Kentucky & I. Bridge Co. v. Louisville & N. R. Co.

37 F. 567, 2 L.R.A. 289, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2101
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 7, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 37 F. 567 (Kentucky & I. Bridge Co. v. Louisville & N. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky & I. Bridge Co. v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 37 F. 567, 2 L.R.A. 289, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2101 (circtdky 1889).

Opinion

Jackson, J.

On February 10,1888, the Kentucky & Indiana Bridge Company, a corporation created by the laws of Kentucky and Indiana, owning and operating a bridge across the Ohio river between Louisville and Xow Albany, and claiming to bo a common carrier of interstate commerce, filed its petition before the interstate commerce commission, against the Louisville & Kashville Railroad Company, alleging as the ground of its complaint that said railroad company, in violation of the provisions of the act to regulate commerce, approved February 4, 1887, and in combination and conspiracy with the Louisville Bridge Company, a corporation owning and operating the only other bridge across the Ohio river at Louisville, and with other railroad companies interested in and using said last-named bridge, for the purpose of preventing or obstructing the transfer of traffic and freight over petitioner’s bridge, had [574]*574refused, and was still refusing, to interchange traffic with, or to receive from petitioner or the railroad companies using its bridge, cars or freight tendered said Louisville & Nashville Bailroad Company., for transportation over its line or lines southward, or to deliver to petitioner, or any railroad company using its tracks and bridge, freights arriving by the Louisville & Nashville Bailroad at Louisville, for or consigned.to points on petitioner’s said railway, or to any railroad connecting therewith at New Albany, although said Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company afforded such facilities for the interchange of traffic to said Louisville Bridge Company, and to the railroads north of the Ohio river using that bridge. The point of connection between petitioner’s track and that of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, at which said interchange of traffic was demanded and refused, was at Seventh street and Magnolia avenue, in the city of Louisville. The prayer of the petition was “that the defendant, (the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company,) be required, by the order of the commission, to interchange traffic with the petitioner and with the railway companies using its railroad at said point of connection at Seventh street, arid Magnolia avenue, and to receive from petitioner and said railw'ay companies using its railroad all freight tendered by it or them to said defendant for transportation to points on or beyond, and by way of its railroad or railroads, and to deliver to petitioner and to the railroad companies using petitioner’s railroad, at said point of connection, all freights arriving at Louisville over defendant’s railroad,, and consigned to petitioner or to railroad companies using petitioner’s railroad, or to points on the line of petitioner’s railroad, or the railroads using its track.”

In its answer to said petition the defendant did not concede that the petitioner was a common carrier of interstate commérce. It admitted the physical connection of its own and the petitioner’s tracks at Seventh street and Magnolia avenue, which connection, under its charter, it could not prevent; but denied that such connection imposed upon it, either by the state or federal law', the duty of making a business connection, for the interchange of traffic at that point. It denied that said connection was a suitable and convenient place for the interchange of cars or freight with the petitioner or railroads using its tracks and bridge, for the reason that neither itself nor the petitioner had any depot, platforms, buildings, or other suitable facilities there for the interchange of traffic, and because defendant had no clerks, agents, car inspectors, repairers, or other employes at that point, to attend to the business of such interchanges. It further denied that such interchange at said point could be made without the Use of its tracks and terminal facilities by the petitioner. • It further claimed that the requirement to interchange traffic at .said point of connection would be unreasonable and improper, because the defendant already had in the city of Louisville four regular yards and depots, with ample facilities and accommodations for the handling and interchange of traffic arriving at or going from said city. That its main yard and depot for the reception and delivery of freight w'as at Ninth street and Broadw'ay, in the city of Louisville, where it interchanged traffic with the Louisville Bridge Company, and the railroads north of the Ohio river [575]*575using that bridge, and where it had ample accommodations and an adequate force of clerks, agents, and employes to transact the business, and to make all exchanges of traffic. The defendant further set up the fact that, in 1872, it had entered into a written contract with said Louisville Bridge Company, and with the .Jeffersonville, Madison & Indianapolis Railroad Company, and the Ohio & Mississippi Railway Company, under and by virtue of which it had agreed to interchange freights and traille with said railroad companies, and any other company using said bridge, upon certain terms, more favorable to itself, than the Kentucky <fc Indiana Bridge Company had or could offer, and which contract (hereafter fully set out) defendant felt was still obligatory and binding upon it. Bor these and other reasons set forth in its answer the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company claimed that it was not discriminating against petitioner, and was justified in not acceding to its demand for an interchange of traffic at the Seventh street and Magnolia avenue connection, as such interchange with petitioner at that point would entail upon it extra expense, inconvenience, and trouble, and compel it to violate its contract and obligations with the Louisville Bridge Company.

On the issues thus made, testimony, oral and written, was presented, and arguments were heard before the interstate commerce commission, which, on August 2, 1888, rendered its decision in the premises as follows:

“This case having been heretofore submitted on the evidence, and on written and printed briefs, and having been maturely considered, and the commission now finding' that complainant is a common carrier; and that, as such, defendant is bound and obliged by law to give to it equal facilities for the interchange of traffic to those it affords to oilier common carriers; that defendant cannot lawfully refuse to receive traffic which is brought to it over the the bridge of the complainant, on the ground that the railroad company bringing it had contracted with defendant to bring all its traffic across the Ohio river at this point on the Louisville bridge; and that the point of connection of complainant’s line with defendant’s road in the city of Louisville is a suitable point at which defendant should receive traffic for and from complainant: it is now ordered that the complaint be, and the same is hereby, sustained, and that defendant cease from refusing to receive from complainant and the carriers using its track the traffic brought and offered to it at the point of connection aforesaid. It is further ordered that defendant allow and afford to complainant, as a common carrier, at that point, the same equal facilities which it affords to other common carriers at the points of connection with their lines, respectively. And it is further ordered that a notice embodying this order he forthwith sent to the defendant corporation, together with a copy of the report and opinion of the commission herein, in conformity with the provisions of the fifteenth section of the act to regulate commerce.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 F. 567, 2 L.R.A. 289, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-i-bridge-co-v-louisville-n-r-co-circtdky-1889.