Duluth-Superior Milling Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

140 N.W. 1105, 152 Wis. 528, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 104
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 N.W. 1105 (Duluth-Superior Milling Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duluth-Superior Milling Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 140 N.W. 1105, 152 Wis. 528, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 104 (Wis. 1913).

Opinions

Maeshaxl, J.

Was the service in question of interstate character ? If so, if is conceded that the Wisconsin railroad commission had no jurisdiction to regulate the charges therefor and the judgment based thereon must be reversed.

Respondent’s claim is, that because the bill of lading, in each case, was for a transit to Superior, and the terminal yard of the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Company was there, and as near the finally determined upon unloading point as could be reached by its line, and there was no through bill of lading to such point, that the switching service was rendered as an independent matter. That, at first impression, seemed plausible.

[533]*533True, when a car reached tbe terminal yard it bad arrived at Superior. If we look only to tbe literal meaning of words and close our eyes to tbe service tbe shipper contemplated, to tbe knowledge of tbe carrier, we could readily conclude that tbe interstate service was completed before tbe switching service was rendered and therefore such service was intrastate. But tbe obligation of tbe initial carrier must be viewed from tbe standpoint of tbe parties when it was incurred, and tbe real relation thereof to the service required to execute tbe shipper’s purpose must be kept in view. The obvious facts that, at the place of origin of tbe freight, both parties to the transaction of commencing the transit contemplated a termination where tbe grain could be discharged in the usual manner ; that there 'were no facilities therefor- -at the terminal yards and that the universal'custom was to move cars, after having been placed in the yard, to some mill or elevator at the head of the lake designated, in due course, by the shipper through his agent, either on the initial carrier’s or some other road connecting therewith, show that the bill of lading given in each case, does not, in its letter, express tbe whole agreement. The word “Superior” was not used to mean, merely, inside the corporate limits thereof or the initial carrier’s yard there. The ordinary rule applies that where, following the literal sense of a contract, the result would be so unreasonable or absurd that no one would be fairly considered to have so intended, and if, without so bending tbe words used out of their ordinary sense as to violate the rules of language or of law, they can be seen to embody a sensible agreement, and the circumstances characterizing the transaction support that view, such should be taken as the real understanding between the parties. That course does not change a contract, — -vary it in any way; it merely gets out of it the sense the parties intended to put into it.

Without spending timé to discuss the matter at length, it is considered, very plain, that though “Superior” was stated as the destination in case of each car, the real meaning was [534]*534the subsequently selected place for unloading at Superior; the terminal yard being regarded as a temporary stopping place on the route to such place and the point covered by the tariff rate to Superior, in case of completion of the transit to such place being necessarily over a connecting line. It was no more the contemplated termination of the interstate commerce service when the car was required to be delivered to a connecting line in order to reach the unloading point, than when it could be transported to such point on the line of the initial carrier. The contract, in any event, was made in view of the necessity which might arise for use of a connecting line. It provided for delivery to such a line, in the route to the final destination. No other term than “Superior” exactly fitted the situation, at the origin of the service, because the particular destination was determinable only by the shipper’s agent later. As soon as that was known, in due course in each case, the car was moved thereto by the initial carrier, or a connecting road employed by it at the expense of the shipper, according to the necessities of the case, and thereby the service contemplated at the start brought to a finish.

Every circumstance in respect to the matter under consideration bears out the view expressed. Not only must it have been contemplated that the interstate commerce character of th'e grain loaded upon the cars of the initial carrier would continue to the unloading point, but the freight was handled under orders of the shipper’s agent to the end, possession however remaining with the initial carrier or its selected connecting line, — the final service being rendered upon its request and receipt of information as to the destination.

So it seems clear that the service contemplated when the freight was received gave thereto its impre'ss as a subject of interstate commerce; that such impress was not removed until the service was completed by the last movement which ended at the unloading point. The intention of a shipper, known [535]*535to tbe carrier .when tbe transit commences, as to tbe service required to complete tbe former’s purpose, and perhaps whether so known or not, — not tbe mere tariff rate mentioned in tbe first bill of lading, or tbe mere destination mentioned in connection with such tariff rate, or whether there is a through bill of lading ór a bill of lading at all covering every element of tbe transit, — governs tbe character of tbe commerce. Tbe named destination in tbe initial bill may be a mere place in tbe route to the final destination to be reached by tbe entire service, part to be performed by tbe initial carrier and part by connecting carriers; tbe charges for services of the latter to follow tbe initial bill as an expense matter in accomplishing tbe entire service or be liquidated in some other manner.

It is difficult to see bow any other course of reasoning or any other result, under tbe circumstances, could well be reached than tbe foregoing, even if tbe question at issue were to be viewed from an original standpoint. If a car of freight, originating at St. Paul, Minnesota, were to be started for New York destined for some point abroad, tbe land transit being by an initial and successive carriers, all for a through rate, but subject to a custom at New York for trunk lines to turn incoming freight over to a concern doing switching service for delivery at tbe particular steamship dock designated by tbe shipper after commencement of tbe transit; tbe charge therefor to follow tbe bill as a special expense matter, — no one would question but that the entire service would be of interstate character. Why so? Not because of a through-rate contract for service, obviously, which might be rendered by a service charge over the initial line to its terminus, with authority to turn the car over to a connecting line for transportation to the terminus thereof, with authority continuing to deliver for further traxisportation and, finally, for delivery to a switching company in New York for placement at the unloading point, the charge for each section of the transit [536]*536after tbe first to be evidenced by a bill of lading issued by each particular line, following tbe initial bill, and all including tbe switching expense to be discharged in tbe bands of tbe last carrier or in some other way. There might be several contracts all making up one entire service or be one, to effect tbe object of transporting tbe car to tbe dock in New York, and tbe particular dock not be determined upon until after tbe arrival in tbe last terminal yard of tbe final trunk line.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 N.W. 1105, 152 Wis. 528, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duluth-superior-milling-co-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-wis-1913.