Heuer Truck Lines v. Brownlee

31 N.W.2d 375, 239 Iowa 267, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 395
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 9, 1948
DocketNo. 47100.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 31 N.W.2d 375 (Heuer Truck Lines v. Brownlee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heuer Truck Lines v. Brownlee, 31 N.W.2d 375, 239 Iowa 267, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 395 (iowa 1948).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The facts are substantially without dispute. Plaintiff, a corporation, has long been a truck operator, organized by the father of Stanton Heuer and Forrest Heuer, the present operators. The principal place of business is in Marshalltown, Iowa. Defendants operate a Coca Cola bottling plant in the same town and have a warehouse at Ames, from which customers in the Ames territory are served.

Both Stanton and Forrest were drafted into the service; Stanton in 1942, and Forrest early in 1943, and a substitute manager employed. This manager arranged for the Heuer Truck *269 Lines to haul Coca Cola at four cents a case from Marshalltown, Iowa to Ames, Iowa, and return empty cases without charge. Stanton Heuer, on his discharge from service, again managed the business and asked the Coca Cola company for the hauling. Arrangements were made between Stanton and Edward White, manager for the Coca Cola company, to again haul the product at the rate arranged by the substitute manager. Later, Stanton Heuer discovered that this rate did not conform with the filed tariff rate and demanded of the Coca Cola company the difference between the rate charged and the higher tariff charge. This was refused and suit brought. On trial the court found for the plaintiff.

Among other findings of fact the district court found that plaintiff was duly licensed, had filed with the Iowa Commerce Commission prior to the time of hauling, a schedule of rates fixing the charges to be made for hauling merchandise; that the hauling under agreement began in May 1943, and continued to and including January 1944; that 1he hauling began again on September 28, 1944, and continued to and including October 31, 1944; that (as stipulated) during the periods May 25, 1943 to January 4, 1944, and September 28 to October 31, 1944, the plaintiff hauled to Ames the Coca Cola indicated in seventy-four freight bills filed, and forty-six freight bills showed the empty cases and shells transported from Ames to Marshalltown; and that payment was made at the rate above mentioned by the defendants 1o the plaintiff, and also $287 for labor under the oral arrangement. The weight of the cargo and the distance from Marshalltown were also stipulated.

The court found, as a conclusion of law, that the plaintiff was a common earlier and was making the haul for the Marshall-town Coca Cola Bottling Company as a common carrier. The court further found that plaintiff was required to make the charges in accordance with the rates on file with the commerce commission at the time of the hauling; that any agreement to make a lesser charge or to make no charge would be unlawful and void; that defendants had knowledge, either actual or constructive, of the rates on file with the commerce commission and any agreement with the plaintiff in violation of the plaintiff’s schedules would constitute a preference to the defendants and *270 unlawful discrimination against others; that the plaintiff cannot be prevented by estoppel, or otherwise, from collecting the lawful rate according to the schedules properly filed with the Iowa State Commerce Commission under the provisions of chapter 327 of the Iowa Code of 1946. The court found for the plaintiff the difference between the price paid and the- scheduled price.

The defendants filed various requests for enlargement of the court’s findings, which were refused, except that the court, to clarify his findings, set out that there was a second oral contract made between plaintiff and defendants; that plaintiff was a common carrier and that there was no evidence of the commingling of merchandise of the defendants and others.

I. Defendants’ first contention is that, error was committed by the court in holding that the hauling of Coca Cola from Marshalltown to Ames, and returning the empties, was a common carrier operation. This is the principal issue in the case. Defendants do not seriously contend that the plaintiff was not a common carrier, and could not well do so. The evidence shows that plaintiff had appointed one J. M. Brockway as an attorney in fact in the adoption of the scheduled rates filed with the Iowa State Commerce Commission, as provided by law and published by the Iowa State Commerce Commission; that plaintiff had held itself out. to the public generally as such carrier. But defendants allege that in the particular services involved in this action plaintiff was working under a contract, and as such was a contract carrier. Defendants allege that the operation was separate and distinct from the plaintiff’s common carrier operations, and that as such a separate contract operation the plaintiff was not governed by any tariffs filed in the office of the Iowa State Commerce Commission. Defendants admit that a common carrier cannot use a contract as a subterfuge for the purpose of violating its duties as a common carrier, and that a common carrier cannot indulge in common carrier and contract operations at the same time. There can be little doubt that a common carrier could enter into a contract operation, but the authorities cited by the defendants do not support their argument. They cite 13 C. J. S., Carriers, section 5, which holds:

*271 “A common carrier may, under some circumstances, act as a private carrier, and when, as a matter of accommodation or special engagement, a common carrier undertakes to carry something which it is not his business to carry, he becomes a private carrier, pro hac vice. A common carrier cannot, however, avoid the duties required of him as such carrier, by insisting on a special or private contract with the shipper. It has also been held that, while the same person may be engaged in one line of business as a common carrier and in another line of business as a private carrier, the same facilities cannot be used at the same time in both common carrier and private carrier transportation.”

But under the evidence in this case, as a common carrier it was plaintiff’s duty to carry merchandise of any kind except livestock, either in interstate or intrastate commerce. As such carrier it would he required to extend its facilities to any person demanding its services. It would he hound by the obligations attendant upon a common carrier. The contract or arrangement between plaintiff and defendants was about the same as, or did not involve deviation from, the service that would be extended to all its customers. Such service being open to the use of all members of the public, the public would have the right to require its service to the extent of the capacity of the plaintiff. The mere fact that plaintiff, through error, granted a lower rate to a shipper than the scheduled rate, did not change its duties as a carrier for the public generally sq as to make it a private or contract carrier. See 13 C. J. S., Carriers, section 4; 9 Am. Jur., Carriers, sections 4, 37.

The definition of a private carrier as given in 13 C. J. S., Carriers, section 4, is:

one who, without making it a vocation, or holding himself out to the public as ready to act for all who desire bis sendees, undertakes, by special agreement in a particular instance only, to transport property from one place to another either gratuitously or for hire. He carries only for persons with whom lie has an initial contract, and assumes no obligation to carry for others * * *."

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W.2d 375, 239 Iowa 267, 1948 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heuer-truck-lines-v-brownlee-iowa-1948.