Baker-Whiteley Coal Co. v. Baltimore & O. R.

188 F. 405, 110 C.C.A. 234, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4336
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 1911
DocketNo. 974
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 188 F. 405 (Baker-Whiteley Coal Co. v. Baltimore & O. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker-Whiteley Coal Co. v. Baltimore & O. R., 188 F. 405, 110 C.C.A. 234, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4336 (4th Cir. 1911).

Opinion

BRAWEEY, District Judge.

[1] This case comes up on appeal from the decree of the court below dismissing on final hearing a bill of complaint upon which a restraining order had been granted. The Baker-Whiteley Coal Company is a corporation of West Virginia owning a number of tug boats, and doing an extensive towing business with steamship lines trading to the port of Baltimore. It does a considerable business in supplying the steamships • handled by it with bunker coal for their own consumption, which coal is bought from owners of mines on the line- of the defendant company, and delivered by the railroad at the Curtis Bay pier. The defendant is a railroad company, a Maryland corporation, engaged in interstate commerce. The complainant, about the middle of June, 1908, had a contract with the owners or charterers of the Norwegian steamship Horda to tow her to the pier and to load her bunkers with coal, and the steamship was taken to. the Curtis Bay coal pier by one of the complainant’s tugs. The defendant refused to allow the Horda to make her lines fast to the pier, cast off those lines when they were made fast, and pushed the steamer off into the stream. This was in pursuance of an order of the defendant company, which was as follows:

“The Baltimore & Obio Railroad Company.
•‘On and after June 15, 1908, docking and undocking of all classes of vessels at this company’s coal pier, Curtis Bay; must be done by the tugs of Oapt. R. M. Spedden. By O. H. Hobbs, Superintendent.”

[407]*407The bill of complaint was filed June 19, 1908, a preliminary injunction was prayed, and a restraining order passed, preventing the railroad company from putting this order into effect. The defendant company answered, testimony was taken, and upon final hearing the court below decreed, February 9, 1910, that the restraining order be rescinded and annulled, and the bill of complaint dismissed, and the case is here upon appeal from that decree.

Prior to 1900 coal brought to Baltimore by the defendant company was delivered by the railroad either at its own pier at Locust Point, or at various private piers owned by shippers and dealers in coal. Baltimore has long had a large trade in coal, and most of it is brought by the defendant company. The Curtis Bay coal pier was constructed about the year last named. It is about 800 feet long and about 60 feet wide, extending out into the navigable waters of the bay. To facilitate the business the United States government spent a considerable sum of money in dredging a deep channel from the main ship channel to a point a short distance from the pier, where, in part from natural causes, and in part from the dredging done by the railroad, there was a sufficient depth of water at the pier, and it appears from the testimony that practically all of the coal brought to Baltimore by the defendant company and intended for transshipment by water to points beyond the capes of the Chesapeake is now and has since the year 1901 been delivered at the Curtis Bay coal pier. The Curtis Bay coal pier is named in the freight tariffs of the defendant company filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission as a station of the railroad company, which company does not undertake to further transport coal brought by it to said pier, nor enter into contracts with the owners of vessels for the transportation of coal beyond the said Curtis Bay coal pier, but it undertakes to deliver all coal which is shipped over its road under a bill of lading designating said pier as the place to which said coal is to be carried, upon the arrival of said coal at said pier, to whatever vessel or vessels the shippers or consignees of the same may designate. The testimony shows that when the pier was first opened, five or six tug boat owners competed for the business of docking and undocking vessels at the pier. The railroad company from the beginning had some arrangement with R. 1\I. Spedden for the docking and undocking of vessels there. The exact terms of this contract do not appear in the record, but there is testimony tending to show that from the beginning the officials of the railroad company adopted a policy of throwing obstacles in the way of some of the owners of tug boats, the result being that for several years prior to the commencement of the proceedings in this case only two tug boat owners have ever docked and undocked vessels at this pier, one of them being Spedden, and the other the complainant here; Spedden having practically a monopoly of the docking and undocking of sailing and other craft not propelled by steam, and the complainant having a large business in the docking and undocking of steamships. The complainant company had been in the towing business for many years. It had powerful and well equipped tugs, and had built up a large and prosperous business. It had been in the habit annually for many years of [408]*408making contracts with different steamship lines trading to the port of Baltimore. By these contracts it agreed to do all the towage required by these steamship lines in and about the harbor of Baltimore, im-eluding all docking and undocking of steamers. It met these steamships on arrival, did, many small services such as putting their officers and crews on and off ships, for all of which they charged a definitely fixed sum. Its towage business, amounting to from $90,000 to $100,-000 a year, is from 50 to 60 per cent, of all the towage business in Baltimore harbor. Its receipts for the work of docking and undock-ing steamers at the Curtis Bay coal pier amounts to something over $7,000 a year, and this business seems to have been done with skill and energy. It appears from the testimony that for some years prior to 1908 the officials of the railroad in charge of the operations at the pier were dissatisfied with existing conditions, and desired to correct them. They claimed that delays in docking and undocking of vessels limited the capacity of the pier, created confusion and delay at the pier and yards, and prevented quick dispatch. On the part of the complainant testimony was offered tending to show that such delays as were proved were not properly imputable to it. An examination and careful consideration of all the testimony on both sides fails to convince us tliat the complainant is properly chargeable with dereliction in the docking and undocking of vessels, or fault as to any preventable delays. The railroad company would be clearly within its right in making all proper regulations for the use of this pier. It could provide for the time and method of docking and undocking vessels, and make charges for de-murrage in all cases where delays occured from inefficiency or other hindrances to the most rapid and economical use of its pier. It could have reserved the Curtis Bay pier for its own exclusive use, or for the use of such special transportation lines with which it made contracts for transshipment, as was the case in Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. West Coast Company, 198 U. S. 494, 25 Sup. Ct. 745, 49 L. Ed. 1135. It could have constructed a wharf for its private use, as was decided in Weems Steamboat Company v. Peoples Company, 214 U. S. 345, 29 Sup. Ct. 661, 53 L. Ed. 1024. These two cases are cited in the opinion of the learned judge below, but the principles which should govern the use of the Curtis Bay pier differ entirely from those in the two cases cited, in neither of which was the wharf held out as a public wharf.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F. 405, 110 C.C.A. 234, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-whiteley-coal-co-v-baltimore-o-r-ca4-1911.