Mefford v. Wilson Concrete Company

77 N.W.2d 895, 163 Neb. 137, 1956 Neb. LEXIS 115
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1956
Docket33925
StatusPublished

This text of 77 N.W.2d 895 (Mefford v. Wilson Concrete Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mefford v. Wilson Concrete Company, 77 N.W.2d 895, 163 Neb. 137, 1956 Neb. LEXIS 115 (Neb. 1956).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

This is an action in two causes of action by A. C. Mefford, plaintiff and appellee, against Wilson Concrete Company, defendant and appellant. The first cause of action is to recover the difference between what the plaintiff received as a motor carrier holding a certificate as a common carrier for the transportation of sand and gravel from a pit located on the Platte River about two miles south and one-fourth mile east of Richfield, Nebraska, to the plant of the defendant about one mile south of Omaha, Nebraska, near U. S. Highway No. 75, and what he contends he was entitled to receive.

The second cause of action involves a like claim in favor of one John Sorensen which was assigned by Sorensen to the plaintiff. The two causes of action do not require further separate consideration in this opinion.

A jury was waived and the case was tried to the court. At the conclusion of the trial a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff on the two causes of action for $1,567.73. Thereafter the defendant filed a motion for new trial which was overruled. The plaintiff also filed *139 a motion for new trial which was likewise overruled. From the judgment and the order overruling the motion for new trial the defendant has appealed. The plaintiff cross-appealed.

The contention of the plaintiff as substantially declared by his petition and by computation is that from August 8, 1953, to December 28, 1953, as a common carrier, he transported sand and gravel between the pit described and the plant of the defendant in the amount of 4,277 yards for which he received from the defendant $2,780.66, the rate therefor being 65 cents a yard; that from January 1, 1954, to January 8, 1954, he transported 110 yards of sand and gravel for which he received $81.49, the rate therefor being 74 cents a yard; and that from October 25, 1953, to December 19, 1953, Sorensen, likewise a common carrier, transported sand and gravel between the two points in the amount of 2,188 yards for which he received $1,619.12, which was at the rate of 74 cents a yard. As to each cause of action the plaintiff contends that the proper tariff as fixed by the Nebraska State Railway Commission was 92 cents a yard instead of the rates paid. The difference as to the first cause of action is $1,173.89 and as to the second $393.84 or a total of $1,567.73. The judgment was for this amount.

The defendant has not disputed the amount of sand and gravel transported or the amount or rate of payment made therefor. The sole question in dispute when the case was presented to the district court was that of whether under the Nebraska State Railway Commission tariff the rates paid or the 92 cent rate was applicable.

In this cotut however a new question has been presented by the defendant. The defendant contends here that the district court had, and this court has, no jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action.

The theory advanced is that under law the fixation, classification, - regulation, and interpretation of intrastate freight and passenger tariffs is a function of the Nebraska State Railway Commission and since involved *140 here is a dispute over tariffs resort may be had only to the commission for the resolution of the dispute. In support of the contention the defendant cites sections 75-208, 75-401, and 75-402, R. R. S. 1943.

Section 75-208, R. R. S. 1943, grants broad regulatory power, but it is to be observed that nothing appears directly or by implication to permit action to be taken against anyone not acting in the capacity of a carrier. The provision does not directly or by implication permit or allow a carrier to institute action before the commission against a shipper for the purpose of determining a dispute concerning rates.

In Central Bridge & Construction Co. v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co., 129 Neb. 726, 262 N. W. 852, this court upheld the right of a shipper to seek and obtain relief with reference to tariffs fixed by the commission. This case does not, and no other case in this state has been found which does permit or require a carrier to bring before the commission a shipper to have determined a disputed tariff.

Sections 75-401 and 75-402, R. R. S. 1943, attribute broad powers to the commission but among these is not contained the bringing of shippers before it for the purpose of adjudicating rate disputes.

The contention that the court does not have jurisdiction over the subject matter is without merit. This conclusion makes necessary a determination of the case upon the merits to the extent they are presented by the other assignments of error. By the assignments as a whole the defendant contends substantially that factually and legally there is no support for the judgment rendered.

This contention requires only the ascertainment, interpretation, and application of the tariff established for the transportation of sand and gravel between the points involved. There is no dispute as to the origin or destination of shipments, the quantity shipped, or the rate paid by the shipper.

The defendant contends that Item 6 (b) of Supplement *141 No. 2 to Official Highway Builders and General Contractors Tariff No. 4 is applicable. This item exacts a charge of 53 cents a ton or, converted to a yardage basis, a charge of 74 cents a yard. This rate was paid by the defendant for 110 yards of the amount involved in the first cause of action. The remainder of the yardage involved in this cause of action or 4,277 yards was paid for at the rate of 65 cents. The rate of 74 cents was paid for the yardage involved in the second cause of action. On the other hand the plaintiff contends that the schedule of yardage and mileage rates contained in Item 7 is applicable. The appropriate charge under this item would be 92 cents a yard. It was this rate that the district court accepted and adopted as the basis of the judgment rendered.

The determination must turn in the main upon the meaning of the words “from pits located on the Platte River south of Omaha.”

The plaintiff contends that these words limit the point of origin for the purposes of Item 6 to pits directly south of Omaha and not to any pits west of a line directly south from the westernmost limits of the city of Omaha, which the parties agree was at the time Seventy-second Street. The pit from which these shipments came was west of such a line. The distance is not authentically shown but it cannot be great since the entire distance of the haul was 13 miles.

The defendant substantially contends that the words do not so limit the point of origin but that they apply to pits on the Platte River from which shipments come into Omaha from the south.

The conclusion reached herein is that the contention of the defendant must be accepted and that of the plaintiff must be rejected.

In the first place, the contention of the defendant is reasonable. If the commission had intended to limit the application in the manner contended for by the *142 plaintiff it could so easily have said so. This it failed to do.

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77 N.W.2d 895, 163 Neb. 137, 1956 Neb. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mefford-v-wilson-concrete-company-neb-1956.