State ex rel. Burr v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad

59 Fla. 612
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 59 Fla. 612 (State ex rel. Burr v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Burr v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, 59 Fla. 612 (Fla. 1910).

Opinion

Parki-iill, J.

(after stating the facts.)—As interesting and important as it is, the question whether the effect of the enforcement of Rule 15-A would be to deprive the respondent of its property without due process of law, and therefore in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, bécause it requires, as argued, that railroads shall part with their cars or make connections with other railroads without due process of law does not confront us. This rule does not seek to compel a service, but merely to fix a rate therefor: “The charge for switching cars of rough lumber * * * to any planing mill in the Jacksonville yards and thence, if the lumber is dressed, to any point in the same yards, shall not be more than two dollars per car * * *” • It is true that the Rule further provides “that when the said switching movement is over the tracks of more than one railroad a charge of not more than three dollars may be made,” but such rule nowhere requires or compels the service over more than one railroad, and the [621]*621alternative writ herein complains that the respondent only “has * * * refused to charge and put into effect the rate prescribed in and by said Rule 15-A, but has charged and received * * * and is still charging and receiving the sum of five dollars for switching cars of rough lumber consigned to and arriving at the City of Jacksonville from points in this State, to a planing mill in the Jacksonville yards and thence, after the lumber is dressed, to a point in the same yards when the said switching movement is over its own tracks only, for which service under the said Rule 15-A it is entitled to charge and receive the sum of two dollars.” And the command of the writ is that the respondent forthwith “observe the rate prescribed in Rule 15-A of the ‘Rules Governing the Transportation of Freight’ by our Railroad Commissioners for switching cars of lumber over your oton tracks only in the Jacksonville yards; that is to say, to charge and receive no more than the sum of two dollars per car for switching cars of rough lumber consigned to and arriving at the City of Jacksonville from points in this State, to any planing mill in the Jacksonville yards and thence, after lumber is dressed to any points in the same yards, when the switching movement is over your own tracks only.”

It is also true that Rule 15, in prescribing a rate for transporting, switching or transferring a loaded car from any point on any railroad to any connecting railroad, or to any warehouse, sidetrack, or any other point of delivery that may be designated by the consignee within a distance of three miles from the point of starting, provides- that no railroad company shall decline or refuse to so transport, switch or transfer any car, or to receive it from any con-connecting railroad for such purpose; but the service here, contemplated is entirely distinct from that of switching cars of rough lumber to a planing mill and thence if the [622]*622lumber is dressed to any point in the same yards, as provided by Rule 15-A.

The service contemplated by Rule 15-A, the stopping of a commodity in transit for the purpose of treatment, is said to be in the nature of a special privilege which the carrier may concede, but which the shipper cannot, in the present state of the law, demand as a matter of lawful right. Diamond Mills v. Boston & M. R. R. Co., 9 I. C. C. Rep. 311. Whether the carrier is or is not under obligations to permit the interruption of the transit, the rule merely seeks to regulate the charge for such service when rendered. Whether intentionally or not, Rule 15-A seems not to have determined that question as far as the Commission may determine it, for it fails to contain the provision that no railroad company shall decline or refuse to transport, switch or transfer any such car, or the further provision that no railroad shall refuse to receive such car from any connecting railroad for such purposes, while these provisions are made a part of Rule 15, which provides a rate for transporting, switching or transferring a loaded car from any' point on a railroad to any connecting railroad or to any warehouse, sidetrack, &c., not stopping the commodity for the purpose of treatment,

As the rule plainly avoids the difficulties that have been suggested in the second ground of the motion to quash we will not undertake to consider them. So understanding the two rules, 15 and 15-A, and taking them together, we do not think them so inconsistent and uncertain as to be incapable of enforcement, as is suggested in the fourth ground of the motion to quash.

We cannot see, from anything in the alternative writ, wherein Rule 15-A is discriminatory against Jacksonville, or against localities other than that city, or against commodities and dealers therein, other than rough lumber, or against the respondent and other railroad companies [623]*623and common carriers at Jacksonville and at other points in this State, as is contended for in the fifth, sixth and seventh grounds of the motion to quash. In regard to these matters and contentions we must confine ourselves to the allegations of the alternative writ. Matters stated in the motion to quash or in respondents brief cannot be considered, if not found in the alternative writ. State ex rel. Romano v. Yakey, 43 Wash. 15, 85, 85 Pac. Rep. 990.

There is nothing in the alternative writ to show that there are any planing mills within railroad yards in localities or lumber markets other than Jacksonville, or that railroad companies in these other localities either do not, or are compelled, to render the service of transfer to or from the mill if there be one, or that other commodities are shipped to Jacksonville or other localities for stoppage at mills of any kind for treatment, or that the charge made by other railroads for like service at other places is unreasonable or excessive. In fact, there is nothing on the face of the alternative writ to sustain the charge of unjust discrimination made in the motion to quash. We cannot see in the allegations of the alternative writ that Rule 15-A provides a lesser rate for manufacturers of dressed lumber at Jacksonville than it does for other manufacturers and shippers of other products at Jacksonville, and manufacturers, shippers and consignees of the same and other products at other points in this State. Undoubtedly carriers may not discriminate between markets nor between individuals in the granting of such privileges as are contemplated by Rule 15-A (Southern Railway Company v. St. Louis Hay & Grain Company, 214 U. S. 297) and the Commissioners likewise in regulating such privileges may not unjustly discriminate; but such discrimination, if it exists, should be set up by a return to the alternative writ. It cannot [624]*624be made so to appear by motion, to quash or in the form of a speaking demurrer, where there is nothing in the record as made by the alternative writ to evidence any such discrimination.

The alternative writ does not show that the rate fixed by the Commission in Rule 15-A is unreasonable, unjust or exorbitant or unjustly discriminatory in amount against any other locality or person. If the rate is so illegal and unjust it may be made to appear by return to the alternative writ; but for aught that appears the same rate may prevail for other markets, by virtue of other rules. There may be sub-divisions of Rule 15 for every letter of the alphabet dealing with other places, markets and commodities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Fla. 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-burr-v-atlantic-coast-line-railroad-fla-1910.