State ex rel. Crandall v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

101 N.W. 23, 72 Neb. 542, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 229
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1904
DocketNo. 13,539
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 N.W. 23 (State ex rel. Crandall v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Crandall v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 101 N.W. 23, 72 Neb. 542, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 229 (Neb. 1904).

Opinion

Letton, C.

This is an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the respondent to furnish and deliver to relator sufficient freight cars to enable him to ship all grain and mill products offered for shipment at the railroad station of the respondent at Firth, Nebraska, and to compel the respondent to furnish equal facilities and privileges to the relator in the matter of providing for the shipment of grain that are given to his competitor in business, the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company.

William J. Crandall, the relator, now is and has been engaged, for a number of years, at the town of Firth, Lancaster county, Nebraska, in operating a mill and elevator, and of buying, selling, and shipping grain and mill products. A few years ago The Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company was organized by a number of farmers residing in that locality for the purpose of dealing in grain, and ever since this corporation began business sharp competition has existed between the respective grain dealers. Both of these parties occupy elevators situated upon the line of railroad of the respondent. It appears that in the early part of 1903 a shortage of cars existed on the lines of the respondent, and that it was compelled to apportion the cars available at that time between the grain shippers operating upon its lines of railroad, and it further appears that during this time the respondent had furnished cars in equal numbers to the rival grain dealers at Firth for the shipping of grain, upon the theory that, as a grain dealer, Crandall was entitled to an equal number of cars with the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company, and, in [544]*544addition thereto, as a miller, he was entitled to whatever cars he conld use and the railroad could furnish for the purpose of shipping his mill products; but that, since the mill products were for the most part destined to southern points, foreign cars were furnished him specially for such shipments. Under this arrangement, Mr. Crandall, from the 1st of December, 1902, to the 12th of February, 1903, had been furnished in all 102 cars, while the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company had been furnished 17. After the 12th of February, 1903, the railroad agent at Firth, Nebraska, was instructed by O. B. Rogers, the division superintendent, that after that date the railroad company would furnish Mr. Crandall cars for flour, bran and straight car loads of corn meal as mill products, and then divide the remainder of the available cars evenly between Crandall and the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company, and that under this ruling mixed car loads of com meal, chop, cracked corn and sack corn would be counted at their capacity as cars loaded with grain.

It would seem that the moving cause of this order was the fact that a complaint had been made by the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company to the railroad company that Crandall was obtaining more than his share of cars by reason of his shipping chop and cracked corn as mill products, when they ought of right to be counted as grain in the division of cars, and thus that the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company was being unduly discriminated against in the apportionment of cars, furnished. Following the making of this order, whenever Crandall shipped a car load of chop or of mixed chop and sack corn or oats, the agent at Firth furnished a like capacity of cars to the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company for the shipment of grain, and out of this order and the action of the agent of the railway company in accordance therewith this controversy takes its rise.

It is apparent from the whole testimony that the officers of the railroad company endeavored to fairly and equitably apportion cars for the shipment of grain between these [545]*545contending parties. The determination of the question at issue depends almost wholly upon whether the article of commerce which is termed “coarse meal” or “chop” by Mr. Crandall, and is denominated “cracked corn” by the respondent and the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company, should be considered as grain for the purpose of the apportionment of cars or should be classed as a mill product. If this article is handled and dealt in by grain dealers and elevator proprietors, and is not known under the custom and usages of the trade as a mill product or meal, then the Farmers’ Grain & Lumber Company would be entitled, under the rule adopted by the respondent, which seems to be fair and reasonable, to an equal capacity of freight cars for shipment of grain to those used by Mr. Crandall in the shipment of this product; Avhereas, if this article falls properly and legitimately under the head of mill products, and is to be considered as a manufactured article, Crandall would be entitled to such cars as the railroad could furnish him to use in his milling business, including the shipment of this product, and, in addition thereto, Avith as many cars for grain shipments as were furnished to his competitor. A sample of this product taken from a sack in a car loaded by Mr. Crandall was in evidence in the district court, and is attached to the bill of exceptions in this case. A number of Avitnesses engaged in the elevator and grain dealing business testified that this article Avas what is knoAvn in the trade as “cracked corn”; that it is manufactured simply by crushing the corn betAveen rollers, and is not cleaned or bolted in any manner, the resulting product being the same as that produced by the ordinary farmers’ feed mill; Avhile Crandall testifies that it is properly knoAvn as “coarse corn meal,” though admitting that it is so produced. It seems also that in the southwestern tariff sheet a higher rate is charged for corn chop than for corn, and that on respondent’s system “chop” is classified as a separate item. It is therefore contended by Crandall that this product is not properly shipped as grain but as a mill product. [546]*546Should the “chop,” “cracked corn” or “coarse meal,” as it is variously termed, he regarded in the distribution of cars as a grain or as a mill product? This question is not free from doubt. It is shoAvn that a number of elevators in this state Avliich do not do a milling business have had a demand from their customers for cracked corn for feeding purposes, and that to meet this demand they have installed roller machinery for the purpose of cracking the corn, and that the article thus manufactured is handled and sold as other corn by grain dealers. On the other hand, it is shown that Mr. Crandall has installed expensive machinery at his mill for the purpose of manufacturing corn meal. But it is also shoAvn that in the manufacture of coim meal for culinary purposes the corn is first kilndried, then cracked or ground betAveen rollers, and aftenvards bolted, and that in the manufacture by him of this “coarse meal” or “cracked corn” the same rollers are used, but they are set farther apart so as not to crush the grain so finely; that the corn is not kilndried and the product is not bolted. The corn is merely passed between the rollers and from there loaded into the car. After examining the sample attached to the bill of exceptions and considering the evidence in the case, Ave are convinced that this substance properly belongs under the head of “cracked corn” or “chop,” and is not in the ordinary acceptation of the term “meal”; and we are further convinced from the testimony that under the usages of the trade the article is properly handled by grain dealers as well as millers.

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Related

Peterson & Howe v. Davis
196 N.W. 113 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 N.W. 23, 72 Neb. 542, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-crandall-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-neb-1904.