Peoria & Pekin Union Railway Co. v. Corning & Co.

266 Ill. 515
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 266 Ill. 515 (Peoria & Pekin Union Railway Co. v. Corning & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoria & Pekin Union Railway Co. v. Corning & Co., 266 Ill. 515 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant, the Peoria and Pekin Union Railway. Company, brought this action in assumpsit in the circuit court of Peoria county against the appellee, Corning & Co., to recover $9484 alleged to be due for switching service furnished the appellee. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and a jury having been waived there was a trial by the court. The dispute at the trial was whether the plaintiff was entitled to two dollars for each car switched, as claimed by it, or to one dollar, as insisted upon by the defendant, and it was agreed that the plaintiff might cash checks which had been tendered to it by the defendant at the rate of one dollar per car, to the amount of $4742, without prejudice to the claim for a balance of the same amount. The court found the issues for the plaintiff and assessed the damages at $485.45, and rendered judgment for that amount, with costs of suit. The plaintiff appealed to the Appellate Court for the Second District, and that court affirmed the judgment and granted a certificate of importance and an appeal to this court.

The plaintiff is a railroad corporation organized under the general act for the incorporation of railroad companies. It has extensive switching yards in Peoria and does an extensive terminal and switching business, doing the switching service for most of the railroads entering the city of Peoria, all but one of which extend into other States. The plaintiff’s property and business are confined to Peoria, with a line to. the neighboring city of Pekin. The defendant is a corporation engaged in the business of distilling, rectifying and selling alcohol and whisky, and it nialces shipments to places within the State and to various points in other States and countries. It is the successor and assign of a partnership known as Corning & Co. and of the Monarch Distilling Company. On September 14, 1881, the Monarch Distilling Company conveyed to the plaintiff a tract of land in the city of Peoria in consideration of $12,912, and the deed recited that it was made concurrently with, and to be construed with, a written contract of the same date. By that contract the plaintiff agreed with the Monarch Distilling Company and Corning &' Co., (the corporation and partnership composed of 'the same individuals,) in consideration of the conveyance to the plaintiff and a conveyance to the city of Peoria for a street, that it would do all switching of cars for said companies to and from their respective places of business at as low a rate as a like service should be performed for any other business in Peoria, except to the elevators and stock yards, and in no case was the charge for such switching to exceed one .dollar for each loaded car. The plaintiff. took possession of the land conveyed to it and covered it with its switching yards and tracks and used it in'its business and treated the contract as a binding, valid and subsisting contract with the defendant, which succeeded the Monarch Distilling Company and the partnership of Corning & Co., up to November 13, 1907. On September 27, 1907, the plaintiff gave notice to the defendant that on and after November 15, 1907, it would demand two dollars per car for switching service for the defendant. The reason given for refusing to further perform the contract was that a freight committee, to which the plaintiff was a party, had established a switching tariff, effective November 15, 1907, of two dollars per car, and that under the Inter-State Commerce act the plaintiff had no right to charge any other or different rate than the duly published tariff rate. From November 15, 1907, to July 31, 19-11, the plaintiff had switched for the defendant 4742 cars and rendered bills at the rate of two dollars per car, in accordance with the terms of the published switching tariff, and it was for this switching that the suit was brought. When the defendant had received the bills, from time to time, it had refused to'pay at the rate of two dollars per car and tendered the plaintiff checks for the cars switched at the rate of one dollar per car. The checks were refused by the plaintiff, which held them with notice that they were held at the defendant’s risk and would not be credited in payment of the switching charges, except on account and not in full settlement. These are the checks which it was agreed upon the trial the plaintiff might, and did, collect. Of the 4742 cars switched, 4179 were switched between the distillery and the rectifying house of defendant in Peoria and were no part or parcel of any iriter-State shipment. Practically all of them were switched from the distillery to the rectifying house, and all were unloaded where delivered in the ordinary course of the business of the' defendant. The remaining 563 cars were switched from the rectifying house of the defendant to the freight house of the plaintiff 'for distribution to railroads leading out of Peoria, to various points within and without the State of Illinois. The plaintiff maintained a union freight house for the benefit of all roads coming into Peoria, and all freight less than carload shipments from the different railroads, except two, was brought to that freight house. The defendant. would load a car at its rectifying house with various packages to be shipped, marked with the name of the consignee and the point of destination, and would give the plaintiff a switching order on what was known as “form 200,” for each car containing shipments to be forwarded from Peoria. The defendant made out bills of lading in triplicate covering each of the packages and delivered the bills of lading to the plaintiff when the car containing the packages was delivered to it. When the car reached the freight house the various packages were distributed by employees of plaintiff to the various out-going roads, and the plaintiff would then sign the various bills of lading in the name of the agent of the out-going road and deliver one copy to the out-going road, returning the other two to the defendant. The defendant would retain one ‘copy and forward the other to the consignee. Only cars containing package shipments were taken to the freight house and full car-loads were forwarded direct from the rectifying house to the out-going road, and the switching charges were absorbed by such road and are not involved in this suit. In the case of cars loaded with packages, the switching charge was to be paid by the defendant and was not absorbed by any of the out-going roads, except where the amount carried by any one road in one load was 6000 pounds or more. Óf the 563 cars switched from the rectifying' house to the freight house, eighty-five per cent contained packages going out of the State together with packages to be delivered within the State. The remaining fifteen per cent contained only packages consigned to places within the State.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 Ill. 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoria-pekin-union-railway-co-v-corning-co-ill-1915.