Harp v. Choctaw, O. & Ry. Co.

118 F. 169, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5187
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Arkansas
DecidedAugust 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 118 F. 169 (Harp v. Choctaw, O. & Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harp v. Choctaw, O. & Ry. Co., 118 F. 169, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5187 (circtwdar 1902).

Opinion

ROGERS, District Judge.

Gentlemen of the Jury: I am constrained by my view of the law of this case to instruct you to return a verdict for the defendant. The far-reaching importance of the case, as well as its somewhat novel features, have induced me to consume more time than is usual in its consideration. Every shipper and every railroad company in the state is interested in the questions of law involved, and the decision, of course, affects immense interests. It is therefore due counsel, the jury, and the court that I state my reasons for the course to be pursued. There is fortunately very little conflict in the evidence, and it is gratifying that in such conflict the witnesses on both sides have deported themselves with unusual candor and fairness. Any differences may be fairly attributed to' the infirmities of memory, inaccuracies of speech, and misunderstandings at the time as to what was said, rather than to any disposition to pervert facts.

It was urged that the Conatser Case, 61 Ark. 562, 33 S. W. 1037, governed this case. A very careful review of that case leads me to doubt its application to the facts at bar. At all events, I am not willing to base my action on that case. Conatser held cotton at Ozark, Ark. He wanted to sell for cash to buyers on the ground. He could not sell unless cars could be had upon which to ship it. He applied to the railroad company for cars. They were not furnished. Hence the cotton could not be sold. Cotton declined, and he sued the railroad company for the difference between the price he could have sold for, had the cars been furnished, and the price he did sell for after it declined. The court held, on his own evidence, that he was not a shipper, but a seller, of cotton, and that he had no cause of action against the railroad company, and dismissed his suit. In the case at bar, plaintiff had a coal mine. He could not sell his coal or ship it without cars. He applied for cars. They were not furnished. He had orders for all the coal he could mine, for $1.25 per ton, free on board the cars at Hartford, where his mine was located. ' It cost him 96 cents per ton to mine and load it on the cars. He sued for the difference between the cost and selling price. What was his legal status ? The plaintiff was to load the coal and bill it out to the purchasers, who purchased free on board cars after billed out. It did not appear that Conatser was to load cotton or bill it out, or that he intended to do either. And this is the distinction between the two cases. I do not think, on more mature reflection, that the Conatser Case is applicable to the facts in the case at bar.

The material facts of the case are these: When the defendant rail-, road company was extending its line from Howe, Ind. T., east through the state of Arkansas, it intersected the Arkansas state line about a [171]*171mile from the old town of Hartford, in Sebastian county, Ark., where it owned a large body of coal land, and there laid out a new town. The old town of Hartford was a mere village, of no commercial importance, and only a few persons resided there. Shortly after the road was put in operation at that place the railroad company permitted some one to work a strip pit on its land near the station, and load coal by wagons on cars standing on its switches at the station. ^ Very soon thereafter the plaintiff began working an old mine in the vicinity, which had been opened and worked for local supply before the railroad was constructed, and he, too, loaded by wagon on the same switches. One of his witnesses, Rogers, who was working a small mine near by, did the same thing. This arrangement as to plaintiff and Rogers continued until August-14,1901. In the meantime the defendant railroad had sold its coal land, including the strip pit above referred to, and two large coal companies had been organized and had opened mines at Hartford, and another was at the time in full operation a mile or two off, equipped with private switches and tipples for quick loading. These switches were built in this way: The coal operators and the railroad authorities agreed where the switches should be put in. The operator furnished the right of way, the ties, and did the grading. The railroad company furnished the iron and laid the rails, and, after it was constructed, controlled the switches. In the fall and winter of 1900-01, the business of the road had increased abnormally by reason of large crops and the immense development of coal and other products along the line, and also because it was constructing large eastern and western extensions of its line. Hartford, which for business amounted practically to nothing in the beginning, had become a large shipping point for coal, an'd its commerce had increased in proportion; indeed, it had increased all along the line. Some time in the spring or early summer of 1901 (the plaintiff’s evidence tends to show, about the 14th of August, 1901) the defendant company notified the plaintiff that the loading of coal on its commercial tracks at Hartford could not be continued, and that the company would not receive or ship coal except by car loads, and the cars to be loaded on the private switches of the coal operators and by tipple. The undisputed evidence is that the demand for cars at that time was much greater than the supply, and the company then had given orders for nearly one-third as many new coal cars as it then had in use, and they could not be had; that to continue the loading of coal cars by wagon on its commercial switches at Hartford was necessarily slow, and thereby had a tendency to reduce the maximum shipping facilities of the road, and, moreover, delayed and interfered with its commercial traffic, and rendered dangerous the operation of the road to defendant’s employes, the persons employed in loading thé cars from the wagons, and the traveling public; that these were the reasons that the practice of loading cars on the commercial tracks in defendant’s yards at Hartford was discontinued. The undisputed evidence shows that, at the time the notice was given, no other persons on its entire line, except plaintiff and the witness Rogers were loading cars on the commercial tracks at its stations. True, both at Hartford and at Red Oak some cars were loaded from strip pits by wagon, but always on the private [172]*172tracks of the operators; and this was not allowed, except temporarily, to enable the operator to open his mine, and for the reason that a tipple could not be used until the stripping was stopped, and what is called the “slope” was begun. Soon after the defendant railroad company gave the notice referred to, plaintiff, Harp, began negotiations with various officers of the company to secure some method of loading his coal. These negotiations resulted in nothing. The testimony in relation to these negotiations is very confusing as to dates, and quite conflicting in detail. It is not perceived that it is very material to the questions involved; but the plaintiff, Harp, insisted that a switch should be put in running from his mine, and intersecting the ground set apart for the company’s station track yard. This the defendant company refused to do. Suffice it to say they failed to agree upon any point at which the company should put in a spur track to plaintiff’s mine. Meantime plaintiff, Harp, and his witness, Rogers, who was similarly situated with reference to his coal operations, brought the matter to the attention of the state railroad commission, and the state railroad commission brought about a conference with the defendant railroad authorities.

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Harp v. Choctaw, O. & G. R.
125 F. 445 (Eighth Circuit, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 F. 169, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harp-v-choctaw-o-ry-co-circtwdar-1902.