Chicago, B. & Q. R. v. United States

98 F. Supp. 119, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1875
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 1, 1951
DocketCiv. A. No. 51 C 613
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 F. Supp. 119 (Chicago, B. & Q. R. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, B. & Q. R. v. United States, 98 F. Supp. 119, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1875 (N.D. Ill. 1951).

Opinion

LINDLEY, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit by the railroads serving John Morrell & Company, the intervener, to set aside the Interstate Commerce Commission’s report and order of March 12, 1951, entered in the proceeding known as John Morrell & Company, Terminal Allowance, Ex Parte 104, Practices of Carriers Respecting Operating Revenues and Expenses, Part II Terminal Services. The report reaffirmed the Commission’s prior findings to the effect that the plaintiffs’ common carrier obligations under their interstate line-haul rates do not extend beyond certain interchange tracks described in the prior reports of Division 3 of the Commission and that carrier payment of an allowance to the industry for performing switching service beyond those interchange tracks or carrier spotting of livestock cars beyond such tracks without compensatory charges in addition to the established line-haul rate was unlawful, and ordered plaintiffs to> cease and desist from engaging in such practices.

The Commission instituted the original Ex Parte No. 104 proceeding, an investigation of Practices of Carriers Affecting Operating Revenues or Expenses, Part II, Terminal Services, on July 6, 1931. In its report of May 14, 1935, 209 I.C.C. 11, the Commission found that when a carrier is prevented from performing an uninterrupted service to loading or unloading points within a plant area by reason of some action or disability of the industry or its plant, the carrier’s duty with respect to delivery or receipt of cars ends at the point of interruption or interference, and that any allowance to the industry for performing service beyond such point or performance [120]*120thereof by the carrier without a charge over and above its line-haul rate was unlawful, in violation of Section 6 of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C.A. § 6. A similar finding of illegality was made with respect to the payment of an allowance for or carrier performance of plant spotting service in excess of the service required in making a simple placement or in teamtrack spotting. The instant case brings up for review the forty-eighth supplementary proceeding applying the general principles laid down by the Commission in the original Ex Parte No. 104 report. This proceeding, with respect to which Division 3 made its first report on May 8, 1936 (215. I.C.C. 431), has extended over a 16 year period during which four different hearings have been accorded the railroads and the intervener. The Division’s intermediate decisions are reported at 263 I.C.C. 69 and 277 I.C.C. 173; the Commission’s final report and order, entered March 12, 1951, is as yet unreported. The plaintiffs and the in-tervener contend that the Commission’s order directing the carriers to cease paying allowances to Morrell on the cars handled by the industry’s engine beyond the interchange tracks and making deliveries beyond said tracks without the assessment of a proper charge is arbitrary and capricious, without substantial support in the evidence and, therefore, beyond the Commission’s power.

The intervener, John Morrell & Company, operates a meat packing plant in Ot-tumwa, Iowa, located in the Ottumwa Switching District. Since the plant was established in 1877, it has been served directly by the lines of the Burlington, Milwaukee and Rock Island and indirectly by the Wabash.1 Each of the three carriers directly serving the plant has sidings and spur tracks within the plant area, the Burlington entering from the northwest, the Milwaukee from the southwest and the Rock Island from the northeast, and the industry has additional trackage of its own. Traffic at the Morrell plant consists principally of outbound carloads of fresh meats and packing house products and inbound carloads of livestock. Approximately 90%' of the livestock is delivered at unloading pens within the plant by the carriers with their own engines at night when the plant is not in operation. Daytime traffic into and out of the plant, moving between the carriers’ interchange tracks and the loading and unloading points within the plant area, is handled by the industry’s engine, the carriers paying the industry an allowance, based on actual cost, up to a maximum of $2.50 per car. The order sought to be enjoined, which is based on the conclusion “that the line-haul carriers could not deliver and remove empty and loaded cars at the various loading and unloading points in the plant in uninterrupted movements at their operating convenience and that under the conditions set forth, services beyond the interchange tracks were in excess of the services respondents were required to perform at their line-haul rates”, would require plaintiffs (1) to cease making livestock deliveries at the unloading pens unless an extra charge is assessed for performance of the spotting service beyond the interchange tracks and (2) to discontinue paying allowances to the industry on cars handled by the industry’s engine.

Inasmuch as it is well settled that the Commission is authorized to determine the paints at which transportation begins and ends and to prohibit the performance of services not embraced therein,2 it follows that the principal question for determina[121]*121tion by this court is whether the evidence before the Commission was sufficient to warrant its conclusion that the circumstances existing at the Morrell plant constituted plant interference or interruption within the meaning of the principles announced in Ex Parte No. 104, supra, and approved by the Supreme Court in United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., 301 U.S. 402, 57 S.Ct. 804, 81 L.Ed. 1186.3 The carriers contend that there is no evidence to support a finding of an interruption in or interference with terminal service caused by the desires or disabilities of the industry, as contemplated in the Commission’s decision in Ex Parte No. 104. They assert that the Commission’s finding that they could not perform the necessary spotting service at the Morrell plant at their convenience without interfering with each other is based on an hypothetical situation rather than on the actual facts of the case and that it is contrary to the “only testimony of record by railroad operating men”. The testimony referred to was to the effect that, with the industry’s engine handling the daytime switching operations and the carriers’ engines spotting livestock shipments only during the hours when the plant and the industry’s engine were not in operation, there had been no' interference in the past. However, the maps which were introduced in evidence, showing the complete track layout and the location of the various loading and unloading points within the Morrell plant, considered in conjunction with the reports of the Commission’s inspectors who had made on-the-spot studies of the terminal service practices and facilities at the plant, would certainly seem to provide ample evidentiary support for the Commission’s findings that the plant’s facilities are insufficient for the carriers to make deliveries at their convenience without interference from one another and from the industry’s engine.

Even so, say the carriers and the inter-vener, inasmuch as the plant facilities have not been found to be inadequate for terminal use by one carrier alone, the potential interference which might materialize, if each of the carriers spotted for unloading all of the cars hauled by it, should not be said to constitute a plant disability within the meaning of the Commission’s report in the original Ex Parte No.

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Bluebook (online)
98 F. Supp. 119, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-b-q-r-v-united-states-ilnd-1951.