cars upon the railroads for which said schedules may have been respectively prepared, Said commissioners shall, from time to time, and as often as circumstances may require, change and revise said schedules. When any schedules shall have been made or revised as "aforesaid, it shall be the duty of said commissioners to cause publication thereof tobe made for three success! ve weeks, in some public newspaper published in the city of Springfield, in this State: Prended, that the schedules thus prepared shall not betaken as prima facie evidence, as herein provided, until schedules shall have been prepared and published as aforesaid for all the railroad companies now organized under the laws of this State, and until the 15th day of January, A. D.. 1874, or until'ten days after the meeting of the next session of this General Assembly, provided a session of the General Assembly shall be held previous to the 15th day of January, aforesaid,” etc.

The charge of the offenses in the declaration is in general form, the language in one of the counts, which, in this respect, is a fair specimen of all, being, that the sum charged “exceeded a fair and reasonable rate of toll and compensation for the carriage of the goods, in the sum of $1.91, and was then and there unjust, unfair, unreasonable and extortionate, contrary to the form of the statute,” etc.

Looking merely at the first section of the statute, the declaration would seem to describe the statutory offense. That section, by itself, makes the offense to consist in taking more than a fair and reasonable rate of tóll and compensation, without reference to any standard of what is fair and reasonable. In such case, it may be seen, different persons would have different opinions as to what is a fair and reasonable rate; courts and juries, too, would differ, and at one time or place a defendant might be convicted and fined in a large amount for the same act, which, in another place, or at another time, would be held to be no breach of the law, and what might be thought a fair and reasonable rate on one road, might, be considered otherwise upon another road. There would be no certainty of being able to comply with the law. A railroad corporation, with purpose of conforming to the law, might fix its rates at what it believed to be reasonable, and yet be subjected to the heavy penalties here prescribed.

The statute furnishes evidence that it did not intend to leave the railroad companies in this state of uncertainty and danger, and exposed to such seeming injustice. We must look to the entire statute, and to every part and provision of ■it, to learn in what the offense is really made to consist. The 8th section provides how reasonable rates shall be ascertained ; what they shall be; that the Bailroad and Warehouse Commissioners should make for each of the railroad corporations in the State a schedule of reasonable maximum rates; thus furnishing a uniform rule for the guidance of the railroad companies. When that is done, there "will be a standard of what is fair and reasonable, and the statute can be conformed to and obeyed. The careful provision made by the statute for the publication, in a public newspaper, for a length of time, of the schedules, when made, and that, until so published, they should not be such prima facie evidence, indicates, as we may suppose, the legislative intention that the railroad companies should have fair notice of the schedule of rates, and so have the opportunity afforded to them of being able to conform thereto. The provision, too, that the schedule of rates is to be. made for each of the railroad corporations in the State, is another indication in the same direction.

We are of opinion, from an examination of all the provisions of the statute, taken together, that a disregard of the schedule of rates to be prepared by the Bailroad and Warehouse Commissioners is a necessary element of the offense against which the statute is directed—that it is the charging more than the maximum rates fixed bv said board of commissioners, which makes the company guilty of extortion, under the statute, within its true intent and meaning. We can not think that, until this schedule of rates was made by the board .of commissioners, there would, under the statute, be incurred a liability for unreasonable and extortionate charges; nor that, when the schedules were made, that for taking the rates fixed by the schedule, or less rates, the statutory penalties would be incurred, even though proof might be made that the rates so taken were more than fair and reasonable rates. Yet, in such last case, according to the terms of the first section of the statute, and the interpretation put upon the act by appellee, there would be a commission of the statutory offense, as there would have been the taking of more than fair and reasonable rates. The evident purpose was. to regulate and fix, so far as the legislature might, the rates of railroad charges, and to punish the taking in excess of the fixed rates; and the form of the provision, making the schedule of rates prima fade evidence of what were reasonable maximum rates, was, doubtless, to avoid the objection indicated in the opinion in C. and A. R. R. Co. v. The People, 67 Ill. 11, to the legislature making any fixed rates conclusive of what was reasonable, and to follow the intimation in 'that opinion, that the should be made but prima facAe evidence. It is true, that the taking of higher rates than those fixed bv the commissioners’ schedule of rates, is not the exact form of the statutory offense, and the taking of such higher rates might not subject to the penalties of the statute, upon the making of proof that, they were fair and reasonable. Still, as we view it, to constitute the offense really designed and intended by the statute, regarding it in its whole scope and purpose, the rates taken must have been in excess of the schedule rates.

It was not enough, then, we think, to bring the case fully within the provisions of the statute, that the rates charged were simply unreasonable and extortionate, but they should have been'so according to the rule of reasonableness to be prescribed under the statute, and we are of opinion that the declaration, in this respect, was defective in not averring that a schedule of rates had been established by the board of commissioners, and that the defendant had received compensation in excess of those rates.

We think what has already been said sufficiently meets the position taken by appellee, that the statutory offense consists simply in receiving more than a fair and reasonable rate of compensation, and that the schedule of rates is but prima fade evidence of what is reasonable, and that it is not necessary for a party to plead evidence. In the view taken, the schedule of rates is something more than evidence—it is a fact upon which the action rests.

Under the constitutional provision, the statute would go into effect July 1, 1873, and so, from that date the first and fourth sections prohibitingand imposing penalties for extortion be in force; but the eighth section provided that the schedules of rates could not be used as prima fade evidence until the 15th day of January, 1874, and appellee’s counsel make a point upon this, as evincing that the existence of the schedule of rates was not essential to the commission of the offense of extortion under the act. But we can view this as but an accidental incongruity in the respect named, not entitled to such serious regard as to be of controlling force in determining the true construction of the statute.

But it is insisted, on the part of appellee, that there is at least .one good count, the 20th, that which declares for unjust discrimination.

The charge in the count is, that defendant made an unjust discrimination in its rates and charges of toll and compensation of freight from Quincy to Macomb, in this, that defendant, on the 11th of April, 1874, transported, for James T. Applegate and Samuel Dodd, from Quincy to Macomb, one ear load of horses, commonly called ponies, a distance of 59 miles, charging therefor the sum of $28.34, being at the rate of 48 cents per mile; and that said defendant, on the 30th of March, 1874. transported, from Macomb to Chicago, a distance of 204 miles, for Robert Smithers and James Robinson, one oar load of horses, charging therefor only the sum of $55.20, being at the rate of 27 cents per mile for the carriage of said car load of horses, contrary to the form of the statute, etc.

The statute defines, in section three in respect to unjust discrimination, as it provides in section eight in respect to reasonable rates, what shall be deemed and taken as prima facie evidence of the unjust discriminations prohibited by the act. The language of the section in respect to freight, is, charging a greater amount of compensation for any distance than is at the same time charged “'for the transportation in the same direction of any passenger or like quantity of freight of the same class over a greater distance of the same railroad.” This count, we think, does not present a state of facts which shows a violation of the statute, in that there is no averment as to the respective freights being of “like quantity of the same class,” or that, in respect of such freight, that was a -higher charge for a less, than for a greater distance. There is no averment whatever upon this head, either in respect of the numbers of the respective animals, or their weight, or the size or class of the cars containing them, or otherwise. The section itself recognizes the fact of there being railroad cars of different classes and numbers, for, in defining unjust discrimination in respect to cars, it provides that they be of the “same class or number.”

The description of the respective freights merely as one car load of ponies, and one car load of horses, does not, in our view, sufficiently show them to be “like quantities of freight of the same class.”

The rules applicable to the enforcement of penal statutes require, that it should be made clearly to appear that the precise statutory offense has been committed.

Being of opinion that the demurrer should have been carried back and sustained to the declaration, instead of to the pleas, the judgment will be reversed.

Judgment reversed. -