Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Higdon

148 S.W. 26, 149 Ky. 321, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 599
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 21, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 26 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Higdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Higdon, 148 S.W. 26, 149 Ky. 321, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 599 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the . Court by

William Bogers Clay, Commissioner

Affirming.

[322]*322Appellee, Joe Higdon, doing business under tbe name of Crescent Coal Company, was, during the year 1908, engaged in buying and selling coal in the city of Henderson. Appellant, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, is a common carrier. Its main line runs into and through the city of Henderson. In addition to its main line, it operates and controls a belt line. Leading from its main and belt lines and running into various industrial plants in the city of Henderson, are several spur tracks which are used for the purpose of transporting freight to and from these industrial plants, and are operated by the railroad as a part of its line of road. During the year 1908, the Keystone Mining & Manufacturing Company was operating a coal mine in the city of Henderson. This mine was connected with the main and belt lines of appellant’s road by a spur which appellant operated and controlled. During the month of April, 1908, appellee contracted with the Keystone Mining & Manufacturing Company to furnish and deliver to him on the spur track at its mine 20,000 tons of coal. After making this contract, he contracted with various industrial plants having spur connections with the line of appellant company to deliver to them at their plants in carload lots at a stipulated price, a large quantity of coal. On July 1, 1908, he applied to appellant company to furnish him cars at the Keystone Company’s mine for the purpose of loading and hauling the coal to the industrial plants and proposed to pay for the service $4 per car, or at the rate of about ten cents per ton. Appellant refused to furnish any cars for this service until July 13, 1908, when it notified Higdon that it would furnish the cars and perform the service at 50 cents per ton. Appellee refused to accept the service at that price. On August 13, 1908, appellant informed him that it would not furnish cars for this service at any price. Thereupon appellee brought this action against appellant to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of appellant’s failure to furnish him the service at the price of $4 per car. The case was transferred to equity, and on final hearing, appellee’s petition was dismissed. ' On appeal to this court, the judgment was reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial consistent Avith the opinion. Crescent Coal Co. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 143 Ky., 73.

On that appeal it appeared that appellant, in its [323]*323printed and published rates, rules and regulations governing the handling of cars in the city of Henderson, had promulgated the following:.

“The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company does not engage in the business of local switching between switches, tracks, warehouses, or industries in the Henderson. Kentucky, terminals; but where any such service is performed as an accommodation, a charge of $2 a ear, plus $2 for car rental, shall be assessed.”

It was the contention of the railroad company on that appeal: (1) That appellee’s cause of action was not determinable independently of a decision of the railroad commission adverse to the railroad company. (2) That the service demanded of the railroad company was not such a service as the law or public policy required it as a common carrier to perform, nor was it such a service that it engaged in or professed to engage in. (3) That the hauling of grain and milling products between mills, and elevators at Henderson was entirely different from the intra-urban transportation which appellee sought to require the railroad company to engage in. (4) That the railroad company published no tariff rate for intraurban transportation at Henderson, that the tariff provisions relied on by the plaintiff applied exclusively to switching services, and the service demanded by the plaintiff was a transportation service in that the coal was mined at one point in Henderson station, and was to be transported from that point to another point in the same station. (5) That even if the railroad company did haul grain and milling products at the rate of $4 per car, it was not required by section 215 of the Constitution of Kentucky to haul coal at the same rate.

In holding these contentions of the railroad company without merit, the court, in its former opinion, laid down the following rules:

(1) In the discharge of its duties to the public as a common carrier, a railroad must use for the public convenience all the tracks set apart by it for the transportation of freight, and treat without favor or discrimination all persons offering to it freight for carriage.

(2) A common carrier may hold itself out to the public as being a carrier of certain articles; and if it is only engaged in the carriage' of the specified articles, it is not under any obligation to carry other things.

[324]*324(3) No length of time or manner of treatment or habit of dealing’ will discharge a common carrier when requested from the obligation to furnish to the public the service it is engaged in performing.

(4) A railroad company may for its convenience in the handling, storing and distribution of its cars and freight, have yard facilities, including switches, spurs and side tracks, and it will not be obliged as a common carrier to transport from one point to another in such yards freight for the convenience of shippers.

(5) A railroad company owes to establishments connected with its line of road by spur tracks the same duty that it does to establishments situated immediately upon its main line of road. It is under the same obligation to furnish facilities for the transportation to one as it is to the other. It must serve all alike.

(6) A railroad cannot arbitrarily and without any relation to the use to which it is put, designate a part of its track or system as yards or switching limits, and assert that it owes no duty as a carrier in this district except such as it may choose to assume. It cannot classify or divide its trackage into parts and say that on one part it is a carrier and on another it is not.

(7) When a carrier publishes a rate it will charge for a certain service, it must furnish to all persons demanding this service the same rate.

(8) If a carrier has no established rate that covers the service requested, it must fix a reasonable rate for such service.

(9) A carrier has a right to classify freight, and make a reasonable difference in its charges for different kinds of freight.

(10) A person sustaining loss by the failure of a carrier to transport freight tendered to it at its stipulated rate may recover any amount lost to him on account of contracts made on the faith of this rate.

In remanding the case, the court held that on the contract made in April appellee was entitled to recover the difference between what it cost him to fill the contracts he had made, whether before- or after July 1, 1908, with industries having separate connections, and that he could have filled with coal from the Keystone mine between July 1, 1908, and July 1, 1909, and what it would have cost him to fill these contracts if he had obtained the coal from this mine. The court further held that [325]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 26, 149 Ky. 321, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-higdon-kyctapp-1912.