Chicago, St. Louis & New Orleans Railroad v. Moss

Campbell, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This motion involves the question of the constitutionality of an act entitled, “An actfor the relief of certain litigants,” approved March 9, 1882, and found at page 110 of the Acts of 1882. Our view is that it is violative of that principle of equality before the law, and in the courts, which has ever been the boast of republican institutions. It discriminates-between classes of persons, as to the incidents of an appeal from the judgment of an inferior court, and not as to the subjects of litigation or classes of controversies, but because of the persons litigant.

The right of appeal cannot be fettered and clogged with reference to the parties litigant or the attitude they occupy as plaintiff or defendant. All litigants, whether plaintiff or *647defendant, should be regarded with equal favor by the law, and before the tribunals for administering it, and should have the same right to appeal with others similarly situated. All must have the equal protection of the law, and its instrumen-talities. The same rule must exist for all in the same circumstances.

There may be different rules for appeals and their incidents in different classes of cases determined by their nature and subjects, but not with respect to the persons by or against whom they are instituted.

The subjection of every unsuccessful appellant to a charge for the fee of the attorney for the appellee would afford no ground for complaint as unequal, for it would operate on all, and such a rule for the unsuccessful appellant in certain classes of actions, tested by the nature and subject of the actions, would be equally free from objection on the ground of its discriminating character ; but to say that where certain persons are plaintiffs, and certain persons are defendants, the unsuccessful appellant shall be subjected to burdens not imposed on unsuccessful appellants generally is to deny the equal protection of the law to the party thus discriminated against. It is to debar certain persons from prosecuting a civil cadse before the appellate tribunals of this State.

"It is an unwarrantable interference with the “ due course of law” prescribed for litigants generally.

The Supreme Court of Alabama in South and North Ala. Railroad Co. v. Morris, 65 Ala. 193, pronounced an act of the Legislature of that State, which made the unsuccessful appellant from a decision by a justice of the peace liable for an attorney’s fee as part of the costs taxed in favor of the appellee in actions for damages for killing live stock brought against corporations or persons operating railroads, unconstitutional as violative both of the State and Federal Constitutions. Several of the provisions of. the Constitution of Alabama, quoted by its court in the case cited as bearing upon the question are contained in the Constitution of this State, viz : “Sect. *64828. All courts shall be open and every person, for an injury done him * *' * shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice administered without sale, denial or delay.” “ Sect. 30. No person shall be debarred from prosecuting or defending any civil cause for or against him or herself, before any tribunal in this State, by him or herself, or counsel, or both.” Speaking of the act, that court said: “ It is not general in its provisions or applicable to all persons, but is confined to such as own or control railroads only; and it varies from the general law of the land, by requiring the unsuccessful appellant, in this particular class of cases, to pay an attorney’s tax fee not to exceed $20. A law which would require all farmers who raised cotton to pay such a fee, in cases where cotton was the subject-matter of litigation, and the owners of this staple were parties to the suit, would be so discriminating in its nature as to appear manifestly unconstitutional; and one which should confine the tax alone to physicians or merchants or ministers of the gospel would be glaring in its obnoxious repugnancy to those cardinal principals of free government which are found incorporated, perhaps, in the Bill of Eights of every State Constitution of the various commonwealths of the American government.”

The Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in Turke v. Janesville, 28 Wis. 464, speaking of a. law discriminating as to costs, said: “ It is obvious there can be no certain remedy in the laws where the Legislature may prescribe one rule for one suitor, or class of suitors, in the courts and another for all others, under like cii’cumstances, or may discriminate between, parties to the same suit, giving one a most unjust advantage over the other. Parties thus discriminated against would not obtain justice freely and without being obliged to purchase it. To the extent of such discrimination they would be obliged to buy justice and pay for it, thus making it a matter of purchase to those who could afford to pay, contrary to the letter and spirit of this provision,” referring to one the equivalent of sect. 28, Art. I, of the Constitution of Mississippi in these *649words: “All courts shall be open, and every person, for an injury done him in his lands, goods, person or reputation shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice administered without sale, denial or delay;” speaking of which the court further said : ‘ ‘ The language denotes that there can be but one remedy for all similar cases, which must operate upon all persons or parties alike, and be equally free and favorable to all.”

The discrimination of this act is the more odious because it is against citizens of this State, who may be deterred by its provisions from appealing in cases against corporations, because of the penalty the act imposes on the unsuccessful appellant.

Citizens of other Statés and countries may bring actions for damages against corporations with no such risk of suffering a penalty for appealing. A corporation, domestic or foreign, may bring such action here against a corporation, with no such risk, but a citizen of this State cannot sue a corporation (of any kind) without the risk of having to pay an attorney’s fee of unlimited magnitude to his successful antagonist in the litigation, if compelled to appeal to test his_ claim. No such obstacle as this shonld be thrown in the way of the citizen who seeks redress in the courts of his State for wrongs done him by a corporation.

By the act, if a citizen of this State brings an action for damages against a corporation, of whatever kind, and is cast in the action', and appeals and still fails, he must pay for his failure such attorney’s fee for the corporation as shall have been assessed against him by the court appealed from, not less than the prescribed sum, and unlimited in amount above that. If a corporation sues him for damages, is cast in the action, appeals aud fails, no fee is taxed against it in favor of the citizen, for it is only when the citizen brings the action that such result follows an unsuccessful appeal. He may be vexed, harrassed and oppressed by actions by corporations of the different sorts, and he must pay his own attorney’s fees through *650all the courts before which he may be dragged ; but when he sues the same corporation, and failing to maintain his action, as he thinks he should, appeals and fails, he must pay not only his own attorney but his adversary’s. It is not in all cases of actions for damages between corporations and citizens, but only when the citizen is plaintiff that the act applies.

The act we are considering is far more objectionable than that held to be void in Alabama, whose provision was that the attorney’s fee should not exceed $20. Our act fixes & minimum saiá no maximum. Not less than $15, if the appeal is fi’om a justice’s court, and $25, if from a Circuit Court, is to be the fee, and it may be for an unlimited sum greater, with no means of correction or opportunity for trial and determination of the propriety of its assessment. It may be grossly excessive and wantonly unjust, and. no appeal lies from the assessment. The appellate court might be appalled by its magnitude and its injustice, and shrink from the disagreeable duty of giving judgment for it, but it is allowed no discretion. It must give judgment for it as assessed. This is the mandate of the act.

The damages claimed may be but a few dollars, the paltry value of a poor man’s claim. The fee must be at least $15, and it must be adjudged against him, if he is an unsuccessful appellant from an adverse decision by a justice of the peace, whereby his loss may be doubled.

It is, doubtless, true that the act was designed for the relief of citizens who become litigants in actions against corporations, because it applies only when a citizen is plaintiff, and it was assumed that the corporation would be appellant, and to avoid discrimination between parties to the same action, it was made to operate on either party as appellant, but it sometimes occurs, and majr very often, that the citizen plaintiff is an appellant, and in such cases the discrimination may operate oppressively on him.

The Supreme Court of Alabama declared its act violative of the Constitution of that State, and of the United States, be*651cause of its unjust discrimination in establishing peculiar rules for a particular occupation, i.e.) “ such as own or control railroads.”

Our objection to the act under consideration is broader, as shown above, embracing in its scope the right of the citizen who sues a corporation, for whom we assert the right to appeal on the same terms granted to other plaintiffs in like cases, i.e., actions for damages against whomsoever brought.

The act was intended to deter from the appellate courts corporations against whom judgments should be rendered for damages, or citizens of this State suing them for damages. It was conceived in hostility to citizens as plaintiffs or corporations as defendants in such actions. In either view, it is partial and discriminating against classes of litigants, denying them access to the appellate courts on the same terms, and with the same incidents, as other litigants who may be plaintiffs or defendants in actions for damages. It is not applicable to all suitors alike in the class of actions mentioned by it.

The right of appeal is an important privilege. The Constitution expressly provides that: “In all causes tried by a justice of the peace the right of appeal shall be secured under such rules and regulations as shall be provided by law.” Art. VI. j sect. 23. Although there is no such requirement, in express terms, in the Constitution as to the right of appeal from Circuit and Chancery Courts, it is plain, from the creation of a Supreme Court, and the terms in which jurisdiction is conferred on Circuit and Chancery Courts, that the Constitution contemplates and makes provision for appeals from their decisions ; and while it is for the Legislature to prescribe in what cases appeals from these courts shall be allowed, and to regulate the terms on which all appeals may be had, and their incidents, it is not admissible to prescribe one rule for one class of litigants and a different one for another in the same kind of cases.

An act “ which is partial in its operation, intended to affect particular individuals alone, orio deprive.them of the benefit *652of tbe general laws, is unwarranted by the Constitution and is void.” “A partial law, tending directly or indirectly, to deprive a corporation or an individual of rights to property, or to the equal benefits of the general laws of the land, is unconstitutional and void.”

In this case it is a citizen who seeks a recovery of an attorney’s fee from a corporation ; but in the next the position of parties may be reversed.

We hold the act mentioned to be unconstitutional, and decline to enter judgment for the sum assessed as a fee for the attorney of the appellee.