Alabama Great Southern R. v. F. A. Hulett & Son

131 So. 814, 159 Miss. 333, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 17
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1931
DocketNo. 28959.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 So. 814 (Alabama Great Southern R. v. F. A. Hulett & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama Great Southern R. v. F. A. Hulett & Son, 131 So. 814, 159 Miss. 333, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 17 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

*337 Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant brought this action against the appellees in the county court of Lauderdale county to recover the sum of one hundred eighty-one dollars and forty-three cents, an alleged undercharge on two carloads of iron beds shipped to the appellees from Kenosha, Wisconsin, to Meridian, in this state.

There was a trial on agreed facts between the parties, resulting in a judgment in appellees’ favor, from which the appellant appealed to the circuit court where the *338 judgment of the county court was affirmed, and from the judgment of the circuit court appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The facts 'agreed upon between the parties were made a part of the record, and, leaving off the formal parts, are as follows.:

“On about October 21, 1925, the Simmons Bed Company, of Kenosha, Wisconsin, shipped from that point two carloads of iron beds with metal springs consigned to F. A. Hulett & Son, Meridian, Mississippi, routed via EJE CCCSTL and Southern via Birmingham. F. A. Hulett & Son requested the shipper to provide for the stoppage of said shipment at Tuscaloosa, Alabama, for partly unloading at Tuscaloosa, and the bill of lading contained the following’ provision written thereon: ‘Stop over at F. A. Hulett & Son, Tuscaloosa, Alabama to partly unload. ’ The bill of lading was issued by Chicago & Northwestern Eailway at Kenosha, Wisconsin. The shipper ordered a fifty-foot car for said shipment, but the railroad being unable to furnish a fifty-foot car, furnished instead two smaller cars into which the shipment was loaded and the two cars moved as one shipment. One of the cars moved through to Meridian without stoppage at Tuscaloosa and one of the cars was stopped at Tuscaloosa, and partly unloaded by Hulett, and the balance then moved from Tuscaloosa to Meridian on the original bill of lading. The weight of the freight in the car which stopped at” Tuscaloosa was thirty-two thousand three hundred pounds, before being partly unloaded at Tuscaloosa, and the weight of the freight left in the car after partly unloading, which moved from Tuscaloosa to Meridian was eighteen thousand two hundred pounds. The through rate on said shipment from Kenosha, Wisconsin, to Meridian, Mississippi, as fixed by the tariffs of the originating carrier and the other carriers handling the shipment was seventy-eight cents per one hundred pounds. If the through rate from Kenosha to Meridian, *339 being seventy-eight does not apply, then the minimum weight provided by the tariffs for the car which was stopped at Tuscaloosa was thirty-two thousand four hundred pounds, north of the Ohio River; that is to say from Kenosha to Cincinnati, and south of the river the minimum weight was thirty thousand pounds, applying from Cincinnati to Meridian. The tariffs of the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company over which the shipment moved to Tuscaloosa, and upon which railroad Tuscaloosa is situated, did not provide for any stop-over privilege at Tuscaloosa for partly unloading. The local rate on said shipment from Tuscaloosa to Meridian, as provided by the tariffs of the said Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company is seventy-two cents per one hundred pounds. Hulett & Son paid the freight on both of these cars at the through rate of seventy-eight cents per one hundred pounds, and by a miscalculation they paid ten dollars and ninety-two cents over the amount actually due at the said seventy-eight-cent rate. There is no rate published from Kenosha to Tuscaloosa. The rate from Kenosha to Cincinnati is thirty-one and one-half cents per one hundred pounds, which applied to thirty-two thousand four hundred pounds, makes one hundred two dollars and six cents. The rate from Cincinnati to Tuscaloosa is sixty-two cents per hundred pounds, which applied to the actual weight of thirty-two thousand three hundred pounds makes two hundred dollars and twenty-six cents; the sum of the two being three hundred two dollars and thirty-two cents. Hulett & Son paid the agent at Tuscaloosa one hundred nine dollars and ninety-eight cents, leaving a balance of one hundred ninety-two dollars and thirty-four cents as per the above calculation. The freight on the eighteen thousand two hundred pounds moving from Tuscaloosa to Meridian, at seventy-two cents per one hundred pounds amounted to one hundred thirty-one dollars and four cents. Seventy-two cents is the local rate on such shipment from Tuscaloosa to *340 Meridian as provided by the published tariff of said A. Gf. S. Railroad. Hulett paid the full freight on tlie second car, which moved from Kenosha to Meridian without stopping at Tuscaloosa, and by some miscalculation paid ten dollars and ninety-two cents excess, for which'he is entitled to credit, which leaves the difference of one hundred eighty-one dollars and forty-two cents claimed by the railroad company.
“If, under the tariffs, the car which was stopped at Tuscaloosa was entitled to move from Kenosha to Meridian with the right of stoppage for partial unloading at Tuscaloosa, at the through rate of seventy-eight cents, then the full amount of freight has been paid. If under the tariffs the railroad company is required to collect freight on the shipment from Kenosha to Tuscaloosa at the tariff rate applying to a shipment from Kenosha to Tuscaloosa, and then to collect the local rate from Tuscaloosa to Meridian, on the shipment remaining in the car after partial unloading, which moved from Tuscaloosa to Meridian, then Hulett owes the on§ hundred eighty-one dollars and forty-two cents sued for.”

Section 6(1), U. S. C. A., title 49, provides that tariffs shall state separately all privileges granted or allowed, and, in section 6(7) of the act, it is provided that no carrier shall participate in the transportation of the property unless the rates and charges therefor have been filed and published in accordance with the statute; “nor shall any carrier charge ... or collect ... a. greater or less or different compensation for such transportation of . . . property, or for any service in connection therewith, . . . than the rates . . ■ . and charges . . . specified in the tariff filed and in effect at the time . . . nor extend to any shipper or person any privileges or facilities in the transportation of . . . property,' except such as are specified in such tariffs. ’ ’ Appellant’s contention is that, under' the Interstate Commerce Act, it was prohibited from extending to appellees the unloading privilege at Tuscaloosa, a point *341 short of the destination of the car, and then moving the car with the remaining load on to Meridian under the through rate of seventy-eight cents per one hundred pounds.

It clearly appears that, under the Interstate Commerce Act, the unloading privilege at Tuscaloosa extended by appellant to appellees was illegal. The tariffs permitted no such privilege. Both the appellant and the appellees were affected with notice of the tariffs, and are presumed to have known the law; and, of course, that is true of the ■initial carrier.

Nevertheless, it is well known that the common carrier railroads of the country have much more thorough and accurate knowledge of their schedules of rates than have the shipping public.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 814, 159 Miss. 333, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-great-southern-r-v-f-a-hulett-son-miss-1931.