A state may impose double damages and an attorney's fee on
railway companies for failure to pay the owner of stock killed
within a reasonable period after demand and award of the jury of
the amount claimed before action commenced, and so
held
that the double damage statute of Arkansas is constitutional as
applied to cases of this character.
St. Louis, Iron Mtn. & Southern Ry. Co. v. Wynne,
224 U. S. 354,
distinguished, as in that case this statute was declared
unconstitutional only as applied to claims where the jury awarded
less than the amount demanded.
A statute is not necessarily void for all purposes because it
has been declared by this Court to be unconstitutional as applied
to a particular state of facts; it may be sustained as to another
state of facts where the state court has expressly decided that it
should not be construed as applicable to such conditions as would
render it unconstitutional if applied thereto.
A state statute imposing double damages, and otherwise valid, is
not unconstitutional as denying the equal protection of the laws
because
Page 233 U. S. 326
it applies only to railroad companies, and not to litigants in
general.
The classification is not arbitrary.
Seaboard Air Line v.
Seegers, 207 U. S. 73. The
states have a large latitude in the policy which they will pursue
in regard to enforcing railroad companies to settle damage claims
promptly and properly.
Chi., M. & St. P. Ry. Co. v.
Polt, 232 U. S. 165.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality under the
Fourteenth Amendment of a statute of Arkansas allowing double
damages and attorney's fee to be awarded against railway
corporations under certain conditions, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 233 U. S. 327
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Error to review a judgment of the supreme court of the state,
affirming a judgment by which defendant in error was awarded
against plaintiff in error (herein called the railway company)
double damages and attorney's fee for a mare killed by one of the
railway company's trains.
The judgment was recovered under a statute of the state which
the railway company attacked in the courts below and attacks here
on the ground that it violates the due process clause of the
Constitution of the United States. The statute provides that, when
any stock is killed or injured by railroad trains running in the
state, the officers of the train shall cause the station master or
overseer at the nearest stationhouse to give notice of the fact by
posting and by advertisement, and, on failure to so advertise, the
owner shall recover double damages for all stock killed and not
advertised.
"And said railroad shall pay the owner of such stock within
thirty days after notice is served on such railroad by such owner.
Failure to do so shall entitle said owner to double the amount of
damages
Page 233 U. S. 328
awarded him by any jury trying such cause, and a reasonable
attorney's fee."
Act 61, Acts of Arkansas of 1907, p. 144.
If a suit be brought after the thirty days have expired, and the
owner recover
"a less amount of damages than he sues for, then such owner
shall recover only the amount given him by said jury, and not be
entitled to recover any attorney's fee."
For its contention that the act offends the Constitution of the
United States, the railway company relies on
St. Louis, Iron
Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v. Wynne, 224 U.
S. 354.
In that case, however, there was a demand for $500 damages. The
railway company refused to pay it. The owner sued for $400 and
recovered a verdict for that amount, and the court, deeming the
statute applicable, gave judgment for double that amount and an
attorney's fee of $50. The supreme court sustained the judgment
against the contention of the railway company that the statute, so
applied, was repugnant to the due process clause of the
Constitution of the United States. This Court reversed the
judgment, holding that, so far as the statute was held to justify
the imposition of double damages where there was demand for one sum
and an action and judgment for less, it was void. The question was
expressly reserved whether such would be the decision if the
recovery corresponded to the demand -- in other words, in the
language of the opinion, "where the prior demand is fully
established in the suit following the refusal to pay." That
question is involved in the present case, and we think it is
determined by
Seaboard Air Line v. Seegers, 207 U. S.
73, and
Yazoo & Miss. R. Co. v. Jackson Vinegar
Co., 226 U. S. 217. In
both cases, statutes (South Carolina and Mississippi) were
sustained. Each provided for a penalty for failure to settle claims
after certain time after demand, the penalty being $50 in one
Page 233 U. S. 329
statute and in the other $25, in addition to the actual damages.
In the
Seegers case, it was said:
"It must be remembered that the purpose of this legislation is
not primarily to enforce the collection of debts, but to compel the
performance of duties which the carrier assumes when it enters upon
the discharge of its public functions."
In the other case it was said the railroad company
"has not been penalized for failing to accede to an excessive or
extravagant claim, but for failing to make reasonably prompt
settlement of a claim which, upon due inquiry, has been pronounced
just in every respect."
In
Chicago, M. & St.P. Ry. Co. v. Polt,
232 U. S. 165, a
statute of South Dakota was passed upon which makes a railroad
liable for double damages if, within sixty days after demand, it
does not pay the damage actually sustained for property destroyed
by fire communicated from its locomotive engine. The plaintiff in
the case got a verdict for less than he demanded, but for more than
the railroad offered. Judgment for double the amount of the verdict
was entered and sustained by the supreme court of the state. It was
reversed by this Court, the ruling of the
Wynne case,
supra, being applied. We said:
"The case is not like those in which a moderate penalty is
imposed for failure to satisfy a demand found to be just.
Yazoo
& Mississippi Valley R. Co. v. Jackson Vinegar Co.,
226 U. S.
217."
It is contended, however, that, the statute having been declared
unconstitutional as applied to one state of facts that properly
raises the question, it is void for all purposes. The contention is
based on the assumption that we decided the statute in the
Wynne case to be unconstitutional; but the ground of the
decision was, as we have seen, that the statute was there applied
to a case where the plaintiff in the action had recovered less than
he demanded before suit. We declined to extend our opinion to a
case where the amount of the judgment corresponded to the
demand;
Page 233 U. S. 330
in other words, declined to pronounce the act entirely
unconstitutional.
In
Yazoo & Mississippi Valley R. Co. v. Jackson Vinegar
Co. supra, when urged again to extend our ruling beyond the
facts and declare the Mississippi statute entirely void, we
declined to do so, considering it a matter for the state court to
decide "how far parts of it might be sustained if others fail."
In the case at bar, the supreme court of the state has limited
the statute, and has, indeed, declared that it had not intended in
the
Wynne case to place upon the
"statute a construction that would make it applicable to a case
based upon a state of facts where a demand had been made before
suit for a sum greater than that recovered upon a trial."
And, further:
"The construction and application of this statute, as made by
this Court, is therefore not such as to render it invalid under the
decisions made by the Supreme Court of the United States."
It is also contended by the railway company that the statute
deprives it of the equal protection of the laws in that it singles
out railroads and subjects them to the payment of double damages
and attorneys' fees when litigants in general are not subject to
the same burdens. The contention is not tenable.
Seaboard Air
Line v. Seegers, supra.
We do not enter into a general discussion of the police power of
the state. As we said in the
Polt case, "the states have a
large latitude in the policy that they will pursue and enforce,"
and we do not think that the limit of their power has been
transcended in the present case.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES and MR. JUSTICE LAMAR dissent.