Southern Railway v. Commonwealth
Southern Railway v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op toe court bt
¡Reversing.
The grand jury of Mercer county returned an indictment on February 6, 1902, charging-1 that appellant witliin 12 months before the finding of the indictment, transported a barrel of gasoline for Henry E. Samuels from Louisville to Harrodsfeurg, Ky., for the price of 26 cents per 100 pounds- and contemporaneously therewith transported between the same points a barrel of gasoline of the -same class and kind of freight for Wallace Green for the price of 21 cents per 100 pounds; that this was done willfully and knowingly, with intent to discriminate in favor of Green and- against Samuels, in violation of section 215 of the Constitution of Kentucky; “All railway, transfer, belt lines, or railway bridge companies shall receive, load, unload, transport, haul, deliver, and handle freight of the same class for all persons, associations, or corporations, from and to the same points
There was an árrangement between Green and Erwin that Erwin would haul gasoline over at 50 cents a barrel. This arrangement seems to have grown out of the fact that there is a station on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad four miles from Perryville, from which also goods were hauled to Perry-ville, and Erwin was underbidding to get the hauling on his route. The railroad had for a number of years a published: tariff on this class of goods by which the rate was fixed to Harrodsburg at 26 cents and to Perryville at 36 cents. When the rate was first made, about the-year 1889, a man named James was running the wagon line, and the rate of 15 cents for the wagon line was then agreed on between him and the the railroad company. After three years he sold out to sc man named Tatum, and subsequently Erwin c-ame in under Tatum; but the railroad company had no agreement with Erwin. It simply billed the goods to Perryville as before. Erwin received them at Harrodsburg and delivered them at Perryville. The railroad company did not know that Erwin was making any reduction on the 15 cents per 100 pounds allowed for his part of the haul. The goods were not delivered to the consignees at Harrodsburg, but were required to be earned over by the wagon lino and delivered at Perryville. The wagon line hauled for everybody that applied, and! also carried for a time the express.matter, each owner as he came in succeeding to all the rights and privileges of his predecessors. The proof leaves no doubt that the operator of the wagon line was a common carrier. Robertson v. Kennedy, 2 Dana 431, 26 Am. Dec. 426; Caye v. Pool (108 Ky. 124; 21 R. 1600) 55 S. W. 887, 49 L. R. A. 251; Chevallier v. Straham, 47 Am. Dec. 639.
If there had been a railroad operated by another company
The fact that the connecting carrier took the goods on a ¡vehicle pulled by horses and not by steam, is not relied on as changing the principle; but it is urged that Erwin had no contract with the railroad company, and that therefore, he took the goods simply as the agent of the consignee, Green. Without considering whether a contract should be implied from the fact that'he came in under James, who made the contract with the railroad company, we rest our judgment on the ground that appellant had received the goods consigned to Perryville, and had, by its bill of lading agreed for 36 cents per 100 pounds to transport them to Perryville. This was not a shipment to Harrodsburg. There was in such a shipment and the shipment to Samuels at Harrodsburg no discrimination between shippers of the same class of freight between the same points. Appellant had the right to charge less for part of the through haul than the local rate to that point. When-it received the goods and undertook: to carry them to Perry-ville, it was its duty to see that they got to Perryville. Its obligations under such a contract were different from those
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, withl directions to dismiss'the indictment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.