Horton v. Tonopah & Goldfield R.

225 F. 406, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1265
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedOctober 6, 1914
DocketNo. 1125
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 225 F. 406 (Horton v. Tonopah & Goldfield R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton v. Tonopah & Goldfield R., 225 F. 406, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1265 (D. Nev. 1914).

Opinion

CARRINGTON, District Judge.

The plaintiff, C. E. Horton, surviving member of the firm of Horton-Hinckley Lumber Company, in this action seeks to recover for the alleged conversion- of some 22 car loads of lumber.

The defendant company owns and operates a line of railroad, reaching from Mina to Tonopah and Goldfield, all in this state. The lumber in question was shipped in 1907 from points outside the state, received by the defendant at Mina, and transported, 18 car loads to Goldfield, a.nd four car loads to Tonopah. In each case the consignment was to Horton-Hinckley Company itself, but with the understanding between Horton-Hinckley Company and its customers that each lot should be delivered 1o the party ordering it when he paid the freight, and until such payment was made legal title to the lumber would remain in the consignor. On arriving at its destination the lumber was refused by the parties ordering it. Horton-Hinckley Company was notified of this fact, but failed to take any action. In August, 1907, Hinckley went to Tonopah and Goldfield, and later the firm wrote defendant that the entire situation would be cleaned up in 10 days, but nothing was done.

¡1] The company was fully and seasonably informed as to the arrival of the lumber at its destination, and the failure of the persons by whom it was ordered to take and receive it. Frequent demands were made by the railroad company for the payment of its charges, and the removal of the lumber. The four car-loads sent to Tonopah were sold at public auction December 9, 1907, for $1,435.04. This sale appears to have been entirely regular, and in strict compliance with the Nevada statute regulating the sale of unclaimed freight; consequently the lumber cannot be regarded as having been converted by the defendant.

Under the Revised Rules and Regulations of the Utah Car Service Association, in force at Tonopah during the times in question, it was [408]*408the duty of defendant to collect for car service and storage the sum of $1 per car per day after the expiration of 48 hours’ free time. Under these rules the free time did not commence until the car had been properly placed for unloading and delivery. In computing the time all Sundays and holidays are excluded.

Two hundred and seven dollars, the amount claimed as demurrage on the lumber shipped to Tonopah, is not excessive, and is therefore allowed and found to be due from plaintiff; and it is conceded that $1,228.73 is due for freight.

The 18 cars sent to Goldfield contained 314,728 feet of lumber. They reached that point as their final destination at various times between April 1 and August 12, 1907. The freight charges claimed are $6,131.50. This amount is conceded to be correct, and is therefore found to be the amount due.

Six cars were unloaded in June, 1907, and Jhe remainder in October of the same year. This was done by defendant company. Defendant’s cars were then released, but the lumber remained on its right-of way.

[2] Plaintiff contends that the company’s right to collect demurrage ended when the cars were thus released for service. I am unable to accept his view. Rule 11 of the Car Service Association, in force at that time, prohibited agents—

“from storing any part of car load freight in warehouse or on ground belonging to the railroad company without adding thereto car service charges, the same as if the freight had been left in the car.”

This rule was stated in defendant’s tariff schedule, regularly filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and published as required by law; consequently it was so obligatory that until changed by action of the Commission itself, it was unlawful for the carrier to collect or receive any greater or less compensation for storage than that provided for in the rule. Furthermore, to permit the carrier to stop the running of demurrage charges by unloading freight cars for favored patrons would render the collection of such charges more or less discretionary, and open the door for discrimination as between shippers, the very thing which the act to regulate commerce was designed to prevent.

November 5, 1907, the lumber was offered for sale by the company at public auction, under the provisions of the Nevada act providing for the sale of unclaimed freight. There being few or no bidders, it appears to have been bid in by the company itself, and immediately thereafter the company began to sell the lumber in small lots at private sale. During the month of November three car loads were purchased by the Goldfield Lumber Company. Being advised that these proceedings were irregular, defendant company caused the remaining 15 car loads to be again advertised for sale.

[3] Section 541 of the Revised Laws of Nevada, under which these sales were attempted to be made, provides:

“If no person calls for tbe freight or .other property received by such railroad, express company or other common carrier, commission, forwarding merchant, or warehouseman, within sixty days from the receipt thereof, the carrier, forwarding, commission merchant, or warehouseman may sell such prop[409]*409ert.v, or so nracti thereof, at auction to the highest bidders, as will pay freight and other .iust and reasonable charges, first having given notice of the time and place of sale to the owner, consignee, or consignor, when known, and by advertisement in a daily paper ten days, or if a weekly paper, four weeks, published where such sale is to take place, or if there is no paper published at the placo where such sale is to take place, by posting a notice of the sale conspicuously in at least three public places.”

No valid sale of undelivered freight can be made by a carrier unless the statutory method is strictly pursued. 2 Moore on Carriers, p. 649.

The burden is on the carrier to show that one or the other of these sales was regularly conducted. This has not been done. Furthermore, the evidence fails to show that any notice of the time an place of sale was first given “to the owner, consignee, or consignor.”

[4 [ At the second sale the 15 car loads of lumber in question, belonging to Horton-Hinckley Company, together with 4 car loads of coal belonging to the Goldfield Trading & Transfer Company, and 13 car loads of lumber belonging to various other persons and firms—32 car loads in all—were sold in one parcel to H. W. Brooks for $2,000. It appears that Brooks at some previous time had been an employe of the company, and was a brother of one S- W. Brooks, defendant’s then agent at Goldfield. The purchase was made in pursuance of a secret understanding that Brooks was merely acting as agent for the company, that the company was the real purchaser and party in interest. Brooks paid nothing for the lumber, but proceeded to dispose of it at retail, turning the proceeds in to the company. These proceeds were credited to the' Horton-Hinckley Company account. The Railroad Company itself, as the evidence shows, used a considerable quantity of the lumber, which was credited to the same account, at $25 per thousand.

It is very clear that these transactions constituted a wrongful conversion of the lumber. Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v North Texas Grain Co., 32 Tex. Civ. App. 93, 74 S. W. 567; Van Zile on Bailments and Carriers, §§ 126, 305, 542. Martin v. McLaughlin, 9 Colo. 153, 158, 10 Pac. 806.

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Bluebook (online)
225 F. 406, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-tonopah-goldfield-r-nvd-1914.