Glens Falls Portland Cement Co. v. Delaware & Hudson Co.

55 F.2d 971, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1017
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 F.2d 971 (Glens Falls Portland Cement Co. v. Delaware & Hudson Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glens Falls Portland Cement Co. v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 55 F.2d 971, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1017 (S.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

I deny the plaintiff’s motions in so far as they ask for judgment against the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company on the pleadings; in all other respects the motions are granted.

I. This action was brought to enforce a reparation order, dated August 14, 1939, of the Interstate Commerce Commission, hereinafter called the Commission, allowing a recovery to the petitioner in the sum of $12,-588.63, with interest, against the Delaware & Hudson Company, hereinafter called the D. & H., the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company, hereinafter called the New Haven, and the New York, Ontario, & Western Railway Company, hereinafter called the Ontario & Western.

The basis of the reparation order, as found by the Commission, is that within the period of two years antecedent to the plaintiff’s application to it for relief the three defendant railroads against which the order was aimed charged the plaintiff unjust, unreasonable, and unlawful rates on shipments of cement moving over their lines from Glens Falls, N. Y., to New England destinations on the New Haven.

II. The box heading of the papers in this cause is unnecessarily cluttered with the names of defendants no longer involved, and the party situation should be cleared up before we take up the very interesting questions on whieh my decision herein turns.

The complaint in the proceeding brought by the plaintiff-petitioner before the Commission was filed on August 27, 1926.

At that time the Central New England Railway Company was an independent corporation and was a necessary and proper party to a proceeding before the Commission for the relief here involved. Since then, however, it has been merged with the New Haven, and thus is not now a separate entity, and therefore disappears automatically as a defendant herein, 'leaving the New Haven as its successor.

The Delaware & Hudson Railroad Corporation which took over all the railroad properties of the D. & H. on April 1, 1939, was not a party to the proceeding before the commission, for it was not then in existence. It was made a party to and served in the present action apparently on the theory that as successor earner to the D. & H. it must have assumed the latter’s liabilities. After this action was started, however, the attorneys for the petitioner became satisfied by the representations of the attorneys of the Delaware & Hudson Railroad Corporation that it had not assumed the said liabilities, and thereupon the action was voluntarily discontinued as against it.

The parties defendant to the instant case, [973]*973therefore, are the D. & H., the Ontario & Western, and the New Haven, and in that order their lines made up the only through route available to the petitioner for shipment of carload lots of cement from Glens Halls to destinations on the New Haven in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island, during the period for which reparation for rates charged was sought before and granted by the Commission and is now claimed in this action.

III. It appears from the report of the Commission here involved, New England Cement Rates, 155 I. C. C. 601 (Docket No. 18, 112, decided June 3, 1929), and from some of its earlier published reports referred to therein that, leaving out importations from foreign countries, New England’s cement requirements are almost entirely met by shipments from two, so-called, cement districts, the Lehigh district and the Hudson district.

In the report of the Interstate Commerce Commission in Allentown Portland Cement Co. et al. v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. et al., 49 I. C. C. 502 (No. 9544, decided April 11, 1918), which is referred to in the report of the Commission involved in the instant case, at page 607 of 155 I. C. C. there is a map inserted at page 505 of 49 I. C. C. in which the so-called Hudson district is outlined in what is substantially the form of a triangle, with its base running, north and south between Hudson and Glens Palls, a distance of about 74 miles, and with Troy near the base line at a point slightly nearer Hudson than Glens Palls. The other two sides of the triangle come together substantially at Howes Cave, which thus constitutes the westerly apex of the so-called Hudson district, and which is about thirty-three miles to the north-westward of Hudson and about twenty-seven miles almost westward from Troy. It is shown from this map that Glens Palls has apparently always been dealt with as being in the Hudson district.

In the report of the Interstate Commerce' Commission in Atlas Portland Cement Co. v. Central Vermont Railway Co., Director General et al., 63 I. C. C. 420 (No. 11, 110, decided August 29, 1921), mentioned also at page 607 (of 155 I. C. C.) of the report of the instant case, the fact that Glens Palls was considered to be in the Hudson district is also shown, and the two districts are described. It was decided then that carload rates on cement from Hudson, N. Y., to points in New England then obtaining were not shown to be unreasonable or to subject Hudson to undue prejudice and disadvantage, or to give to the Lehigh district of Pennsylvania an undue preference and advantage. Accordingly, the complaint there made before the Commission was dismissed.

In that report, at page 420 of 63 I. C. C., the Hudson district and the Lehigh district are thus described:

“Hudson is situated on the east bank of the Hudson River, about 30 miles south of Albany, N. Y. It is served by the Boston & Albany and the New York Central railroads. It is in the same locality as Alsen, Howes Cave, and Glens Palls, N. Y., which also produce cement. There is another cement plant at Hudson Upper, which is for all practical purposes a part of Hudson. Alsen is on the west bank of the Hudson River, about 10 miles south of Hudson. Howes Cave is on the Delaware & Hudson, about 33 miles northwest of Hudson. Glens Palls is on the Delaware & Hudson, about 74 miles north of Hudson. The Knickerbocker Portland Cement Company, of Hudson Upper, intervened but presented no evidence. The Alpha Portland Cement Company, of Al-sen, intervened and presented evidence. It asks for the continuation of rates on the Hudson basis, where now existing, and for the correction of certain alleged preferences of Hudson.

“The Lehigh district is situated mainly in eastern Pennsylvania but includes a mill or two in western New Jersey. The entire district extends about 70' miles; from east to west and about 30 miles from north to south. Most of the 22 mills which comprise the dis-triet are situated within 20' miles of Allentown, Pa. Northampton, Pa., is in. about the center of the group and by consent of all parties all distances are computed "fróln Northampton. . The mills in this district, which take group rates to New t England, have intervened in opposition -to-. the complaint. They and the carriers will be. xer ferred to collectively as the defendants: The Lehigh district, as represented by Northampton for mileage purposes, will be, ref erred to merely as Lehigh. The term differential will be understood to mean difference • in rate. Except where otherwise stated all rates and differentials are those in effect prior to the general increases authorized by us on July 29,1920.

“By reason of the location of cement mills at Universal and New Castle, Pa., on the west and at Hagerstown and Baltimore, Md., and Eordwiek, Va., on the south, which [974]*974serve the territories west and south of them,2

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55 F.2d 971, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glens-falls-portland-cement-co-v-delaware-hudson-co-nysd-1932.