Crookston Milling Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co.

242 N.W. 287, 185 Minn. 563, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 813
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 1, 1932
DocketNo. 28,605.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 242 N.W. 287 (Crookston Milling Co. v. Great Northern 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
Crookston Milling Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co., 242 N.W. 287, 185 Minn. 563, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 813 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

Hilton, J.

Plaintiff appeals from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

Appellant and respondent are Minnesota corporations; the latter is an intrastate and interstate common carrier for hire of freight and passengers by steam railroad, subject to the federal and state laws regulating such carriers. In its complaint appellant sought to recover from respondent alleged overcharges on certain Minnesota intrastate freight shipments from Minneapolis to Crookston. The *564 case was tried to the court without a jury and judgment ordered for respondent.

Between September 11, 1925, and November 2, 1926, both dates inclusive, there was shipped to appellant over respondent’s railroad, between the two points named, merchandise represented by 90 different waybills. The amount of freight charges collected thereon was $1,943.07. Appellant claims that such charges paid by it were $465.07 more than the lawful freight rate thereon and demanded judgment therefor. Respondent insists that the charges made and collected were the proper ones. The only question involved is what were the lawful rates in effect on the shipments in question.

Under the law respondent was required to publish a tariff of rates to which it was entitled and to file the same with the railroad and warehouse commission. Appellant concedes that respondent was lawfully entitled to file a tariff for the rate which it collected, but asserts that it failed to do so; that it permitted to remain in effect a lower tariff of rates. The basis of the claim of overcharges is that such lower rates were the laAvful charges Avhich should have been collected from appellant. Respondent’s position is that the charges it collected were properly established in the later higher tariff. (Plaintiff’s exhibit J, filed September 11, 1925.)

Prior to that date freight rates between points in Minnesota were prescribed under Avhat was known as the “Cashman distance tariff law.” G-. S. 1923 (1 Mason, 1927) §§ 4838-4847. It prohibited a carrier from charging any greater compensation for transportation of freight for a shorter than for a longer distance over the same line, the shorter being included within the longer distance. These rates were published by respondent in a tariff Avhich contained a table of distances between points in Minnesota, together with a scale of rates prescribed by the railroad and Avarehouse commission. The short line distance between Minneapolis and Crookston was ■ 280 miles, and for classes of freight 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and A the rates ranged respectively from 88 cents to 39.5 cents per 100 pounds. (Plaintiff’s exhibit I, filed June 2, 1924.) Hereafter reference will be made only to the rates on class 1, although many of the ship *565 ments involved were in classes bearing a lower rate — tbe relation between tbe different classes remained constant.

In 1924 and 1925, on respondent’s railway, under tariff filed with the interstate commerce commission and the Minnesota railroad and warehouse commission, there was in effect between Stillwater and Crookston (both in Minnesota) a schedule of class rates, class 1 being 93 cents (Plaintiff’s exhibit H, filed February 19, 1924) which schedule applied in connection with either the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha or the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroads, from Stillwater via Minnesota Transfer through Minneapolis to Crookston (hereafter referred to as the intermediate rule). This tariff carried the following provision:

“Intermediate Application on Minnesota Intrastate Traffic. Bates named herein applying on Minnesota intrastate traffic wrill apply as a maximum at directly intermediate points.”

This was a general rule in force throughout the state whenever the situation warranted.

This tariff necessarily made the rate from intermediate points between Stillwater and Crookston, including Minneapolis, subject to a maximum rate of 93 cents on class 1 freight. The 93-cent maximum rate however was not, prior to September 11, 1925, actually charged on traffic from Minneapolis to Crookston due to the fact that the Cashman distance rate of 88 cents applied, inasmuch as the rates between Minneapolis and Crookston were less than the rates between Stillwater and Crookston.

On June 2, 1925, the interstate commerce commission entered an order in the case of Commercial Club of Fargo, North Dakota, v. Ahnapee & Western Ry. Co. 98 I. C. C. 691, Docket No. 13,839, requiring the rail carriers, including respondent, to publish and maintain, effective September 11, 1925, a scale of rates, known as the Fargo scale, applicable from. Fargo and from certain Minnesota points, including Minneapolis, to destinations within a radius of 150 miles of Fargo. Crookston is within the 150-mile limit. For the purpose of complying with this order respondent published and filed on September 11, 1925, supplement 24 (Plaintiff’s exhibit J) to Plaintiff’s exhibit I, which bore on its face a legend reading:

*566 “Changes published in the supplement are issued in compliance with order of Interstate Commerce Commission in Docket No. 13.839 of June 2, 1925.”

This made the class 1 rate from Minneapolis to Crookston 116 cents. At the time this tariff supplement was published and filed no change in express terms was made in the intermediate rule contained in tariff exhibit EL Effective December 17,1927, on a reissue of that tariff, a note was added to the intermediate rule reading as follows:

“Note — The rates named in this tariff shall not by their intermediate application change or supersede the rates prescribed in the orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission in Dockets No. 13.839 of June 2, 1925 [Fargo case] and 14,743 of July 14, 1925, as amended August 3, 1925, which are published "in Section 2 of N. P. Tariff No. 2323-H, ICC No. 8419, MEG No. 973.”

In both exhibits I and J Crookston bore two index numbers, 175 and 310. In the supplement (exhibit J) section 1 of exhibit I was amended by adding a provision by which class rates named in that section would not apply on traffic from Minneapolis to Crookston, under index No. 175. This left the rates specified in exhibit I applicable to traffic from Crookston to Minneapolis. Also in said exhibit J a statement ivas expressly made which fixed the class 1 rate from Minneapolis to Crookston, under index 175, at 116 cents. Index No. 310, by reference to the rate shown under index 175, also established the 116-cent rate from Minneapolis to Crookston. Under both index numbers the rate from Minneapolis to Crookston was fixed at 116 cents; the rate from Crookston to Minneapolis remained the same as before.

A traffic expert witness for appellant correctly testified that exhibit J canceled the 88-cent rate prescribed in exhibit I in so far as the rate from Minneapolis to Crookston was concerned under index 175. Anyone seeking information as to the rate between Minneapolis and Crookston would naturally look at the then latest published rate schedules on file (exhibit J). In it there is but one rate on class 1 freight from

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242 N.W. 287, 185 Minn. 563, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crookston-milling-co-v-great-northern-railway-co-minn-1932.