Crown Mills v. Oregon Electric Railway Co.

21 P.2d 214, 144 Or. 25, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 57
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 214 (Crown Mills v. Oregon Electric Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crown Mills v. Oregon Electric Railway Co., 21 P.2d 214, 144 Or. 25, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 57 (Or. 1933).

Opinion

RAND, C. J.

This is an action to recover treble damages under section 62-161, Oregon Code 1930, for an alleged violation of Order No. 1131 of the Public Service Commission of Oregon in its cause No. F-1083. The plaintiff corporation owns and operates a milling plant for the manufacture of flour and other grain products in the city of Portland. Each of the defendants are common carrier railroads and Portland is a terminus common to all defendants. The complaint alleges that between December 4, 1924, and April 1, 1925, certain carload lots of grain were shipped from certain designated points in Oregon over the line of one of said carriers to plaintiff at Portland for which transportation plaintiff was charged and compelled to *27 pay local rates; that plaintiff manufactured the grain at Portland and shipped the product thereof in the form of flour and feed to other designated points in Oregon over the lines of another carrier, for which plaintiff also was charged and paid local rates, and it is alleged that the combination of the locals thus paid thereon by plaintiff exceeded the amount prescribed by said Order No. 1131 and was in violation of the Commission’s said order. This action seeks to recover three times the amount of such alleged excess payments.

The defendants demurred to the complaint on the grounds that it did not state a cause of action, that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and that the action was barred by the statute of limitations. The demurrer was sustained upon the first ground and plaintiff was given permission to amend. Failing thereto, judgment of dismissal was entered from which plaintiff appeals.

The complaint nowhere alleges that said Order No. 1131 was in effect at the time the shipments were made, nor does it allege that the privilege of milling in transit had ever been accorded by any carrier at Portland, or that any joint rates had ever been established by any of the carriers for any multiple line haul at or prior to the time the shipments were made. A copy of said Order No. 1131 was attached as an exhibit to the complaint, and, on its face, it shows that it supplemented and modified two orders previously made by the commission. It prescribed local rates to be effective between points on the line of a single carrier and joint rates for application to continuous hauls originating on the lines of one carrier and terminating on the lines of another. It contains no mention or reference to any milling in *28 transit at Portland or elsewhere, but it does provide that:

“* * * nothing herein contained shall be construed as modifying or changing any existing rates, rules or regulations, provisions or privileges which are on or make a basis lower than the maximum rates established by this Order”.

In respect to this order, the complaint alleges that on August 29, 1924, the Public Service Commission of Oregon issued its Order No. 1131 in its cause No. F-1083, and that said order:

“required the establishment and application on the basis therein specified of local and joint rates on grain, flour, mill feed and other farm products by the defendants herein and other carriers and ordered that ‘nothing herein contained shall be construed as modifying or changing any existing rates, rules or regulations, provisions or privileges which are on or make a basis lower than the maximum rates established by this order’ ”.

It further alleges that on the date of said order:

“there existed and there was accorded by the defendants in connection with the rates that the Public Service Commission of Oregon required to be superseded by the rates prescribed in its order No. 1131 aforesaid the privilege of milling grain in transit, whereby the aggregate charges for the inbound movement of grain and the outbound movement of the grain products were computed upon the basis of the through rate on the product from the point of origin of the grain to the destination of the product plus a special charge for the privilege and that the joint rates prescribed by the Public Service Commission of Oregon in its said order No. 1131 in connection with the usual privilege of milling in transit made a lower basis of aggregate charges for the transportation of the inbound and outbound shipments aforesaid than the combination of local rates established by said order No. 1131, etc.”.

*29 The complaint also alleges that the defendants wilfully omitted to comply with the order and prior to March 1, 1927, wilfully refused to establish the local and joint rates specified in the order or to accord milling in transit privileges, or to collect the rates prescribed, and alleges that said acts constitute a violation of the provisions of said section 62-161.

The complaint fails to allege that the order was in effect at the time the shipments were made and, because of this failure, the defendants also contend that the complaint is fatally defective. The objection to the sufficiency of the complaint upon the ground that it failed to state that the order in question was in effect during the time the shipments were made grows out of the fact that the action taken by the Commission in making said Order No. 1131 and the other orders referred to was made the subject of litigation in the case of Oregon-Washington R. & N. Co., et al. v. Corey, et al. (constituting the Public Service Commission of Oregon), and continued to be in litigation until that suit was finally decided by this court on February 1, 1927. See the opinion of this court in 120 Or. 517 (252 P. 955), where the action of the Commision was in all respects upheld.

Order No. 1131 recites that:

“This matter is before the Commission for further consideration under the provisions of section 5858, Oregon Laws, (now section 62-138, Oregon Code 1930), legal proceedings having been instituted in the Circuit Court of Oregon for the County of Marion, against the previous orders of the Commission entered herein, etc.”

The legal proceedings referred to was the suit above referred to of Oregon-Washington R. & N. Co., et al. v. Corey, et al.

*30 In respect to the proceedings had before the Commission in canse F-1083, the records of the Public Service Commission of Oregon, of which we take judicial notice as provided in section 9-302, Oregon Code 1930, show that the Commission in 1923, after notice to these defendants, instituted proceedings to inquire into the reasonableness of rates and charges for the transportation of farm products by railroad within this state and, after a hearing thereon, made Order No. 1027, which prescribed a scale of rates for the transportation of hay and straw graduated according to the distance carried, and Order No. 1040, which prescribed a like scale of rates for transportation of grain, grain products and other commodities. The carriers then commenced the suit referred to in the circuit court for Marion county and filed their undertaking in conformity to section 62-137, Oregon Code 1930, and obtained an order staying the enforcement of said orders until that case could be determined in that court.

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Related

State v. Mendez
938 P.2d 246 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 214, 144 Or. 25, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crown-mills-v-oregon-electric-railway-co-or-1933.