State ex rel. Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Public Service Commission

95 Wash. 376
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1917
DocketNo. 13541
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 95 Wash. 376 (State ex rel. Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Public Service Commission, 95 Wash. 376 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Holcomb, J. —

Upon a complaint by Taylor & Kemp, millers at Prosser, in this state, to the public service commission, proceedings were had resulting in an order by the commission requiring these relators to establish a joint through rate, from Eastern Washington points, on their lines, with milling in transit privilege at Prosser. The relators then instituted their action in the superior court for Thurston county to review the proceedings of the commission.

The court found, in substance, that the Northern Pacific Railway Company has a line of railroad from Wallula to Puget Sound via North Yakima, and that the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Company has a line from Attalia to North Yakima which approximately parallels the Northern Pacific road. About fifty miles west of Wallula on the Northern Pacific is the town of Prosser, and about the same distance west of Attalia on the Oregon-Washington is the station of North Prosser. At this point the two [378]*378railroads are about a mile and one-half apart. Between the two railroad lines at this point, lies the flour mill of Taylor & Kemp, which is distant from the Northern Pacific tracks about one-quarter of a mile, and from the Oregon-Washington Company’s depot one mile and a quarter. This mill has been in operation about twenty years, and obtains its wheat for milling purposes in sections of Eastern Washington which are contiguous to both the Northern Pacific and Oregon-Washington railroads. Prior to August, 1912, the grain contiguous to both the Northern Pacific and. Oregon-Washington railroads was shipped over these lines to Wallula, where it was turned over to the Northern Pacific for delivery at points on Puget Sound, under a through route and joint rate, with milling in transit privileges to mills along the line, including Taylor & Kemp’s mill at Prosser.

After the construction of the Oregon-Washington railroad to North Yakima, the through route and joint rate hereinbefore referred to was withdrawn. Another through route and joint rate with milling in transit privileges was made, but the point of connection between the two roads was at North Yakima instead of Wallula; so that, in order to obtain the advantages of this rate, all grain which originated east of Wallula on the Oregon-Washington railroad was hauled over that road to-North Yakima and thence over the Northern Pacific road. Grain moving over this route, if milled in transit at the Prosser mill, was unloaded at North Prosser. To handle the grain from the Northern Pacific to Taylor & Kemp’s mill costs twenty cents per ton. To haul grain to the same mill from the Oregon-Washington road costs fifty cents per ton.

It is obvious that Taylor & Kemp are at a greater expense in milling grain received from the Oregon-Washington road than when the grain is received from the Northern Pacific.

The claim of Taylor & Kemp is that they are now in a worse plight than they were before the Oregon-Washington road was constructed, when shipping grain from points east [379]*379of Wallula contiguous to the Oregon-Washington lines, since they must now move the grain there originating over the Oregon-Washington road to North Prosser to secure the more advantageous rate; for, if they move the grain over the Oregon-Washington road to Wallula and thence to Prosser on the Northern Pacific, they must pay a higher rate. They further claim that this situation constitutes a discrimination against them and in favor of the mills located at North Yakima and west thereof on the Northern Pacific, because the latter mills can purchase grain at points on either the Oregon-Washington road or the Northern Pacific and ship over either line to North Yakima and thence via the Northern Pacific, and in either case they will get the through route and joint rate, and the haul to their mill from the railroad will in each instance be the same. To overcome this alleged discrimination, was the purpose of the complaint of Taylor & Kemp.

Both the Northern Pacific and the Oregon-Washington' railroads appeared and opposed this proposed rate, especially the latter, which maintained that such rate would deprive it of the haul from Attalia to North Yakima, and that it was not its fault that Taylor & Kemp’s mill was located farther from its depot than from the depot of the Northern Pacific.

After a hearing upon the merits, the commission made the following order:

“Wherefore it is ordered that respondents establish a through route for the transportation of grain, flour and mill feed to be milled at Prosser, Washington, from all points in Washington on the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Company’s lines in Adams, Franklin, Columbia, Garfield and Walla Walla counties and in Whitman county south and west of Winona and on the line from Winona through Colfax and Pullman to the Washington and Idaho boundary line, via Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Company’s lines, Wallula, Washington, and Northern Pacific railway and from all points on the Camas Prairie Railroad, [380]*380. via Camas Prairie Railroad, Riparia, Washington, Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Company’s line, Wallula, Washington, and intermediate points taking the same rate, with milling in transit privileges at Prosser, Washington, subject to milling in transit charge.
“It is further ordered that respondents establish joint rates on grain, flour and mill feed for application over the through routes herein ordered established. This order shall become effective at the expiration of thirty days from date of service hereof.”

This is an appeal by both railroad companies from the decree of the lower court affirming the order of the commission.

It is first urged by relators that the order appealed from is so vague and uncertain as to be incapable of enforcement, in that it fails to specify what the rates are to be or whether they are to apply to carload lots or less or both. State ex rel. La Follette v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R. Co., 16 S. D. 517, 94 N. W. 406, is relied on to support this rule. That case holds that an order requiring certain railway companies to install transfer connections is too vague and uncertain to be enforced because it fails to state of what material the connections are to be constructed or just where they are to be made. Obviously it has no bearing on an order requiring a certain rate to be made, and in any event the statute does not require that the amount of the rate shall be determined, and, so far as the record shows, the order of the commission has not been superseded, and becomes effective in twenty days by virtue of § 81, ch. 117, Laws of 1911, p. 593 (Rem. Code, §8626-81). Hence it would be presumed that the order has been complied with, and such compliance would clearly show that it was not too indefinite to be enforced.

Error is also asserted upon the failure of the commission to find that the Oregon-Washington line fróm Attalia to North Yakima cost $5,000,000, and that, by putting in the through route demanded, all the grain moving over the North [381]*381Yakima line could be diverted to the Northern Pacific at Wallula, thus taking away from the Oregon-Washington road the one hundred-mile haul to North Yakima.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 Wash. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-northern-pacific-railway-co-v-public-service-commission-wash-1917.