Southern Pacific Co. v. Corporation Commission

3 P.2d 518, 39 Ariz. 1, 1931 Ariz. LEXIS 151
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1931
DocketCivil No. 3022.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 518 (Southern Pacific Co. v. Corporation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pacific Co. v. Corporation Commission, 3 P.2d 518, 39 Ariz. 1, 1931 Ariz. LEXIS 151 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

This is an appeal by the Southern Pacific Company from a judgment and order of the superior court of Maricopa county affirming and approving an order and decision of the Corporation Commission directing said appellant to refund to the Shattuck-Denn Mining Corporation certain switching charges.

The action in the superior court and this appeal are provided for in section 720 of the Revised Code of 1928.

On December 23, 1924, an application of the Shat-tuck-Arizona Copper Company was filed with the Corporation Commission alleging that the switching charges of the El Paso & Southwestern Railroad Company and the Southern Pacific Company were unjust, unreasonable, and excessive. Thereafter a hearing was had upon such application, at which time the Shattuck-Denn Mining Corporation had succeeded to the rights of the Shattuck-Arizona Copper Company and the Denn-Arizona Copper Company, also a shipper; and the Southern Pacific Company had acquired the control of the El Paso & Southwestern Railroad Company.

Herein we shall refer to the Southern Pacific Company as the carrier and the Shattuck-Denn Mining-Corporation as the complainant.

*3 The commission found it unnecessary to determine whether the charges were unjust, unreasonable or excessive, hut held the question was one of tariff interpretation.

On July 1, 1922, the El Paso & Southwestern Kailroad Company (predecessor of appellant) filed with the Corporation Commission a tariff schedule in which the various switching services the carrier performed were classified and defined as follows:

“Intra-plant switching: A switching movement from one' track t£> another within the same plant or industry.
“Intra-terminal switching: A switching movement (other than intra-plant switching) from one track to another of the same road within the switching limits of one station or industrial switching district.
“Inter-terminal switching: A switching movement from a track of one road to a track of another road when both tracks are within the switching limits of the same station or industrial switching district.”

The rate for intra-plant switching was fixed at $3.60 per car movement and for intra-terminal and inter-terminal at $7.20 per car movement.

The carrier had charged the complainant and its predecessors for intra-terminal movements. The commission held the movements were intra-plant, and ordered the carrier to refund to the complainant $3.60 on each car movement.

This suit was brought by the Southern Pacific Company to test the correctness of the commission’s order, and resulted in its approval by the trial court. The same question is presented on this appeal. It was stipulated in the trial that the question involved is, “Was the service or movement involved an intraplant or an intra-terminal movement?” Thus the question of the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the charges is eliminated. Appellant, Southern Pacific Company, contends the movements were intra *4 terminal, and that the commission and the trial court, in holding- that they were intra-plant, erred.

The pertinent facts are, and we take them largely from appellant’s brief, the appellee not disputing them: That the tracks and spurs over which the movements were made, as also the right of way, belong- to the carrier, and are all within the Bisbee switching district, which includes the yard limits at Bisbee Junction on the main track of the carrier and all intermediate 'trackage between that point and the end of the branch line, extending from Bisbee Junction into Bisbee; that the distance from the ore bins, where the ore is loaded on the cars, to Bisbee is 2,235 feet, and that the distance from 'the end of the main line at Bisbee to the switch of what is known as the Denn main spur, just below Lowell, is 10,822.3 feet, and that the distance' from the Denn main spur to 'the switch of the mill spur is 3,704.5 feet; that the total distance of the movement from the Shattuck ore-bins, upon what is called the high line, to the unloading bins at the mill is 17,915 feet, approximately 3.4 miles; that there is located at the mine a hoist, buildings and all equipment and facilities for bringing ore out of the ground to the surface of the earth and loading it into the cars, and that the mill consisted of mill bins, dryatory crusher, Simms Ball Mills, flotation machines, filter and storage for ore concentrates, and all facilities necessary for the concentration of ores; that there were produced at the mine two classes of ores, a high grade and a low grade; that the high grade could be shipped directly to the customs mill at Douglas, Arizona, or to E] Paso, Texas, without being concentrated at Bisbee; but that it was necessary to concentrate the low grade before it could be shipped with profit.

The commission, in arriving at the conclusion that the movements were intra-plant, reasoned this way. *5 They said the business of complainant consisted of two units: One the production of ore at the mine, and one the reduction of that ore at the mill; that it was necessary that the ore be reduced because' its quality and value would not permit a substantial transportation charge; that the industry could not function without both units, and that one would be of no value without the other, and therefore the two units constituted a plant or industry.

The appellant contends that, in determining whether the car movements were intra-plant or intra-terminal, the necessity of reducing the ore before it could be made profitable is aside from and foreign to the question, for two reasons:

(1) That it is the character of service rendered by the carrier, and not the business motives or commercial reasons of the shipper in causing his commodity to be shipped or the service to be rendered, that determines the' rates and charges. The carriers do not fix their charges upon the ability of the commodity shipped to stand such charges. But for the same service the same rate must be charged, even though the result might be that one shipper’s commodity could, and another’s could not, stand that charge. This seems to be a cardinal rule in rate-fixing. For instance, the passenger is charged for the accommodations afforded and the length of his journey, but in no case is such charge predicated upon the reason or purpose of the passenger in making the journey. This rule has been many times announced and adhered to by the' Inter-State Commerce Commission and also the courts. Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & O. Ry. Co., 225 U. S. 326, Ann. Cas. 1914A 504, 56 L. Ed. 1107, 32 Sup. Ct. Rep. 742; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. International Coal Min. Co., (C. C. A.) 173 Fed. 1 (reversed in 230 U. S. 184, 57 L. Ed. 1446, 33 Sup. Ct. Rep. 893, on another *6 point); Brainerd Fruit Co. v. Chicago G. W. R. Co., 163 I. C. C. 585; Louisville Cement Co.

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 518, 39 Ariz. 1, 1931 Ariz. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-co-v-corporation-commission-ariz-1931.