Du Bois v. Central R.

22 F. Supp. 469, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2434
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 1, 1938
DocketNos. 5059, 5058
StatusPublished

This text of 22 F. Supp. 469 (Du Bois v. Central R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Du Bois v. Central R., 22 F. Supp. 469, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2434 (D.N.J. 1938).

Opinion

FORMAN, District Judge.

These cases arise by virtue of complaints filed by various anthracite coal dealers doing business in Southern New Jersey. Anthracite coal is shipped over Various routes and railroads from the. Schuylkill, Lehigh, and Wyoming coal mining regions located in Pennsylvania. ' Briefly stated, some of the carriers follow a more direct route in transporting coal to Southern New Jersey which passes through Camden, New Jersey. The other route is more circuitous' and follows a northerly course through Phillipsburg, Elizabethport, and Red Bank in Northern New Jersey, and then takes a southerly course to contact the coal dealers involved in this ca’se. The railroads involved in this circuitous route are the Delaware & Hudson; Delaware, Lackawanna & Western; the Lehigh & New England; and the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Some of the mines are located on the latter railroad, and other mines áre located on the three former railroads. The three former railroads, however, do not deliver the coal to the dealers in Southern New Jersey, but deliver it to a junction somewhere in Pennsylvania, at which point either the Central Railroad or the Pennsylvania Railroad takes control of the cargo and then proceeds to make delivery in Southern New Jersey, the latter railroad following a more direct route.

The dealers had been paying a rate of $3.40 a ton on anthracite coal with one exception. On lines of the Delaware & Hudson the rate had been $3.53 for Central delivery. It was complained that these rates were unreasonable and in violation of the following section of the Interstate Commerce Act: “All charges made for any service rendered or to be rendered in the transportation of passengers or property * * * shall be just and reasonable, and every unjust and unreasonable charge for such service or • any part thereof is prohibited and declared to be unlawful.” 49 U.S.C.A. § 1, par. (5). After a hearing, the Commission on August, 14, 1931, made a report entitled, Tri-County Coal Dealers’ Association et al. v. Atlantic City Railroad Company et al., 178 I.C.C. 213, in which it found certain rates unreasonable to the extent that they exceeded rates of $3.20 a ton, and awarded reparatipn on shipments made during the statutory period equal to the difference between the rates which had been paid and the rates which were found to be reasonable. The amount of the reparation on shipments that had moved via the direct routes through Camden was promptly agreed upon and paid, but defendants declined to pay the awards on shipments which had moved via the circuitous route through Elizabethport and Red Bank, New Jersey. The Commission thereupon ordered a fúrther hearing solely for the purpose of determining the amount of reparation remaining due, and in a supplemental opinion (203 I.C.C. 673) on August 11, 1934, it announced the following specific awards of reparation, all applicable on [471]*471shipments routed via Elizabethport and Red Bank:

Claimant Route Amount
R. E. Jerrell CRR1 $ 387.32
DL&W 2-ORR 3 122.15
D&HM4RR 653.61
MeElroy & Chell CRR 95.09
DL&W-CRR 74.72
L&NE53RR 2,979.01
D&H-CRlt 1,295.57
Vineland Lumber Co. CRR 288.98
DL&W-CRR 39.83
D&H-CRR 625.61
$6,561.89

Those named to receive the above awards are the plaintiffs in one of the instant suits, namely, J. E. DuBois et al. v. Central Railroad et al. (at law No. 5059).

Following the reports and order above referred to, another complaint asking additional reparation on shipments to Wheat Road, Bridgeton, and Vineland, the only destination points herein involved, based upon the decision in the Tri-County Case was filed by certain complainants who had not been parties to the Tri-County Case. This complaint was entitled “Thomas H. Jaggers et al. v. Central Railroad Company of New Jersey et al.,” and after due hearing the Commission made a further report, 203 I.C.C. 749, under date of September 4, 1934, in which it made additional awards of reparation aggregating $10,361.-17 based upon the finding that certain rates of $3.40 a ton applicable on prepared sizes of anthracite to said destinations were unreasonable to the extent that they exceeded rates of $3.20 a ton. As the complaint in this suit points out, such part of the awards as accrued on shipments which moved via the direct routes through Camden were paid in full. The following awards, however, based on shipments that moved via the circuitous route through Elizabethport and Red Bank, New Jersey, and were delivered by the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey have not been paid:

Claimant Route Amount
T. H. Jaggers CRR $1,342.44
L. P. Hess CRR 551.91
DL&W-CRR 264.06
D&H-CRR 86.97
Pond Coal Co. CRR 838.30
L&NE-CRR 131.11
C. J. Woodruff CRR 309.53
DL&W-CRR 110.03
$3,634.35

Those named to receive the above awards are the plaintiffs in the other of the instant suits, namely, Thomas H. Jaggers et al. v. Central Railroad Company of New Jersey et al. (at law No. 5058).

Both cases have been consolidated for the purposes of this trial, and a jury has been waived. The sole question presented is the validity of the orders granting reparation in so far as they are founded upon the report of the Interstate Commerce Commission in the Tri-County Case.

At the trial the plaintiffs offered in evidence the reports and the orders for the' payment of reparation and thereupon rested. According to the provisions of 49 U.S.C.A. § 16, par. (2), the order determining the fact and amount of damage is prima facie evidence of the fatts therein stated.

In rebuttal, the defendants asked for the equivalent of a directed verdict in their favor for the following reasons:

(1) The basic findings contained in the Commission’s reports were studiously restricted so as not to include the shipments on which the present claims are based.

(2) The Commission’s reports, if construed to cover the shipments on which the present claims are based, are arbitrary, and therefore void, because not supported by “basic and essential” findings.

(3) Said reports, if construed to cover the shipments on which the present claims are based, are arbitrary, and therefore void, because wholly unsupported by evidence; and

(4) Any value as prima facie evidence which the Commission’s reports and orders may have had originally is rebutted by the Commission’s subsequent findings respecting the same group of rates in the case of Atlantic City Coal Dealers Credit Bureau v. Atlantic City R. R. Co. et al., 203 I.C.C. 470; Id., 209 I.C.C. 737.

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22 F. Supp. 469, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/du-bois-v-central-r-njd-1938.