Ross v. Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad

19 S.W. 541, 111 Mo. 18, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 20, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 541 (Ross v. Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad, 19 S.W. 541, 111 Mo. 18, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 123 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

Black, J.

The plaintiffs, Ross and Todd, brought this suit to recover the statutory penalty of three times the amount of alleged overcharges paid by them to defendant for hauling several hundred cords of wood to St. Joseph, between the first day of July, 1883, and March 25, 1886.

The petition contained two hundred and thirty-four counts. Plaintiffs withdrew or took a nonsuit as to some fifty odd counts, and recovered judgment on the others, and the defendant appealed.

The proof shows that the cordwood was all shipped from points on the defendant’s road to St. Joseph, the distance in all cases being less than twenty-five miles. In some instances the wood was not shipped from any regular station, but from points on the road where it had been piled with the knowledge and consent of the defendant. In such cases the defendant sent out a special train and made a special charge of $25 for “engine services” in addition to the usual freight charges. As the trial court, by the instructions given, excluded these special charges in computing the overcharges, it is not necessary to give them any further notice.

[23]*23The defendant made ont from time to time what are called “expense bills” and presented them to the plaintiffs for payment, and they paid the charges thus made. Each of these bills represents a car, and the charges are extended according to the weight of the wood, the price charged for carriage ranging from three and one-half to four cents per one hundred pounds. One of these bills will serve as a sample for all. It reads: “Weight, twenty-eight hundred; rate, three hundred and seventy-five; total to pay, $10.50.”

. The defendant put in evidence portions of the fourth annual report of the railroad commissioners of the state of Missouri for the year 1878, addressed to the general assembly. In this report the commissioners say: “The laws of Missouri recognize two thousand pounds as a ton, but in regard to some articles, particularly iron, custom allowed twenty-two hundred and forty pounds to the ton. Custom has established ten tons or twenty thousand pounds as a carload, but in many freights, especially lumber, custom allows twelve tons or twenty-four thousand pounds to the car. The weight of lumber being estimated from the number of feet. To avoid confusion, therefore, the commissioners published, in connection with their table of classification, that they recognize two thousand pounds as a legal ton and ten tons as a carload. See appendix C and D.”

The part of “appendix C” read in evidence is in these words:

“Classification of freights established by railroad commissioners of Missouri.
“This classification to be in force on all the railroads in Missouri from and after July 10, 1878.
“Explanations: The classes are first, second, third, fourth, D, E, E, Gr, H, I and J, and the expression [24]*241 1-2, D and 3x1 mean one and a half times the first, double first and three times first class.
“The commissioners recognize two thousand pounds as a legal ton and ten tons a carload.”

The defendant insists that it had the right and was in duty bound to make its charges in accordance with the construction placed upon the law by the railroad commissioners, fixing ten tons or twenty thousand pounds as a carload. If correct in this contention, then this action must fail, for the amount charged did not in any case exceed $8 per twenty thousand pounds. The plaintiff insists that when the law speaks of a carload it means all the wood hauled in one car, and hence the defendant was guilty of making overcharges.

The act of 1875, which provides for the appointment of a board of railroad commissioners, divides freights transported into four general classes “to be designated first, second, third and fourth classes, and into special classes to be designated as classes D, E, F, Gr, H, I and J.” Revised Statutes, 1879, sec. 833. The statute does not define what articles shall be included in these general classes, but it is left to the commissioners to make the classification. The statute, however, declares what shall constitute special classes D, E, Gl and H, and it specifies some of the articles which shall go into special classes I and J. It also fixes the maximum rate of charges upon the special classes. Class D comprises grain in carloads, and the maximum rate is six cents per one hundred pounds for the first twenty-five miles. Class E comprises flour in lots of fifty barrels or more, and lime in lots of twenty-four barrels or more, and the highest charge allowed is twelve cents per barrel for the first twenty-five miles. Class H comprises live stock, and the maximum rate is $10 per carload. “Class J shall comprise coal, brick, sand, stone, railroad ties and cordwood, and all heavy [25]*25fourth class articles, in carloads,” and it is provided in respect of rates: “Glass J, not exceeding $8 per carload for the first twenty-five miles,” etc. As the statute itself, and not the commissioners, places cord-wood in class J and fixes the maximum rate at $8 per carload for the first 25 miles, the present case resolves itself into the question as to what is meant by a “carload” of cordwood.

It is to be observed in the first place that the statute deals with the movement of the commerce of the country, and must have accorded to it a reasonable and practical construction in the light of usages existing at the date of the enactment. “A statute applicable to a large trade or business should, if possible, be construed, not according to the strictest and nicest interpretation of the language, but according to a reasonable and business interpretation of it, with regard to the trade or business with which it is dealing.” Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes, sec. 83.

Again, where such a statute as this has been interpreted by those executive officers whose duty it is to enforce it, and their construction has been acted upon for any considerable time, due regard should be paid to such construction. While the rulings of such officers are not conclusive upon the courts, still their construction of the law is entitled to weight, especially where there is doubt as to the meaning of the law. Says the author just cited, after speaking of the deference paid to the practice in lower courts, “But of almost equal dignity is the practical construction put upon an act by the governmental officers particularly charged with its execution, especially where so long continued as to have grown into a rule of departmental practice. Thus the construction of a statute adopted and acted upon, by the executive, in the execution of his duty to give effect to the laws, or by the secretary of the treasury, or [26]*26the construction of a general insurance law of a state by its attorney general and other officers required to act under it, will, in cases of doubt and ambiguity * * * be adopted by the courts, or, at least, not disregarded by them, except for cogent reasons.” Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, sec. 360; Union Ins. Co. v. Hoge, 21 How. 35.

Now, it must be conceded that a “carload of wood” is a very indefinite expression, and especially so in view of the fact that there is no uniformity whatever in the size or strength of cars. One car will carry only five tons while another can safely carry twenty tons.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 541, 111 Mo. 18, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-kansas-city-st-joseph-council-bluffs-railroad-mo-1892.