Louisville Ry. Co. v. Commonwealth

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle.

Appellants, Louisville Eailway Company and Louisville & Interurban Eailroad Company, were separately indicted in tbe court below for violating Section 795, Ky. Stats., 1903, tbe specific charge against each being that it operated a railroad between tbe city of Louisville and O’Eell’s Station, in Jefferson county, a distance of 10 miles, without causing or having each separate coach for the transportation, of white and colored passengers on the line, or compartments thereof for each race, to bear in some con*740spicuous place appropriate words in plain letters indicating the race for which it was set apart. A jury was waived in each case, and they were heard together by the lower court upon the agreed facts, and each .appellant was adjudged guilty and fined $500. Both have appealed, and the cases have been submitted together in this court.

It is contended by appellants that the indictments were insufficient and the demurrer to each should have been sustained. There is no force in this contention. The indictments substantially follow the language of the statute, and neither seems to lack any essential averment necessary to constitute an offense under the statute.

On the merits of the cases, we do not concur in so much of the judgment of the lower court as fastens guilt upon .the appellant Louisville & Interurban Bail-road Company, but do not think it necessary to decide, as did that court, the question of whether the appellant Louisville Railway Company was or not without authority under its charter to operate a railroad between the points indicated. As a street railway operating within the territory to which its charter confines it, the Louisville Railway Company is not required by law to provide separate cars, or separate compartments in its cars, for the transportation of white and colored passengers. But interurban railroads are by law required to do so, and they can not evade the performance of this duty by leasing or otherwise turning over the use of their lines to a street railway or other railroad. Commonwealth v. L. & N. R. R. Co., etc., 120 Ky. 91, 85 S. W. 712, 27 Ky. Law Rep. 497. It appears that the cars operated over the line in question were owned and operated by the appellant Louisville Railway Company, and whether *741it did or did not have authority to so use said line, as it nevertheless did so, without having complied with section 795, Ky. Stats., 1903, by setting aside separate coaches or compartments in each coach for the separation of the white and colored races, bearing in a conspicuous place appropriate words in plain letters indicating the race for which it was set apart, it violated the statute in question. This being true, it would not, had it relied upon the want of authority under its charter to operate the road at all, have been allowed to escape punishment under the indictment on that ground. A corporation indicted for an offense punishable by statute will hot, if guilty, be permitted to escape ppnishment by showing that the act constituting' the offense was ultra vires. The doctrine of estoppel applies in such a case with full force. Under the admitted facts the appellant Louisville Railway Company was manifestly guilty of the offense charged in the indictment. It must be presumed to have knowingly and willfully violated the provisions of the statute. The trial court, therefore, properly inflicted upon it the fine complained of.

The attitude of the appellant Louisville & Interurban Railroad Company is, however, different. If it should be conceded that it was without authority to lease its roadbed to the Louisville Railway Company ■ — -which is not decided — it would nevertheless be civilly liable for any dereliction of duty upon the part of the latter resulting in public or private injury from operating its road, but it does not necessarily follow from these facts that it would be criminally liable for such wrongful acts of the Louisville Railway Company as are punishable under the criminal or penal laws of the State. It does not appear from the ad mitted facts in the cases that the Louisville & Interur *742ban Railroad Company authorized the violation of the law committed by the Louisville Railway Company resulting in the indictment, or knew when it leased the latter the road in question that it would operate its cars thereon in a manner prohibited by section 795 of the Kentucky Statutes. We do not regard the state of case here presented as one to which the doc trine of agency should be applied. The relation be tween the two appellants is more nearly akin to that landlord and tenant. And whether the lease under which the tenant Louisville Railway Company holds the Louisville & Interurban railroad’s right of way and track is or not void, when the offense for which the former was indicted was committed, it was in possession of the property and operating its cars over the line. This court has held that the owner of leased premises is not liable to indictment for violations of the criminal or penal laws committed or suffered thereon by the tenant, in the absence of knowledge at the time of entering into the lease that such was the use to which the tenant intended to put the property; nor does the fact that such use of the property by the tenant furnished the landlord grounds for applying to a court of equity for a forfeiture of the lease makes him liable to indictment. Comonwealth v. Henrietta Morris, 129 Ky. -, 112 S. W. 580, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 987; Commonwealth v. Conway, 112 S. W. 575, 33 Ky. Law Rep. 966. While it is true that “when the Legislature has declared that a given act shall be. deemed unlawful, the person voluntarily doing said act will be charged with a criminal intent.” Commonwealth v. Bull, 13 Bush 656. This rule applies only to unlawful acts which are voluntarily, and, in that sense, intentionally done. The facts in the record before us do not show the appellant Louisville & Interurban *743Railroad Company guilty according to the above rule. It did not itself commit the unlawful act for which it was indicted, nor did the fact that it directly contributed to it by placing its railroad track in possession of the appellant Louisville Railway Company under a lease whether valid or void make it a voluntary participant in the unlawful act committed by the latter in the- absence of knowledge at the time of making the lease that it would be committed.

The judgment is affirmed as to the appellant Louisville Railway Company, and reversed as to the appellant Louisville & Interurban Railroad Company, with directions to the lower court to grant the latter a new trial.