Martin-Howe Coal Co. v. Illinois Central Railroad

142 Ill. App. 80, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 147
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 6, 1908
DocketGen. No. 13,870
StatusPublished

This text of 142 Ill. App. 80 (Martin-Howe Coal Co. v. Illinois Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin-Howe Coal Co. v. Illinois Central Railroad, 142 Ill. App. 80, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 147 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Martin-Howe Goal Company, a corporation, in a trial without a jury, secured a judgment against the Illinois Central Bailroad Company in the Municipal Court of Chicago on July 20, 1907, for $141.20 and costs. To reverse this judgment and to secure one for $14.59 in its favor on a claim of set-off filed by it in the suit, the Illinois Central Bailroad Company has sued out a writ of error from this court.

The facts involved in the ease are these: The Martin-Howe Coal Company is an Illinois corporation for mining and selling coal. In the winter of 1906-07 it was shipping and selling coal throughout the Northwest. It was the custom of the Company to ship coal from Chicago to the order of itself at some distributing point in the Northwest, like Peoria, Dubuque or St. Paul, and while the coal was en route, if orders were received from customers at places to which it could he more or less conveniently diverted, the Coal Company would order the Bailroad Company which was carrying it so to divert it to the new or, as they called it, “final” destination.

In January, 1907 (about .January 1st), the Martin-Howe Coal Company was the owner of fifty-six and three-quarters tons of Hocking Valley coal, which cost it $3.20 a ton at Blue Island, near Chicago, on the Chicago Junction Bailway, which answered for f. o. b. cars, Chicago, there being a transfer point there. The coal came from the east in open cars, but was by the Coal Company loaded into box cars of the Illinois Central Bailroad Company at Blue Island and consigned by the Coal Company to its own order at Dubuque.

It is not the custom to issue bills of lading on coal cars, and there were none issued in this case. The custom is to issue an expense bill at destination and collect charges.

These box cars of coal were taken by the Illinois Central Bailroad from the tracks of the Junction Bail-way and carried to Dubuque. They were cars Nos. 40096 and 36551.

On January 11, 1907, a day or two before the cars arrived at Dubuque, however, the Coal Company having sold the coal to the Hawkeye Elevator Company of Aberdeen, South Dakota, for four dollars per ton plus the freight from Chicago to Aberdeen, to be paid upon delivery of the coal at Aberdeen to said Hawkeye Elevator Company, in apparent pursuance of its custom before alluded to, sent an order by mail to the agent of the Illinois Central Bailroad Company at Dubuque, as follows:

“Please deliver the following cars to Hawkeye Elev. Co.,
Initials. Car No.
Aberdeen, S. D. I. C. 40096 36551
Via M. & St. L. B. B.
Martin-Howe Coal Co.”

About four months before this time, on September 4, 1906, the Illinois Central Bailroad Company, in consequence of a shortage of cars, which was general in the Northwest, had issued the following announcement, of which the manager or employe representing tho Coal Company in this matter had notice in January, 1907, at the time of these transactions:

“Illinois Central Bailroad Company.
Office of Coal Traffic Manager.
Chicago, September 4, 1906.
To all concerned:
Effective Saturday, September 15th, Illinois Central box and coal cars cannot be loaded or reconsigned to points on foreign roads except when for switch movement at junction points. All coal loaded on and after that date, and all coal at junction points for which reconsigning orders have not been given, will be subject to the above. Operators having orders for coal to points on foreign roads should order foreign cars through the local agents at the mines. Every possible effort will be made to secure foreign equipment for such loading.
E. H. Harwood,
Coal Traffic Manager.”

On January 16, 1907, Mr. Harwood wrote the Martin-Howe Coal Co. that the agent of the Illinois Central Bailroad Company had received the reconsigning order above set out, but that the Bailroad Company could not “see their way clear to allow their cars to be reconsigned from Dubuque to Aberdeen, owing to shortage of cars on their line.” He added: “Please see if you cannot dispose of these cars at some point on our line.”

January 17, 1907, the Coal Company replied that they had no other orders to give. “Having,” they say, “sold the coal at Aberdeen when the market was about 50 cents a ton higher than it is today, we respectfully request that you strain a point and act on the orders we have given. In this connection we will advise you that these two cars were loaded in Chicago here on the Junction, and it would have suited our convenience to have sent these cars out from Chicago over other roads, but we were anxious to live up to your rules and were under the impression that you would allow your cars to go to M. & St. L. points.”

On January 26,1907, the Bailroad Company advised the Coal Company that the cars loaded with coal consigned to the Coal Company were at Dubuque for disposition, and requested the Coal Company “to take this matter up and arrange to furnish our agent at Dubuque with immediate orders disposing of the cars. If you are unable to do this, please advise and we will dispose of the cars.”

To this letter the Coal Company replied, under date of January 28th, in which they say: “We have given you the disposition of this coal almost two weeks ago,”' and that “if the coal is not forwarded as per our orders, we will render a bill for same to the Illinois Central Bailroad.”

To this again, the Bailroad Company replied on January 29, 1907, advising the Coal Company that the cars could not be reconsigned to Aberdeen, and that it would be necessary for the Coal Company to furnish a disposition for the cars to some point on the line of the Illinois Central Boad.

On February 7th, the Bailroad Company requested advice in writing if the Coal Company could not dispose of the cars at a point on the Illinois Central Line, “in order,” they say, “that we may dispose of the cars.”

February 9th, the Coal Company wrote to the Bail-road Company that since the latter had refused to act upon their orders they enclosed a bill to the Bailroad Company for the coal and looked to them for payment.

On February 11th, the Bailroad Company wrote to the Coal Company, referring to the restrictions on the use of their cars since September 15, 1906, stating that they could not make an exception in the present case, and permit the cars to run to Aberdeen, S. D.

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142 Ill. App. 80, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-howe-coal-co-v-illinois-central-railroad-illappct-1908.