Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Knox Homes Corp.

343 F.2d 887
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 1965
DocketNo. 21507
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 343 F.2d 887 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Knox Homes Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 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. Knox Homes Corp., 343 F.2d 887 (5th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.

Immediately involved here is the question whether the District Court properly directed a verdict for the Shipper1 and against the Carrier2 in the Carrier’s claim for undercharges. The underlying issue is whether, under the applicable tariff, the Shipper was entitled to substitute carloads of Georgia-South Carolina lumber for the West Coast shipments of fir admittedly entitled to Transit privileges. Upon the completion of the Carrier’s evidence before a jury whose presence seemed on all hands to have been a superfluous affectation, the Shipper moved for a directed verdict, and the Carrier followed suit, each party proceeding on the assumption that in the final analysis it was a question of law for the Court. The Trial Court granted the motion of the Shipper on two grounds. The first was on the construction of the Tariff. It seems to have- run on a double track, either one of which was sufficient: (a) the tariff justified the Shipper’s practice, or (b) if it did not, then the tariff was so ambiguous that the Shipper was entitled to the construction most favorable to it. The second ground was that the Carrier by identified Carrier records of waybills, freight bills, and the like had not sufficiently established the correct weight of the shipments involved to make out a prima facie case. We reverse the judgment in part and in effect render that portion for the ' Carrier. But as to the more troublesome question of tariff construction, we vacate the judgment and return that aspect to the District Court for' initial determination by the Interstate Commerce Commission under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction.

The Transit Point is the Shipper’s plant at Thomson, Georgia, situated on the Georgia Railroad. The initial inbound-transit shipments came from the West Coast presumably under Transit Rates and billing for ultimate delivery to the Miami, Florida area. There is no question that the West Coast shipments fully qualified for the Transit Privileges if the lumber (or its products) after being held at the Transit Point had moved on to ultimate Destination Points. The problem arises, however, because the West Coast lumber did not move on. What the Shipper did was to substitute 119 cars of Georgia-South Carolina lumber. Of these shipments 107 cars moved via rail to Thomson, Georgia, from various points of origin,3 and the remaining 12 cars moved to Thomson from the mills 4 by motor truck.

There is agreement that substitution is permitted. The dispute revolves around the tariff restrictions on substitution, what it is that makes a shipment [890]*890eligible either as a substitute or to be substituted for, and the tariff consequences, rate adjustments, etc. to make a shipment partially eligible for Transit Privileges.5

Although, as a sort of reflex to the proposition that merely because Judges can understand the operation of a device does not necessarily establish lack of invention, Hughes Tool Co. v. Varel Mfg. Co., 5 Cir., 1964, 336 F.2d 61, 63, n. 8, citing, Florence-Mayo Nuway Co. v. Hardy, 4 Cir., 1948, 168 F.2d 778, 781, we run a considerable risk that simplicity may sacrifice accuracy, we think it aids such understanding as is within our competence to consider the tariff broadly in a general way apart from each of the particular, and frequently confusing, parts. As thus sublimated, the tariff 6 provides substantially the following. Transit privileges7 which consist of the forwarding to a specified Transit Point of carload shipments of lumber and forest products (including veneer, plywood and built-up wood) for storage, dressing, resawing, drying, sorting, inspection or conversion into specified wood products, and the forwarding of carload shipments to a subsequent and farther destination will be permitted8 at the specified Transit Points9 for such lumber originating at the specified Origin Territory Points10 [891]*891and reshipped to specified Destination Territory Points.11 On shipments from Origin Points not within specified Origin Territory,12 Transit may be granted on the basis of the local rate to the nearest Point within the specified Origin Territory plus the rate from such Transit Point to Destination.13 Although a movement into, and á subsequent movement out of, the Transit Point is required to permit these special rates,14 it is not necessary to preserve the identity of the lumber and substitution is permitted under the tariff rules.15 The tariff rules restrict substitution to lumber entitled to transit privileges.16

The Carrier’s case is simple, even though the simplicity is beguiling. Almost as though it were operated by automatic block signals to open and close specific tariff subdivisions, the contention runs this way. Each of the shipments began at a place, such as Four Holes, South Carolina,17 which was not in Origin Territory.18 Consequently, such shipment was “not entitled to Transit privileges.”19 That being so, the carload of lumber could not be substituted for a carload of West Coast lumber previously received by the Shipper at the Transit Point (Thomson, Georgia). However, the shipment is not perpetually banished beyond the pale of Transit Privilege eligibility. It may acquire at least limited eligibility if — but only if — ■ an additional rate is paid as a combination of the local rate from the point of shipment to the nearest place on the route which is within the specified Origin Territory,20 plus the rate authorized “from such transit origin” to destination.21 Indeed, the suit was for this difference between the through-transit rate as actually paid by the Shipper and the [892]*892higher combination rate for the two short hauls required under Item 1(b).22

But we do not think it is that simple. And, contrary to the importunities of the Shipper, “we must resist the temptation, to take the ambiguity route as an easy and quicker way out” 23 — and for the Shipper the cheaper way out.24

Especially is this true when the claim of ambiguity rests essentially on the dubious proposition that from the strange terminology used, the traditional, highly sectionalized structure of the tariff, the result, resembling a mixture of a section of the Internal Revenue Code and a patent claim, Thermo King Corp. v. White’s Trucking Service, Inc., 5 Cir., 1961, 292 F.2d 668, 675 n. 9, is simply impossible to understand. It rests on the doubtful basis that that which is not crystal clear to the judicial mind must perforce be ambiguous. This claims too much for the law, and certainly for Judges as its votaries. It ignores, too, the law’s traditional approach which requires, both for the ambiguous and the unambiguous writing, that one seeking to ascertain the meaning must place himself as near as possible in the position of the parties.25 And the record in our case is way too sketchy both in testimony as to railroad practices and as to the provisions of the tariffs for us — as non-railroading Judges — to divine with safety what was really meant. We must steel ourselves against easy interpretations which make sense.

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343 F.2d 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-knox-homes-corp-ca5-1965.