Bennett Commission Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

271 N.W. 468, 199 Minn. 179, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 642
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 13, 1937
DocketNo. 31,040.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 271 N.W. 468 (Bennett Commission Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett Commission Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 271 N.W. 468, 199 Minn. 179, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 642 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Devanen, Chief Justice.

Action brought to recover damages in the sum of $10.45, alleged to be the amount by which freight charges assessed and collected by defendant on a mixed carload shipment of livestock exceeded those permitted by 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 4872. 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 4872, provides in part as follows:

“Every such company shall furnish at proper points designated by it, suitable cars for the transportation of live stock of all kinds, and shall transport the same at a rate not to exceed the highest rate and minimum weight charged by such company for any kind of stock in such car, except that the cattle rate and minimum weight will apply when by the use of same a lower charge results, and the cattle rate will apply when the actual weight exceeds the cattle minimum. * * * Any such company failing to comply with any provision of this section shall forfeit to the party aggrieved not less than $100, nor more than $500.”

The shipment in question was consigned from Wadena, Minnesota, to plaintiff, Bennett Commission Company, by one H. A. Goetsch. It consisted of one bull, one cow, 19 calves, and 38 hogs. The shipping weight of the animals was 14,705 pounds. The freight charges assessed Avere $48.40. These charges Avere paid by plaintiff upon receipt of the shipment at South St. Paul.

Plaintiff in this action alleges that defendant in assessing freight charges violated § 4872, quoted above. The matter came on for trial *181 before the court Avithout a jury on December 13, 1935. The court found for plaintiff. This is an appeal from the judgment entered.

But one question is presented: What is the meaning of the phrase “highest rate and minimum Aveight” as used in § 4872?

At the time the shipment involved Avas made defendant’s laAvfully published tariff on file Avith the Minnesota railroad and Avarehouse commission provided the folloAving rates and minimum Aveights on straight carload livestock shipments of cattle and hogs from Wa-dena, Minnesota, to St. Paul, Minnesota:

“Kind of stock Bate per 100 lbs. Minimum Weight

(Straight carload) (Cents) (Pounds)

Cattle (including calves) 22 22,000

Hogs (in single-deck cars) 23 16,500”

These rates and minimum Aveights apply to shipments of livestock in cars 36 feet, 7 inches in length, which was the size of the car carrying this particular shipment.

Plaintiff’s shipment contained both hogs and cattle. The rate for hogs is 23 cents per 100 pounds, which is higher than the cattle rate of 22 cents per 100 pounds. The minimum weight for hogs on a straight carload shipment is 16,500 pounds, which is loAver than the cattle minimum weight of 22,000 pounds. It is plaintiff’s contention that the phrase in the statute “highest rate and minimum weight” means that the defendant company in computing freight charges on a mixed carload must choose the kind of livestock contained in the shipment which carries the highest rate on 100 pounds and apply thereto the accompanying minimum weight. The reasoning is that the Av'ord “highest” in the phrase modifies only the word “rate” and has no other implication. So, in this case, it is claimed that defendant company must take the rate for hogs, 23 cents per 100 pounds, and apply thereto the accompanying minimum weight of 16,500 pounds which would result in an assessed charge of $37.95.

Defendant contends (and made its charge accordingly) that the phrase “highest rate and minimum weight,” as used in the statute, means that rate and minimum weight which together produces the *182 highest charge; that the word “highest” does not modify only the word “rate” but rather modifies the entire phrase “rate and minimum Aveight.” Thus the proper charge to be assessed the shipper is arrived at by taking the cattle rate of 22 cents per 100 pounds and applying it to the accompanying cattle minimum weight, 22,000 pounds, the result being a charge of $48.10 for the carload shipment in question.

The court below held in accord Avith plaintiff’s contention that because the hog rate was higher than the cattle rate, when the respective minima are not considered, the hog rate and minimum weight was the “highest rate and minimum weight” within the meaning of the statute; and therefore appellant violated the statuté by charging a rate in excess of that allowed by law Avhen it applied the cattle rate to the cattle minimum weight and charged accordingly.

We believe that the trial court erred in its decision.

Both parties to this litigation agree that rate and minimum weight are inseparable. They differ, hoAvever, as to the nature and extent of this inseparability. Defendant contends that rate and weight are inseparable in the sense that the phrase “rate and minimum weight” is the equivalent of the word “charge,” and therefore urges that the phrase “highest rate and minimum weight” must be construed as though it meant “highest charge.” Plaintiff, on the other hand, admits the inseparability only to, the extent of granting that once a particular rate is chosen, i. e., the rate per 100 pounds for a particular kind of stock, the minimum weight accompanying that particular rate must be used in computing the actual charge to be assessed.

The language of the statute, particularly the phrase in question here, is unfortunate. The briefs of counsel for both sides have been carefully prepared and have ably presented the problems created by the ambiguities in the statute. The argument for each- side is persuasive. Neither interpretation is entirely devoid of merit,

HoAvever, we are constrained to the conclusion that the interpretation of the laAv as contended for by defendant is the proper one.

*183 Section 4872 had its beginning in L. 1887, c. 17. It read originally :

“That the charge and rate oí such cars of mixed livestock for transportation, as aforesaid, may be the highest rate for transportation of either class or kind of such stock so transported in said mixed carloads by said railroad company.”

As so worded, it was carried into the statutes of 1894 as § 2712. In the revision of 1905 it became § 2025, and the language was changed so that it then read:

“And shall transport the same at a rate not to exceed the highest rate charged by such company for any kind of stock in such car.”

In L. 1915, c. 254, the statute was amended. The amendment consisted of inserting the words “and minimum weight” after the phrase “not to exceed the highest rate,” and adding the clause “except that the cattle rate and minimum weight will apply when by the use of same a lower charge results.” In L. 1919, c. 301, this act was further amended by the addition of the following provision:

“and the cattle rate will apply when the actual weight exceeds the cattle minimum.”

In 1931 there was an additional amendment with which we are not concerned here.

It is apparent that § 4872 from its inception was intended to deal with charges

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Related

Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Armour & Co.
26 F. Supp. 964 (N.D. Illinois, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
271 N.W. 468, 199 Minn. 179, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-commission-co-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-minn-1937.