Southern Pac. Co. v. Railroad Commission of Oregon

208 F. 926, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1283
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedSeptember 29, 1913
DocketNos. 5,860, 5,845-5,847, 5,849-5,852
StatusPublished

This text of 208 F. 926 (Southern Pac. Co. v. Railroad Commission of Oregon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pac. Co. v. Railroad Commission of Oregon, 208 F. 926, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1283 (D. Or. 1913).

Opinion

WOEVERTON, District Judge.

These suits are. instituted by the transportation lines against the State Railroad Commission and the District Attorneys of the several judicial districts of the state to enjoin the putting into operation and the enforcement of an Initiative Act adopted by the people November 5, 1912. Demurrers to the bills were first interposed. These were overruled, and the causes were finally submitted on bill and answer. The act, with its title, is in language following:

“An act entitled ‘An act to provide for a uniform percentage in the relationship of the classification ratings, providing for the establishment of minimum ear load weights, to fix the maximum rate on basis of the less than car load rate of the article and the minimum car load weight that may be charged on car load shipments of property, defining the rating upon which the car load rate shall be computed, and prescribing penalties for violations of the provisions of the act.’
“lie it enacted by the people of the state of Oregon:
“Section 1. The classification ratings of freight shall hear a uniform relationship of one class to another class, and the percentage of the first class shall be 100, and the other classes shall be the following percentages of the first class:
Classes 1 2 3 45 ABODE
Percentages 100 84 70 59 50 42 35 29 24 20.
“Sec. 2. A minimum car load weight shall be provided for each article, but no minimum car load weight shall be greater than the actual weight that can be loaded in a ear, nor shall a small minimum car load weight be fixed with [928]*928tlie sole'object to secure a high car load rate. Where no minimum car load weight is provided for each article by a railroad, or fixed by'an order of the Railroad Commission of Oregon, the minimum car load weight shall be 30,-000 pounds.
“Sec. 3. It shall be unlawful for any railroad, as the term is defined In chapter 53, Laws of Oregon for the year 1907, creating a railroad commission, to demand, charge, collect or receive a greater compensation for the transportation of property in car load lots than the following: When the minimum car load weight for an article is fixed at 20,000 pounds or less the car load rate shall not exceed 70 per cent, of the less than car load rate provided for the article. When the minimum car load weight for an article is fixed at more than 20,000 pounds and not in excess of 30,000 pounds the car load rate shall not exceed 59 per cent, of the less than car load rate provided for the article. When the minimum car load weight for an article is fixed at more than 30,000 poimds and not to exceed 40,000 pounds the car load rate shall not exceed 50 per cent, of the less than car load rate provided for the article. When the car load minimum weight for an article is fixed in excess of 40,000 pounds the car load rate shall not exceed 42 per cent, of the less than car load rate provided for the article.
“Sec. 4. When two or move less than car load ratings are given an article the car load rate shall be computed on the lowest less than car load rating given the article, and when two or more articles are permitted to be shipped, or are provided to be shipped, as a mixed car load the car load rate shall be computed on the article contained in the car load which is given the highest less than car load rating.
“Sec. 5. If any railroad shall demand, charge, collect or receive a greater compensation for the transportation of car loads of property between points wholly within the state of Oregon as provided in section 3 of this act, it shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof shall be punished for each offense by a fine of one hundred dollars and the cost of the prosecution.
“Sec. 6. Each car load shipment against which an unlawful charge is made shall constitute a separate offense.”

In epitome, the effect of the act'-is to provide, by its first section, a standard for the classification ratings of freight, to require, by its second section, that a minimum car load weight be provided for each article, and, by its third, to establish a maximum percentage of rates for minimum car load weights with reference to- less than car load charges, above which it is declared to be unlawful for the carrier to charge or receive compensation for the service of transportation. A penalty of $100 and costs is imposed for each offense of charging or receiving an excessive rate; each car load constituting the basis of a separate offense.

In the development of rate regulation, there has been brought into vogue for the territory west of Chicago, including the Pacific Coast states, what is known as the “Western Classification,” which is made the basis or standard for the classification of all freight for the purpose of establishing the rates and charges for transportation by rail. This classification has been recognized and adopted by the Interstate Commerce Commission, and also by the Railroad Commission of. Oregon, and is as follows:

Classes 1 2345ABCDE
Percentages 100 85 70 60 50 50 4S> 30 25 20.

Generally, perhaps not universally, the first four classes have been used in practice for fixing the schedule rates pertaining to less than [929]*929car load freight, and the other six classes have been adopted as the standard for ratings on car load shipments. There appears to be no rule among carriers requiring ratings to be so made, nor is there any law imposing the obligation. It is simply a usage that has grown up in the effort to establish rates for the cárriage of freight, and the authorities intrusted with the power of imposing reasonable and undiscriminating rates have adopted it as convenient and useful in regulation.

It may be further noted that less than car load freight is loaded and unloaded by the carrier, while the car load freight is loaded and unloaded by the shipper. This fact, and the fact that the larger the car load the less, proportionately, is the expense of carriage, are dominant features in rendering less than car load rates higher than car load rates.

Before passing from the subject, it should be understood that it is not requisite in usage, nor by the exactions of the Interstate Commerce or the State Railroad Commission, that all freight shall be rated according to classification. There arc certain commodities which are carried in large quantities that are excepted from the classification and permitted to take exceptionally low rates, which are called commodity rates. By rule 36 under the Western Classification, whenever a car load (or a less than car load) commodity rate is established, it removes the application of class rates to or from the same points on that commodity in car load quantities (or less than car load quantities, as the case may be), except when the alternative use of class and commodity rates is provided for. So- that a commodity may be excepted from the classification, and a specific rate provided for both car load and less than car load, and when so provided it becomes the controlling rate without reference to the classification.

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173 U.S. 684 (Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 F. 926, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pac-co-v-railroad-commission-of-oregon-ord-1913.