Lothrop v. Spokane, P. & S. Ry. Co.

10 F.2d 225, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 925
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJanuary 4, 1926
DocketNos. 9413, 9414, 9444
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 225 (Lothrop v. Spokane, P. & S. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lothrop v. Spokane, P. & S. Ry. Co., 10 F.2d 225, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 925 (D. Or. 1926).

Opinion

WOLVERTON, District Judge.

These are actions instituted for recovery of certain alleged overcharges on freight shipments, from Detroit and other allied points of shipment in the Middle West, under the westbound tariff, generally to Portland and East Portland, Or., but in some instances to other western termini, such as Bend, La Grande and Marshfield, Or., and Seattle and Walla [226]*226Walla, Wash. " The shipments consisted of automobiles, and were domestic in character, that is, from inland to inland and seaboard points; nor were any of them destined to or consigned through to Hawaiian Islands. The carriers made their charges under section 2 of the tariff, and they were paid by the shippers. Section 4 of the tariff provides a lower rate, which the shippers claim is the lawful rate. The purpose of these actions is to recover back the difference between the charges under sections 2 and 4. The three causes were submitted to the court, without the intervention of a jury, and were tried together. Being of such close analogy, one opinion will suffice to dispose of all of them.

The crucial question involved here is one of law, and relates to an interpretation of the tariff as respeets the rates applicable to the shipments concerning which it is alleged the carriers collected overcharges on freight transportation. The inquiry is really one confined to very narrow limits. The simple question is whether defendants were justified in making their charges in pursuance of the alternative application clause of section 2 of the tariff, or should they have made such charges in pursuance of the allied clause of section 4? A brief reference to the adoption of the alternative application clause pertaining to each of the four basic sections of the tariff will aid materially in arriving at the proper construction of the two alternative application clauses involved here, namely, those pertaining to the basis elassi-. fieations 2 and 4.

Under West-Bound Tariff 4-Q rates axe classified as class rates, commodity rates, and special commodity rates, and are denoted in the tariff as sections 1, 2, and 3. Each of these sections carries an alternative application clause, which precedes the specific rates prescribed. Eor clarity, I give them here. The clause pertaining to section 1 is as follows:

“If the rate in section 2 or section 3 of this tariff, makes a lower charge on any shipment than the rate in section 1 of this tariff, the rate in section 2 or section 3, whichever is lowest, will be applied. (See notes 1 and 2 below.)”

That pertaining to section 2:

“If the rate in section 1 or section 3 of this tariff makes a lower eharge on any shipment than the rate in section 2, of this tariff, the rate in section 1 (see note 1, page 129), or section 3, whichever is lowest, will be applied).” .

And that to section 3:

“If the rate in section 1 or section 2 of this tariff makes a lower eharge on any shipment than the rate in section 3 of this tariff, the rate in section 1 (see note 1, page 129) or section 2, whichever is lowest, will be applied.”

The purpose of these alternative application clauses is obvious. It is to afford the shipper the lowest freight eharge where the shipment is essentially the same as respects distance of carriage and transportation or from and to points in same zones, recognized by the tariff.

By supplement No. 34 to West-Bound Tariff No. 4^Q, effective June 1, 1922, there was constituted by the Transcontinental Freight Bureau an additional section 4, denominated “Export Rates to Pacific Coast Ports, Applying Only on Traffic Destined to and Consigned through to Hawaiian Islands.” There was adopted at the same time the following alternative clause:

“If the rate in section 1, section 2, or section 3 of this tariff makes a lower eharge on any shipment than the rate in section 4 of this tariff, the rate in section 1 (see note 1, page 129, of tariff, and as amended), section 2, or section 3, whichever is lowest, will be applied.”

This gave the shippers under the added section 4 the advantage of the lowest charge to be found in sections 1, 2, and 3; but shippers under none of these last sections were accorded the alternative privilege of the eharge under section 4, if that should be the lowest.

Later West-Bound Tariff No. 4-R was adopted, effective July 1, 1922, with the caption, as it respects section 4, “Export Rates to Pacific Coast Ports on Traffic Destined to' and Consigned through to Hawaiian Islands.” The same alternative clause in effect was also adopted. The wording is slightly different, but the meaning is the same in so far as it relates to the present controversy. By the same tariff, the alternative application clauses of sections 1, 2, and 3 were also amended, so as to include section 4 therein; the amendment as respects section 2 reading as follows:

“If the rate in section 1, section 3, or section 4 of this tariff makes a" lower eharge on any shipment than the rate in section 2 of this tariff, the rate in section 1 (see note 1, page 153), section 3, or section 4, whichever is lowest, will be applied.”

Thus by the amendment of these alternative application clauses appertaining to [227]*227sections 1 to 3, inclusive, the alternative application clauses o£ all four sections were made to harmonize, which apparently gave the shipper the advantage of the lowest charge under any section. This, of course, applies to shipments where the transportation is over lines extending from and to points designated in the tariff, as, for in-< stance, those shown on page 47 of Supplement No. 34 and page 454 of "West-Bound Tariff No. 4-R.

Later there was published Supplement No. 20 to Tariff No. 4H3, effective October 1, 1923. This tariff added a new section 5, “Import Commodity Rates,” with an alternative application clause making such section alternate with the four preceding sections, and the alternative application clause of each of the preceding sections was so amended as to make section 5 alternate therewith. By Supplement No. 24, Supplemental to Tariff 4 — S, effective November 1, 1923, the alternative application clauses- appertaining to sections 1, 2, and 3 were amended by eliminating therefrom sections 4 and 5.

Thus stands the record. All the matters forming the bases of these actions had their origin subsequent to the date when Tariff 4r-R became effective, namely, July 1, 1922, and prior to and exclusive of November 1, 1923, when Supplement- No. 24 to Tariff 4H3 became operative. It may be noted that, as to the rates or charges on automobiles, as respeets the transportation complained of, by comparison of section 2 with section 4, having in view the alternative application clause appertaining to each, those of section 4 are the lower, and this denotes the grievance of which complaint is made.

We come, now, to a construction of the alternative application clauses pertaining to sections 2 and 4, for determining whether plaintiff is entitled to the application of the rate basis of section 4. It may be premised, in so far as the shipments in litigation are concerned, that the points of origin and of destination are practically the same,- whether section 2 or section 4 be considered. In other words, like and similar routes of traffic, with analogous originating and terminal points, are embraced by sections 2 and 4.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F.2d 225, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lothrop-v-spokane-p-s-ry-co-ord-1926.