Penna. R.R. Co. v. P.S.C.

190 A. 367, 125 Pa. Super. 558, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 190 A. 367 (Penna. R.R. Co. v. P.S.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penna. R.R. Co. v. P.S.C., 190 A. 367, 125 Pa. Super. 558, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Argued October 2, 1936. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Reading Company have appealed from an order of the Public Service Commission sustaining two complaints of the *Page 560 Diamond Glass Company that certain intrastate freight rates which it has paid the appellants were unjust, unreasonable, oppressive and extortionate, and fixing the extent of the unreasonableness.

The Diamond Glass Company manufactures glass containers at its plant on the Reading railroad at Royersford, Pa., and purchases glass sand in carload quantities at Mapleton, Pa., on the Pennsylvania. Shipments are made in box cars from Mapleton over the Pennsylvania to Harrisburg, a distance of 89 miles, and thence over the Reading to Royersford, a distance of 80 miles, or a total of 169 miles. Since July 1, 1935, the prescribed rate has been $1.80 per ton of 2,000 pounds. Prior to July 15, 1929, the rate had been $2.52 per ton, but was then so reduced that by June 30, 1932, (the earliest date with which we are particularly concerned) it was $2.40 per ton, plus emergency charges of 6 cents per ton, between June 30, 1932, and October 1, 1933, and 7% of the total freight charges between May 7, and June 30, 1935.

Within two years from the beginning of the period involved under this appeal, viz., on June 27, 1934, the Diamond Glass Company filed a complaint with the commission, at complaint docket No. 10237 of 1934, in which it stated appellants participated in the transportation of the sand purchased at Mapleton and had been charging it the $2.40 rate, and averred the rate so charged was excessive and unreasonable and in violation of Section 1(b) of Article II of the Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374, 66 P. S. § 22; the prayer of the complaint was that the commission make a finding that the rate complained of was excessive and unreasonable and fix the extent to which it was excessive. A second petition to the same effect was filed by the glass company on July 31, 1935, to complaint docket No. 10865 of 1935, evidently for the *Page 561 purpose of covering shipments up to July 1, 1935. Each complaint contained a prayer for reparation.

The proceedings were consolidated for hearing and resulted in a report and order by the commission, under date of March 31, 1936, in which it sustained the complaints and found that "the rate of $2.40 per net ton, plus emergency charges, charged for the transportation of glass sand, in carloads, from Mapleton to Royersford during the period June 30, 1932, to June 30, 1935, inclusive, was unjust and unreasonable, oppressive and extortionate to the extent that it exceeded $2.00 plus emergency charges based on that rate." There was testimony that during the specified period approximately 275 carloads, containing 14,982 tons, had been shipped. No award of reparation was made by the commission, but it was ordered that the proceeding "be set down for further hearing at a time to be designated, to ascertain what damages, if any, complainant has sustained." Appellants unsuccessfully sought a rehearing and have now appealed from the above action of the commission. Their appeals may be disposed of in one opinion.

In the case of Centre County Lime Company and Chemical LimeCompany, et al., v. Pub. Ser. Com., 96 Pa. Super. 590, this court had occasion to consider the distinction between complaints against existing rates under Section 3 of Article V of the statute, 66 P. S. § 492, and those against past rates under Section 5 of that Article, 66 P. S. § 511. It was pointed out that the proceedings under these sections are separate and distinct and that the findings on the issues involved in determining whether existing rates were then unjust and unreasonable, and would be for the future, furnished no basis for awarding or refusing reparation.

Later, in Centre County Lime Company v. Pub. Ser. Com. et al.,103 Pa. Super. 179, 157 A. 815, we had an appeal from an order of the commission refusing *Page 562 reparation for alleged excessive freight rates paid in the past, although it had found those rates would be excessive and unreasonable for the future. In affirming the order of the commission, reference was again made to the distinction that proceedings under Section 3 are an exercise of the commission's quasi-legislative power to protect the public from future injury through the exaction of unreasonable rates, while proceedings under Section 5 are an exercise of its quasi-judicial function and have for their object the measuring and redressing of past injuries sustained by a private shipper. The proceeding now at bar is purely one by an individual consignee for the redress of injuries alleged to have been suffered through the exaction of unreasonable rates in the past.

No useful purpose would be served by a detailed discussion of the evidence. It consisted largely of the testimony of rate experts showing the history and development of rates for the transportation of sand from various districts and to many destinations, both within and outside of Pennsylvania, and the presentation of exhibits. For instance, it was shown that the rate from the Mapleton district to Pittsburgh, 167 miles, was $2.00 per ton as compared with $2.40 for the 169 miles to Royersford.

Appellants contend there was no competent evidence that any damages had been actually sustained by the complainant, within the meaning of Section 5 of Article V of the statute. The commission has not undertaken, as yet, to pass upon that question but has expressly stated in its order that, in accordance with the holding of this court in the second Centre County Lime Company case, supra, (p. 188), it intends to conduct a further hearing "to ascertain what damages, if any, complainant has sustained."

Considerable space has been devoted in the briefs to a discussion of the quantum and quality of evidence *Page 563 necessary to support a finding under Section 5 that rates which have been collected in the past were "unjust and unreasonable," as compared with the evidence required under Section 3 to show that existing rates are unjust and unreasonable and would be for the future. As indicated by this court in the Centre County Lime Company cases, supra, it does not necessarily follow that a rate, which should be reduced for the future, was unreasonable in the past — particularly where it was "put into effect in good faith and maintained without challenge for a considerable length of time." In the first instance, the commission is required to use its best judgment with reference to prospective conditions, but in the latter there is no possibility of increase in traffic or opportunity for the readjustment of other rates. No hard and fast rule can be laid down. The commission, in the exercise of "that flexible limit of judgment" with which it is clothed, must in each individual case determine, under the particular facts there developed, whether past rates have been unreasonable to the extent of involving elements of legal oppression and extortion.

Upon examination of the testimony and exhibits in this case, our independent judgment is that the commission was justified in holding that the $2.40 per ton rate, so far as collected by appellants between a certain date, hereinafter considered and fixed, and July 1, 1935, was unreasonable within the meaning of Section 5, as interpreted by this court in the second Centre County Lime Company case (pp.

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Bluebook (online)
190 A. 367, 125 Pa. Super. 558, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penna-rr-co-v-psc-pasuperct-1936.