Sultan Railway & Timber Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co.

109 P. 320, 58 Wash. 604, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 976
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1910
DocketNo. 8356
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 109 P. 320 (Sultan Railway & Timber Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co.) 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
Sultan Railway & Timber Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co., 109 P. 320, 58 Wash. 604, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 976 (Wash. 1910).

Opinions

Fullerton, J.

The respondent brought this action against the appellant to recover damages for a breach of contract. The action was tried in the court below by the judge sitting without a jury, and resulted in a recovery by the respondent. This appeal was taken therefrom.

The facts material to an understanding of the controversy are, in substance, these: The appellant is a common carrier of both intrastate and interstate commerce. The respondent is engaged in the business of logging. For sometime prior to the month of April, 1903, the respondent had logged in the vicinity of what is now Sultan Junction. At that date it owned a considerable body of timber in that vicinity, the logs from which it was marketing by bringing them down [606]*606on skid roads to the Skykomish river from whence they were rafted to the city of Everett, where the principal market was found. The motive power used to drag the logs along the skid road was furnished by stationary donkey engines. After the logs were brought to the skid road from the place where they were cut, the nearest donkey engine would send out its cable and drag them along until they could be reached by the cable of the next engine, which in turn would drag them to the next one, and so on until they reached the dumping grounds on the bank of the river. As the timber was logged off, the line of haul lengthened, requiring the 'repeated installation of additional donkey engines, as the distance that could be covered by one ranged from but one-half to three-quarters of a mile. „

In April, 1903, the respondent found it necessary to change its method of hauling, and conceived the idea of laying rails on its skid road and using a locomotive engine to haul its logs. Its skid road crossed the appellant’s railway track at grade, and to make the required change, it was found to be necessary to cut the track at the place of crossing and put in the customary frogs and other protective devices usually found at railroad crossings. The respondent thereupon applied to the appellant for the privilege of putting in a crossing at grade, when it was informed by the railroad company that a grade crossing was inadvisable, and that the respondent must find a crossing either above or below grade. An over or under crossing was found not to bé feasible, and various plans were suggested by the respondent to overcome the appellant’s objection to a grade crossing, none of which proving acceptable, the respondent threatened to avail itself of the courts with the view of forcing a crossing. About this time the appellant’s traffic manager approached the officer of the appellant and inquired what rate of carriage they would deem sufficiently attractive to induce them to discontinue hauling logs across the appellant’s tracks, and to market them by way of the appel[607]*607lant’s road instead. Negotiations were thereupon taken up along this line, which were participated in by a number of the managing and traffic officials of the appellant’s road, during the course of which the respondent informed them fully of its then timber holdings, of the timber on which it held contracts of purchase and of other timber tributary to that point of shipment which they expected to procure, as well as the additional cost and expense it would be put to in order to change its system of logging to make it fit the changed conditions; among which was the fact that it would have to lessen the grades and lengthen the curves on its existing road, and place thereon heavier rails and construct more substantial bridges than would be necessary were it to pursue the method of logging it originally had in view.

Particular inquiry seems to have been made by the railway officials as to the volume of traffic the railway might expect from that source, and they were told that it would take from fifteen to twenty years to finish logging the timber tributary to the railway at that point. The railway company finally proposed to haul the respondent’s logs from Sultan Junction to Everett at a rate of $1 per thousand feet, board measure, with an estimated equivalent weight basis of twenty-five cents per ton, until a permanent weight basis could be arrived at by weighing the logs for the first few months of hauling. This proposition was accepted by the respondent, whereupon the appellant, through its assistant traffic manager, wrote the respondent’s president the following letter:

“Seattle, Wash., April 26, 1904.
“Mr. U. K. Loose, President,
“Sultan Railway & Timber Co.,
“Snohomish, Washington.
“Dear Sir: Referring to the matter of hauling your timber from Sultan Junction to Snohomish, Everett, Union Slough and Marysville. The understanding reached between you, Mr. Ward and myself at the discussion we had in Mr. Ward’s car on Friday, April 22nd, is, until a permanent weight basis can be arrived at by weighing the cars [608]*608for the next few months, that the logs shall be handled as follows :
“A charge of 25 cents per ton with a minimum of 50,000 lbs. per car, will be made; you to furnish certified copies of Official Scaler’s report of logs hauled at the end of each month; and an adjustment of ‘over or under’ charges will be made so that the charge to you for hauling will not exceed $1.00 per thousand feet official scale with a minimum of 7,500 feet per car average for the month.
“A special switching charge of $3.75 per hour will be made where we are required to make more than one setting of cars; except that we will give one hour’s time of the switch engine in spotting cars at your unloading works.
“You are to take empties and deliver loads at convenient transfer tracks at Sultan Junction, and will keep the tracks, necessary for our engine to use, in such repair as to enable our trains to run over them with perfect safety.
“We will furnish bunks and attach same to cars assigned to your exclusive service; but in the event that cars are taken out of service on account of suspension of operations they are to be re-bunked by you; or, you will accept this company’s bill for same.
“Cars used in your service will be subject to the usual rules of the Car Service Association.
“You are to assume ordinary responsibilities assumed by railways interchanging cars as covered by rules of the American Railway Association.
“Your company to load and unload the logs and assume responsibilities for damage to cars in doing so.
“The instructions to cover our understanding of the terms under which your logs are to be hauled by contract were received from Mr. J. W. Rlabon, our Fourth Vice President; and although Mr. Ward said that he did not care about a contract, it may be that Mr. Blabon will still wish to have one executed; in the meantime, however, I will issue instructions to our agents to handle the business as outlined above. Yours truly, Jno. C. Eden,
“Assistant General Traffic Manager.”

The parties continued under the arrangement outlined in the letter until March 1, 1906, when a weight basis for charges at the rate of twenty-four cents per ton was agreed [609]*609upon in place of the charge based on board measure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P. 320, 58 Wash. 604, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sultan-railway-timber-co-v-great-northern-railway-co-wash-1910.