Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville & N. R. Co.

118 F. 613, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5208
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 F. 613 (Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville & N. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 118 F. 613, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5208 (circtsdga 1902).

Opinion

SPEER, District Judge.

The interstate commerce commission brought this proceeding against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, the Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad, and the Savannah, Florida & Western Railway Company. An injunction is sought to restrain the collection of certain rates exacted on shipments to Savannah of naval stores and uncompressed cotton. These are blanket or group rates, enforced upon shipments of these commodities from all points on the Pensacola & Atlantic Division of the Louisville & Nashville properties. The suit originated as follows: The Savannah Bureau of Freight and Transportation and nine other complainants, who described themselves as “general merchants, naval stores manufacturers, and cotton shippers,” made complaint to the commission against the defendant companies. The complainants allege that they and all other shippers of cotton and naval stores from the points mentioned had been subjected to undue and unrea[615]*615sonable prejudice and disadvantage because of these rates. The principal offender, it is alleged, was the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company. The lines of this company begin at Louisville and Cincinnati, traverse the states of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and a portion of Florida. At a station known as “Flomaton,” in South Alabama, its lines diverge, the westward division deflecting through Mobile towards New Orleans. A much shorter line, trending to the southeastward, reaches the port of Pensacola. At this point also begins what is known as the “Pensacola & Atlantic Division.” This division reaches the city of Jacksonville through' connection with the lines of the Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad Company at a place on the Chattahoochee called “River Junction.” Also, at River Junction the Pensacola & Atlantic connects with the Savannah, Florida & Western Railroad, which operates a line from that point via Bainbridge and Waycross to the port of Savannah. Contributory to the commerce of many states, with terminals at the ports of New Orleans, Mobile, Pensacola, and Savannah, all with abundant facilities for deep-sea navigation, the commercial communities of these cities and the public generally are gravely concerned for the legality and fairness of the freight rates these great railroads assess and exact.

To facilitate a clear understanding of the country and terminal points affected by this controversy, reference may be made to the subjoined diagram:

Before the interstate commerce commission it was complained that the freight rates charged upon shipments from stations on the Pensacola & Atlantic Division to Savannah were unjust and unreasonable in themselves; further, that such rates were relatively unjust and unreasonable when compared with the rates charged from the same, stations to Pensacola, Mobile, and New Orleans. Consequently it was alleged that the complainants and all shippers of like situation [616]*616were subjected to unjust discrimination, and were made to suffer undue and unreasonable prejudice and disadvantage; that this redounded to undue and unreasonable preference and advantage to the mercantile communities of Pensacola, Mobile, and New Orleans, and to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company. The respondents appeared before the commission and made answer to the complaint. Evidence was taken, and the respondents were heard. Upon consideration it was found that the respondents were violating sections i and 3 of the act to regulate commerce. To arrest these violations thé commission ordered: First. That the respondents should desist from charging a rate to Savannah of $3.30 per bale of 500 pounds of uncompressed cotton from any station on the Pensacola & Atlantic Division aforesaid, for the reason that this rate was deemed unlawful under sections 1 and 3 of the act. Respondents were further enjoined to desist from charging any other than reasonable, just, and lawful compensation for such transportation. Second. The commission ordered that the respondents should desist from charging the raté increased from $2.75 to $3.30 per bale on such shipments from the stations mentioned to Savannah, the commission declaring the whole of such increase to be unlawful. Third. The commission ordered the respondents to desist from charging from the stations mentioned a rate to Savannah which should exceed by more than 25 cents per bale of 500 pounds the rate charged at the time over the Louisville & Nashville Railroad from the same point of shipment to New Orleans. Relative to naval stores the commission ordered that respondents should desist from charging on shipments of carload lots of these products from the stations above mentioned to Savannah a rate of 24^ cents per 100 pounds of rosin and 38^ cents per 100 pounds of turpentine. These rates were declared by the commission to be unlawful, under sections 1 and 3 of the act to regulate commerce. Respondents were also ordered to desist from charging or receiving any other than reasonable, just, and lawful rates for such transportation. Second. The commission ordered that the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company desist from charging on car-load shipments of rosin from the stations mentioned via River Junction to Savannah any higher rate per 100 pounds for its service to River Junction than it at the same time charged or received for the transportation of car loads of rosin to Pensacola, for approximately the same distances. The commission also ordered that the Louisville & Nashville should desist from charging for its service to River Junction any higher rates per 100 pounds on shipments in car loads of turpentine from Mossy Head and other westerly stations on the Pensacola & Atlantic Division via River Junction to Savannah than it contemporaneously charged and received for the transportation to Pensacola of turpentine, in car loads, for approximately the same distances. The commission further ordered that the Louisville & Nashville Railroad should desist from charging on shipments of turpentine, in car loads, from stations east of Mossy Head on the Pensacola & Atlantic Division via River Junction to Savannah any higher rate per 100 pounds for its service to River Junction than 6 cents per 100 pounds in excess of the rate it had contemporaneously in force for [617]*617the transportation of turpentine, in car loads, to Pensacola from Sneads, the station nearest to River Junction.

From' the report of the commission the following material facts appear: It is 259 miles by the line of the Savannah, Florida & Western Railway from River Junction to Savannah. Between the same points, by the line of the Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad, the distance is 347 miles. From River Junction to Mobile is 265 miles, and to New Orleans 406 miles. The Pensacola & Atlantic Railroad was constructed by the joint efforts of the state of Florida, the Louisville & Nashville, and the people who live along its line. To aid in its construction, the state conveyed to it nearly 4,000,000 acres of land. Of this grant over $1,000,000 worth'of land has-been sold by the Pensacola & Atlantic and the Louisville & Nashville. Considered as an independent line, the Pensacola & Atlantic is not prosperous, but the Louisville & Nashville, operating it since the beginning of the year 1885, is both solvent and strong. In 1889 the latter paid its accrued funded debt obligations and declared a dividend of 3yí per cent, on its stock. It has nearly $55,000,000 of stock' outstanding. The country served by the Pensacola & Atlantic is sparsely settled. There are not 1,000 inhabitants at any town on the line except at Pensacola.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 F. 613, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-commerce-commission-v-louisville-n-r-co-circtsdga-1902.