Swift & Co. v. United States

255 F. 291, 166 C.C.A. 461, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1211
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 1918
DocketNo. 2482
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 255 F. 291 (Swift & Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swift & Co. v. United States, 255 F. 291, 166 C.C.A. 461, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1211 (7th Cir. 1918).

Opinion

EVAN A. EVANS, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). Although several assignments of error are presented, only one need be considered. For it is admitted by both sides that the judgment cannot stand if the shipper was entitled to carload rates for each of the four shipments mentioned. Plaintiff in error admits that its right to carload rates is dependent upon certain rules appearing in the published tariff sheets of the Ann Arbor road in force at the time of the shipments; that, if these rules do not furnish support for the carload rate, then it obtained a reduced rate on each of its four shipments. The case therefore turns upon the construction and the application of these rules to the facts as stated.

[1] These rules appearing under the general head of “Charges for Stopping. Cars in Transit to Complete Loading or Partly Unload” read as follows:

(A) Cars containing freight which is waybilled at carload rates will be stopped in transit to complete loading of car, or to partly unload contents of car (except as otherwise specifically provided).

(B) The charge for stopping off cars for the purpose of unloading a portion of the contents, or completing loads, will be $3 per car for each stop.

These rules obviously pertain to carload shipments. They deal with and recognize the rights of shippers who are shipping freight in car-1 load lots. The first one may have been unusual, but it was conceded on the trial that it was on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission and was in force on the Ann Arbor line at the time of the shipments in question.

Nor can there be much dispute as to the meaning of the words “stop in transit to complete loading of car or to partly unload, contents of car,” as used in rule A, especially in view of the language “stop off cars in transit” adopted in rule B. If a shipper under these rules asked to have his car “stop off in transit” (put on a side track or left at a station to be taken by a later train), he was charged $3 for each such stop. If the shipper wished to take on freight to fill the car, or partly unload the car (there being no necessity for holding the car [293]*293for a later train), rule A governed, and no charge was made. Not only is this construction the only rational one, hut it is in complete harmony with the understanding of the officials of the Ann Arbor road, as shown by their testimony, and it is in harmony with the practice of the road as carried on when shipments by other parties of a similar character were made.

[2] Had experts given testimony tending to dispute this construction, we think the shipper would still be hound only by a fair and reasonable construction of these rules. The correct rule of construction in a situation like this is announced in Newton Gum Co. v. C., B. & Q. R. R. Co., 16 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 346 as follows:

“Tlie law compels carriers to publish and post their schedules of charges upon the theory that they will be informative. A shipper who consults them has n right to rely upon their obvious meaning. He cannot be charged with knowledge of the intention of the framers or the carrier’s canons of construction or of some other tariff not even referred to in the one carrying the rate. The public posting of tariffs will be largely useless if the carrier’s interpretation is to be dependent upon tradition and the arbitrary practices of a general freight oilice. * * *
“A classification sheet is put before the public for its information. It is supposed to be expressed in plain terms, so that the ordinary business man can understand it, and, in connection with the rate sheets, can determine for himself what he can’ be lawfully charged for transportation.”

But it is claimed that these rules must yield to rule 11 of the Official Classification No. 38 which reads as follows:

“In no case will the charge for a consignment of freight (shipped at one time by one consignor to one consignee and destination) when loaded by shipper, oil or in one car be greater when computed at actual or estimated weight and Xj. O. Ij. rate than on basis of O. Ij. rate and minimum carload weight; nor will the charge for a full carload when loaded by shipper be greater at O. L. rate and mimimum carload weight than on basis oí L. C. Xj. rate and actual or estimated weight.”

By adding $3 for each stop to the carload rate the government contends that a rate greater than the R. C. R. charge was obtained, and therefore, under this last-quoted rule, the R. C. R. rate applied.

'This position is well answered by referring to a rule governing Official Classification No. 38 and reading as follows:

“A tariff is not governed by a classification or exceptions thereto, except when and to the extent stated on the tariff.”

Inasmuch as this classification rule was not set forth in the tariff sheets of the Ann Arbor Railroad from which quotation has been made, it cannot govern over a contrary rule therein appearing.

But a further reason for not applying this rule 11 of the Official Classification No. 38 lies in the fact that the shipper was not subject to a charge of $3 for every stop, and therefore the carload rates plus the charge for stopping did not in fact exceed the R. C. R. rate.

[3] We are also convinced that still another reason exists for not applying this rule to this case. The character of this shipment, or any freight shipment, must be determined at the time the shipment begins, and cannot be changed, so far as the application of rates is concerned, by the subsequent conduct of either the consignor or the con[294]*294signee. Consignor’s exercise of his right to stop a shipment in transit cannot relieve him of his obligation to pay the freight charges based upon the character of the shipment as it was originally begun. Nor would consignor’s determination, after a shipment has begun, to handle the freight differently from what it was originally billed, change the character of the shipment.

The government further contends that the E. C. L. rate should have been applied because each carload shipment was not a single shipment, but in reality was from the plaintiff in error as consignor to the various retailers to whom the Saginaw Beef Company made sales as consignees. This appears to be the theory of the indictment, as each such shipment is made the basis of a separate count.

This theory totally ignores, not only the bill of lading, wherein but one consignee, the Saginaw Beef Company, is named, the undisputed testimony that plaintff in error was a stranger to the transactions between the retailer and the Beef Company, but it also ignores the two rules above' quoted.

The right of plaintiff in error to ship fresh meats in carload lots from Chicago to Owosso or to intermediate points was affirmatively established on the trial by the introduction of freight tariff sheets, circulars of the' Interstate Commerce Commission and the Official Classification in force at the time of the shipments. In fact, this right to make carload shipments between these points is fully conceded by the government.

This same documentary proof recognized,' and in fact established, the shipper’s right to the benefit of transit privileges on connecting lines.

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Bluebook (online)
255 F. 291, 166 C.C.A. 461, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swift-co-v-united-states-ca7-1918.