Schumacher v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

69 N.E. 825, 207 Ill. 199
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 69 N.E. 825 (Schumacher v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway 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
Schumacher v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 69 N.E. 825, 207 Ill. 199 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant brought an action of replevin in a justice’s court in Lake county ag'ainst appellee for three tons of coke. Judgment was for appellee in the justice court. On appeal to the circuit court of said county a trial was had before a jury, and the court directed a verdict for appellee and entered judgment thereon. Appeal was taken to the Appellate Court, where the judgment of the lower court was affirmed, and this appeal was prosecuted.

Appellant is a resident of Highland Park, and in June, 1902, purchased and caused to be shipped to himself at said place over appellee’s road two cars of coke. The cars arrived in Highland Park on June 20, at seven o’clock in the morning, and at nine o’clock in the morning" of the same day appellee’s station agent at said point mailed appellant notice of the arrival of the cars. Appellant is a practicing lawyer residing at Highland Park and having his office in the city of Chicago, and on the same morning of the arrival of the cars, and shortly after the mailing of the first notice, appellee’s agent saw appellant personally and informed him that ■ said cars had arrived. At that time appellee’s agent did not know the freight charges, and neither by the first postal card nor by verbal statement was appellant informed on that day of the freight charges. On the morning of the 21st appellee’s agent again notified appellant of the arrival of said cars, sending notice by postal card through the mail, which was received by appellant between 8:30 and 9 o’clock in the morning of that day. On the postal card so sent to appellant, after describing the freight, was the following: “Which is now at your risk; please pay charges and remove property within twenty-four hours, or same will be charged storage or delivered to warehouseman; all car-load freight shall be subject to a minimum charge for trackage and rental of one dollar per car for each twenty-four hours’ detention, or fractional part thereof, after the expiration of forty-eight hours from its arrival at destination.” And across the face of said postal card was stamped the following: “If this car is not unloaded within forty-eight hours from 7 A. M., June 21,1902, a charge of one dollar per day, or fraction thereof, will be made for car service, for which this company reserves a lien upon the contents of car.” Upon the 21st of June, and after the receipt of the postal card by appellant on that day, he went to appellee’s station and there paid its agent the freight, taking a receipt therefor, and on each of the freight bills was stamped a notice identical with the one last above quoted. When appellant received the freight receipts he called the attention of appellee’s agent to the notice with reference to the charge for car service contained thereon, and stated to him that he could not g'et the cars unloaded within forty-eight hours, or anywhere near that time; also recalled the fact that he had had trouble a year or so previous to this shipment with this same company at the same station, growing out of appellee’s insistence upon the enforcement of the above rule. Appellant then engaged one James H. Duffy, whose business was the hauling of coal and coke, to haul the same for him, but was informed by said Duffy that he could not begin the work until the following Monday, June 21 being on Saturday. One car was unloaded by Tuesday, June 24. On Thursday, June 26, the other car was only partially unloaded, and appellee, through its agent, notified Duffy, who was hauling the coke, that he could haul no more until the car service due from the delay in unloading had been paid. ■ A controversy then arose between appellant and appellee, which resulted in the suing out of the writ of replevin on Monday, June 30, there remaining about three tons of coke in one car, which appellee had sealed and refused to allow to be removed until the car service was paid.

The evidence further shows that the cars, on their arrival on Friday, June 20, were placed on a stub-track, where they could be approached from one side and unloaded, and on the 21st of June were placed at the end of another stub-track, so that their removal was unnecessary until they were unloaded, and could be approached from both sides, for the purpose of unloading, without interference from switching so long as they remained at that point. The two cars in question came from and belonged to other railroad lines, one being from the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company and the other from the Illinois Central Railroad Company; that appellee had no warehouse for the unloading of bulk freight, such as car-loads of coal and coke, at Highland Park station, and that freight such as that in question is uniformly loaded and unloaded by the shipper and consignee.

The evidence further shows that in what was called “Chicago territory,” and embracing a considerable scope of country surrounding the city of Chicago, and including Highland Park, was an association called the “Chicago Car Service Association,” which was a joint association including all the railroads within that territory, all of which united in the selection of a single agent, known as the “Gar Service Association agent,” the purpose and business of which association were to facilitate the loading and unloading of cars and for the securing of prompt service to shippers; that this agency or association had existed since 1888, and that appellee was a member of such association; that the United States, with reference to railroad traffic, was divided into forty-two districts, each having a similar association; that certain rules, designed to effectuate the purpose of such association, were formulated and published by it and observed by all its members and brought to the attention of shippers, as business between them arose and was conducted; that among the rules were rules 2, 4 and 5, as follows:

“2. Forty-eight hours’ free time will be allowed for loading or unloading all cars, whether on public tracks or on private tracks, at the expiration of which time a charge of one dollar per car per day, or fraction thereof, shall be made .and collected for the use of cars and tracks held for loading or unloading or subject to the orders of consignors or consignees or their agents.

“4. In calculating time, Sundays and the following holidays are excepted: New Year’s Day, Washington’s Birthday, Decora.tion Day, Fourth of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas.

“5. On cars arriving after 6:00 P. M. of any day, car service will be charged after the expiration of forty-eight hours from 6:00 P. M. on the day following.”

The evidence showed that in the city of Chicago alone there were shipped in, approximately, 75,000 cars of coal and coke every month; that the average earning capacity of freight cars upon twenty-nine railroads in the association, for the year 1901, was $2.42, and on appellee’s road $2.15 per day.

Under the above state of facts appellee contends that it was entitled to charge a car service or car track service of one dollar per day, after the expiration of forty-eight hours, upon these cars, and that it was entitled to a lien upon the coke, the same being the freight contained in them, for the payment of such charges. Both of these propositions are denied by appellant, and arise upon the peremptory instruction for a verdict, given by the trial court.

Under the constitution and laws of this State railroads are public highways and railroad corporations are quasi public corporations.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.E. 825, 207 Ill. 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schumacher-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-ill-1904.