Citation Numbers: 20 N.Y.S. 758, 73 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 103, 49 N.Y. St. Rep. 504, 66 Hun 103
Judges: Brien, Brunt
Filed Date: 11/18/1892
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The Quebec Steamship Company is a foreign corporation, and the firm of Outerbridge & Co., the other defendants, have for sev
We do not think this preliminary order should have been granted, as the plaintiffs did not present a case entitling them to relief in a court of equity. It is claimed upon the part of the plaintiffs that they would have suffered irreparable damage were an injunction not issued. It is difficult to see how the impossibility of obtaining redress exists, in view of the fact that, if improper rates of freight were charged and paid by them, the excess might have been recovered in a proper action brought for that, purpose. But, further, we are unable to see that any unjust discrimination has been made by the defendants against the plaintiffs. They have offered to the plaintiffs precisely the same terms which they have done to everybody else; and we have not been able to find any rule obtaining in the case of simple common
A large number of authorities have been cited by the counsel for the respondents to support the proposition that a common carrier is bound to accept all freight offered to it, at the same rates and with the same facilities. But an examination of those cases will show, with but one or two exceptions, that the common carrier was a corporation which had exercised the right of eminent domain, and had thereby become a public servant which had exercised the highest right known to the law for the purpose of affording facilities for the transportation of freight; and that, therefore, it had no right to refuse or to make any terms or conditions in respect to transportation, except fixing the rate of freight; and if this rate discriminated, then they were not performing the public functions for the performance of which they had been allowed to exercise these extraordinary powers. Such stringency of rule does not obtain where no such rights have been exercised. Hence there is a manifest distinction between the duties to the public of that character of common carriers who' have exercised the right of eminent domain, because of their undertaking, and those who have not had conferred upon them any such powers. In the case at bar the. defendants are ordinary common carriers. They have offered to treat the plaintiffs upon precisely the same footing as the other shippers who were their customers, and therefore there is no discrimination.
If any authority is needed to support what seems to be a self-evident proposition, the case of Steamship Co. v. McGregor, 21 Q. B. Div. 544, is one singularly in point, notwithstanding the claim upon the part of the respondent that the case at bar and the case cited have nothing in common. It seems to us that the principle which controlled that case was precisely the question which is involved in the ease at bar. It is urged upon the part of the respondents that the English case was an action for conspiracy brought by one steamship company against others, alleging an unlawful combination to ruin the plaintiffs’ business, and that, in sustaining the judgment for the defendants entered by direction of the court, the appellate court decided,merely that an unlawful conspiracy was not made out. And why? Simply because no element of unlawfulness was found in the combination which was established. Now, what was that combination? It appears that the plaintiffs were a company of shipowners, trading between Australia and England, taking China by the way, and desirous of participating in the benefits of the transportation of tea during what is termed the “tea harvest.” The defendants were a number of shipping companies and private partnerships, trading for the most part between England and China, and who, being desirous of keeping. this valuable trade in their own hands, to prevent if they could the rqinous lowering of freight which they contended would follow from absolutely unrestricted competition, entered into what they called a “conference” for the purpose of working the China tea trade, by offering a rebate of 5 per cent, upon all freights paid by shippers to the conference vessels, such rebate not to be paid to any shipper who shipped tea in any vessels but those belonging to the conference. The plaintiffs in that action thereupon commenced the same, alleging a conspiracy to ruin their trade, to recover the damages alleged to- have been sustained. It was held that, there being no element of unlawfulness in the combination mentioned, the action would not lie, and that the defendants had a right to combine with a view of keeping the trade in their own hands, such combination not being entered into with the intention of ruining the trade of the plaintiffs, nor through personal malice