Pennsylvania Railroad v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

4 A.2d 815, 135 Pa. Super. 154, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 276
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 10, 1938
DocketAppeal, 92
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 A.2d 815 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) 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
Pennsylvania Railroad v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 4 A.2d 815, 135 Pa. Super. 154, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 276 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The general subject matter of this appeal is the reasonableness of certain intrastate group and differential freight rates, charged by the appellant carriers for the transportation of fire brick in carloads from origin points in western Pennsylvania to destinations in the central and eastern parts of the state. Five specified shipping points and five origin groups are involved in the present proceeding. With reference to destinations, we are concerned with two groups: (a) The Philadelphia group, embracing that city and surrounding territory; and (b) The Baltimore group, which includes Harrisburg and Steelton.

On February 4, 1937, The McLain Fire Brick Com *156 pany, manufacturing fire clay brick at Merrill, Pa., some thirty miles northwest of Pittsburgh and located within the Pittsburgh group, filed its complaint with the then existing Public Service Commission alleging that the rates charged by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, Reading Company and Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, for the transportation of its product to points in the Baltimore and Philadelphia destination groups are unjust, discriminatory, and unduly prejudicial to it.

On February 17, 1937, a similar complaint was filed against the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Reading Company by North American Refractories Company, engaged in the manufacture of fire brick at St. Marys, a point in the Johnsonburg group, embracing considerable territory in northwestern Pennsylvania.

On April 26,1937, complaints to the same effect were filed by The Garfield Fire Clay Company, doing business at Bolivar, against the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, the New York Central Railroad Company, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Reading Company, and by Haws Refractories Company, located at Johnstown, against the same carriers, — both of which points of origin are within the Johnstown group. A number of other shippers, and particularly Harbison-Walker Refractories Company, having one of its plants at Templeton in the northern portion of the Connells-ville group, were permitted to intervene.

The above mentioned Pittsburgh, Johnsonburg, Johnstown and Connellsville groups are four of eight origin groups of varying sizes, all located west of the Susquehanna River and each taking its name from a municipality constituting a railroad centre within its boundaries. The four additional groups of origin are the Broolcville, Cumberland, Lock Haven and Clear-field groups; of these, the Clearfield group is the only one with which we are presently concerned.

When the complaints came on for hearing before the *157 Public Utility Commission, successor to tbe Public Service Commission, they were consolidated and disposed of in one report and order, dated January 10, 1938.

The rates assailed by the respective complaints are §3.15, per net ton, from Merrill, in the Pittsburgh group, to destination points within the Baltimore group, and §3.35 to points within the Philadelphia group. These rates were reduced by the order of the commission to not more than §2.60 to the Baltimore group and not more than §3.05 to the Philadelphia group, — a reduction of 55‡ per ton in the former and 30^ in the latter. The existing rates from Templeton, in the Con-nellsville group, to points in the Baltimore group are §3.10 per ton, and to the Philadelphia group §3.30. The reductions ordered were to §2.55 for the Baltimore destination group and §3 to the Philadelphia group. The present rates from St. Marys, in the Johnsonburg group and from Bolivar and Johnstown, in the Johns-town group, to the Baltimore group are §3.05 per ton, and to the Philadelphia group §3.25. They were reduced by the order to §2.50 for the Baltimore group, and §2.95 to the Philadelphia group. Each reduction was in the amount of 55‡ per ton upon all shipments to the Baltimore group, and 30$ to the Philadelphia group.

The present appeal is by the carriers from the order directing them to put these reductions into effect on or before March 7, 1938; a supersedeas of the order was granted by this court and the reasonableness and legality of the order are now before us for disposition.

It should be noted at the outset that the alleged discrimination asserted in the complaints did not arise out of the establishment of rates by the carriers of their own volition. All of the rates involved in this appeal were prescribed either by the Interstate Commerce Commission or by the Public Service Commission of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. If complainants have *158 been subjected to any discrimination or prejudice it is the result of an order of the former state commission, entered November 25, 1936, hereinafter discussed.

Some understanding of the nature, structure and history, of the rates now attacked is essential to a disposition of the questions of law arising under this appeal.

The history goes back to 1922, at which time a readjustment was made by the federal commission of interstate rates upon “articles in the uniform brick list.” The case in which it was made is National Paving Brick Mfrs. Asso. v. A. & V. Ry. Co., 68 I. C. C. 213, frequently referred to as the “General Brick” case. It applied throughout the territory east of the Mississippi, and north of the Potomac River. Rates were not fixed upon a mileage basis, but from large origin groups to large destination groups and by a group and differential system. The eastbound movement had as its foundation a key rate from Chicago to New York and from Pittsburgh to New York. The key rate from Pittsburgh to New York was $4.20 per ton. Intermediate rates were related to the key rate, not by distances but by specified differentials. This system has not been assailed in the present case. We are here concerned, inter alia, with shipments originating in the Pittsburgh group, which also extends into Ohio, and from which shipments go to destination groups in eastern Pennsylvania and along the Atlantic seaboard.

Port differentials over and under New York also figured in the adjustment. All destinations involved in this case are in the Philadelphia group except Harrisburg and Steelton, which, as above stated, are in the Baltimore group. The key rate from the Pittsburgh group to the Philadelphia group was adjusted at $3.80 and to the Baltimore group at $3.60. A differential under the key rate of 5# per ton was given the Connells-ville group as the next eastern group; 10# to the *159 Johnstown and Johnsonburg groups; and 20^ to the Clearfield group.

Ten years later the rate structure set up in the “General Brick” case was again examined and affirmed in Victor Cushwa & Sons v. Arcade & A. R. Corp., 185 I. C. C. 280. In 1936 a proceeding, designed as Eastern Brick Rates, 218 I. C. C. 59, involved a comprehensive rate investigation. The Interstate Commerce Commission again affirmed the adjustment of 1922. Excerpts from its opinion read:

“The brick adjustment in official territory has not changed materially since the General Brick case. It is set forth therein and reviewed in Victor Cushwa & Sons, Inc. v. Arcade & A. R. Corp.,

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Related

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512 A.2d 1242 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1986)
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203 A.2d 515 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1964)

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4 A.2d 815, 135 Pa. Super. 154, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1938.