Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. v. United States

250 U.S. 556, 40 S. Ct. 24, 63 L. Ed. 1138, 1919 U.S. LEXIS 1775
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 10, 1919
Docket38
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 250 U.S. 556 (Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. v. United States) 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
Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. v. United States, 250 U.S. 556, 40 S. Ct. 24, 63 L. Ed. 1138, 1919 U.S. LEXIS 1775 (1919).

Opinion

*559 Me. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

The case is here on certificate, an outline of which it is necessary to give.

The Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company, herein called the Company, is a miner and shipper of anthracite coal and was indicted, convicted and fined in the District Court of New Jersey for accepting rebates and concessions from the Central Railroad of Néw Jersey in violation of the Elkins Act, as amended in 1906, 34 Stat. 584.

It was charged in each count of the indictment that the Central Railroad Company was an interstate carrier of coal and as such filed tariffs and schedules with the Interstate Commerce Commission showing its rates and charges from the coal fields in Pennsylvania to points in New Jersey.

During 1912, 1913, 1914 and a part of 1915, the tariffs were in force and under them the Company shipped a carload (described in the indictment) from its colliery in Pennsylvania to a specified point in New Jersey and accepted from the railroad a portion of the rate due and payable so that the coal was carried at less than the rate and the Company thus received the advantage of an illegal rebate. Discrimination was not charged.

In accordance with circumstances which are detailed at length in the certificate, among which was the fact that the Company at one time operated a railroad of its own (the Lehigh & Susquehanna), the Company decided to • lease its railroad properties to the Central Railroad, a connecting carrier. Accordingly, March 31, 1871, the Company made a lease to. the Railroad, the 10th covenant of which provided as follows:

“. . . on coal delivered for transportation by the Company on sidings at the northern end of the Nesquehoning tunnel, the rates of transportation shall not exceed *560 the rates charged at the same time from Penn Haven to the same points on coal from the Lehigh region, either by the Central Railroad or by the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company.”

In making the lease naturally the Company took into account the advantageoús nearness of its mines to tide1 and sought to insure favorable rates for the coal from its collieries.

About 1878 the method of fixing rates was changed but the rate to be charged the Company was fixed at 86% of the rate charged to other mines in the Lehigh region, the reason being that there was that difference in distance. While this arrangement was in force the Company paid a net rate calculated on thé basis of 86%. After 1887, the. date of the first act to regulate commerce, this method of settlement was changed and the Company was charged the full tariff rate, but was rebated or credited with 14% thereof, this being done under the obligation or supposed obligation of the 10th covenant. And between 1887 and August, 1906, when the Hepburn Act went into effect, this arrangement for repayment did not appear in the tariffs filed by the Railroad with the Commission. • But in August, 1906, and thereafter, the tariffs contained a foot-. note in the following form:

“(4) In compliance with the Tenth Covenant of the lease frbm the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company under which the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey operates the Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad, a lateral allowance is made out of herein-named rates to the Lehigh Coal ana Navigation Company on all Anthracite coal. originating on the latter’s tracks in the Panther Creek, Nesquehoning, and Hacklebarnie, Districts mined and shipped by it, when coming via the Hauto, Nesquehoning, and Mauch Chunk gateways.”

■ All of the tariffs of the Railroad filed with the Commission after 1906 (262 in number) contained the footnote. *561 The allowance was 19.18 cents per ton and this was credited in the monthly settlement of the Company's account with the Railroad, the credit being the point of the Government’s attack.

“The verdict covers 27 shipments of coal in prepared sizes from Nesquehoning colliery for reshipment at Elizabethport. The foregoing facts were either proved or' stipulated, and it appeared also without dispute that during the years in question the Company’s officers were familiar with the contents of the Central Railroad’s tariffs, and knew that the allowance was being made and accepted. One of the Company’s defenses was that it had not ‘ knowingly ’ accepted a rebate within the meaning of the Act— its contention being, that the allowance had been accepted in good faith, in the honest belief that the payment was ■justified by the 10th covenant, and also in the honest belief that the allowance was properly and legally noted and provided for in the filed and published tariffs.”

The Company offered evidence that would support the following findings:

(1) At the time the note was made, the Company was informed of it, but was advised that the note had been made part of the tariff in full compliance with the Act of. 1906, and that being so the payment and receipt of the allowance would comply with the tariff and the law and the officers of the Company relied on this judgment.

(2) Between 1906 and the date of the indictment 262 tariffs, all containing the note, had been filed and accepted by the Commission.

(3) In 1908-the Company had been informed by the Railroad that the Commission (acting through one of the Commission’s important officers who was in charge of the tariffs) had specifically approved the form of the tariff containing the note, in spite of the fact that the amount of the allowance had not been specified therein, the Commission at the time having the question under consideration. *562 By reason cf such information the Company honestly believed that the receipt of the allowance was not in violation of. the tariff or the act, but was in compliance therewith.

(4) The Company’s books, records and accounts were examined by the Commission’s investigators in 1909, and the Commission was thereby informed that the Company had received and was receiving the allowance, but the Commission did not object either to the form or the substance of the practice.

“The Company’s evidence concerning good faith was received under the Government’s objection, and the Goverment offered evidence in contradiction thereof. At the close of the trial the court struck out all the evidence on this subject from the record, and refused to submit the question of good faith to the jury, holding that the Company’s honest belief that the allowance was permitted by the tariffs and the footnote thereto could not affect the issue, for the reason that the Company knew the contents of the tariffs, and knew also that the allowance was actually made and received.”

The certificate asks the following questions:

“1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 U.S. 556, 40 S. Ct. 24, 63 L. Ed. 1138, 1919 U.S. LEXIS 1775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehigh-coal-navigation-co-v-united-states-scotus-1919.