Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. H. D. Foote Lumber Co.

162 So. 16, 182 La. 372, 1935 La. LEXIS 1604
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1935
DocketNo. 32894.
StatusPublished

This text of 162 So. 16 (Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. H. D. Foote Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. H. D. Foote Lumber Co., 162 So. 16, 182 La. 372, 1935 La. LEXIS 1604 (La. 1935).

Opinion

*373 HIGGINS, Justice.

This is a suit by a public carrier against a lumber company and its surety, in solido, to recover freight charges amounting to the sum of $10,652.40, representing the difference between the depressed transit rate collected by it on numerous shipments of inbound rough lumber and the normal non-transit rate alleged to be'due under the terms of four bonded “milling-in-transit” contracts entered into between the parties on September 29, 1922, April 1, 1925, July 1, 1925, and September 8, 1925, respectively.

Plaintiff alleges that under the provisions of the agreements which were confected in accordance with the published tariff regulations of the Interstate and Intrastate Commerce Commissions, the lumber company was entitled to pay the depressed transit rate on the inbound rough lumber only on the condition that the lumber company would reship the finished product via the carrier’s lines within one year thereafter, at the full published tariff or commercial rates applicable from the mill at Alexandria, La., to the final destination, •otherwise the normal tariff rate would be ■due; that the lumber company failed to reship certain finished lumber within the year; and, that while other finished lumber was reshipped within that period of time over its lines, these shipments were •exempt from the payment of any freight under the tariffs, because the railway company purchased the materials for itself and hauled them for its own account, and, therefore, plaintiff is entitled to collect the full commercial rate on the previous inbound shipments of rough lumber, subject to a credit of the depressed transit rate already paid.

The defendants answered admitting the execution of the contracts and bonds, but denied liability, and averred that the plaintiff wrongfully refused to allow the defendants credit on the “milling-in-transit” account for the merchandise purchased by the plaintiff from the defendants and shipped over its railroad from Alexandria, La., to Marshall, Tex.; that plaintiff requested prices for the purchase of the lumber on the basis f. o. b. its rails Alexandria, La.; that the f. o. b. Alexandria prices quoted plaintiff were accepted and paid by the plaintiff and were the same prices charged all other buyers for lumber of similar quality and quantity f. o. b. Alexandria; that the lumber products were sold to the plaintiff at prices based on the low inbound depressed tariff rate on rough material, of which • fact the plaintiff’s representatives were apprised; that the various shipments of the finished product over the plaintiff’s lines were under the standard form or regular commercial bills of lading issued -by the plaintiff to the defendants and were not stamped “freight prepaid”; that, therefore, the said shipments were delivered to and accepted by the plaintiff on the basis of “freight charges collect” to the point of destination, in accordance with full published tariff rates; that plaintiff, having purchased the lumber at f. o. b. prices *375 Alexandria, based upon the low inbound “milling-in-transit” rate on the rough materials, is indirectly attempting • in the present suit to reduce the purchase price paid by plaintiff to the extent of the difference between the normal commercial rate on the inbound rough materials and the depressed rate thereon; that plaintiff’s position is untenable, because it is attempting to violate the agreements that it entered into with the defendants in connection with each and every purchase of finished lumber during the last several years, and would have the effect of reducing the total amount of the purchase prices by the amount claimed in this suit; that plaintiff is endeavoring to interpret the tariffs and the contracts in such a way as to discriminate in its favor against other purchases of lumber at prices quoted f. o. b. railway cars Alexandria; that by virtue of the issuance of the commercial bills of lading on such shipments of outbound tonnage, the plaintiff is estopped from denying defendants credit on the transit account covering the shipments in question.

There was judgment against the defendants, in solido, for the sum of $886.74, and plaintiff appealed.

Defendants have not answered the appeal, and admit that the judgment of the lower court is correct.

In order to give manufacturers the equivalent of through freight rates, the Interstate and Intrastate Commerce Commissions have authorized what are called “milling-in-transit” contracts. There are two modes of procedure under the tariffs by which a transit operator or manufacturer may avail himself of the “milling-in-transit” privileges. The manufacturer may pay the normal nontransit rate from origin of the rough material to the mill and thereafter secure a refund down to the depressed rate by making reshipments of the finished product via the rails of the same carrier within one year. The manufacturer is given the option of executing a contract and bond guaranteeing the observance of the requirements of the tariff, thereby securing, the right to have the rough materials delivered to him by the carrier upon the payment of the depressed nontransit rate. Under this arrangement he must also' reship the finished product over the contracting carrier’s lines within one year, at the full published tariff rates, otherwise he-must pay the full normal rate. The contract and bond arrangement gives the manufacturer the advantage of not having his. capital tied up in freight charges subject to rebate. The tariffs also allow in favor of the manufacturer a shrinkage of 25 per cent, between the rough and finished product. The transit operator or shipper mrtstkeep a record of all inbound rough material shipments and the outbound product shipments, and must permit the carrier to inspect his records.

The plaintiff employed, in addition to its own auditors, the Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau to check the “milling-in-transit” accounts of its patrons.. During the latter part of 1922, the lumber company *377 kept the account .and placed therein, as a credit, the outbound shipments of merchandise sold to the railway company f. o. b. its cars Alexandria. Some time later, the representatives of the Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau struck put these credits on the ground that the shipments of the lumber purchased by the carrier and hauled over its lines were not subject to freight charges. The defendants’ employee was then instructed by the representatives of the Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau not to enter such shipments as credits in the future. By eliminating these credits, the amount of the bond furnished in 1922 in the sum of $2,000 proved inadequate, and the plaintiff, exercising the right given it by the tariff, exacted an additional $2,000 bond, which was furnished on April 1, 1925. Due to the fact that the outbound shipments of the finished product at full published tariff rates to consignees, other than the railway company, were insufficient to offset the inbound shipments of rough materials, the railway company again on July 1, 1925, and September 8, 1925, called for additional bonds, which were furnished, making the total amount thereof $13,000.

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 16, 182 La. 372, 1935 La. LEXIS 1604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-p-ry-co-v-h-d-foote-lumber-co-la-1935.