Denver & R. G. R. v. Interstate Commerce Commission

195 F. 968, 1912 U.S. Commerce Ct. LEXIS 7
CourtCommerce Court
DecidedApril 9, 1912
DocketNo. 35
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 195 F. 968 (Denver & R. G. R. v. Interstate Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commerce Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denver & R. G. R. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 195 F. 968, 1912 U.S. Commerce Ct. LEXIS 7 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

KNAPP, Presiding Judge.

This suit was brought to set aside an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, dated November 26, 1909, which in effect required petitioner, the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Company, to reduce its rate on beer in car loads, from Pueblo, Colo., to Leadville, Colo., when part of a through transportation from St. Louis, Mo., to Leadville, from 45 cents to 30 cents per 100 pounds.

The principal ground upon which the order of the Commission is claimed to be invalid, and the only one that needs to be discussed, is that the order relates to the transportation of property received, handled, transported, and delivered wholly within one state, which is said to be not within the jurisdiction of the Commission because of the first proviso in section 1 of the act to regulate commerce. It is conceded that the transportation in question was interstate commerce, because the traffic wa's carried by continuous movement from a point in one state to a point in another state, and was therefore subject to the regulating power of Congress: but the contention is made that [970]*970the proviso mentioned covers such transportation as is here involved, and therefore excludes it from the authority of the Commission. The facts upon which this contention is based appear to be as follows:

The Missouri Pacific Railway Company operates a line of railway from St. Louis to Pueblo, where it connects with a line of petitioner from Pueblo to Leadville and beyond. The rate affected by the order was applied to car-load shipments of Seer which originated in St. Louis' during the years 1907 and 1908, and were transported therefrom by railroad through Pueblo to Leadville. The shipments in question were hauled by the Missouri Pacific to Pueblo, and there delivered by that carrier without break of bulk to the Denver & Rio Grande, which completed the haul to Leadville. At the time these shipments moved, there was no joint rate of the two roads applying from St. Louis to Leadville, and the through charge was the local rate of the Missouri Pacific from St. Louis to Pueblo plus the local rate of petitioner from Pueblo to destination. In this connection it appears that petitioner had no joint rates with any of its Eastern connections at Pueblo, or other Colorado common points, on traffic moving to or from points in Colorado on its lines west of Pueblo and other Colorado common points, but was a party to joint tariffs on traffic moving between Eastern points and points west of Colorado—as, for example, Utah and transcontinental traffic.

The traffic in question was shipped by the William J. Lemp Brewing Company, of St. Louis, to the Baér Bros. Mercantile Company, of Leadville; the latter being the complainants at whose instance the rate in question was investigated and reduced by the Commission, and the transportation appears to have been conducted in the following manner:

Upon receiving -a car load of beer at St. Louis, the Missouri Pacific issued to the consignor, the William J. Lemp Brewing Company, a receipt for the same, showing on its face that it was to be delivered to Baer Bros. Mercantile Company at Leadville, Colo., routed via the Denver & Rio Gr-ande. This receipt described the articles. shipped, with their aggregate weight, and bore a notation to the effect that the shipment was tendered and received subject to the company’s uniform bill of lading. The car in which the shipment was loaded was then moved by the Missouri Pacific on a local waybill from St. Louis to Pueblo; such waybill showing Baer Bros. Mercantile Company as the consignee and Leadville as the destination, and containing a statement of the contents and weight of the car, with- the freight charges of the Missouri Pacific computed on its local rate from St. Louis to Pueblo. Upon arrival at Pueblo the car was placed on the interchange track, where the Missouri Pacific and petitioner delivered car-load traffic to each other. The agent of the Missouri Pacific at Pueblo thereupon delivered to the' agent of petitioner what is known as a “transfer sheet,” which showed the consignor and point of origin, the contents and weight of the car, the freight charges of the Missouri Pacific to Pueblo, and also the consignee and destination of the shipment. The car was then taken from the interchange track by petitioner and [971]*971moved to Leadville on a local waybill, which likewise named the consignor, and showed the consignee and destination, description of contents, the rate and charges to Pueblo, and the rate and charges of petitioner from Pueblo to Leadville. If the shipment were prepaid to destination, as generally seems to have been the case, the Missouri Pacific paid petitioner the amount of its charges from Pueblo to Lead-ville ; if not prepaid, petitioner paid the Missouri Pacific the charges of that carrier to Pueblo, and collected! the entire charges from consignee at destination, such payments between the two roads being made in daily settlements. In either case the physical movement and handling of the car was precisely the same as would be the case under a joint rate and through bill of lading. The movement was continuous from origin to destination, without the intervention of the consignor or consignee, and so far as they were concerned the transportation was like that over a single line. In control and management, and in fixing their respective local rates upon which these shipments moved, the Missouri Pacific and petitioner were entirely independent of each other, and there was no agreement or arrangement between them for through transportation from points on one line to points on the other, except such as is indicated by or may be implied from the manner' in which such business was handled and their mutual dealings with respect thereto, as above described.

[1] Upon these facts, as stated above, it is contended with much earnestness that petitioner was a purely local carrier within a single state of the traffic in question, and therefore as to such traffic not subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission because of the proviso in section 1 (Act Feb. 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3154]), which reads as follows:

“Provided, however, that the provisions of this act shall not apply to the transportation of passengers or- property, or to the receiving, delivering, storage, or handling of property wholly within one state and not shipped to or from a foreign country from or to any state or territory as aforesaid. * * * ”

Briefly stated, the argument of petitioner’s counsel is this: That section 1 of the act defines the classes of carriers subject to its provisions ; that it might be plausibly contended that the proviso aimed to exclude only their strictly intrastate business, but that this construction is inadmissible because of the concluding phrase, “and not shipped to or from a foreign country from or to any state or territory • a;s aforesaid,” that is to say, because intrastate business destined to or coming from a foreign country is not excluded; and that therefore it follows that, as there may be foreign business handled wholly in one state and not excluded, so there may be interstate business handled wholly in one state which is excluded. ' . •-

But it would also follow that the Congress, in devising a system of railway regulation, took care to include the intrastate carriage of foreign commerce—comparitively small in amount—and yet purposely exempted the intrastate carriage of interstate commerce, which' aggregates a very large volume. Only the plainest language would im[972]

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Bluebook (online)
195 F. 968, 1912 U.S. Commerce Ct. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denver-r-g-r-v-interstate-commerce-commission-com-1912.