Steenerson v. Great Northern Railway Co.

72 N.W. 713, 69 Minn. 353, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 286
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 20, 1897
DocketNos. 10,402—(69)
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 72 N.W. 713 (Steenerson v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steenerson v. Great Northern Railway Co., 72 N.W. 713, 69 Minn. 353, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 286 (Mich. 1897).

Opinions

OANTY, .T.

1. Chapter 10, Laws 1887, as amended by chapter 106, Laws 1891, provides that in fixing rates of transportation the state railroad and warehouse commission may act upon the complaint “of any person, firm, corporation or association, or any mercantile, agricultural or manufacturing society, or any body politic or municipal organization.” It further provides:

“If the tariff of rates, fares, charges and classifications so complained of shall be found by the evidence to be unequal or unreasonable, the commission shall state wherein they are unequal or unreasonable, and shall make a tariff of rates, fares, charges and classifications which shall be substituted for the tariff complained of.” 3

Steenerson appeared before the commission, alleged that he was engaged in shipping grain over the railroad of the Great Northern Bailway Company from the stations of Crookston, Fisher, and East Grand Forks to Minneapolis and Duluth, in this state, and that the rates between these points were too high. After summoning the railway company and having a hearing as provided by the statute, the commission made an order reducing rates on grain on all the lines of the railway company within the state. From this order the railway company appealed to the district court, and after a hearing on the appeal the court reversed the order of the commission. From the order of the court the attorney general appeals to this court.

[372]*372It is contended by counsel for the railway company that under the statute the commission had no authority to go beyond the relief asked for in the complaint, or to reduce rates between points not named in the complaint. We cannot agree with counsel. It is the duty of the commission, when reducing rates as prayed for in such a complaint, to see that its acts do not result in discrimination as against other points on the line or system not named in the complaint. The statute which makes it the duty of the commission to prevent discrimination, when complained of, clearly intends that the commission shall not itself create such discrimination. And, in order to avoid doing so when reducing the rates complained of, it may be necessary to reduce rates between all other points on the line or system. The complaint made in such a case is not at all analogous to the bringing of an action by a private suitor to redress a private grievance. The complainant before the commission need have no direct or immediate interest in the matter, and, even if he has, he is acting on behalf of himself and the rest of the public.

2. Of the lines of railroad here in question, 561 miles were built for and owned by other railroad companies prior to the foreclosure sales of 1879. At one of these sales the promoters of the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway Company bid off a part of the property; and the company itself, after it was organized, bid in the rest of said property. These properties, the franchise connected with the same, and a large land grant, earned and to be earned, were bid off for the aggregate sum of $3,600,000, subject to a prior lien of $486,000. The promoters transferred to the new company the part bid in by them, and the properties were immediately bonded by the new company for $16,000,000, and it issued to the promoters its stock to the amount of $15,000,000. It operated its railroads from 1879 to 1890, during which time it increased its mileage in Minnesota from 561 miles to nearly the present amount of 1,381 miles of main track. It also extended its lines beyond the state into North and South Dakota, and beyond to the Pacific coast. Its stock was subsequently increased to $20,000,000, and its bonded indebtedness now outstanding is $84,558,484. It leased all of its lines to the Great Northern Railway Company for 999 years. By [373]*373the terms of the lease, which took effect February 1,1890, the Great Northern Railway Company guarantied the payment of the principal and interest of said bonds, and guarantied a dividend of 6 per cent, per annum on said $20,000,000 of stock.

At the foreclosure sales of 1879 the 561 miles of main track then built were sold for a small part of their original cost, and a small part of what it would then cost to reproduce them, saying nothing of the large quantity of valuable lands included in the sale. The attorney general contends that the price at which the property sold at foreclosure sale must, as far as it goes, be taken as the basis for determining in this case what is a reasonable income to be derived from the operation of these lines of railroad. On the other hand, counsel for the railway company contend that the amount of the present fixed charges of the Great Northern Railway Company is the controlling consideration in determining what is a reasonable income to be derived from operating the lines so leased by it.

In our opinion, both positions are wholly untenable. If the Manitoba Company and its promoters bought the properties at the foreclosure sales at a great sacrifice, that is their good fortune. If the leasing of the system by the Great Northern Railway Company turns out to be a bad bargain, that is its misfortune. The patrons of the road should not gain by the one transaction or lose by the other. There is as much reason why the public should bear the loss of the bad bargain as there is why it should take the profits of the good bargain. To adopt any such principle would leave the public at the mercy of every railroad manipulator, and offer a premium on all kinds of schemes for increasing the fixed charges of railroads.

Again, in determining what are reasonable rates, it is perfectly immaterial whether the railroad is mortgaged for two or three times what it would cost to reproduce it, or whether it is free from incumbrance. To hold otherwise would be to hold that the stated or the public have indirectly guarantied the payment of the mortgage bonds of every railroad. The state may as well guaranty the bonds directly as indirectly. But neither the state nor the public have done either the one or the other. It is immaterial how the [374]*374property has been split up into different rights, interests, and claims. For the purpose of fixing rates, the holders of all of these stand in the shoes of the sole owner of the property, unincumbered. The rights of the bondholders are no more and no less sacred than the rights of such an owner. Again, the railroad may have been constructed years ago, when iron rails cost $85 per ton, and everything else in proportion, or it may have been constructed yesterday, when steel rails cost but $16 per ton, and everything else nearly in proportion. Counsel for the railway company dwell much upon the original cost of the older portions of these lines of road. If a railroad was built 80 years ago at a cost of $40,000 per mile, and another one equally as good was built within a year through the same territory at a cost of $12,000 per mile, on what principle should it be held that the old road is entitled to 31/¡¡ times as much income as the new road? No guaranty was ever given by the state to the old road that the price of materials and the cost of construction would not decline, or that capital invested in railroads should not be subject to like vicissitudes as capital invested in other enterprises.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.W. 713, 69 Minn. 353, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steenerson-v-great-northern-railway-co-minn-1897.