Moline Consumers Co. v. Illinois Commerce Commission Ex Rel. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

187 N.E. 161, 353 Ill. 119
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1933
DocketNo. 21597. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 187 N.E. 161 (Moline Consumers Co. v. Illinois Commerce Commission Ex Rel. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moline Consumers Co. v. Illinois Commerce Commission Ex Rel. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 187 N.E. 161, 353 Ill. 119 (Ill. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the Moline Consumers Company from a judgment of the circuit court of LaSalle county, confirming an order of the Illinois Commerce Commission denying the prayer of a complaint filed before it by appellant.

On April 29, 1929, appellant filed a complaint before, the commission alleging that a rate of fifty cents a ton for the transportation of sand and gravel from its plant to points within the switching district of Ottawa, Illinois, as, published and charged by the Illinois Traction, Inc., and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, was unjust, excessive, unreasonable and unduly prejudicial, in violation of sections 32 and 38 of the act concerning public utilities, and was also unlawful, in violation of section 40 of that act. The complaint was later amended by making the Chicago and Illinois Valley Railroad Company, the successor of Illinois Traction, Inc., a party defendant,' herein referred to as the traction company. The prayer of the complaint was for the establishment of a just, reasonable and lawful rate in place of the one complained of, and for reparation for the unlawful transportation charges collected under the alleged unjust and unlawful rate. ' An answer in the nature of a general denial was filed by the - Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, herein called the Burlington. After a hearing the commission entered its order denying the prayer of the complaint, and the order, on appeal, was confirmed by the circuit court.

Appellant is engaged in the mining and production of sand and gravel and the selling and shipping thereof to various places in this State. Its plant and pit are located on a line of the traction company at a point about five miles from the railroad station of Ottawa and about three and two-tenths miles from Siberling switch, where the traction company has interchange facilities with the Burlington and the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company, which will be designated as the Rock Island. The traction company does not operate cars within the city limits of Ottawa, having no franchise from the city to do so. While in the complaint it is alleged that the plant and pit of appellant are a short distance outside the defined limits of the Ottawa switching district, the commission found, and appellant in its brief states, that its plant and pit were within that switching district when the complaint was filed. The rate complained of is a joint through rate of fifty cents a ton for transportation of sand and gravel in carload lots of fifty tons to the car-load ($25 a car-load) from the plant and pit of appellant by the traction company to Siberling switch and from that switch by the Burlington to points within the Ottawa switching district.

The evidence shows that the published rate for transportation of sand and gravel from the plant and pit of appellant to Siberling switch is $6.30 a car-load, and that the published rate of the Burlington for transportation from that switch to any point also within that district is thirty-eight cents a ton (or $19 a car-load) on traffic originating within the Ottawa switching district, and twenty-five cents a ton (or $12.50 a car-load) on traffic from without that switching district. It is also shown by the evidence that the Burlington published rates of switching charges between certain named firms or plants, tweny-nine in number, within the Ottawa switching district and the Rock Island; that the switching rate so published to or from twenty-four of these firms or plants is $2.70 a car on traffic to or from points on the Rock Island outside the switching district and $3.15 a car on traffic moving between two points within the switching district. The commission found, and the evidence showed, that these rates last mentioned were reciprocal switching rates made by the Burlington in connection with the Rock Island and that they did not reflect the actual cost of the service performed.

The first contention of appellant is that the order of the commission is not responsive to the issues presented to the commission in two respects: First, because the commission states in the order that appellant complained of rates which were not, in fact, complained of at all; and second, because the commission in the order does not make a finding on the facts which appellant contends show the fifty-cent rate (a through rate) to be greater than the aggregate of intermediate rates and therefore in violation of section 40 of the act. In the first paragraph of its order the commission correctly states that it is alleged in appellant’s complaint that the rate applicable from its plant and pit for the transportation of sand and gravel in car-load lots to the station of Ottawa and industries located within the switching district thereof on the Burlington is unreasonable, unduly prejudicial and unlawful. Later paragraphs of the order, referred to by appellant as showing that the order is not responsive to the issues before it, are:

“Complainant attacks the switching charge of the traction company of $6.30 per car on sand and gravel which applies on shipments originating on its line and interchanged at Siberling switch with the Burlington. This charge is absorbed, by the Burlington on shipments destined to points on its line on which it receives a road haul. The Burlington also publishes a rate of twenty-five cents per ton from its point of connection with the traction company on traffic originating outside of the Ottawa switching district destined to points within the Ottawa switching district, and a rate of thirty-eight cents per ton for switching where traffic originates and is destined to points within the limits of the Ottawa switching district.
“The evidence also shows that there exists a joint through rate of fifty cents per ton on sand and gravel based on fifty tons per car, and it is these rates, namely, twenty-five cents, thirty-eight cents, fifty cents and a switching charge of $6.30 per car, which are assailed by the complainant.”

Appellant by its complaint did not “attack” or “assail” or “complain” of the rate of $6.30 per car or of the twenty-five-cent rate or the thirty-eight-cent rate, and, as pointed out by appellant, the commission was in error when it stated that appellant did complain of those rates. Under the complaint filed by appellant the commission could not have entered an order reducing or changing those rates. (Alton and Southern Railroad v. Commerce Com. 316 Ill. 625.) But it does appear from the order that the commission understood that appellant was complaining of the fifty-cent rate, and that it passed upon the complaint as to that rate and found that that rate was not shown to be unjust, unreasonable or unduly prejudicial. When the commission’s order is considered in its entirety it clearly appears that the commission understood that it was the fifty-cent rate which was complained of and that the commission rendered its decision on the complaint made of that rate.

The paragraphs of the order of the commission relating to the allegation that the fifty-cent rate was in violation of section 40 of the act, in that it, a through rate, was greater than the aggregate of the intermediate rates, are as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
187 N.E. 161, 353 Ill. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moline-consumers-co-v-illinois-commerce-commission-ex-rel-chicago-ill-1933.