Inter. Com. Commis'n v. CHICAGO & C. R'D CO.

186 U.S. 320, 22 S. Ct. 824, 46 L. Ed. 1182, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 900
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 2, 1902
Docket154
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 186 U.S. 320 (Inter. Com. Commis'n v. CHICAGO & C. R'D CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter. Com. Commis'n v. CHICAGO & C. R'D CO., 186 U.S. 320, 22 S. Ct. 824, 46 L. Ed. 1182, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 900 (1902).

Opinion

186 U.S. 320 (1902)

INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
v.
CHICAGO, BURLINGTON AND QUINCY RAILROAD COMPANY.

No. 154.

Supreme Court of United States.

Argued November 7, 8, 1901.
Decided June 2, 1902.
APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT.

Mr. William A. Day, Mr. S.H. Cowan and Mr. David Willcox for appellant. Mr. James M. Beck was on their brief.

Mr. Lloyd Bowers for appellees. Mr. Frank B. Kellogg and Mr. Robert Dunlap were on his brief.

MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the court.

This record requires us to determine whether the court below rightly refused to enforce an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, by which it was found that an alleged terminal charge, made by the defendants in error, for the delivery of live stock to the stock yards in Chicago, was unjust and unreasonable, *321 and hence violative of the act to regulate commerce. To avoid the confusion which must be engendered by considering a number of irrelevant issues and to reach the single question to which the controversy is reducible, it is essential to state the facts, which are uncontroverted, concerning the making of the charge in question, and to bear in mind the results of a controversy relating to such exaction, which arose when it was first imposed by the railroad companies.

Prior to 1865 there were four different places in the city of Chicago at which live stock shipped to that city was delivered and marketed. The railroads by which such live stock was brought into Chicago were accustomed to deliver at any one of these four points as directed by the shipper, and no distinct terminal charge was made, the charge, if any, for the terminal services being embraced in the through rate exacted for carriage from the point of shipment to the place of delivery. In 1865 a corporation was formed, called the Union Stock Yards and Transit Company, which will be hereafter referred to as the Stock Yards Company. Under its charter this corporation was given the right to construct the necessary buildings and conveniences for the receipt, keeping and marketing of live stock. The corporation was given power to construct tracks connecting its facilities with the different lines of railway entering Chicago, and it was provided that when such tracks were constructed the Stock Yards Company might engage in the business of transporting stock and other freight over these tracks on its own account, or it might lease the privilege to do so upon such terms as might be deemed best. The facilities and the tracks were constructed, and it consequently came to pass that the general market for live stock in Chicago was transferred from the places at which such business had been previously carried on to the establishment of the Stock Yards Company. Leaving aside all question of charges on freight, other than live stock, from the incipiency of the opening of the stock yards in 1865 down to June, 1894, the railroads bringing in live stock to Chicago were accustomed to use the tracks of the Stock Yards Company for the purpose of delivering carloads of cattle, and for the use of these tracks by the various companies, for the *322 purpose above stated, no charge for trackage or otherwise was made against the railroads by the Stock Yards Company, except a small sum for the unloading of the cattle. During these thirty years the railroads did not divide their rates by separately charging for carriage from the point of shipment to Chicago and for terminal services rendered at Chicago, but asked one rate from the place of shipment to delivery at the stock yards.

In June, 1894, the Stock Yards Company imposed a trackage charge for carrying in carloads of cattle to the stock yards and in bringing the empty cars out. The railroads, therefore, became subject to an additional burden, the amount of which depended upon the distance which each road was obliged to carry its carloads of stock in going in and coming out over the tracks belonging to the Stock Yards Company. The situation of the various roads was such that no one of them in consequence of this new exaction paid less than 80 cents per car, that is, 40 cents each way, and none paid more than $1.50, that is, 75 cents each way. The railroad officials thereupon entered into an agreement that each road would impose a terminal charge of $2 upon each car of cattle taken into the stock yards. A joint circular was issued on behalf of the railroads, informing shippers on the subject, the circular being as follows:

"On and after June the 1st, 1894, a terminal charge of $2 per car will be made in addition to the Chicago rates as shown in the tariffs of the Western Freight Association on live stock and other freight received from or delivered to the stock yards or industries located on the tracks of the Union Stock Yards Railway, the Indiana Line Railway and the Northern Indiana Railroad."

The provisions of this circular were besides separately reiterated by the various railroads concerned in the agreement, and in their posted tariffs, as in those filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, a memorandum was made showing the additional charge substantially in the form above stated. In other words, because the Stock Yards Company imposed on the railroads a charge for the use of its tracks, varying between a minimum of 80 cents per car of cattle to a maximum of $1.50 per *323 car, the railroads immediately exacted a terminal charge on each car of $2.

One of the roads which imposed this terminal charge was the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe. It was in the hands of a receiver appointed by the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois. Keenan, a shipper, who carried on his business at the stock yards, refused to pay the added charge, and the receiver consequently declined to deliver to him a consignment of cattle. Keenan thereupon petitioned the court to instruct its receiver to make delivery of the cattle without the payment of the charge in question. Several persons interested in the receipt of cattle at the stock yards intervened, and prayed the court to make an order forbidding the receiver from exacting the additional $2. The Circuit Court granted the relief prayed for. It held that it had been settled in Covington Stock Yards Co. v. Keith, 139 U.S. 128, that a carrier could not lawfully divide his charge so as to separate the sum to be paid for terminal services from that exacted for the through carriage, unless the terminal services embraced some character of service not by operation of law included in the contract of carriage. 64 Fed. Rep. 992.

The case was taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals, where the decree of the Circuit Court was reversed. That court thought that the Circuit Court had misapplied the case of Covington Stock Yards Co. v. Keith, and, interpreting that case, held that it was not authority for the proposition that a carrier in a case like the one before the court could not divide its rate so as to separate the terminal charge from that for carriage from the point of shipment to the place of delivery. 73 Fed. Rep. 753, 760.

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Bluebook (online)
186 U.S. 320, 22 S. Ct. 824, 46 L. Ed. 1182, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-com-commisn-v-chicago-c-rd-co-scotus-1902.