Railroad Commission v. Weld & Neville

73 S.W. 529, 96 Tex. 394, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 151
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1903
DocketNo. 1136.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 73 S.W. 529 (Railroad Commission v. Weld & Neville) 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. Weld & Neville, 73 S.W. 529, 96 Tex. 394, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 151 (Tex. 1903).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Under article 4565, Revised Statutes, the defendants in error instituted this suit in the District Court of the Twenty-sixth Judicial District, Travis County, against the Railroad Commission of Texas, and alleged in substance that the said Railroad Commission had established rules and regulations for the transportation of cotton from various points in Texas to Houston and Galveston as follows: For the territory extending not more than one hundred miles from Houston, the rate allowed to be charged upon cotton was based upon the length of the haul, but from all points more than one hundred miles from Houston, the same rate was allowed based upon one hundred pounds of weight whether in carload or less lots; with reduction of rate upon cotton compressed to a density of 22% pounds to the cubic foot. It is alleged that the regulations of the commission require the railroad companies to cause the cotton to be compressed either at the initial point of shipment or at the first compress in the line of transportation; charges for compressing to be paid by the railroad company, except, for cotton shipped from points between seventy and one hundred miles from Houston, the charges of compressing are apportioned between the shipper and the railroad company, but cotton shipped from stations less than seventy miles from Houston is not required to be compressed.

The petition alleges that the regulations of the Railroad Commission, governing the shipping of cptton and fixing the rates thereon, were made with reference to the old system of handling cotton, which involves its compression at the gins in bales of 54 to 58 inches long, 28 to 36 inches wide, and from 24 to 28 inches thick, which must be hauled to the railroad station, thence by the carrier to the nearest compress, twenty-five bales being all that a car will carry in an uncompressed condition; but *402 after being compressed to a density of 22% pounds to the cubic foot, fifty bales can be carried to the car.

Plaintiffs allege that they are interested in one of a number of im- ' proved economic methods of handling cotton in successful operation in Texas, and minutely describes the method by which a bale of cotton is produced by the Lowry system, which weighs two hundred,and fifty pounds with a density of more than forty pounds to the cubic foot, being convenient in size and weight for handling, impervious to water and not combustible. With bales thus compressed the carrier can load cars to the limit of their capacity and the allowed excess, and can use flat cars in the transportation of the cotton without danger of injury from water or fire.

Plaintiffs allege that the cotton crop of Texas amounts annually to 3,000,000 bales, the greater part of which is gathered and shipped during the last four months of each year and all of it must be transported by the railroads of the State within that time, necessitating the ownership and use of a large number of cars at a heavy cost, which cars can not be used at other seasons of the year. That the demand for cars to carry cotton is so great as to often.create car famine and great delay in the transportation of the cotton, which causes the railroad companies to resort to the use of flat cars that are unfit for that use and expose the cotton to damage by water and fire, whereby the railroad companies are subjected to heavy damages. The petitioners state minutely the supposed advantages that accrue to the railroad companies in shipping the Lowry bales of cotton over other freight or cotton otherwise compressed. Briefly stated, the allegations are, that the Lowry bales are not breakable; that they are not combustible nor liable to injury by water; save the expenses incident to short hauls and concentrating the cotton, and the difference between the cost of carrying two packages of the same weight, one compressed to the density of 22% pounds to the cubic foot, and one to the density of 40 pounds to the cubic foot.

The petition charges that notwithstanding cotton properly compressed is the most desirable class of freight for railroad'companies, the Bail-road Commission has fixed upon cotton the highest charge for transportation. It is charged that in transporting the same weight of cotton as originally compressed and the Lowry bale the railroad company receives nearly twice as much freight for a carload of the Lowry bale as for a like carload of the other, and particular instances are cited to illustrate this proposition. It is averred in the petition that under the regulations complained of the railroad companies are given an extraordinary and unreasonable revenue and profit for transporting Lowry bales of cotton; that the revenue derived by railroads from handling cotton compressed under the new method is greatly in excess of that derived from cotton handled in the old way, and that the cost under the new method is so much less that to establish the same rate for both classes of cotton is unjust and inecmitable and a discrimination against plaintiffs.

*403 Plaintiffs allege that prior to the institution of this suit they twice called upon the Railroad Commission for proper hearing to establish reasonable rates for the transportation of cotton, which application the Railroad Commission refused, alleging as its reason that to grant the prayer of petitioners would give the owner of the improved bales practically a monopoly of the business of compressing cotton. It is alleged that the refusal to grant a hearing and the refusal to establish the regulations requested were unreasonable and unjust to plaintiffs; that the regulations requested were reasonable and just to defendants, and they prayed that the regulations be established by the court.

The Railroad Commission by the Attorney-General filed general demurrer and special exceptions which were by the court overruled, and upon trial before the judge, judgment was entered declaring the rates and regulations to be unreasonable and unjust as to the defendants in error, which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

The contention of the Railroad Commission may be considered under the following propositions: (1) Articles 4565 and 4566 of the Revised Statutes do not authorize an inquiry by the courts into the reasonableness and justness of "the rates, rules and regulations made by the commission, except to ascertain if they amount to the taking of property without due process of law. In other words, that such rates, rules and regulations are confiscatory in their effect. (2) It is contended that if the said articles do authorize an inquiry into the reasonableness of rates, etc., except to ascertain whether or not they are in conflict with the Constitution, then such articles of the statute are in violation of the Constitution of the State because they thereby confer legislative power upon the courts. (3) That the facts alleged in plaintiff’s petition do not constitute a cause of action under articles 4565 and 4566.

The first question stated above has been decided by this court adversely to the contention of plaintiff in error in the case of Railroad Commission against Houston & Texas Central Railway Co., 90 Texas, 340.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W. 529, 96 Tex. 394, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-commission-v-weld-neville-tex-1903.