Kinney v. New Mexico Midland Ry. Co.

28 N.M. 451
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1923
DocketNo. 2583
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 N.M. 451 (Kinney v. New Mexico Midland Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinney v. New Mexico Midland Ry. Co., 28 N.M. 451 (N.M. 1923).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT

PARKER, C. J.

On November 11, 1918, the appellee filed a petition before the State Corporation Commission for the purpose of reducing the rates, which had been promulgated and charged by the defendant company, on coal and other commodities. The petitioner alleged that he was the owner of a coal mine, and was engaged in operating the same, and in mining coal therefrom at a place known as Tokay, within the Carthage coal district, in the county of Socorro, and in shipping coal from said point over defendant’s railway, and was also engaged in the business of operating a general merchandise store át said point. He alleged that the defendant company was a railroad corporation organized under the laws of this state, owning and engaged in operating as a com-' mon carrier a line of railroad from San Antonio to Carthage, which line is 10 miles in length; that said railroad was what is commonly known as a coal road, and that practically 99 per cent of the freight transported over it consisted of coal, hauled from the mines in said district, to San Antonio, and mining timbers, machinery, and other supplies used in the mines, provisions and miscellaneous merchandise for stores operated in connection with the mines hauled from San Antonio to said mines, all of which said freight, except small quantities of merchandise, was hauled in carload lots in cars furnished by the Atch-ison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company; that petitioner, and one other producer and shipper of coal, the Carthage Fuel Company, were the only shippers of coal over said railroad; that when petitioner commenced operating his coal mine in 1914, defendant’s freight rates, as promulgated and established by its freight tariffs, between Carthage and San Antonio, were 50 cents per ton on coal, which rates remained in force up to June 25, 1918; that on or about January 1, 1918, the defendant company came and passed under the control of the government of the United States, and on June 20, 1918, it promulgated its freight tariff No. 1-F, effective June 25, 1918, in which the rate between Carthage and San Antonio was fixed at 85 cents per ton on coal; that on or about July 1, 1918, the defendant company was released from all control by the government of the United States Railroad Administration, and the management and administration of the road was resumed by the defendant company; that the defendant company has nevertheless continued to maintain and charge said increased rates and had compelled the petitioner to pay the same; that the said rate of 85 cents per ton so charged was grossly excessive, unjust, and unduly compensatory, and discriminatory; that the defendant company had never established a joint rate with the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, or other railroad, and no through rate to interstate points had ever been established, promulgated, or charged by defendant. The petitioner therefore prayed for a hearing before the State Corporation Commission, and for an order establishing a reasonable and just rate on coal and other shipments.

The defendant filed an answer to the petition in which it denied broadly that the tariff charged by it was unjust or unduly compensatory, and alleging that subsequent to July 6, 1918, upon which date the United States government relinquished control over the defendant company, the United States Railroad Administration, Division of Tariffs, issued an order to the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company requiring them to put into effect a combined rate on coal from Carthage, N. M., over the line of the defendant company and the line of the said Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, through the said junction point of San Antonio to points beyond the said junction point of San Antonio, and requesting said Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company to make effective at once a joint through tariff therefor with the said defendant company; that such joint through /tariff was duly issued and became effective November 22, 1918, and was duly approved by the United States Railroad Administration and the Interstate Commerce Commission; that under such joint through tariff the combined rate on coal from Carthage, and also from the spur track of the petitioner, to El Paso, was 25 cents per ton lower than the combined rate, according to the tariff issued by the defendant company, covering the local haul from Carthage to San Antonio and the haul from San Antonio to El Paso, Tex., over the lines of the said Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, with other points on the line of the said Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company in the state of New Mexico reduced in the same proportion. The defendant thereupon pleaded want of jurisdiction in the State Corporation Commission to change, alter, or consider the joint tariff on coal from Carthage over the line of the defendant company to the junction point of San Antonio, and thence over the lines of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, either to the city of El Paso in the state of Texas, or to other points on the line of said Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company beyond said junction point of San Antonio, upon the ground that the supervision and control of all said joint tariffs made by the said Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company was under the control and direction of the United States Railroad Administration.

The petitioner filed a reply denying that any joint through tariff rate upon the two railroads mentioned had ever been approved by the United States Railroad Administration, or the Interstate Commerce Commission, and alleged that neither the United States Railroad Administration nor the Interstate Commerce Commission had any power, authority, or jurisdiction to pass upon, determine, or establish such local rates.

A formal hearing was ordered upon the questions involved in the pleadings beginning on March 17, 1919, and a large amount of testimony was taken as to the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the rate of 85 cents per ton for coal shipments over the defendant company’s railroad from Carthage to San Antonio. All questions of fact relevant to the question of a reasonable rate were gone into on this hearing. The result of that hearing was a finding by the State Corporation Commission that the rate charged by the defendant company of 85 cents per ton for coal in carload lots, in effect June 25, 1918, to October 12, 1920, was excessive, unjust, and unduly compensatory. The Commission further found that a rate of 65 cents per ton , on coal in carload lots over the said railroad was a fair, just, and compensatory rate, so as to produce to the defendant company a return upon the investment of 8 per cent upon its authomed capital, and 7 per cent plus upon the valuation of the said defendant company’s property as placed thereon by the Interstate Commerce Commission. The Commission thereupon on December 3, 1920, ordered that the defendant company desist from publishing, demanding, or collecting on or after December 15, 1920, in excess of 65 cents per ton for the transportation of coal in carload lots between Carthage and San Antonio.

The defendant company having declined to obey this order, the petitioner moved for the removal of the ease into this court, which accordingly was done, and the case is here for consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.M. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinney-v-new-mexico-midland-ry-co-nm-1923.