Mobile & Ohio Railroad v. Southern Saw Mill Co.

251 S.W. 434, 212 Mo. App. 117, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 89
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 434 (Mobile & Ohio Railroad v. Southern Saw Mill Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobile & Ohio Railroad v. Southern Saw Mill Co., 251 S.W. 434, 212 Mo. App. 117, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 89 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*124 DAUES, J.

Plaintiff sues to recover certain undercharges amounting to $843 on ninety-four shipments of lumber, from points in the State of Louisiana to1 Cairo, Illinois. The cause was tried by the court, a jury having been waived, and resulted in a judgment in favor of defendant, from which plaintiff appeals.

No' point is, made on the pleadings and little or no dispute arises on the facts. The undercharges claimed amount to' two cents per hundredweight on the ninety-four carloads of cypress lumber; the shipments were made between March 1, 1915, and August 31, 1915, inclusive. "The route was over, the Louisiana Railway & Navigation Company, the initial line, to New Orleans, Louisiant; the New Orleans & Northeastern Railway Company from New Orleans to Meridian, Mississippi, and the plaintiff railroad company, the delivering line, from Meridian to the destination point, Cairo, Illinois. *125 The defendant company was both consignor and consignee. At the time the shipments were made, plaintiff and defendant’s agent, it appears, supposed that fourteen cents per hundredweight was the legal rate. Bills were computed upon that rate and were paid upon that basis. Plaintiff afterwards made a demand for an alleged undercharge, claiming that a mistake had been made in applying a rate of fourteen cents instead of a sixteen cent rate on said shipments, and this suit is for the difference between those rates, or for two cents per hundredweight on said shipments.

The record discloses that Joint Freight Tariff No. 61G-B; I. C. C. 2679, effective September 19, 191G, established a rate of fourteen cents per hundredweight on cypress lumber over this route. By supplement to said tariff, effective May 1, 1911, provision was again made for fourteen cents, and by Supplement No. 18, item No. 3G6-C, to said tariff, purporting to become effective January 1, 1913, this rate of fourteen cents was advanced to sixteen cents. The Interstate Commerce Commission suspended this advance in rates from time to time, the last suspension terminating on February 1, 1915. This suspension by the Interstate Commerce Commission was for the purpose of investigating the reasonableness of said proposed advance in rates. On January 12, 1915, the Commerce Commission made its finding’s; of fact and rendered its decision in the case. The decision involves many items and leaves it a debatable question whether the proposed sixteen-cent rate on cypress lumber was held to be unreasonable. The order was to the effect that the carriers were to cancel on or before February 23, 1915, such rates as were thus found to be unreasonable. We need not here analyze the opinion to determine whether the item covering cypress lumber was or was not included as being unreasonable. The decision is termed Investigaion and Suspension Docket No. 184, submitted October 21, 1914, decided January 12,1915. Under this order the carriers were to file a new tariff upon five days’ filing *126 and posting of rates instead of thirty days as required by law in the absence of an order of the Commission.

On January 26,1915, the carriers filed Freight Tariff No. 610-C, I. C. C. 2746. This tariff applied a rate of fourteen cents on cypress lumber and was to become effective March 1, 1915. However, prior to said effective date (March 1, 1915) the carriers filed Supplement No. 1 February 23,1915, which was to become retroactively effective February 1, 1915. In this supplement the rate on cypress; lumber was restated to be sixteen cents. This new rate of sixteen cents was termed a “reissue,” and purported to-be issued “under the authority of the Interstate Commerce Commission’s order of January 12, 1915, in the above-mentioned docket.” Thereafter tariff Supplement No. 5 was filed to become effective May 25,1915, which also promulgated a sixteen-cent rate as a “reissue” of the rate of sixteen cents. The rate in this supplement on cypress lumber to Cairo was made effective retroactively from February 1,1915.

The plaintiff was the delivering line and did not file or put into effect the said sixteen-cent rate on cypress lumber. The plaintiff seeks to collect the freight as per schedule of rates filed by the initial carrier covering the shipments. The reason given by plaintiff that the sixteen-cent rate was not" originally charged, as already indicated, is that a clerk of the plaintiff made the mistake, and that the auditor’s office afterwards discovered that the amount collected did not correspond to the tariff rate on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission. Plaintiff then demanded the payment on the rate on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission. After the dispute arose between the railroad and the shipper as to whether fourteen cents or sixteen cents was the legal rate, plaintiff wrote to the Interstate Commerce Commission asking- advice on the subject, and this letter was replied to by the secretary of the Commission, in which letter the secretary stated that the sixteen-cent rate applied to these shipments. ' This correspondence was finally excluded by the *127 trial court, and this ruling forms the ground of one of appellant’s assignments of error.

Appellant urges fourteen assignments of error for our consideration. However, they present hut two questions: First, did the court err in ruling and deciding that the order of the Interstate Commerce Commission (Investigation and Suspension Docket No. 184) annulled the rate of sixteen cents on cypress lumber filed by the initial carriers subsequent to said order of the Commission; and, second, did the court err in excluding plaintiff’s exhibits, being correspondence between plaintiff’s general freight agent and the secretary of the Commission with reference to the question of the proper and legal rate? All other assignments will come within a discussion of the above.

The shipment was interstate, and not only is the Interstate Commerce Commission the proper tribunal to determine the reasonableness of such rates, but we must look to the decisions and statutes of the United States to control our views wherever we find expression or light from that source.

We begin with the thoroughly settled rule that the legal rate is the -filed rate, and it is the duty of the carrier to charge and collect the rate precisely as same is contained in the tariffs on file with the Interstate Comm orce Commission. And this is so even' though such rate be excessive, unreasonable and unlawful. [Pittsburg v. Fink, 250 U. S. 577; L. & N. Railroad Co. v. Maxwell, 237 U. S. 94; Dayton Coal Co. v. C. N. & T. P. Railroad Co., 239 U. S. 446; Pennsylvania R. R. Co. v. International Coal Mining Co., 230 U. S. 185; Armour Packing Co. v. U. S., 209 U. S. 56; Crescent v. Clear R. R. Co., 24 I. C. C. 149; Mobile & Ohio R. R. Co. v. Laclede Lumber Co., 202 Mo. App. 630, 216 S. W. 798; Cicardi Bros. v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co., 201 Mo. App. 609, 213 S. W. 531; Bush v. Driller Co., 199 Mo. App. 152, 199 S. W. 597.]

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 434, 212 Mo. App. 117, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-ohio-railroad-v-southern-saw-mill-co-moctapp-1923.