Oklahoma Belt R. Co. v. Schaff

282 F. 128, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2599
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1922
DocketNo. 5912
StatusPublished

This text of 282 F. 128 (Oklahoma Belt R. Co. v. Schaff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma Belt R. Co. v. Schaff, 282 F. 128, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2599 (8th Cir. 1922).

Opinions

TRIEBER, District Judge.

This is a writ of error to review a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant in error in this court. The cause was submitted in the court below upon an agreed statement of facts; a trial to a jury having been waived by stipulation in writing:

“Agreed Statement of Facts.
“It Is hereby stipulated and agreed that, in addition to the facts alleged in paragraphs 1, 2, 8, 4, and 5, of the plaintiff’s petition, which are admitted by the defendant’s amended answer herein, the following facts are hereby agreed to:
“That pursuant to the provisions of the contract attached to the plaintiff’s petition and identified as Exhibit A, which contract is made a part of this agreed statement of facts in so far as the same may be relevant, the defendant did acquire the necessary right of way and property for the construction of its line of railway from a point of connection with the line of railway in the [129]*129possession of the plaintiff at the point marked ‘A’ on the blueprint maps attached to said contract to the point marked ‘B’ on said maps, and along the line indicated in red on said maps, and proceeded to have a railway constructed thereon in a good and substantial manner according to the plans and specifications agreed upon between the chief engineer of the plaintiff and the chief engineer of the defendant, as provided in said contract, to wit:
“ ‘Section 1. The Belt Company agrees within three (3) months from the date hereof, at its own expense, to acquire the necessary rights of way and ordinance rights for the construction of its line of railway from a point of connection with the line of railway in the possession of the receiver at the point marked ‘A’ on said Exhibit A to the point marked ‘B’ thereon, and along the line indicated in red, and to construct in a good and substantial manner a railway thereon according to the plans and specifications to be' agreed upon between the parties hereto, or their chief engineers or other representatives designated for that purpose.’
“That Leon F. Lonnbladh, chief engineer of the plaintiff, and C. B. Smith, chief engineer of the defendant, agreed that the construction of said road (by the plaintiff, who had agreed to construct the same for the defendant) with native earth, in so far as the embankments and roadbed was concerned, was a full and complete compliance with section 1 of said contract above set forth, and wherein said section provides: ‘And to construct in a good
and substantial manner a railway thereon according to the plans and specifications to be agreed upon between the parties hereto or their chief engineers, or other representatives designated for that purpose.’ The chief engineer of the plaintiff stated to the chief engineer of the defendant that, inasmuch as the plaintiff was under contract to operate and maintain the road being built for a period of ten years, the expense of maintenance and operation would be greatly reduced if the road was ballasted, whereupon the two engineers reached the following agreement:
“That the plaintiff was to deliver chats for the ballasting of said road on the road at Oklahoma City, and the defendant agreed to pay an amount for said ballast not to exceed 60 cents per cubic yard, the exact amount to be ascertained, based upon the cost of chats at the mines and the cost of transporting same to Oklahoma City in work trains on a work train basis as determined by the plaintiff.
“That thereafter said agreement was submitted by the engineer of the plaintiff to Mr. Webb, chief operating officer of the plaintiff, who approved the said contract and authorized and assisted in the consummation thereof; that the duties of a chief operating officer are substantially the same as the duties of a general manager of a railroad not in the hands of a receiver.
“It is further agreed that this subsequent contract was never submitted to Charles E. Schaff, the receiver, and that Mr. Schaff, as such receiver, did not approve or disapprove said contract or arrangement until after the consummation thereof, but that when the matter was called to Mr. Sehaff’s personal at- • tention he did disapprove of it; that the said Charles E. Schaff had no personal knowledge of the same; that the defendant did not know whether or not the chief operating officer submitted the same to Mr. Sehaff, and did not know whether or not Mr. Schaff personally had any knowledge of the same, or whether or not he had approved the same.
“It is further agreed that the plaintiff did during the months of May, June, July, August, and September, 1917, procure chats at the mines located at or near Chitwood, Mo., in the aggregate amount of 12,492 cubic yards, and transported the same from that point over plaintiff’s lines of railway in work trains to Oklahoma City in cars furnished by the plaintiff and there delivered the same on the railway which the plaintiff was building for the defendant and placed the same on said railway so being constructed ; that the said chats were originally billed as company material, consigned to T. G. Banks, division engineer of plaintiff, at Oklahoma City, and that the plaintiff’s station agent at Oklahoma City, some time after the receipt of said shipments changed the waybills to. show the Oklahoma Belt Railroad Company as the consignee, and reported, them to plaintiff as revenue waybills. It is further agreed that the defendant was not notified, and had no knowledge, of the change of said waybills from ‘deadhead’ or company freight to revenue waybills until September [130]*130or October, 1918, or more than a year from the time said chats were moved, and it is agreed that the increased amount now claimed by the plaintiff and for which a recovery is sought in this case was not presented to the defendant, and that the defendant had no notice or knowledge of the same, until September or October, 1918, or more than a year after the chats moved.
“It is further agreed that the plaintiff rendered a statement to the defendant in accordance with the contract hereinbefore mentioned, based upon 10 cents per cubic yard and actual work train cost of transportation, or $5,983.67, which was duly paid by the defendant; that the said $5,983.67 account was rendered under this second or special contract to ballast said road, and that it was not connected with nor an act arising out of the original contract for the construction of said road by the plaintiff for the defendant.
“It is further agreed that at the time said service was performed the tariffs and schedules of the plaintiff, duly filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission and in effect, prescribed the charges for the transportation of chats in interstate commerce from Chitwood, Mo., to Oklahoma City, OUla., over the line of railway of plaintiff, when said chats were to be used for general or commercial purposes, but not for railroad purposes of the plaintiff; that by the charges so fixed in said tariffs and schedules the total amount thereof for transporting the 12,492 cubic yards of chats between said points would be $14,138.40, which sum, added to the purchase price of 10 cents per cubic yard, or $1,249.20, makes a total of $15,387.60, which last-mentioned sum is $9,403.93 in excess of the sum of $5,983.67 heretofore paid plaintiff by the defendant, as above set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
282 F. 128, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-belt-r-co-v-schaff-ca8-1922.