Virginia-Carolina Peanut Co. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad

82 S.E. 1, 166 N.C. 62, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 30, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 82 S.E. 1 (Virginia-Carolina Peanut Co. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia-Carolina Peanut Co. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, 82 S.E. 1, 166 N.C. 62, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 345 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the ease: This case involves the construction of section 6 of the Interstate Commerce Act. We have set out in the above statement so much of this act as relates to the matters in controversy. It is admitted in the case agreed that the rate of 26 cents per hundred pounds to Philadelphia, Pa., which was known as a class rate, was the lawful rate at the time the first shipment was made in January, 1908, and, as we will show, the tariff from which this quotation of the rate was taken rSmained in force throughout the period of the entire shipment of peanuts by interstate traffic moving from Williamston, N. C., and was in no'way affected or changed, nor was.it suspended by the supposed tariff of 1 February, 1908, so as to authorize the defendant to charge a greater rate for the shipment of the peanuts than was allowable under the tariff or schedule of rates which had been filed and published and was in force on and prior to 1 January, 1908, and this grows out of the fact that there is nothing in the case agreed to show that the tariff or schedule of “1 February, 1908, effective 2 March, 1908,” was ever filed and published as required by the act. On the contrary, it is admitted “That said tariff was designated as No. 555, I. C. C. 6114, and that at no time prior to said date *67 (25 March, 1909) had said tariff been filed with the agent of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company at Williamston,-N. 0., nor had he any notice thereof, nor had the Yirginia-Carolina Peanut Company or its officers had any notice thereof until advised hy the agent of the A. C. L. Railroad Company at Williamston, N. C., on 11 April, 1909.”

If the later tariff was in force, the defendant had not only the right, but it was its duty, to charge according to its rates, and it would have been illegal to have charged less. It had this right, and this duty was imposed, notwithstanding it had quoted a different and lower rate to the plaintiff, and he had actually made all the shipments of his peanuts believing the lower rate to he the true and lawful rate. And this is so, because to charge a rate, even a lower rate, than the one fixed by its published schedule, would be in direct violation of the provision of-section 6 of the act .prohibiting a carrier “to charge, demand, or collect or receive a greater or less or different compensation for transportation of passengers or property, or for any service in connection therewith, between the points named in its tariffs, than the rates, fares, and charges which are specified in the tariff filed and in effect at the time; nor shall any carrier refund or remit in any manner or hy any device any portion of the rates, fares, and charges so specified, nor extend to any shipper or person any privileges or facilities in the transportation of passengers or property, except such as are specified in such tariffs”; and the carrier is forbidden to engage or participate in the transportation of passengers or property unless the rates, fares, and charges for the same have been filed and published in accordance with the provisions of the act. Hamlin on Interstate Commerce Acts, pages 11 and 12.

It has been held under this section that a carrier must require payment of the lawful or published rate, even though its agent had misrepresented the rate and it had agreed to take the goods for shipment at a lower rate, the published rate being the only lawful one. Railway Co. v. Hefley, 158 U. S., 98; Railway Co. v. Mugg, 202 U. S., 242; Railway Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S., 426; Railway Co. v. Elevator Co., 226 U. S., 441.

*68 In tbe last case cited it was held that “the rate fixed in the schedule filed pursuant to the act to regulate commerce is controlling, and it is beyond the power of the carrier to depart from such rates in favor of any shipper, and that the .erroneous, quotation of rates made by the agent of the railroad did not justify recovery, since to do so would be in effect enabling the shipper, whose duty it was to ascertain the published rate, to secure a preference over other shippers contrary to the act to regulate commerce.” And in Railway v. Mugg, supra, it was held that a cominon carrier may exact the regular rate for an interstate shipment, as shown by its printed and published schedules on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and posted in the stations of such carrier, as required by the Interstate Commerce Act, although a lower rate was quoted by the carrier to the shipper who shipped under the lower rate so quoted. There are other cases in that court and many decisions by the Interstate Commerce Commission to the same effect, the latter being collected in Lust and Merriam’s Digest of Decisions under the Interstate Commerce Act, pages 802 to 813.

The right of the .plaintiff to recover the difference between the amount he was charged and that which he afterwards was required to pay in order to get his goods will depend upon whether the last schedule of rates was lawfully filed and published, and had become effective.

Much of the argument was spent upon the question whether compliance with the requirement that copies of the schedule of rates shall be kept posted in two public and conspicuous places in every depot or station SO' that they shall be accessible to the public and can be conveniently inspected, was necessary to the operation and effectiveness of the schedule. But it has been held not to be so in several eases: Railway Co. v. Cisco Oil Mill, 204 U. S., 449; Railway v. Albus Commission Co., 223 U. S., 573; U. S. v. Miller, 223 U. S., 599. In the first case Justice Van Devanter said: “Although it was shown that the schedules embodying this rate were regularly printed, duly filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and kept open to public inspection at the freight offices of the garnishee at Kansas City *69 and other points, it was not shown that copies were posted in public and conspicuous places in those offices, as required by-paragraph 6 of the Interstate Commerce Act. Posting, however, was not essential to make rates legally operative, and was required only as a means of affording special facilities to the public for ascertaining the rates actually in force.” And in the second case Justice White said: “The requirement that schedules should be ‘posted in two public aud conspicuous places in every depot,’ etc., was not made a condition precedent to the establishment and putting in force of the tariff of rates, but was a provision based upon the existence of an established rate, and plainly had for its object the affording of special facilities to the public for ascertaining the rates actually in force. To hold that the clause had the far-reaching effect claimed would be to say that it was the intention of Congress that the negligent posting by an employee of but one instead of two copies of the schedule, or the neglect to post either, would operate to- cancel the previously established schedule, a conclusion impossible of acceptance.’-’ This construction of the act was confirmed in Miller’s case. That proposition may, therefore, be taken as settled against the contention of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.E. 1, 166 N.C. 62, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-carolina-peanut-co-v-atlantic-coast-line-railroad-nc-1914.