St. Louis S. F. Ry. Co. v. Hobart Mill & Elevator Co.

1925 OK 330, 239 P. 165, 111 Okla. 295, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 509
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 21, 1925
Docket13496
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 330 (St. Louis S. F. Ry. Co. v. Hobart Mill & Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis S. F. Ry. Co. v. Hobart Mill & Elevator Co., 1925 OK 330, 239 P. 165, 111 Okla. 295, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 509 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, 'C.

This action was instituted by defendant in error as plaintiff, in the district court of Kiowa county, Okla., against plaintiff in error, ag defendant, in the trial court to recover certain sums of money as damages resulting from the failure of the defendant railway company to furnish certain cars which had been ordered by the plaintiff to he used in shipping wheat from Hobart, Okla., to gulf ports during the months of July and August, 1920. Plaintiff further alleges that the price of wheat in Hobart, Okla., was based, on the price of vdheat at Galveston, Tex., less cost of carriage. That plaintiff was engaged in the business of buying apd stopping wheat, and that he ordered cars from the agent of it he defendant railway company at various times to be used in shipment of wheat, giving ample notice, and that the defendant railway company failed and refused to deliver or furnish a sufficient number of cars, and in fact only furnished about 12 per cénit, of the cars ordered, prior to August 26, 1920, on which date there was an advance in freight rates, increasing the rate on wheat per hundredweight from Hobart to Gulf ports from 37 to 50 cents, and that on said date a war tax of 8.034 cents per bushel took effect, thereby causing a decline in the price ofi wheat at Hobart in ithe amount equal to said .advance in freight rates .and the war idax, and that by reason of the failure of said defendant railway company to furnish the ears ordered within a reasonable time, plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $1,794.79,- on 22,000 bushels of Wheat purchased for shipment prior to August 26, 1920, which Was then in the elevator and which plaintiff would have shipped had cars been furnished.

The defendant’s answer consists of a general denial, and a further plea that there was an ¡unprecedented demand for grailn Gars, such as could not have been anticipated by defendant, and that there was a congestion of traffic over defendant’s entire line of railway, and on the line of all railway companies throughout the United States, brought about by conditions over which the defendant had no control, and that it was impossible and impractical for the defendant to furnish cars to the plaintiff for ithe transportation of grain at the times herein mentioned.

The case was tried -to a jury on the 20th day of December, 192Í, resulting in a verdict for plaintiff for damages in the sum of $1,172.12; motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and judgment rendered by the court in conformity to the verdict of the jury; from which order and judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal and assigns numerous specifications of error, and in its brief presents five different propositions as ground for reversal of the judgment of the ■trial court.

First, the appellant contends that the trial court was without jurisdiction to try and determine the rights of the parties in this case for the reason that -the cars to be furnished were interstate cars to be used in interstate shipment, and therefore under the Hepburn Aot of 1906, and -other authorities cited, that the Interstate Commerce Commission and the federal courts are the proper tribunal^ in which such litigation should he conducted. We think, -however, this contention has been determined adversely to appellant’s contention by the Supreme Court of the United ¡States in the case of Pennsylvania Railroad Company v. Puritan Coal Mining Company, 237 U. S. 121, and we quote the syllabus of that case as follows:

“Section 8 of the A'ct to Regulate Commerce gives the shipper a right of action against the carrier for damages occasioned by his doing an act prohibited by the statute, and section 9 gives the shipper the option to proceed either before the Interstate Commerce Commission or in the federal courts.
“Construing sections 8 and 22, however, in connection with the statute as a whole, the Act to Regulate Commerce is both declaratory and creative, and while shippers are given new rights, existing causes of action are preserved and the jurisdiction of state courts is noit superseded, in cases in which the decision does not involve the deferrain *297 ation of matters calling for the exercise of administrative powler and discretion of the Commission or relate to subjects over which exclusive jurisdiction is given to the federal counts.
“While the federal courts may have exclusive jurisdiction of a suit brought to declare that a rule of practice promulgated by the carrier is unfair, a suit for damages occasioned toy the -violation or discriminatory enforcement of the carrier’s rule, fair on its face iand not attacked as unfair, does not involve administrative questions tout only those of fact; and even though for damages arising in interstate commerce, such a suit is not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal court, but may be prosecuted either in those courts or in the state counts.
“The state courts have jurisdiction of an action of the shipper against the carrier to furnish a reasonable number of ears, whether the action toe treated as one for breach of the common law duty to furnish the cars or for unjust discrimination in allotting ears to another shipper in violation of the carrier’s own rule to furnish all the shippers on an equal pro raita basis. The jurisdiction of the state court is not defeated because the breach of common law duty is also an unjust discrimination.
“Motive for breach of common law duty of ithe carrier to furnish a reasonable number of cars is immaterial, and what was a proper supply under the circumstances is a matter of fact.
“While ordinarily, a shipper on reasonable demand is entitled to all the' cars it ■can promptly load, that right is not absolute, and a carrier is not liable for failure ito supply oars as the result of sudden and great demands Which it had no reason t;o apprehend, but in a case of car shortage it is bound to treat shippers fairly if not identically.
“Where there is a shortage and the Shipper complains that the carrier’s rule of distribution is unfair, the question is foi the Commission (Mprrisdale Coal Co. v. Penna. R. R., 230- TJ. S. 312), hut where the shipper does not attack the rule itself, tout complains that the carrier refused to furnish the number of oars it was entitled ito under the rule, while other shippers were furnished more cars than they were entitled to under the same rule, a preliminary finding of the Commission is unnecessary; and even if the shipments were interstate, the state and federal courts have jurisdiction.”

The fourth paragraph of the Pennsylvania Case clearly states the rule and holds that the state courts have jurisdiction of actions of the character such as we are here dealing with. Appellant contends that the plaintiff’s petition raises the question of an unjust discrimination in the distribution of ears, hut we find nothing in the petition which justifies this contention. It is clearly an action based on failure of the deféndant to furnish cars on reasonable demand. Appellant further contends that the Act of February 28, 1920, section 1 of the Interstate Commerce Act (1923 Supplemental U. S. C. S. 1916, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 330, 239 P. 165, 111 Okla. 295, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-s-f-ry-co-v-hobart-mill-elevator-co-okla-1925.