State ex inf. Crow v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

75 S.W. 776, 176 Mo. 687, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 126
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 776 (State ex inf. Crow v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.) 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
State ex inf. Crow v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 75 S.W. 776, 176 Mo. 687, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 126 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This is a proceeding by quo warranto ex informations the Attorney-General, against the respondent, The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, a railroad corporation doing business in this State, to oust it from the exercise of certain rights, privileges and franchises alleged to be illegal A exercised by it.

The information alleges that the respondent is a [702]*702corporation of the State of Kansas, operating lines oi railway extending through the Territory of Oklahoma and the States of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, to Chicago, Illinois; and extending west and south from Kansas City to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego, California, and the Rio Grande river; that it has no authority to do ¿ny business in Missouri except as a foreign railroad corporation, having complied with its laws and obtained a certificate to do business in the State; that Kansas City is a market city for grain and grain products, with large mills and elevator facilities, and being located on the lines of many railroads, it reaches the eastern, western, northern and southern markets; that it is important to the people of this State that Kansas City be maintained as a grain market; that there is in Kansas City a large number of firms or companies employing a large number of men, and having a large investment of capital in the business of dealing in, buying and selling, storing and handling of grain, many of them doing business as commission merchants, and all of whom have made their investments upon the faith of the course of business hereinafter stated; that Chicago and the cities and towns upon the Mississippi river are strong competitors of Kansas City for grain: that it has been customary to ship grain to Kansas City in car and train load lots, and place the same on what are called “hold tracks,” for inspection, barter and sale, and subsequent directions for delivery in the city of its destination; that on the faith of such universal custom and usage, large numbers of the citizens of this State and especially said persons at Kansas City have engaged in the grain, elevator, milling, feed and stock business and invested large sums of money therein; that the course of business has been, in shipping grain to Kansas City, for the shippers to draw drafts against the shipments with bills of lading attached, wijh the right to the consignee to inspect the shipments on the “hold tracks” before making pay[703]*703ment of such drafts; that about 57,000 ears of grain are brought into the Kansas City market and placed upon the ‘ ‘ hold tracks ’ ’ in the course of a year, of which about sixty-seven per cent is brought in by the Santa Fe, Missouri Pacific, Rock Island and Burlington railway companies; that up to July 28, 1902, the universal custom at Kansas City and all cities west of the Mississippi river had not only been to place the cars upon the ‘ ‘hold tracks,” but to take them from thence to the point of delivery in said city designated by the consignee, without additional charge for so much of the carriage as passed over the tracks of the initial-carrier or the tracks used by it; that switching charges over the tracks of connecting lines were made, averaging about three dollars per ear; that forty-eight hours free time for inspection, sale and delivery of cars, after arrival on “hold tracks” is allowed, a charge of one dollar per day per car being thereafter charged for demurrage; that the grain coming to Kansas City is largely sent to elevators for cleaning and grading and subsequent shipment out; that there are a number of lines of railway of which Kansas City is the western terminus, which are the competitors of respondent and the other through lines above mentioned for traffic destined from or through Kansas City to eastern and southern points, and such companies seek to carry a part of the grain ■ brought into Kansas City by respondent to points east, south and north of Kansas City; that respondent and other through lines use every effort and endeavor to carry all the grain brought through or to Kansas City by them from points on their lines to points east, north and south of Kansas City; that if they succeed, competition between the various railroads for the haul east, north and south of Kansas City will be destroyed, which competition is beneficial to the public; that the Burlington, Missouri Pacific, Santa Fe and Rock Island railway companies are the only' companies having lines extending from the west through Kansas City, extend[704]*704ing east thereof and reaching the Gnlf ports and the ports upon the Great Lakes; that said four companies have adopted the practice of having large elevators com structed on their lines in the heart of the grain-producing country, for the storage of grain, for the purpose of having such grain carried over their lines for the longest possible distance and to said Gnlf and Lake ports, and they seek to impose a reconsignment charge at Kansas City of a sufficient amount to deter producers of grain from shipping the same to the Kansas City market; that to protect themselves against those producers and dealers who will not ship over the lines of said four companies to markets east and south of Kansas City, said companies conspired and confederated to adopt some device or scheme in the way of an unlawful delivery charge for delivery at said Kansas City from the “hold tracks” to the point in Kansas City, Missouri, designated by the consignee, which would enable them to haul out of Kansas City practically all the grain destined east, north and south thereof; that such scheme is oppressive to the public, a burden to the Kansas City market, interferes with shipments thereto, and places the consumers, merchants and people of that city and those there dealing in grain at a disadvantage in attempting to compete with the eastern, northern and southern markets; that the result of the combination and conspiracy is to divert grain from the Kansas City market, which legitimately would flow to the said market or pass through the same for sale and ultimate disposition; that said grain is concentrated at western points and shipped over said lines to points south, east, and north of Kansas City; that the device and scheme so adopted was this: that said four through lines would make an extra charge, called a “reconsignment charge” of two dollars per ear for delivering any car of grain in Kansas City, Missouri, at any connection with any other railroad, or at any warehouse or mill or elevator or private industry therein, in' ad[705]*705dition to the switching and demurrage charges herein-before mentioned, and in addition to the freight charge made for carrying such grain to the consignee at Kansas City; that notice thereof was given making said charge effective on the 28th day of July, 1902; that said charge is ultimately paid by the producer, places the Kansas City market at a disadvantage as compared with other concentrating points west of the Mississippi river, and is wholly unwarranted by law; that said reconsignment charge is absorbed or refunded if grain coming into Kansas.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 776, 176 Mo. 687, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-crow-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-mo-1903.