Pennsylvania Railroad v. Public Service Commission

190 A. 372, 126 Pa. Super. 1, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 369
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 21, 1936
DocketAppeals, 323 and 324
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 A. 372 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. Public Service 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. Public Service Commission, 190 A. 372, 126 Pa. Super. 1, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 369 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

By supplement 21 to its tariff, P. S. C. Pa. 727, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company gave notice of a proposed increase, from 55 cents to 80 cents per net ton, in its intrastate rate for the transportation of common sand and gravel in carload lots from Morrisville, Pa., to the Philadelphia area, to become effective April 13, 1936. Prior to the effective date, Amico Sand & Gravel Company and Mercer Sand & Gravel Company, in. voking the provisions of Section 3 of Article Y of the Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P. L-1374, 66 PS §492, filed protests with the commission at the above complaint docket numbers against the proposed increase.

Pursuant to the provisions of Section 4 of Article Y, as amended by Section 7 of the Act of June 3, 1933, P. L. 1526, 1537, 66 PS §493, (Supplement), the commission on March 31, 1936, suspended the operation of the new rate until June 30, 1936. In the meantime, viz., on June 15th, the commission, after a hearing, concluded the carrier had failed to justify the proposed increase and made an order directing it to cancel its supplement and restore the 55-cent rate. The present appeals are by the carrier from that order; upon the filing of the bond required by Section 19 of Article YI of the statute, 66 PS §832, the order of. the commission was automatically superseded during the pendency of the appeals in this court and the supplement became effective on June 30, 1936. As the same questions are involved under each appeal, but one opinion will be necessary.

An understanding of the facts which led up to the filing by appellant of the supplement involved in this proceeding is essential. It was not, in fact, an ordinary *4 and voluntary increase in rates, but was the restoration to its former level of a rate which had been lowered for a special purpose. The following history of appellant’s rates upon common sand and gravel from Morris-ville to some sixty points within the limits of the City of Philadelphia appears from the testimony and exhibits before us.

For about four years prior to the summer of 1933 these rates had been based upon the so-called Birdsboro Seale which was superseded in Pennsylvania by the Lycoming Scale, applicable throughout the Eastern Trunk Line territory, and were 70 cents per ton to ten of the Philadelphia points, and 80 cents to the remaining destinations in that city.

There were four operators with plants located at Morrisville—Warner Company, Curtis & Hill Gravel & Sand Company, [subsequently absorbed by Warner], Amico Sand & Gravel Company, and Mercer Sand & Gravel Company, the two last mentioned being the complainants in this proceeding. From the plant of the Warner Company 98% of the shipments were hauled in its own trucks to the Delaware river and then conveyed by its own tugs and barges to the Philadelphia area; the remaining 2% moved by rail. The other operators at Morrisville were located on appellant’s line and shipped exclusively by rail. Appellant decided to make an effort to attract tonnage, which would otherwise move by truck and water, by making a substantial reduction in its rates from Morrisville to Philadelphia, and accordingly put in force, on June 29, 1933, a rate of 50 cents per ton, which on October 1st of that year became 55 cents. This rate was arrived at by an “approximation of a 20 cent rate by water......and the approximation of 30 cents which would be the average rate from a certain point in Philadelphia to other Philadelphia stations,” plus the 5 cent emergency *5 charge. June 30, 1936, was fixed by appellant for the expiration of this experimental rate.

That the reduction had some results is indicated by the fact that during the period from April, 1932, to June, 1933,—prior to the reduction—only 49 carloads of sand were shipped from Morrisville to Philadelphia stations, but during the period from July, 1933, to August, 1934—following the reduction—1745 carloads were shipped. The bulk of this tonnage, 1696 cars, came from shippers other than Amico or Mercer.

In September 1934, the picture began to change. During the fifteen months, January 1935, to and including March 1936, Amico shipped only 14 cars and Mercer 11 from Morrisville to Philadelphia points, and other shippers at Morrisville shipped only 476 cars.

Appellant’s main justification for restoring the rate to the level of rates prescribed by the Lycoming Scale is based upon the following proceedings before the Interstate Commerce Commission instituted by certain shippers of sand whose plants are located at Birmingham and South Pemberton, New Jersey. The distance from Morrisville to various Philadelphia points ranges from 30 to 40 miles, and the distance from Birmingham and South Pemberton to the same points is only three miles longer. At the time of the reduction of the Morrisville rate in 1933, the rates which the shippers of sand from Birmingham and South Pemberton to Philadelphia were obliged to pay were fixed by the so-called Buckland Scale in New Jersey, which is comparable with the Lycoming Scale in Pennsylvania, and ranged from 80 to 90 cents per ton; no change was made by appellant in these interstate rates.

In June, 1934, Horcross Brothers, shippers of sand from Birmingham and South Pemberton to Philadelphia and other destinations, filed their complaint with the Interstate Commerce Commission, alleging that the Buckland Scale rates were unreasonable “and that the *6 lower intrastate rates on like traffic from the plants of complainants’ competitors at Morrisville, Pa., cause and have caused undue and unreasonable prejudice and disadvantage to complainants and undue and unreasonable preference and advantage to these competitors.” In its opinion, filed September 26, 1935, and reported under the title, Norcross Brothers v. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 210 I. C. C. 629, the Interstate Commerce Commission, after reviewing the situation of the shippers at Birmingham and South Pemberton as compared with those at Morrisville, pointed out that appellant by the reduction of June 29, 1933, had enabled the Amico, Mercer and Curtis & Hill plants at Morrisville to ship into the Philadelphia area in competition with the Warner Company, shipping by water, but had refused to accord Norcross Brothers and other shippers at Birmingham and South Pemberton a like opportunity. In that proceeding the present appellant opposed the reduction of the interstate rate from Birmingham and South Pemberton to Philadelphia upon the ground that the entire Buckland Scale would be jeopardized if Norcross Brothers were accorded the same rate as their competitors at Morrisville. To this the Interstate Commerce Commission replied: “But by according the three operators at Morrisville an opportunity to ship by rail into the Philadelphia area in competition with those who ship by water, and by declining to accord complainants, whose plants were formerly grouped with Morrisville, a similar opportunity, defendant is in effect selecting from among operators similarly situated the ones which they desire to ship by rail, thereby causing undue and unreasonable preference and advantage to the operators which are so selected and undue and unreasonable prejudice and disadvantage to the operators which are not.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A. 372, 126 Pa. Super. 1, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1936.