Oman v. Tennessee Central Railway Co.

7 Tenn. App. 141, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 29, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 141 (Oman v. Tennessee Central Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oman v. Tennessee Central Railway Co., 7 Tenn. App. 141, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

The original bill in this case was filed on September 14, 1925, in Part II of the chancery court of Davidson county, by John Oman, Jr.,.a citizen and resident of Davidson county, Tennessee, against the Tennessee Central Railway Company, a Tennessee corporation.

Complainant alleged that defendant had unlawfully collected from him the sum of $840.79, by way of an overcharge of eight cents per ton on 175 carloads of slag, averaging fifty tons to each car, shipped over defendant’s road from Rockwood, Tennessee, to Crossville, Tennessee, and complainant prayed for a recovery of that amount, with interest.

The defendant answered and denied that it had overcharged complainant, as alleged in the bill, in the sum of $840.79, or any other sum.

Defendant alleged in its answer that it had transported over its road from Rockwood, Tennessee, to Crossville, Tennessee, 131 carload's of slag, shipped by complainant, on which defendant had charged and collected eight cents less per ton than the lawful rate, and that complainant was, on that account, indebted to defendant in the sum of $582.23, and defendant filed its answer as a cross-bill and prayed for judgment against complainant for the aforesaid sum of $582.23, with interest thereon.

The cross defendant answered the cross-bill and denied the right of cross complainant to the recovery sought by the cross-bill.

Proof was taken on behalf of the parties, respectively, and the case was finally heard on the entire record and a decree was entered (on January 10, 1927) by which the Chancellor dismissed the original bill and awarded' a recovery of $576.85 in favor of the cross complainant Railway Company and against the cross defendant John Oman, Jr., but declined to allow interest thereon. The Chancellor further adjudged that cross complainant Railway Company pay the costs of the cause.

*143 The complainant and cross defendant, John Oman, Jr., prayed, and was granted, a broad appeal from the Chancellor’s decree. The defendant and cross complainant, Tennessee Central Railway Company excepted to the Chancellor’s action (1) in refusing to allow interest on the amount of the recovery awarded to cross complainant, and (2) in taxing cross complainant with the costs of the cause, and prayed and obtained an appeal accordingly.

The material facts of the case and the conclusions of the Chancellor appear from the written findings and opinion filed by the Chancellor, and which we quote in full as follows-.

“Findings and Opinión.
“Complainant instituted this suit to recover of the defendant $840.79, alleged to be freight overehai’ges on certain shipments of slag made from Rockwood to Crossville, Tennessee, to be used by complainant in the construction of a section of seven miles of highway in Cumberland county, Tennessee.
“The defendant answered and filed a cross-bill to recover of complainant $582.23 for undercharges on certain of the shipments made in the construction of said highway.
“It appears that the complainant entered into a contract with the State Highway Commission to construct seven miles of highway in Cumberland county, Tennessee. Before the contract was let by the State, the complainant, through one of his business associates, J. E. Brady, investigated the freight rate on slag from Rockwood to Cross-ville, Tennessee, and was told by a rate clerk of the defendant that the freight on such shipments of slag would be sixty cents per ton of 2000 pounds. G. S. Blackman, general freight agent of the defendant, before any shipments were made, told the complainant that the correct rate on slag from Rockwood to Crossville was sixty-eight cents per ton of 2000 pounds for commercial purposes, and that they had a rate of sixty cents per ton which was applicable when the slag was the ‘property of Federal, State, county or municipal governments, when consigned to such government, or an officer thereof, for use in the building of public highways. ’
“The defendant charged at the rate of sixty cents per ton on the first 131 cars shipped from Rockwood to Crossville, and after these 131 cars were shipped, it discovered that the rate was sixty-eight cents per ton on slag shipped from Rockwood to Crossville, and refused to transport any more slag unless the latter rate was paid, and on the 175 additional cars shipped by complainant, he paid sixty-eight cents per ton, but under protest. All of these shipments of slag were consigned to the State Highwaj^ Department, in care of John Oman, Jr., at Crossville, Tennessee, but Oman paid for it and was an independent contractor, and not an officer of the State.
“The defendant had in force and on file with the Railroad and Public Utilities Commission of Tennessee, the Interstate Commerce *144 Commission, and in its offices at Rockwood and Nashville, Tennessee, at and before complainant made his contract with the highway department, a voluntary tariff made by it, showing the correct rate on slag in carload lots for a distance of twenty-five miles — this being the distance from Rockwood to Crossville — of sixty-eight cents per ton of 2000 pound's, and sixty cents per ton of 2000 pounds when shipment was made to and was ‘the property of Federal, county, State or municipal governments, or an officer thereof, for use in building public highways.’
‘ ‘ The rate clerk who quoted the rate had no authority from Black-man, the general freight agent, to make such quotation. The slag was purchased from the Roane Iron Co. by the complainant. There was paid sixty cents per ton of 2000 pound's on 131 cars of slag, carrying a weight of 14,555,600 pounds, which was eight cents less than the tariff schedule rate, and eight cents per ton on 7277.8 tons would have amounted to $582.23, which the defendant is endeavoring to collect with interest, as an undercharge, less certain overcharges of $5.38. The first twenty-seven cars shipped by complainant over the road of defendant carried a charge of sixty-eight cents per ton of 2000 pounds and were paid for on that basis. These cars were billed collect, and are not involved in the cross-bill.
“It is insisted by the complainant (1) that the rate of sixty cents per ton is applicable under the provisions of the tariff in question to the shipments made by him; (2) if not applicable, then the higher rate is unjust and unreasonable, and the lower rate gives an undue preference and discriminates against the complainant. 'It seems dear from the record in this case that the complainant was not an official of the State nor was the slag involved the property of the State, and therefore the rate of sixty cents was not applicable to these shipments, but the rate of sixty-eight cents was applicable.
“Both the Federal Commission and the State Railroad and Public Utilities Commission are empowered by statute to fix rates. The rates charged in this particular case are not unjust, unreasonable and discriminatory, as the acts creating these commissions empower them to make exemptions in favor of the State and Federal government, and the rate in this case has been expressly approved by the State Public Utilities Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Tenn. App. 141, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oman-v-tennessee-central-railway-co-tennctapp-1927.