State Ex Rel. Baldwin v. Public Service Commission

99 S.W.2d 90, 339 Mo. 814, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 99 S.W.2d 90 (State Ex Rel. Baldwin v. Public Service Commission) 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 Rel. Baldwin v. Public Service Commission, 99 S.W.2d 90, 339 Mo. 814, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 595 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

*816 FRANK, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cole County approving an order of the Public Service Commission made in a cause entitled Midwest Coal Traffic Bureau v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, L. W. Baldwin and Guy A. Thompson, Trustees.

"We take our statement, in substance, from appellants’ brief which we find to be correct.

This controversy grew out of allowances made by certain railroads to consignees on shipments of coal to Jefferson City, Missouri. The main line and two branch lines of the Missouri Pacific Railroad enter Jefferson City, so that such railroad can deliver coal in carload lots on its tracks in said city. Two other railroads figure in this controversy; the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, commonly called the Katy and the Alton Railroad, for brevity called the Alton. The allowances made to. shippers by these two railroads are only incidentally involved because they were not parties to the action before the commission.

The tracks of the Katy and Alton do not reach or enter Jefferson City, but terminate near the north bank of the Missouri River, the *817 former at North Jefferson and the latter at Cedar City. However, both attempted to serve Jefferson City, and published rates to Jefferson City, although that point was not located on either of their lines. There is no railroad bridge across the Missouri River at Jefferson City.

To compete with the Missouri Pacific whose tracks reach and enter Jefferson City, the Katy and the Alton published an unloading allowance of forty-five cents per ton on traffic billed to Jefferson City. That is, a shipper by routing a fifty ton carload of coal over the Katy, and by hauling such coal by truck from North Jefferson across the vehicular bridge to Jefferson City, would secure a reduction of $22.50 per car in the charge. The result of this allowance caused coal merchants of Jefferson City to ship much of their coal over the Katy and Alton, then move it by truck to Jefferson City in order to get the allowance.

To meet this competition the Missouri Pacific published a similar allowance of forty-five cents per ton on both intrastate and interstate traffic destined to Jefferson City. It found that as to intrastate traffic, after payment of this allowance to the consignee, in many cases there was little, and in some cases, nothing left. It then attempted to amend its tariffs so as to provide that an allowance would not be paid to the shipper until the carrier had collected gross revenue of $25 per car on single-line movements and $50 per ear on joint-line movements. The Public Service Commission refused to permit this to.be done.

Thereafter the Missouri Pacific canceled the forty-five cents per ton allowance on both intrastate and interstate traffic. The result was that much of the coal traffic from Illinois to Jefferson City which was formerly shipped over the Missouri Pacific began to be shipped over the Katy and Alton. To recover this traffic the Missouri Pacific restored the allowance of forty-five cents per ton on interstate shipments, with the restriction that it had formerly attempted to put on intrastate traffic, to the effect that before §uch allowance was paid to the shipper, there must be gross revenue per car of $25 single-line and $50 joint-line.

It will be observed that what the Missouri Pacific finally established as to interstate traffic was what it had theretofore attempted to establish on intrastate traffic, but the Public Service Commission would not permit it to be done.

Following the re-establishment of the forty-five cents per ton allowance to shippers on interstate shipments destined to Jefferson City, the Missouri Midwest Coal Traffic Bureau, representing numerous coal shippers, filed a complaint with the Public Service Commission charging that the-forty-five cents per ton allowance to the shipper on interstate shipments of coal to Jefferson City, gave such interstate shipper an undue and unreasonable advantage and’ preference over *818 persons and companies shipping coal intrastate to Jefferson City, on which the forty-five cents per ton allowance is not made.

Other facts, if necessary to a determination of the case, will be stated in course of the opinion.

The intrastate rate in force at the time in question had been theretofore fixed by the Public Service Commission as a lawful and reasonable rate. The reasonableness of this intrastate rate is not an .issue in this proceeding. That question was not raised nor determined. We must, therefore, assume that the intrastate rate was a lawful and reasonable rate. The substance of the commission’s order is that the Missouri Pacific must either raise its interstate rates forty-five cents per ton or lower its intrastate rates to that extent. If it raises its interstate rates by canceling the forty-five cents per ton it allows to interstate shippers, the result will be a loss of much of its interstate business to the Katy which makes the forty-five cents per ton allowance to interstate shippers. The effect of the order is to say to the Missouri Pacific, you must either lower your interstate rate forty-five cents per ton, or- pay a penalty for failing to do so, by carrying intrastate shipments of coal at forty-five cents per ton less than the commission has fixed as a reasonable rate for such carriage. Such an order directly burdens interstate commerce and is an attempt to regulate and fix the rates for the carriage of such commerce. The Supreme Court of the United States has so held in analogous cases. [See Louisville & Nashville Ry. Co. v. Eubank, 184 U. S. 27, l. c. 40.] The cited cases involved the construction of the long and short haul clause of the Kentucky Constitution. That clause, in substance, makes it unlawful for a railroad operating in Kentucky to charge or receive any greater-compensation in the aggregate for the transportion of persons or property of like kind under substantially like circumstances and conditions for a shorter than a longer distance over the same line in the same direction, the shorter being included in the longer distance. This constitutional provision was under review in Louisville & Nashville Ry. Co., v. Kentucky, 183 U. S. 503. It was there held valid because it did not in terms embrace the case of interstate traffic, but controlled traffic between points within the State of Kentucky.

In the Eubank case, supra, the State Court .of Kentucky held that such long and short haul clause was not confined to a case where the long and short hauls were both within the State of Kentucky but embraced a long haul from a place outside of to one within the State, and a shorter haul between points on the same line and in the same direction, both of which were within the State. On appeal the Supreme Court of the United States reversed the State Court of Kentucky.

The facts in the Eubank case were that the Louisville & Nashville Railway had in effect from Nashville, Tennessee, through Franklin, *819

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99 S.W.2d 90, 339 Mo. 814, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-baldwin-v-public-service-commission-mo-1936.