Baer Bros. Mercantile Co. v. Denver & R. G. R.

200 F. 614, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1122
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedSeptember 26, 1912
DocketNo. 5,611
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 200 F. 614 (Baer Bros. Mercantile Co. v. Denver & R. G. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baer Bros. Mercantile Co. v. Denver & R. G. R., 200 F. 614, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1122 (D. Colo. 1912).

Opinion

POPE, District Judge.

This is a suit in two counts seeking to enforce the payment of reparations awarded plaintiff by two orders of [615]*615the Interstate Commerce Commission. It lias been submitted to the court upon a demurrer challenging the sufficiency of each count. The two causes of action are substantially outlined as follows: After setting out the corporate existence of the plaintiff and of the defendant and also of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, which constitutes defendant’s connecting carrier from Pueblo eastward to St. Louis, plaintiff alleges the shipment of certain beer from St. Louis to Lead-ville, Colo., over the Missouri Pacific Railroad and the line of the defendant from Pueblo to Leadville. It sets up the compensation for transportation paid under protest, and avers that without payment of these charges it was not possible for petitioner to have had the beer transported from St. Louis to Leadville. The complaint further avers “that the rate or charge demanded and paid for the transportation by said carrier on each of said car loads of beer over their said lines of railroad from the said city of St. Louis to the said city of Leadville, as aforesaid, was a combination of the rate of the said Missouri Pacific Railway from St. Louis to Pueblo” and the rate of the defendant from Pueblo to Leadville, and that the shipment was under a through bill of lading from St. Louis to Leadville. The complaint also- alleges that the plaintiff herein filed its petition and complaint before the Interstate Commerce Commission alleging that the rates and charges for transportation of the beer were unjust, excessive, and unreasonable, and that thereupon the defendant filed its answer before the Commission, and the Commission thereupon adjudged the rate to be excessive, and provided that for a period of two j-ears beginning February 1, 1910, the rate charged by the defendant should not exceed 30 cents per hundred pounds, and the Commission further ordered reparation to plaintiff for past overcharges in the sum of $723.56. It is further alleged as follows: “That thereafter said Commission, agreeable to the provision of law in that regard duly caused a properly authenticated copy of its said report, together with the order aforesaid, to be delivered to the said defendant, the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Company,” and that, said company having failed, neglected, and refused to comply with this order, the present suit was brought to recover the amount above named. The second cause of action is in substantially the same terms, except that the proceedings of the Commission set forth do not show the fixing of any future rate to be charged by the defendant company, and with the further difference in the amount for which reparation was ordered by the Commission, and for which judgment is sought in the present suit.

The demurrer is upon four grounds. First. That the complaint has no allegation that the rate charged was unreasonable and excessive or otherwise contrary to law. Second. That there is no allegation of any proper service upon the defendant company, under section 16 of the Interstate Commerce Act, being Act Feb. 4, 1887, 24 Statutes at Large, 379, as amended by Act June 29,1906,34 Statutes at Large, 584. Third. That the order set up in the second cause of action is unlawful because there is nothing in this order establishing a rate, and becaus.e an order of reparation by the Commission is unwarranted by law unless accompanied by an order establishing a future rate. Fourth. That each [616]*616cause of action is fatally defective, in that it appears'on the face of the complaint that the Commission did not make a through or joint rate, but merely ordered a refund by defendant out of its local rate, and that the orders of the Commission were therefore void. The third ground of the demurrer was; in view of the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals of this Circuit in a case between the same parties, being Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Co. v. Baer Bros. Mercantile Co., 187 Fed. 485, 109 C..C. A. 337, confessed by plaintiff on the hearing with prayer for leave to file an amended complaint. This ground of demurrer, therefore, is not for consideration.

[ 1 ] Coming to the first ground, which is that the complaint fails to show an unreasonable rate, and therefore no ground for recovery in this respect, the court is of opinion that this ground is well taken. The statute (section 4 of Act June 29, 1906, amending- section 15 of Act Feb. 4, 1887) provides that it shall be' within the power-of the Commission, where rates or charges are “unjust or unreasonable or unjustly discriminatory or unduly preferential or prejudicial or otherwise in violation of any of the provisions of this act,” to determine and prescribe what will be the just and reasonable rate or rates, etc. It is further provided by section 5 of Act June 29, 1906, substituting section 16 of the former act, that, where it is necessary to have recourse to the courts of the United States for the enforcement of the order of the Commission, there shall be filed “a petition setting forth briefly the causes for which the complainant claims damages and the order of the Commission in the premises.” It will be noted from this that the petition must set forth “the causes for which the petitioner claims damages.” . Since, as we have seen by the quotation from section 4, above, these causes under the law are that the rates are unjust or unreasonable or unjustly discriminatory or unduly preferential or prejudicial or otherwise in violation- of any of the provisions of law, it follows that, to make the petition complete, it must set forth one or the other of these causes. It is not sufficient to set forth the proceedings of the Commission alleging these causes. While these by way of recital show the grounds upon which the Commission proceeded, they do not afford any basis upon which the court may proceed. A long line of authorities show that the functions of the court are not simply to execute the orders of the Commission, but to afford a judicial inquiry surrounded by all the proper judicial safeguards as to whether the orders of the Commission should have been made. Upon questions of fact it is true the finding of the Commission is, under section 5 of Act June 29, 1906, prima facie evidence of the facts at the trial of the cause, but this is a mere matter of evidence, and has no relation to the pleadings. The pleadings must tender an issue as to whether the rates are unreasonable, discriminatory, or otherwise violative of law, and a petition such as this, which does not tender this issue, affords no basis upon which the court may proceed to a judicial determination with the assistance of the jury as to whether the rates were in fact illegal. A brief reference to the authorities will show the relation of the courts to the Interstate Commerce Commission in matters of this kind. Thus in Interstate Commerce Commission v. A. T. & S. F. Ry. Co. (C. C.) 50 Fed. 295, 305, [617]*617it is pointed out by Judge Ross that the court is “not a mere executive organ to carry out the orders of the Commission.” In Western N. Y., etc., R. R. Co. v. Penn. Refining Co., 137 Fed. 350, 70 C. C. A. 30, it is said:

•‘The parties are entitled to an impartial trial by jury, so conducted as to afford to them in full measure the enjoyment of their constitutional right.”

In the same case, citing the authorities fully, it is said:

“Additional evidence may be put in by either party and the duty of the court is to decide * * * upon the entire body of the evidence.”

It is also said:

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86 F.2d 177 (Eighth Circuit, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 F. 614, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baer-bros-mercantile-co-v-denver-r-g-r-cod-1912.