Stratton v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

236 P. 831, 118 Kan. 673, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 6, 1925
DocketNo. 25,785
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 236 P. 831 (Stratton v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stratton v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 236 P. 831, 118 Kan. 673, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 264 (kan 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action for statutory damages for failure and delay in furnishing cars for the shipment of wheat. The action is founded on the reciprocal demurrage act (R. S. 66-201 et seq.), and included in plaintiffs’ demand was an item of $25 for attorneys’ fees in each of the two counts of the petition.

Plaintiffs’ cause of action was set out in a bill of particulars and filed before a justice of the peace. The defendant filed no pleadings. When the case came to the district court on appeal no further pleadings were filed, the cause being heard on the allegations of the bill of particulars.

[674]*674Plaintiffs alleged that in 1922 they were engaged in operating a mill and elevator on defendant’s line of railroad at Udall, in Cowley county. On September 28, 1922, they placed a written order with defendant for a car for the immediate shipment of wheat to Win-field or Wichita, saying that the wheat was then in plaintiffs’ elevator. This car was not furnished until November 4,1922, thirty-six days after the order was given. On October 16, 1922, plaintiffs placed another written order with defendant for a car for the immediate shipment of wheat to Winfield or Wichita. This car was not furnished until November 25, 1922, forty days after the order was given. Plaintiffs demanded the statutory damages of $5 per day for each day’s delay, less the reasonable time allowed for compliance, and deducting the intervening Sundays:

Count 1:
29 days’ delay at $5.00 per day.......................... $145.00
Attorney’s fee ......................................... 25.00
$170.00
Count 2:
26 days’ delay at $5.00 per day......................... $130.00
Attorney’s fee ......................................... 25.00
$155.00

At the trial the facts above narrated were shown and not disputed. On behalf of plaintiffs there was testimony tending to show that other elevators on defendant’s line of railway in Cowley county at distances of a few miles in three directions from Udall, to wit, at Rock, Kellogg and Winfield, much more prompt and expeditious service was rendered by defendant in the matter of furnishing cars for wheat shipments, one witness, who operated an elevator at Rock, testifying:

“Then, we got our cars pretty promptly; they were pretty good to us. They aimed to keep me going and not have the elevator shut down. Once they gave me more cars than I ordered. Along the latter part of October I turned down a car.”

A Winfield elevator man testified that cars on his orders were usually furnished with little delay; in one instance the delay was probably as great as one week.

An elevator man at Kellogg testified:

“Sometimes we had to wait a few days; sometimes in the neighborhood of ten days or two weeks. To the best of my knowledge, all those orders for the cars shipped in October were placed in October. We couldn’t have waited over ten days or two weeks at the very longest. Sometimes I would get one within a couple of days after applying therefor.”

[675]*675On behalf of defendant it was shown that for the purpose of distributing its available supply of freight cars, the defendant’s railway system is arranged in divisions, the divisions here concerned being the “middle division” and the “southern Kansas division”; that Winfield and Kellogg are in the southern Kansas division, and Rock .and Udall in the middle division; that the defendant’s available ■empty cars were distributed to the different divisions and parceled ■out by various officials in conformity with rules of the interstate ■commerce commission and of the public utilities commission. It was also shown that there was a shortage of available cars to supply the demand in the middle division in September, October and November, 1922, viz.:

Cars Cars available. demanded.
September ................................... 708 1,735
October ..................................... 337 1,871
November ................................... 780 1,962

Defendant’s car distributor testified:

“We could not have furnished the cars at Udall within the time demanded without discriminating against other stations and shippers. When the cars ■get beyond the system of the company, the company has absolutely no control over those cars to have them returned. They simply have to wait until "they return.
Cross-examination: “The system is allowed so many cars. That allotment is made to the general office at Topeka. The general manager divides them between the divisions; the division car distributor then divides them between the stations, and the station agent divides the cars allotted him between the shippers. The general manager divides the cars among the various divisions under instructions from the interstate commerce commission. The railroad is compelled to make a report to the interstate commerce commission of cars ■ordered and what cars are available. They arrive at a percentage basis from that report and divide the available cars accordingly to the different systems. When a certain number of cars are allotted to one division the general man■ager at Topeka cannot change the number and allot some of those cars to another division. You understand, the cars allotted are not all at the point where they are ordered and they have to be moved. For that reason we can’t get them on the division. If one division has a great abundance of cars and another division has a lack of cars, we can’t change the allotment. We haven’t the authority. In such cases we would explain the circumstances to the original point of distribution, which would be the car service division of the inter.state commerce commission. They would issue instructions according as they :saw fit.
“Q. If there was an abundance here to supply Kellogg and these other stations, you could have gone around there and proceeded to get cars to supply the Udall mill? A. I couldn’t, from the fact that I do not have any jurisdiction over Winfield and Kellogg.
[676]*676"Q. Your company could? A. The man on the Southern Kansas division might have. ...
Redirect examination: “There was a shortage of cars over all the system. We were able to supply only from eighteen to twenty-five per cent in the majority of places all over the system — over all the grain-loading territory, I mean. That was caused by the oncoming of harvest and threshing season and cars loaded for distant points were anywhere from fifteen days to three months being released. Winfield is the southern Kansas division point. If we are bringing cars in that have been returned to us and we would bring them past a station that needed oars, we would not have the power to drop them off there. When they are in trains we are supposed to take them through and place them to the station where they belong. The first available car for the first order.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 P. 831, 118 Kan. 673, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stratton-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-kan-1925.