Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. West Coast Naval Stores Co.

198 U.S. 483, 25 S. Ct. 745, 49 L. Ed. 1135, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1081
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 29, 1905
Docket225
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 198 U.S. 483 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. West Coast Naval Stores Co.) 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
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. West Coast Naval Stores Co., 198 U.S. 483, 25 S. Ct. 745, 49 L. Ed. 1135, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1081 (1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Peckham,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

When this case was first before the Circuit Court of Appeals it was stated in the opinion which was then delivered that the case showed that the railroad company was in possession of a large wharf, built at its own expense, on the extension of a public street in the city of Pensacola into the' deep waters of the harbor of the city.” On looking at the record before us we find in the pleadings no averment that the wharf in question was in fact built as such an extension. The statement of facts preceding the,opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals-shows, however, that there were replications filed to the various pleas, one of which replications contained the averment that the wharf .was an extension of a street of the city of Pensacola into the bay of Pensacola for a distance of more than five hundred yards, all within the-limits of the city of Pensacola,.and maintained by the defendant by authority of the city. Hence the statement in the opinion was perfectly *493 correct. Subsequently to the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals, and after the case was remanded to the Circuit Court, it appears by the record before us that the, defendant withdrew all its former pleas and filed the single plea set forth in the foregoing statement of facts. To this plea no replication was filed. Counsel for the plaintiff admits that neither the declaration nor the plea contains any averment that the wharf in question was an extension of a public street. If we assume, what is without doubt the fact, that the wharf was built at the foot of a public street in the city of Pensacola and was carried out into the deep water of the bay some hundreds of yards, we must also assume the fact mentioned in the brief of the defendant, and substantially set forth in the former replication, that the building and maintaining of the wharf were authorized by authority from the city of Pensacola and also from the State of Florida. These facts will therefore be taken as admitted, in order that the case may be discussed upon the facts as they really exist.

Counsel for plaintiff now asserts, and we assume, that the gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint is, not that the defendant would not transport plaintiff’s goods, or any part of them, on defendant’s lines, from the wharf in question, “but only that defendant would not permit plaintiff’s goods to be at, from or by means of defendant’s wharf loaded upon, or delivered to, the said vessels,” with the managers of which plaintiff had contracted to have its goods transported to other ports. This means of transportation, by such vessels as plaintiff should choose, is asserted by it as a right, because it contends that the, wharf of defendant, under the averment to that effect in the declaration and not denied, in terms, in the plea, taken in connection with the facts stated in such plea, was a public wharf, or that, at least, the defendant had devoted it to a public use. The defendant in its plea sets up facts which it avers show that the wharf was not a public one. The plaintiff insists that the plea shows that the defendant built and used the wharf itself and permitted a large part of the public to *494 use it, including, at-any rate, those who were engaged m traffic handled by vessels belonging to regular lines running in connection with the defendant, and also including vessels belonging or consigned to the Gulf Transit .Company, an agent of defendant, together, with' those who were using the. wharf under some special, arrangements, between them and the defendant. All this, the plaintiff contends,'amounted to making the wharf a public one, or at least that it thereby became a facility, to the use of which the public as a public had a right on payment of reasonable compensation. If plaintiff chose to employ,, for .the further transportation of its goods, the vessels with the managers of which the defendant had some business arrangement or contract, it is not denied that the defendant would and did permit, such transportation. In this respect there is no allegation mat the plaintiff did not have equal facilities with all other shippers. Defendant's plea avers that it did give to plaintiff the same facilities' for shipping its goods over défendant’s wharf that it gave to any, or all shippers. In brief, The fact seems To be that the only complaint of the plaintiff is that defendant will not permit competing vessels to make use of its wharf ‘for the purpose of such competition.

Wé do not see that the fact that the wharf was erected under authority from the city, at the. foot of a public, street of the city, makes any-material difference in the character of the wharf or that the right of plaintiff to select its own vessels to continue from that wharf the transportation of its goods is on that ground enhanced, or the right of defendant to control the wharf for its own use when erected is thereby diminished. The right to erect the wharf was granted by the proper authorities, and so far as the record shows, it was granted without imposing any conditions as to its use by tlie public. We think the plaintiff had no right of access to the wharf founded simply upon the fact that it was. erected under proper aüthority, in the harbor of Pensacola and at the foot of one of the public streets, oi that city. The question of the rights of plaintiff must really *495 turn upon the character of the use of the wharf, whether it is public or private.

The argument upon the part of plaintiff is in substance this: True, defendant has erected a wharf, which is not in fact intended or used as the terminus of its road at Pensacola, adequate yards and depots having been furnished by the defendant for all goods and passengers destined to Pensacola only; but the wharf has been erected to enable defendant to more conveniently carry out contracts for transportation beyond its own line, which it was not compelled to make, and which it could carry out by such agencies as it chose; but the plaintiff, having goods destined for points outside of Florida, insists upon its right to use the road of defendant, not to carry these goods to Pensacola, but to defendant’s wharf, so that plaintiff may there transfer them into vessels which it has arranged to take them; in order to do this it is necessary that defendant be compelled to share its possession of its own wharf, with the managers of these other vessels; for this possession plaintiff is prepared to make reasonable compensation. This right on the part of the plaintiff is urged as the result of the action of defendant in permitting the use of the wharf as stated in the plea. By such use it is contended that the defendant in effect dedicated the wharf to the public, or at least has granted to the public an interest in the use of the wharf.

We are of opinion that the wharf was not a public one, but that it was a mere facility, erected by and belonging to defendant, and used by it, in connection with that part of its road forming an extension from its regular depot and yards in Pensacola, to the wharf, for the purpose of more conveniently procuring the transportation of goods beyond its own line, and that defendant need not share such facility .with the public or with any carriers other than those it chose for the purpose of effecting such further transportation.

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Bluebook (online)
198 U.S. 483, 25 S. Ct. 745, 49 L. Ed. 1135, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-west-coast-naval-stores-co-scotus-1905.