Lumber Co. v. Railroad

48 S.E. 813, 136 N.C. 479, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 294
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 S.E. 813 (Lumber Co. v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lumber Co. v. Railroad, 48 S.E. 813, 136 N.C. 479, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 294 (N.C. 1904).

Opinions

Clare, C. J.

The gist of this action is for discrimination by the defendant in charging the plaintiff a higher rate on logs to the plaintiff’s mill in Wilmington than was charged others for like service, and to recover the overcharges which had been paid under protest. The point presented is not that the rate, $2.50 per thousand feet in car-load lots charged the plaintiff, is per se unreasonable, but that the rate charged others for the same service for the same distance was $2.10, and that this is a serious discrimination which if continued will result in the crippling or destruction of the plaintiff’s mill and the building up of other mills which are in competition with the plaintiff, for it has in five months amounted to $3,900, for the recovery of which this action is brought.

The Court charged the jury: “If you find that the rate of $2.10 per thousand feet was charged and collected by the [480]*480defendant upon logs shipped over any part of its railroad to a mill or mills at which logs were manufactured into lumber itself reshipped over the railroad of the defendant, or any part of it, and that the reduced rate of $2.10 per thousand feet was given to such mill in consideration of such fact that they would ship the lumber manufactured out of the said logs over the line of the defendant’s road, which said agreement was open to all mills that wished to accept it, then it would not be an unjust or illegal discrimination to charge $2.50 per thousand feet, which it is not contested is a reasonable rate to mills which did not ship their manufactured lumber over the line of the defendant road.”

The proposition herein stated is that a common carrier has a right to charge one person a lower rate of freight than another for shipping the same quantity, the same distance, under the same conditions, provided the shipper give the company a consideration (shipping the manufactured lumber subsequently over its line), which its managers think will make good to it the abatement of rate given to such parties. But if this is equality as to the treasury of the company, it is none the less a discrimination against the plaintiff. It is charged $2.50 while others are charged $2.10 for the same service. It is true if the plaintiff should choose to agree to ship its manufactured lumber out of Wilmington over the defendant’s line it could get the same reduction of fate on its logs into Wilmington. On those conditions it could save itself from being discriminated against. But suppose the plaintiff should wish to sell its lumber in Wilmington, or can ship it at a lower rate by sea, or even by a competing railroad line out of Wilmington, has it not the right to do so ? Should it see fit to exercise that right, has the common carrier the power to place a penalty of a 19 per cent, higher rate on the plaintiff and to charge it $2.50 for [481]*481bringing its logs to Wilmington when it charges others $2.10 for exactly the same service?

The principle involved is a vital one to the public at large, for upon this alleged .right to discriminate by common carriers (exercised either openly or secretly by rebates), nearly all trusts, and especially the Standard Oil Company, have been built up to their present disquieting and menacing predominance, as has been fully shown by the investigation and report of the Industrial Commission and the Interstate Commerce Commission, both appointed by acts of Congress.

Under the same idea that the test was the fact that the railroad company would not lose by the favor (extended in the present case by charging certain shippers $2.10 while charging the plaintiff $2.50), another railroad company charged the Standard Oil Company 10 cents per barrel while charging its competitors 35 cents per barrel, and paying 25 cents of the 35 cents thus collected to the Standard Oil Company. Handy v. Railroad, 31 Fed., 689. The railroad company in that instance must have found its offset, its profit, somewhere or it would not have made that arrangement. But what became of the competitors of the Standard Oil Company?

Here, the railroad company will doubtless make up out of its forced monopoly of shipping out of Wilmington the lumber to be manufactured out of all the logs hauled in by it, the 40 cents which is deducted in favor of those who will give it that monopoly. But why should it discriminate by charging the plaintiff $2.50 instead of $2.10, i. e., charge 19 per cent, higher rates upon logs which when turned into lumber are sold in Wilmington, or shipped by sea, or shipped by a competing route ? It cost no more to bring in the plaintiff’s logs than the logs for whose hauling only $2.10 was charged. The shipment of logs to Wilmington is one transaction; the shipment of lumber out is another. The defend[482]*482ant cannot charge the plaintiff higher on the logs because it will not agree to ship its lumber by the defendant’s line. It is no answer to say that if the plaintiff will come into the defendant’s terms it will get the same discount. The defendant might as well say if you will carry your logs to a saw-mill in which the railroad company is a large owner you will get 19 per cent, reduction in freight on your logs, and there is no discrimination, for the same offer is open to you as to others.

If the plaintiff, like others, was shipping logs to Wilmington with the voluntary intention of shipping by the defendant’s road, say to New York, then certainly there would be no discrimination. But the plaintiff does not wish to ship to New York over the defendant’s line, and the defendant proposes “to put the screws to the plaintiff” and make it do so whether it wishes to do so or not, and if the plaintiff does not do so, the defendant says the plaintiff cannot be treated as well as others as to the rates for hauling its logs, but must pay nearly one-fiftli (19 per cent.) higher rates on its logs. That is the very point at issue. Hauling its logs to Wilmington is the only service the plaintiff seeks at the defendant’s hands. Why should it pay higher for that service than those who agree to carry their logs to the defendant’s mill or to ship out their lumber by the defendant’s road.

Discrimination is a more dangerous power than high rates — if the latter is charged impartially to all. Hence the statutes of Congress and of the State, while leaving the fixing of rates in the hands of commissions, have directly and strictly forbidden, under penalties, any discrimination. Common carriers are fixed with a public use. They exercise a branch of the public franchise. They can condemn rights of way solely because the land “is taken for a public use.” They are subject to governmental supervision and to the reduction or regulation of their charges by the Legislature directly or by [483]*483commissioners appointed by its authority. Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S., 113, and citations to same; 9 Rose’s Notes, 21-55. In all the great countries of the world, except England and this country, the railroads are largely or altogether owned and operated directly by the government, as was formerly the case in North Carolina. In all countries alike it is recognized that it is of vital importance that corporations exercising such public use must be absolutely impartial and equal in their charges for the same service.

All the service the plaintiff asks of the defendant is to haul its logs to its saw-mill in Wilmington. Eor this it charges the plaintiff $2.50; it charges others $2.10, i. e., 19 per cent, higher to the plaintiff than to others for exactly the same service.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Utilities Commission v. Bird Oil Co.
273 S.E.2d 232 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1981)
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78 S.E.2d 290 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1953)
Fletcher Paper Co. v. Detroit & Mackinac Railway Co.
164 N.W. 528 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1917)
Lumber Co. v. Railroad
53 S.E. 823 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 S.E. 813, 136 N.C. 479, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumber-co-v-railroad-nc-1904.