Railroad Commission v. Rio Grande & E. P. Ry. Co.

230 S.W. 974
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1921
DocketNo. 2811
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 974 (Railroad Commission v. Rio Grande & E. P. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railroad Commission v. Rio Grande & E. P. Ry. Co., 230 S.W. 974 (Tex. 1921).

Opinion

PIERSON, J.

Defendant in error, the Rio Grande & Eagle Pass Railway Company, owns and operates a line of railway from Minera to Laredo, where it connects with the line of- the Texas-Mexican Railway Company, running eastward through Pescadito to Corpus Christi. Defendant in error’s line also connects at Laredo with the International & Great Northern Railway Company. Prior to the transactions out of which this suit arose, the Railroad Commission of Texas had established a joint through rate of 80 cents per ton on coal from Minera to Pes-cadito, moving over the lines of defendant in error and the Texas-Mexican Railway Company. The local rates on the same commodity for the two roads were, for defendant in error, from Minera to Laredo, 65 cents per ton, and- for the Texas-Mexican Railway Company, from Laredo to Pescadito, 55 cents per ton. The Texas-Mexican Railway Company was the purchaser of coal at the mines at Minera on defendant in error’s line, and billed and shipped same over defendant in error’s line and its own via Laredo to Pesca-dito. The two roads had no agreement as to the division of the through rate, and the controversy arose between them as to the division thereof. In order to determine the controversy the Texas-Mexican Railway Company submitted the matter of the proper division of said rate to the Railroad Commission of Texas for its decision, and in its application to that body set out eight certain carload shipments of coal, which were shipped on through bills of lading from Minera to Pes-cadito, and that afterwards said shipments were distributed by it to certain points on its line; and after setting, out in detail the facts relating thereto, it concluded its application to the Commission in the following language:

“The Texas-Mexican Railway Company desires a ruling from your honorable body whether it is entitled to a division of the through rate upon company coal shipped from Minera, Texas, and which coal actually moves to Pescadito, Texas, and we would be pleased to have this ruling cover all shipments of company coal moving from Minera, Texas, to Pescadito, Texas.”

After a hearing by the Commission it entered the following order relating thereto:

“It is now, hereby, ordered by the Railroad Commission of Texas, that the revenue, accruing imder the freight rates applicable for the transportation of the shipments in question, the same being carload shipments of soft coal from Minera, Texas, to Pescadito, Texas, shall be divided between the carriers, participating in the haul thereof, in proportion to the local rates of said companies actually applying to and from the point of interchange, being Laredo, Texas, through which the shipments actually moved; the local rates to be used as factors, being as follows:
“For the Rio Grande & Eagle Pass Ry. Co. sixty-five (65) cents per ton.
“For the Texas-Mexican Ry. Co. fifty-five (55) cents per ton.”

This suit was brought by defendant in error in the district court of Travis county, before Hon. George Calhoun, district judge, for a writ of injunction to restrain the enforcement and to declare void the Railroad Commission’s order No. 1427, alleging that said order was unreasonable, unjust, and invalid because it authorizes a division pro rata upon a joint tariff rate to a railroad for hauling its own property over its own line. Defendant in error alleges:

“That the Railroad Commission of Texas had no power or authority to make, enter and promulgate said order in hearing No. 1427, dated February 24, 1914, for this: That no railroad in this state is entitled to any dividend pro rata for hauling its own property over its own line.”

Defendant in error further alleged that the said order of the Railroad Commission is unreasonable and unjust to it because the billing by the Texas-Mexican Railway Company of coal to Pescadito was a m'ere scheme to get a reduced freight rate, and that a large [975]*975number of cars of coal so billed were in fact not hauled to Pescadito, but were stopped at Laredo, and tbat said railway company bad failed and refused to revise tbe billing of cars so stopped, or to advise defendant in error tbat said cars of coal bad been stopped at Laredo, and bad not been bauled to tbe billed point of destination, and tbat said billing was fraudulent.

Plaintiff in error denied tbat tbe order was unreasonable or unjust, and alleged tbat a long time prior to tbe making thereof tbe defendant in error bad voluntarily transported coal from Minera to Laredo and delivered tbe same to tbe International & Great Northern Railway Company under through rates, and bad been voluntarily accepting a proportion of such through rates.

On trial in tbe district court, judgment was rendered sustaining tbe order. In construing tbe order tbe district court held that it applies only to shipments of coal tbat actually moved in transportation from Minera to Pescadito, and only to tbe particular ears of coal mentioned in tbe complaint on which said order was made, and to all similar shipments from Minera, on through shipment to Pescadito, made subsequent to tbe promulgation and notice of said order.

The Court of Civil Appeals in its first opinion sustained tbe validity of tbe order and affirmed tbe trial court’s judgment, out on rehearing held that tbe Texas-Mexican Railway Company bad no right'to participate in tbe division of a through rate on its own line in tbe carriage of its own property, and therefore reversed and rendered the judgment of tbe district court.

The question here presents itself squarely upon tbe issue whether or not tbe Railroad Commission of Texas bad tbe right and authority to issue an order permitting a participation by tbe Texas-Mexican Railway Company in tbe division of a through rate on its own line of tbe transportation of its own property. Tbe other issues raised are only incidental to this one leading proposition.

It is not deemed necessary in this opinion to indulge in a general discussion of the authority and powers of tbe Railroad Commission of Texas under our Constitution and Statutes. This court has fully amplified that subject in an elaborate opinion by Chief Justice Brown in the ease of Railroad Commission v. Galveston Chamber of Commerce, 105 Tex. 101, 145 S. W. 573. Tbe principle is broadly laid down that unless an order of tbe Railroad Commission is shown to be clearly unjust and unreasonable it will be sustained, and tbat tbe burden of so showing is upon the’party attacking it. In this case, aside from the question stated above .as to tbe right of a railroad to participate in a pro rata dividend for hauling its own property over its own lines, there are no sufficient allegations or facts to justify a finding tbat said order is unfair or unreasonable. There is no complaint tbat tbe 80 cent -rate from Minera to Pescadito is not a just and fair rate, and there is no complaint tbat tbe division of tbe rate between those points.as made by tbe said order is not a proper division as applied to commercial shipments. In these respects tbe rate and its division are not challenged. It is only as applied to a division of rate on “company coal” tbat complaint is made, on tbe ground tbat tbe company shipper is not entitled to a division on its own coal; tbat said coal is at home when it reaches tbe junction point, Laredo. Defendant in error specially emphasizes tbe fact that quite a large number of tbe cars were not actually hauled through to Pescadito, but were stopped at Laredo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-commission-v-rio-grande-e-p-ry-co-tex-1921.