Ocean Steamship Co. v. Savannah Locomotive Works & Supply Co.

63 S.E. 577, 131 Ga. 831, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 577 (Ocean Steamship Co. v. Savannah Locomotive Works & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ocean Steamship Co. v. Savannah Locomotive Works & Supply Co., 63 S.E. 577, 131 Ga. 831, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 20 (Ga. 1909).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. It was admitted in. the answer of the defendant that it was a common carrier by sea, operating a certain number of vessels between the port of Savannah, Georgia, and the ports of Boston, Massachusetts, and New York City, and accustomed to carry the particular commodity offered it by the plaintiff, and against which it is alleged to have discriminated. From the earliest times it has been considered that a common carrier exercises a public employment, with public duties to perform. He can not, like a merchant, receive or reject a customer at pleasure. He is bound to serve the public indifferently, and this duty with -respect to the commonness of service was regarded by Judge Nisbet as the distinguishing trait of a common carrier. Fish v. Chapman, 2 Ga. 349 (46 Am. D. 393). In the case just cited it was said that “a common carrier is bound to convey the goods of any person offering to pay his hire, unless his carriage be already full, or the risk sought to be imposed upon him extraordinary, or unless the goods be of a sort which he can not convey, or is not in the habit of .conveying.” If the carrier be under obligation to accept goods which he proposes to carry, and there is room for them in his vehicle, the time for acceptance is when the goods are tendered. It therefore follows that all applying have an equal right to have their goods transported in the order of their tender. Indeed, the proposition is too well established at this late day to require citation of. authorities. 6 Cyc 372; 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 1772; Hutch. Car. (3d ed.) §512.

Counsel for the plaintiff in error contend that at common law a carrier has the right to discriminate in the facilities offered to shippers of different commodities, so long .as shippers of the same [834]*834commodities are all treated alike; and that this right of discrimination justifies a preference given to- shippers of cotton over the shippers of lumber in the order of acceptance of these 'commodities for transportation. We have examined the cases cited to support this contention, as well as many others on the same general subject; and we find in all of them, which concede to a carrier the right of discrimination among shippers, a recognition of the principle that the right to discriminate only arises when the carrier has fulfilled his-obligations to the shipper affected by the alleged discriminatory conduct. We do not think any case which has come under our notice goes further than to hold that when a carrier extends a favor to one shipper, such favor is not to be regarded as an unjust discrimination so long as the carrier by granting the favor does not deny to other shippers any right which they may demand under the law, and the favored shipper is not given any material advantage in competition in business with them. A brief reference will be made to some typical cases, to illustrate the accuracy of our analysis. There are a considerable number of decisions which hold, that at common law the carrier was under no-duty to charge every patron the same rate of carriage; that his duty was to charge a reasonable rate, and, if the rate charged was reasonable, one shipper could not lawfully complain that other shippers were charged a less rate. Johnson v. Pensacola & P. R. Co., 16 Fla. 623 (26 Am. R. 731); Ragan v. Aiken, 9 Lea, 609 (42 Am. E. 684). Some courts hold, that, inasmuch as a carrier has the right to demand of all shippers the prepayment of his freight charge, it- was not undue discrimination to exact of one shipper j)ayment of the carriage charge in advance of carrjdng the freight, and collect it from other shippers at the end of the transportation. Randall v. Richmond, etc. R. Co., 108 N. C. 612 (13 S. E. 137). The Supreme Court of the United States has-decided that railroad companies may transport the traffic of one express company and refuse to transport the traffic of another express company over their lines, because “they are not obliged by common law or by usage to do more as express carriers than to provide the public at large with reasonable express accommodations; and that they need not, in the absence of a statute, furnish to all independent express companies equal facilities for doing an express business upon their passenger-trains.” The Express Cases, 117 U. S. [835]*8351 (6 Sup. Ct. 542, 29 L. ed. 791).. In these eases the complaining shippers were accorded by the carriers every legal right which they could lawfully exact; and their complaint was, not that the carriers were remiss in any duties to them, but that they were entitled to share in the favors extended to other shippers. In the case in hand, the complaint is that the carrier denies the plaintiff a substantial legal right; that the carrier owes it a duty to accept its lumber in the order of its tender, and that the carrier refuses to perform this duty and is prevented from performing it by giving a preference to the shippers of cotton. The gist of the complaint is not so much that favors are shown the shippers of cotton as it is that the bestowal of these favors interferes with the steamship company in discharging its duty to the plaintiff by accepting its commodity in the order of its tender.

We are also cited to the case of Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Augusta Brokerage Co., 122 Ga. 646 (50 S. E. 473, 69 L. R. A. 119), as sustaining the contention that a earner may discriminate in the facilities offered to shippers of different commodities, so long as shippers of the same commodity are treated alike. In that case the shipper claimed that the railroad company delivered, to his competitor in the same commodity; ears for unloading at his competitor’s private warehouse, and refused to deliver to the plaintiff, at liis private warehouse, ears to be forwarded over the railroad of another company; and the refusal of the railroad company in this respect was alleged to be a breach of a certain rule of the railroad commission. It was held that the rule of the commission did not apply to discrimination in commodities. In the discussion of the points involved it clearly appeared that the alleged discrimination did not consist in the denial of any right to the plaintiff which the carrier was under duty to grant, but that the cause of action in this particular hinged upon the refusal of the carrier to deliver its cars at the plaintiff’s warehouse for shipment over the railroad of another company, solely because it switched cars for unloading to the private warehouse of a competitor.

Much stress is put upon an adjudication of the Supreme Court of Arkansas in the case of L. R. & Ft. S; R. Co. v. Oppenheimer, 64 Ark. 271 (43 S. W. 150, 44 L. R. A. 353). This was a suit for a penalty, under an Arkansas statute prohibiting discrimination by railroads. It appeared that the plaintiffs were merchants [836]*836at a non-competitive station on the carrier’s line, and that the carrier failed to furnish sufficient cars to move the cotton from that station, while sufficient cars were furnished a competitive point. The Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the trial court on the merits of the case, and it was said that “the complaint of unjust discrimination grew out of the unusually large cotton crop of 1891. Sufficient transportation was not furnished them, because applicants had not anticipated it.” The complaint was not that the railroad company refused to accept the plaintiff’s cotton, but that it failed to provide sufficient cars for its prompt transportation.

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63 S.E. 577, 131 Ga. 831, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-steamship-co-v-savannah-locomotive-works-supply-co-ga-1909.