United States ex rel. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission

73 F.2d 948, 64 App. D.C. 43, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2869
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1934
DocketNo. 6195
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 73 F.2d 948 (United States ex rel. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 73 F.2d 948, 64 App. D.C. 43, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2869 (D.C. Cir. 1934).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Supreme Court dismissing a petition for mandamus to compel the Interstate Commerce Commission to fix the amount of damage sustained by petitioner, by reason of the collection of illegal charges on shipments of ordinary live stock in carload lots, and to order reparation made therefor.

Petitioner is a consignee of live stock in carload lots with destination at Cincinnati, Ohio. Together with other operators of meatpacking concerns in Cincinnati, it filed a complaint with the Commission against the railroads and t.ho Cincinnati Union Stock Yards Company, alleging that certain yardage charges collected at Cincinnati were in violation of section 6 and section 15 (5) of the Interstate Commerce Act, as amended (49 US CA §§ 6, 15 (5). The cases were consolidated, heard, and decided by the Commission in the proceedings entitled “E. Kahn’s Sons Co. v. B. & O. R. R. Co. et al., 192 I. C. C. 705.” The Commission dismissed the complaints.

The record in this court does not contain a copy of the complaints, nor the evidence submitted to the Commission. Upon the filing of the petition for mandamus in the District Supreme Court, the Commission answered, to which petitioner filed a demurrer. On hearing before Chief Judge Wheat, the demurrer was overruled, and petitioner electing to stand upon the demurrer, there was final judgment, from which an appeal was taken to this court. The facts, as we find them in the petition for mandamus and in the report and answer of the Commission, are as follows:

Tariff 1. C. C. No. W. L. 9881 of the carriers provides that the Cincinnati Union Stock Yards, a public stock yard located within the Cincinnati switching district, should bo the regular station for the handling of live stock at that point. The stock yards company is a noncarrier corporation, whose business consists of feeding, watering, yarding, weighing, handling, and earing for live stock. It is equipped with what are termed unloading pens, into which the cattle are driven over a platform, through chutes, from the railroad cars which are placed on adjacent tracks. These unloading pens have an area of 688 square feet, twice that of a 40-foot car. Only a few of these pens have facilities for watering, none have facilities for feeding live stock.

The stock yards also maintains pens of a different character which are designated holding pens, where stock is held to suit the convenience of the consignee. The latter are equipped with facilities for watering and feeding. Most of the live stock comprising petitioner’s shipments were, after being taken from cars into the unloading pens, driven to scales, where the animals were hoof-weighed, and thence driven into the holding pens. Shipments remain in these holding pens sometimes for several hours, occasionally overnight and during holidays, and until desired by consignees. Some consignees take their stock directly from the unloading pens, passing through alleyways and chutes from the stock yards. In such eases no charge for stock yard services is made by the stock yards company, the shipper or consignee paying-only the transportation charge. The stock yards company files no tariff with the Interstate Commerce Commission, but does file a tariff with the Secretary of Agriculture pursuant to the terms of the Packers and Stockyards Act (42 Stat. 159). These tariff charges cover services rendered by the stock yards company in driving live stock from the unloading pens to the holding pens, weighing, issuing certificates of weight, watering, and keeping the live stock in the holding pens for such time as may be desired by the consignees. There is no extra charge for detention in the holding pens, except for feed consumed. The stock yards company is under contract to the railroads to unload live stock into the unloading pens, and to keep a record thereof and to notify consignees of arrival, and to make delivery and receive the transportation charges.

Petitioner’s position here is that under the applicable tariff on file with the Commission the transportation of its live stock did not end until it was weighed and delivered at destination, and the particular tariff provision on which it relies is rule 16 (b) (included in a manual for the use of agents and for the information of shippers), providing that if proper facilities are furnished at destina[950]*950tion for obtaining hoof weights, the weights so obtained will be the proper basis for assessing freight charges. In other words, its position is that the determination of the weight in the precise manner provided under (b) was a necessary element of the freight charge and was part of the transportation service for which no extra charge could be exacted by the carrier of by its agent, the stock yards company. The issue thus raised was decided adversely to petitioner by the commission, which in its report said:

“Complainants believe that under certain provisions of the tariff before mentioned their shipments must be hoof-weighed at destination before delivery can be made, and that this weighing is part of the transportation service for which no additional charge can be made. Defendants’ position is that it is optional with the consignees whether they desire the freight charges based on the hoof weights obtained at destination or the track-scale weights of the ears, and that it is mandatory to base freight charges on the hoof weights only in instances where that information is obtained, it being of no concern to them whether the stockyard company or the consignee bears the cost of the weighing.

“Rule 16 (b) of the tariff declares that 'Where proper facilities are provided at destination for obtaining hoof weights, the weights so obtained after the stock has been fed and watered, will be the proper basis for assessing freight charges’, subject to certain enumerated fill allowances; and that 'If the stock has not been fed and watered, destination hoof weight will be used without deduction for fill.’ This tariff does not expressly declare that the stock shall be hoof weighed at destination. Moreover, to sustain complainants’ interpretation would render meaningless paragraph (e), which provides in effect that all weights furnished at Cincinnati will be subject to verification by the carriers. In additional support of the view that this tariff provides merely an alternative method of determining the freight charges, defendants refer to paragraph (f) wherein it is stated that where arrangements are not made at destination for the use of hoof weights, or where shipments move between stations (not markets) upon which actual weights are not obtainable, then the track-scale weights of cars loaded and empty will be used to determine the freight charges. Paragraph (h) specifies that when weights under the foregoing rules cannot be obtained at origin or destination the shipment will be subject to paragraph (a) which provides that in no case will charges be collected on less than the established carload minimum weight. Consideration of the various provisions of defendants’ tariff relative to weighing leads to the conclusion that their contention should be sustained.”

Petitioner contests this interpretation of the tariff. It insists that (b), which is to-be found in the above-quoted part of the report of the Commission, makes it mandatory to apply hoof weight for assessing freight charges wherever proper faeilities are-provided at destination for obtaining such weights, and it likewise insists that such facilities were available in the stock yards of the carriers’ agent at Cincinnati.

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Bluebook (online)
73 F.2d 948, 64 App. D.C. 43, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-kroger-grocery-baking-co-v-interstate-commerce-cadc-1934.