Centre County Lime Co. v. P. S. C.

157 A. 815, 103 Pa. Super. 179, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 37
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 9, 1931
Docket1; Appeal 424
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 157 A. 815 (Centre County Lime Co. v. P. S. C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Centre County Lime Co. v. P. S. C., 157 A. 815, 103 Pa. Super. 179, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 37 (Pa. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The question involved upon this appeal is whether an order of the Public Service Commission — réfusing reparation to Centre County Lime Company, the appellant, for damages it claims to have sustained in consequence of the collection from it by Beliefonte Central Railroad, Pennsylvania Railroad and other carriers, of alleged unreasonable rates for the transportation *182 of certain commodities to and from its plant — was reasonable and in conformity with law. The making of the order, in the exercise of the powers conferred upon the commission by Section 5 of Article V of the Public Service Company Law approved July 26, 1913, P. L. 1374, is prima facie evidence of its reasonableness and the burden of proving the contrary is upon appellant. The complaint under which appellant sought reparation was filed August 13,1928, at Complaint Docket No. 7790, and the order appealed from was entered September 23, 1930. A statement of some material and ,, undisputed facts with a summary of the proceedings is essential to an understanding of the question now involved.

The plant of appellant is located at Lime Centre on the Bellefonte Central Railroad, a short line railroad, 18.5 miles in length, extending from Bellefonte southwest to State College and connecting with the Pennsylvania Railroad at Bellefonte. Lime Centre is 3.5 miles from the centre of the Pennsylvania yard at Bellefonte. Appellant’s business is the quarrying of limestone and crushing of stone, manufacture of fluxing stone, crushed stone, ground limestone, burned lime and all forms of lime products. In the transaction of its business it receives inbound shipments of coal, brick and supplies at its plant and makes outbound shipments of its products. On April 13, 1925, there was docketed with the commission at its Complaint Docket 6483 a complaint by appellant against the intrastate rates charged by Bellefonte Central, Pennsylvania and other carriers upon shipments to and from its plant. A companion complaint was filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission against the interstate rates. The Bellefonte Central Railroad supported appellant to some extent by answering that the rates complained against were published by its connecting line and that it was willing to join in any *183 rate established by the commission, and by requesting, at the hearings, the application to its line of the Bellefonte rates. The general ground for the complaint against the rates involved in these proceedings was that the rates between stations on the Bellefonte Central Railroad and the remainder of the state were in all instances in excess of the rates on the same commodities to and from Bellefonte by the amount of the Bellefonte Central’s local rates, i. e., the fates from the coal fields, from which coal is shipped to appellant, and the rates upon appellant’s outbound shipments of its products were higher than the rates to and from Bellefonte. Bellefonte is on a short branch of the P. R. R. ruxming south from Milesburg on the Williamsport Division, which extends from Williamsport through Lock Haven to Tyrone on the main line, Milesburg being approximately halfway between Lock Haven and Tyrone. Bellefonte is also connected with Montandon by a line of the P.'R. R. The Bellefonte Central Railroad thus serves the territory between two lines of the Pennsylvania.

After extended hearings the complaints were sustained by both commissions and in a report and order of the Pennsylvania Commission, dated January 3, 1928, it was determined that “the longer haul and group rates complained of are and for the future will be unjust and unreasonable to the extent that they exceed or may exceed those contemporaneously in effect on like commodities to or from Bellefonte and ......that the maintenance of rates to of from points on the Bellefonte Central Railroad higher than the rates to or from Bellefonte results and will result in undue prejudice to complainant and the localities, served by the Bellefonte Central Railroad and in undue preference of complainant’s competitors at Bellefonte and Lamont and of the localities accorded the Bellefonte basis of rates.” It was further found that *184 the “shorter haul rates are and for the future will be unjust and unreasonable to the extent that they exceed or may exceed those contemporaneously in effect to or from points on the Pennsylvania Railroad beyond Bellefonte equidistant with the stations on the Bellefonte Central Railroad from Bellefonte.” The order directed the carriers to establish by February 25,1928, and thereafter maintain and apply rates decreased to the extent indicated in the report.

In the complaint against the rates there was included a prayer for reparation for the alleged unreasonable charges which had been collected during the two-year period preceding its filing and would be during the pendency of the proceedings. The report of the commission concluded with the statement that “a claim for reparation is a separate proceeding” and the commission deemed it appropriate to say that, i'n view of its conclusions directing the establishment of bases for rates for the future only, the situation did not in its judgment “warrant an award of reparation.” Appellant, however, under date of August 13,1928, filed with the commission at Complaint Docket 7790 its complaint against the rates charged since April, 1923, and its petition, for reparation upon shipments of its products for the period beginning April 4,1923, two years prior to the filing of the complaint against the rates, down to February 25,1928, the effective date of the reduced rates. On October 30, 1928, the commission, referring to its previous report, made an order dismissing this complaint and appellant thereupon appealed from that order to this court. On July 2,1929, we filed an opinion (Centre County Lime Co. et al. v. Commission, 96 Pa. Superior Ct. 590) in which it was pointed out that the object of a complaint against existing rates is to prevent a public wrong for the future and that a proceeding for reparation is intended to redress a private wrong of the past; that the jurisdiction *185 of the commission is exercised under separate and distinct sections of the act — as to complaints against existing rates under Section 3 of Article Y and upon petitions for reparation under Section 5 of that article; that findings on the issues actually involved in a proceeding against rates furnish no basis for awarding or refusing reparation; and that up to the time the petition for reparation was dismissed there had been no specific determination by the commission with respect to the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the rates in the past. Other questions were involved in the appeal but upon this branch of the case the conclusion reached was that it was the duty of the commission to afford appellant “a hearing upon the question of the reasonableness of the rates in the past and whether it has sustained damages.” By way of precaution, it was said: “We do not even intimate that we think appellant is entitled to reparation.” The order of the commission dismissing the petition for reparation was accordingly reversed and the record remitted with directions to reinstate the petition and take such proceedings thereon as should not be inconsistent with the opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
157 A. 815, 103 Pa. Super. 179, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/centre-county-lime-co-v-p-s-c-pasuperct-1931.