Kankakee Coal Co. v. Illinois Central R. R.

17 Ill. App. 614, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 417
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 4, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ill. App. 614 (Kankakee Coal Co. v. Illinois Central R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kankakee Coal Co. v. Illinois Central R. R., 17 Ill. App. 614, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 417 (Ill. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

Lacey, P. J.

This was a suit commenced in the circuit court by appellant against the appellee to recover damages for unjust discrimination in freight in favor of the Central Illinois Coal Co., and against appellant. The declaration consists of four counts to which the appellee demurred, which was sustained by the court, and the appellant abiding his dedaration the court rendered judgment against appellant for costs, from which judgment of the court an appeal is taken to this court and the action of the court assigned for error. The suit is brought under the act of 1873 against extortion and unjust discrimination. The action is brought under sections 2 and 3 of said act. Section 3 provides that, “if any such railroad corporation shall charge any person * * for anjr freight of any description upon its railroad for any distance, within this State, the same or any greater amount of toll or compensation than is at the same time charged, collected or received for the transportation of any * * like quantity of freight of the same class of equal or greater distance of the said railroad * * all such discriminating rates * * * shall be deemed and taken against such railroad as prima facie evidence of unjust discrimination prohibited by the provisions of this act.”

The declaration consists of four counts. In the first count .a contract is recited by way of inducement between appellant and appellee. It is averred that appellee agreed to transport appellant’s coal from Clark City to Chicago, and all intermediate points over its said railroad, at as low a rate as that given to any other coal company or person shipping coal on its said railroad, and that it should have its coal transported as aforesaid to Chicago, at as low rates as the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company should, and was transporting coal from Braidwood on the line of the said road to Chicago aforesaid. That appellant had laid out and expended a large sum of money, to-wit, §50,000, in purchasing a coal mine in said Clark City, and in sinking a shaft thereat, and providing necessary machinery and appurtenances for the purposes of mining and hoisting coal from its said mine, and there loa,ding the same on the cars for transportation over its said road from December, .1882, and from thence hitherto, at said Clark City; the plaintiff was ready and able to ship and transport over said defendant’s railroad to Chicago and intermediate stations * * * large quantities of coal daily, 100 tons per day, and from the first day of March, 1883, the plaintiff was ready and able to increase such shipments to 400 tons daily. Then the count charges in various language that the agreement was violated by the appellee charging the appellant a higher rate of freight, for transporting its coal by the car load, than it did the Central Illinois Coal Company, without specifying the amount of coal of the appellant that was overcharged or discriminated against, and avers that appellee refused to fulfill the agreement by refusing to carry its coal at as low a rate as the C. & A. R. R. Co. carried coal from Braidwood to Chicago. That the latter road .fromDecember, 1882 on, charged 75 centsperton,whi)e'appellee .charged it $1.36. The count closes by claiming damages by reason of such unjust discrimination and by reason of the failure and refusal of the appellee to transport coal for the plaintiff from its said mine to Chicago, at as low a rate as was charged by the Chicago and Alton R. R. Co. from Braid-wood to Chicago. The plaintiff was prevented from shipping its coal in the large quantities it was prepared to furnish, and was driven out of the market, and its mine, on which so much money had been expended on the faith of the representations and agreement aforesaid, rendered substantially worthless. This count should have been in assumpsit for breach of contract t) carry coal at as low a rate as the Chicago and Alton E. E. Co. from Braidwood, and at as low a rate as that given to any other coal company, or person shipping over said road to Chicago, a cause of action which would have been entirely foreign to the one provided for in the statute. The only damages claimed on this account are those arising from the appellant being prevented, as is averred, from selling and shipping its coal in the large quantities it was prepared to furnish, and being driven out of the market, and its mine, on which so much money had been expended on the faith of the representations and agreement of the appellee, being rendered substantially worthless. In this count of the complaint, discrimination in the terminal and switching facilities mentioned, is charged as a part of the discrimination in freights, it being the manner in one particular of such discrimination, and to •that extent a breach of the agreement. The fraud charged in this count, in order to make it a count in case as no doubt was intended, consisted in nothing more than the promise by the appellees to convey coal for certain prices, and the breach of such agreement. It is difficult to see how fraud can arise out of the facts set out. It was a mere promise and a breach as dec’ared.

The substance of the claim for damages arises from the fact, as it appears, that on account of the failure of the appellee to abide his agreement and ship as cheaply as the Chicago and Alton and other companies, the appellant refused to pay the charges demanded and would not ship at all, and now asks pay for the profits on coal that he otherwise would have shipped— 400 tons daily—and also the loss of the mine. We do not think that this class of damages could be recovered, for the reason that in ease of actual unjust discrimination the shipper, according to the provisions of the statute, can recover three times the amount of the damages, together with attorney’s fee, and does not provide for a case where there has not been a shipment but simply a demand for illegal freights on the one side and a refusal on the other to ship.

This would not be a case of unjust discrimination provided against by the statute, and if this count is framed under the provisions of the statute, as is claimed by appellant’s counsel, then it is bad for that reason; for it is not alleged that any particular amount of coal was actually carried and discriminated against, and the damages c1 aimed seem to be restricted to those named, and this seems to be the scope and intent of the count.

For this reason we think the demurrer was properly sustained to this count of the declaration.

The second count is very general in its terms, hut is framed somewhat on the same idea of the first count, relying upon the agreement set out in the first count.

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Related

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77 Ill. 443 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ill. App. 614, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kankakee-coal-co-v-illinois-central-r-r-illappct-1885.