Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. United States Ex Rel. Pitcairn Coal Co.

215 U.S. 481, 30 S. Ct. 164, 54 L. Ed. 292, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1855
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 10, 1910
Docket289
StatusPublished
Cited by141 cases

This text of 215 U.S. 481 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. United States Ex Rel. Pitcairn Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. United States Ex Rel. Pitcairn Coal Co., 215 U.S. 481, 30 S. Ct. 164, 54 L. Ed. 292, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1855 (1910).

Opinion

Me. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

To decide the merits of this cause will require us to determine the legality of the regulations of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, by which that company distributed cars to coal mines along the line of its road in case of car shortage. As an incident to this general question we would further be required to consider the relations, irrespective of its mere attributes and duties as a common carrier, of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad with various coal mines along the line of its road and the relation with or control over some, if not all, of these coal mines by other mines or mine operators, and in *483 addition to consider the relation of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad with the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad. This road taps the main track of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad at Cumberland, Maryland, proceeds thence to the state line between Maryland and P'ennsylvania, where it strikes the Pennsylvania Railroad, and passing thence through a country rich in bituminous coal deposits, and containing coal mines, it reaches Piedmont, West Virginia, where its tracks again connect with those of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. As an additional incident we might also be required to consider the relation or control, direct or indirect, if any, which the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad exerted over some, if not all, of the coal mines along the line of the Cumberland and Pennsylvania road. Some, therefore, of the underlying questions involved in the cause, if we may consider them, are similar to the issues which were passed upon by us in the case of the Interstate Commerce Commission v. Illinois Central Railroad, which we have just decided, ante, p. 452. While referring to the general situation as depicted in that case, we think, in addition, a mere- outline sketch of the conditions existing prior to the commencement of this suit, as regards the matters with which it is. concerned, will serve to render clear the reasons which control us in deciding it,

The Baltimore» and Ohio Railroad Company, a corporation existing under the laws of Maryland, owned and operated a. railroad or railroads in the States of Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio and other States, and, as a common carrier, was engaged in interstate commerce between such States. The main line of said road west of Cumberland, Maryland, passes through a bituminous coal field, which is worked by many coal operators, the product of whose mines depend for their movement to market in interstate commerce on the facilities for such movement which the Baltimore and Ohio affords. For the purpose of this case, the coal mines referred to may be treated as situated in what is described as the Mohongah District of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.. *484 Regulations of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, by which 'mines were rated in order to fix the basis for a pro rata distribution of coal cars in case of car shortage, had their peculiarities differing from other roads. They were based, first, upon the capacity of the mines; second, upon the previous shipments by the mines for a period of two years, the capacity counting as one and the previous shipments as two. The capacity was ascertained by considering the number of working places, etc., modified by taking into account the facilities for moving the coal out of the mine, such as tracks, tipple, etc. The previous shipments were taken from the records of the company during periods when there was no car shortage. Upon the basis of the capacity thus ascertained the regulations of the company for giving each mine owner in the case of shortage its percentage of cars, stated in the most summary way, were briefly these: In the first place, there was assigned, out of the general mass of cars before the distribution was made, such cars as it was deeméd the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad was entitled to. This was done by no fixed rule, but, in the discretion of the traffic manager, generally upon the basis of the percentage of shipments of coal hauled in the two previous years by that road. The estimated mass remaining after the déliveries to the Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad were subjected to certain arbitrary assignments, and the remainder, after such assignments had been taken oufi, were equally distributed among the mine operators, according to their capacity rating. The arbitrary deductions which were made, as we have just stated,.were these:

1. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad cars placed at miñes for Baltimore and Ohio fuel coal.

2. New mines are allotted an arbitrary number of cars daily or weekly for development. In cases where the inspection shows a marked increase in the. capacity of certain mines, and it is not practicable to change the percentage of the whole district, proper arbitraries are applied pending a general revision.

*485 3. Cars of foreign railroads assigned by them to their own fuel trade.

4. Cars of individual companies placed at mines owned by such companies and cars owned by individual consumers placed at mines for their coal.

There are also certain exceptions of a local character, as follows:

1. Curtis Bay premium. Whenever a shipper on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad handles cars at Curtis Bay promptly in any one month, he is allowed in the succeeding month a premium of fifty per cent of the number of cars so handled, in addition to his regular percentage. This in lieu, of an assignment of cars to the Curtis Bay trade.

2. At certain points, noted on the percentage sheets, an arbitrary number of cars is assigned to mines on fire.

3. At certain mines in the immediate vicinity of industries, empty cars intended for loading at such industries are first sent into the mines for loading coal for such industries.

4. When annual contracts are placed for foreign railroad fuel coal with mines on the Baltimore and Ohio, arrangements are made that if the foreign railroads’ cars are furnished for this fuel coal, the Baltimore and Ohio will allow the mines shipping the coal a number ¡of Baltimore and Ohio cars equal to the foreign cars furnished.

5. When mines are connected with foreign railroads as well, as with the Baltimore and Ohio, their rating is reduced fifty per cent. A similar reduction is made in cases where mines are located near rivers and are equipped for loading boats.

Where mines needed, box and stock cars for the shipment of coal, as to which class of cars shortage rarely arose,, there was a special rule which we need not notice.

With the system just referred to in force on the nineteenth of January, 1907, the. Pitcairn Coal Company, a West Virginia corporation, owning a. coal mine on the line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in West Virginia, filed its petition in mandamus in the United- States Circuit Court for the District of *486 Maryland. The defendants were the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, the Fairmont Coal Company, tbe Clarksburg Fuel Company, the Pittsburg and Fairmont Fuel Company and the Southern Coal and Transportation Company, these four coal companies operating.

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215 U.S. 481, 30 S. Ct. 164, 54 L. Ed. 292, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-united-states-ex-rel-pitcairn-coal-co-scotus-1910.