Sullivan v. Minneapolis & Rainy River Railway Co.

142 N.W. 3, 121 Minn. 488, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 797
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 29, 1913
DocketNos. 17,968—(68)
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 142 N.W. 3 (Sullivan v. Minneapolis & Rainy River 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
Sullivan v. Minneapolis & Rainy River Railway Co., 142 N.W. 3, 121 Minn. 488, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 797 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Philip E. Brown, J.

Appeal by the plaintiff from an order sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. Two causes of action are attempted to be stated therein, the first of which is, in substance, that the defendant, a Minnesota corporation, is and was, at all times referred to, engaged as a common carrier in operating a railway extending north from a certain station known as Mississippi River, in Itasca county; that, during the times stated, the plaintiffs and an Illinois corporation, known as the Itasca Lumber Company, were logging in certain territory served by the defendant as a common carrier, the plaintiffs and the Itasca Lumber Company being competitors, each shipping large quantities of logs over the defendant’s railway to its terminus at Mississippi River, in the course of which, between December 1, 1909, and January 1, 1911, the plaintiffs shipped over the defendant’s road, from points in the state to Mississippi River, several million feet of logs, paying the defendant therefor its regularly established and published rate of $2 per thousand feet, and believing, in so doing, that this represented the charge made by the defendant as against the public in general and all parties similarly situated with the plaintiffs; that during the same period the Itasca Lumber Company also shipped and the defendant carried for it, as a common carrier, large quantities of logs the same or a greater distance than that covered by the plaintiffs’ shipments, the service thus rendered to the plaintiffs and the Itasca Lumber Company being like and contem[490]*490poraneous; and that the defendant transported the logs of the latter under the same conditions, except as to rates, as those of the former, but that the Itasca Company paid the defendant, and it accepted for the service so rendered, the sum of $1.50 per thousand feet of logs, thereby giving such company an unlawful preference oyer the plaintiffs and unlawfully subjecting them to an unreasonable prejudice, and thus unlawfully and unjustly discriminating against the plaintiffs in collecting and receiving from the Itasca Company a less compensation for services in transporting the logs than the regularly established schedule rates and charges enforced by the defendant as a common carrier against the public in general and these plaintiffs in particular, for like and contemporaneous service in transporting logs; and that by reason of all of the facts alleged “the plaintiffs have suffered damages in the sum of $4,556.24.”

The second cause of actioh is substantially a repetition of the first, except that the subjects of the shipment alleged consisted of lumbering supplies, horses, feed, etc., and the defendant is charged with having carried those of the Itasca Company for nothing, while the plaintiffs were compelled to and did pay the regular established rates, aggregating about $800, for which the plaintiffs also demand judgment.

The grounds for the demurrer are: (1) That the court was without jurisdiction; and (2) that the complaint does not state a cause of action. It does not appear on what theory the court based its ruling.

1. It is unnecessary, we think, to go into any extended discussion of the first ground of demurrer. The shipments involved in both causes of action were between points within the state and the transportation was wholly therein. Moreover, there is no suggestion in the complaint that the defendant was ever engaged in interstate commerce, or that its road is so situated as to enable it to engage therein. Under these circumstances, the shipments must be deemed to have been intrastate, and the Federal act has no application. The demurrer cannot be sustained upon the first ground.

2. The questions raised by the general demurrer are: (1) What is the common-law duty of a common carrier to shippers similarly [491]*491circumstanced, with reference to equality of charges for the carriage of the same class of goods the same distance? (2) Has a shipper -discriminated against under such circumstances any right of action for damages at common law, and if so what is the measure of his recovery? (3) What is the effect of our statutes relating to the regulation of railroad rates upon the questions here involved ?

(1) While discrimination by railroads as to shipping facilities has been recently condemned by this court, through Chief Justice Start, in Banner Grain Co. v. Great Northern Ry. Co. 119 Minn. 68, 137 N. W. 161, 41 L.R.A.(N.S.) 678, the questions above stated have not been considered. Looking backward from the present viewpoint at the course of events, and had we no precedents to consider, no -difficulty would, we think, be encountered in their determination; but, either fortunately or unfortunately, as it may be regarded, there is a wealth of authority upon the subjects involved, and our first effort will be to extract the common-law rule therefrom.

The earlier cases, of which Johnson v. Pensacola, 16 Fla. 623, 26 Am. Rep. 731, is an example, declared that a common carrier performed its full common-law duty, when it served all alike in the matter of facilities for a reasonable compensation. This view probably originated because of the paucity of early English cases upon the common-law rule as to discrimination in tolls, which latter is not •surprising, when we consider that the first common carriers were individuals whose fields of operation were of necessity extremely limited, and that they were many in number, performing services in various portions of the country and under widely differentiating circumstances. Under such a condition of affairs, and, moreover, when the doctrine of equal rights to all was in its infancy, and when competition, which makes special privilege almost necessarily disastrous to the disfavored party, may almost be said to have been nonexistent, it is not at all strange that the conception of a fixed and equal charge to every man for the same service remained undeveloped.

In England legislation establishing equality in railroad rates •came so soon after the advent of railroads that there was slight occasion for the courts there to examine into the common law of the (Subject independently of statute. See Scofield v. Railway Co. 43 [492]*492Ohio St. 571, 598, 3 N. E. 907, 54 Am. Rep. 846. But later, when the question of the true common-law rule became of prime importance, further investigation brought to light broader principles. Said Mr. Justice Roe in McDuffee v. Portland, 52 N. H. 430, 455, 456, 13 Am. Rep. 72:

“It seems to be supposed that, at common law, common carriers are not bound to carry all and for all on reasonably equal terms. * * * The principal English cases usually cited are” [citing many cases]. “These cases seem to be based on statutes general or special. The English parliament has been extremely vigilant and industrious in putting, in charters of corporations, provisions for the protection of the rights of individuals and the public. Out of abundant caution, and for the information of those specially concerned, and to guard against any possible construction by implication repealing the common law, they affirmed some of its simplest rules. Sandford v. Railroad Co. 24 Pa. St. 378. * * * And the practice of the English courts, on charters and general acts of this kind, has been so long continued, that the fact seems now to be overlooked that the general principle of equality is a principle of the common law.

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Bluebook (online)
142 N.W. 3, 121 Minn. 488, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-minneapolis-rainy-river-railway-co-minn-1913.