National Dock & Storage Warehouse Co. v. Boston & Maine Railroad

227 Mass. 197
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 227 Mass. 197 (National Dock & Storage Warehouse Co. v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Dock & Storage Warehouse Co. v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 227 Mass. 197 (Mass. 1917).

Opinion

Rugg, C. J.

This is a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the defendant to comply with orders of the public service commission, made upon a petition brought by the present petitioner against the present respondent alleging that discriminatory rates were charged by it against the petitioner. Summarily stated, that contention was based upon absorption by the respondent of transfer charges from the Commonwealth pier, to which the tracks of the respondent do not run, made to it by the [199]*199New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad Company and the Union Freight Railroad, in order to transport freight received at the Commonwealth pier on the water front in Boston to the tracks of the Boston and Maine Railroad, while the respondent refused to absorb the transfer charges made by the Boston and Albany Railroad Company from the petitioner’s wharf and dock to the tracks of the respondent, its tracks not running to the petitioner’s wharf and dock.

The Commonwealth pier has been built within a few years at great expense by the Commonwealth, for the purpose of enlarging the shipping facilities of the port of Boston, and in size, equipment and accommodations for seagoing vessels is at least in some respects by far the finest pier on the harbor front of Boston. It was constructed and managed, so far as concerns this case, by a State board known as the directors of the port of Boston. The petitioner owning a wharf and pier on Boston Harbor, is a competitor with the Commonwealth pier for freight business arriving on foreign steamers at the port of Boston.

After a hearing, the public service commission found: “that the rates on import and export freight destined to or moving from points on the Boston and Maine Railroad in Massachusetts from and to the wharves and docks of the petitioner are unjustly discriminatory as compared with the rates on like traffic between the same Boston and Maine points and the Commonwealth pier.” The commission did not then make further order, but found that the absorption by the respondent of the switching charges between the Commonwealth pier and its own tracks was due to a contract entered into by it and the directors of the port of Boston and other railroads under date of July 1, 1912, and that the question of the proper rates was one of complexity and difficulty arising out of conflicting interests between the several railroads involved and the Directors of the Port of Boston and perhaps others, and granted a reasonable period, not exceeding ninety days, for the parties in interest to adjust their differences arising out of the finding of the commission. No adjustment having been made, it entered another order in March, 1915, of the tenor following: “Ordered, That the respondent, the Boston and Maine Railroad, be directed to file with this commission within thirty days from the date hereof, tariffs to become effective thirty days after filing, Unless [200]*200otherwise ordered by the commission, which will discontinue the unjust discrimination which the commission in these proceedings has found to exist, in so far as such discrimination arises from the rates charged by the Boston and Maine Railroad on intrastate movements of freight to and from the premises of the petitioner from and to points on the Boston and Maine Railroad in Massachusetts as compared with the rates on like traffic between the Commonwealth pier in South Boston and the same points.”

Thereafter the respondent filed new schedules of tariffs with the public service commission designed to remove the discrimination of which complaint is made here, by cancelling the rates to Commonwealth pier. Before these tariffs could take effect, the Commonwealth brought suit in the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk County to enforce specific performance of the contract of the respondent with it, dated July 1, 1912, and to restrain the respondent from breaking that contract by cancelling the rates to the Commonwealth pier provided for by that contract. An injunction issued on or about July 16, 1915, which appears to be still in force and which suspended the operation of the rates of the new schedules of tariffs and forbade in substance the making of any additional charge respecting freight at Commonwealth pier above that provided in the contract. The respondent complied with the terms of the injunction. Thereafter, on September 13, 1915, the public service commission wrote to the respondent referring to its previous orders, to the filing of the new schedules of tariffs by the respondent, and to the injunction against their enforcement; it recited that these facts had been called to its attention by the present petitioner at a public hearing at which it asked the commission to enforce its previous order; and that the commission recognized that the respondent, while the injunction remained in force, could not remove ihe discrimination by ceasing to absorb the transfer charges to and from Commonwealth pier, and could only remove that discrimination by absorbing the transfer charges made by the Boston and Albany Railroad Company for freight transported to and from the docks of the petitioner to the tracks of the respondent, and that this was the only way in which the respondent could comply with the order of the public service commission. It then proceeded, “Whether such a compliance would result in unreasonably low rates for the service rendered it [201]*201is unnecessary for the Commission at this time to decide.” It directed the respondent to comply with its order and stated that in the event of failure on its part the commission would proceed to enforce its order. On October 13, 1915, the commission requested the Attorney General to take, steps to enforce its order under St. 1913, c. 784, § 28. 'The Attorney General declined to take such steps on the ground that in his opinion some discretion was vested in him under the statute and it would be highly inconsistent for him to institute such a proceeding while in other proceedings he was in his official capacity making contentions that the contract of the defendant with the port directors was valid and constituted no discrimination. The soundness of that contention need not now be considered. The present petition is brought to enforce the order or orders of the public service commission.

These orders and decisions as a whole are not within the jurisdiction of the public service commission under the facts here revealed and ought not to be enforced now. It is provided by St. 1913, c. 784, § 22, as to commerce within the State that “Whenever the commission shall be of opinion . . . that the rates, fares or charges or any of them demanded, exacted, charged or collected by any common carrier ... or the regulations or practices of such common carrier affecting such rates, are unjust, unreasonable, unjustly discriminatory or unduly preferential . . . the commission shall determine the just and reasonable rates, fares and charges to be charged for the service to be performed.” The discrimination in the case at bar rested upon a rate charged by the respondent. It "had no other basis. It was not a regulation or practice as distinguished from a rate. The very question in the present posture of the case is the compensation which the respondent shall receive for the service of transportation of freight between the petitioner’s wharf and pier and points within the Commonwealth on the respondent’s line of railroad. Thus, for this reason if for no other, Pennsylvania Co. v. United States, 236 U. S. 351, 361, 362, and Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. United States,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 Mass. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-dock-storage-warehouse-co-v-boston-maine-railroad-mass-1917.