Wabash Railroad v. Sloop

98 S.W. 607, 200 Mo. 198, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 98 S.W. 607 (Wabash Railroad v. Sloop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash Railroad v. Sloop, 98 S.W. 607, 200 Mo. 198, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 351 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

CRAVES, J.

Plaintiff by its petition states that it is a common carrier, a railway corporation; that during the year 1902 it transported nine car-loads of timothy seed for defendant from Queen City, Missouri, to Chicago, Illinois; that in compliance with the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 and subsequent amendments thereto, it filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, in the city of Washington, its printed schedule or tariffs, showing the rates of freight then in force, from all points on its railway in one State to points in another State; “that said schedules or tariffs were then, as now, duly printed, published and filed by plaintiff in strict conformity to said law of the United States then in force;” that the rate on timothy seed then in force and fixed by said schedules and tariffs, [202]*202was twenty-six cents per hundred pounds from Queen City, Missouri, to Chicago, Illinois; that by mistake, plaintiff’s agent billed out four car-loads of said seed at sixteen cents per hundred pounds; that said seed was delivered to defendant’s consignee before said mistake was discovered; that on these four car-loads, the difference between the rate fixed in said schedules or tariffs, twenty-six cents per hundred pounds, and the rate of sixteen cents per hundred pounds, amounted to $188.58; that in the shipment of the other five cars, the agent of plaintiff, by mistake, billed them out at twenty-nine cents per hundred pounds; that the full twenty-nine cents per hundred pounds was collected before the mistake was discovered; that by reason of the overcharge of three cents per hundred pounds, the plaintiff collected $66.61 more .than should have been collected; that the mistake was never discovered until after delivery to defendant’s consignee; that immediately after the discovery of said errors, it demanded of the defendant the sum of $121.97, or the difference between $188.58 and $66.61, which demand defendant refused.

The action for said sum of $121.97 was then brought in the circuit court of Schuyler county, but was afterwards taken to Scotland county on change of venue, where it was tried.

The answer is first a general denial. Then for further answer, the defendant averred that by contract with plaintiff’s agent, the plaintiff agreed to transport timothy seed for him from Queen City, Missouri, to Chicago, Illinois, for the price of sixteen cents per hundred pounds, and defendant agreed to pay said sum; that in pursuance of said agreement, defendant delivered to plaintiff the nine car-loads of seed; “that the plaintiff issued to the defendant bills of lading for the said nine car-loads of timothy seed at the rate of the stipulated price aforesaid, to-wit, sixteen cents per hundred pounds; that the defendant paid the plaintiff [203]*203and the plaintiff accepted sixteen cents per hundred pounds for the freight on four car-loads of said timothy-seed ; that thereafter plaintiff refused to accept the sixteen cents per hundred pounds for the remaining five car-loads of timothy seed as aforesaid, but demanded of the defendant twenty-nine cents per hundred pounds on five car-loads of timothy seed and wrongfully and unlawfully refused to accept the sixteen cents per hundred pounds and refused to turn over the said five carloads of timothy seed to the defendant unless the defendant would pay twenty-nine cents per hundred pounds thereon; that the defendant was compelled to pay the plaintiff in order to obtain- his said timothy seed, which payment was made under protest and was not justly due to payment, the amount of twenty-nine cents per hundred pounds which he did under protest in order to obtain his said timothy seed and place them on the market; that the amount of said five car-loads of timothy seed was 221,978 pounds and at twenty-nine cents per hundred pounds, amounted to $643.74, which sum defendant was compelled to pay as aforesaid; that the amount actually due the plaintiff on said timothy seed according to the terms of said contract was $355.-18; but the difference in said amounts is $288.56, which defendant was compelled to pay and did pay under protest to the plaintiff. Wherefore, defendant prays judgment for the sum of $288.56, with interest and cost of suit.”

Plaintiff moved to strike out all that part of the answer except the general denial, and the admission of plaintiff’s corporate capacity, and the transportation of the seed. The reasons assigned in said motion follow:

“1. Because said part of said answer does not constitute a defense to plaintiff’s action.
“2. Because, under the Interstate Commerce Law, as set forth in plaintiff’s petition, a shipper cannot sue [204]*204in a State court to recover damages from a railroad company for charging him rates in excess of those permitted by the said Interstate Commerce Act.
“3. Because a court of the United States is the only forum vested with jurisdiction to hear and determine a controversy in which a counterclaim appears, as is attempted to be set up in said lines of said answer.
“4. Because this court has no jurisdiction to hear or determine the allegations set up by defendant in said lines of said answer.”

This motion was overruled, plaintiff excepting, after which a reply in the nature of general denial was filed.

Prom the evidence there seems to be no dispute as to the amount of seed shipped, and the amount of freight collected. Plaintiff introduced copies of the schedule and tariffs on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission, which shows the rate of twenty-six cents per hundred pounds on timothy seed. Plaintiff further showed the printing and distribution of these schedules or tariffs, and that two copies thereof had been sent to Queen City, Missouri, to be used for public reference. By witness Jennings, who was traveling freight agent for plaintiff in the territory including Queen City, it was shown, that to his best knowledge and belief, the tariff rates were with the agent at Queen City, in the railroad office, and that notice to that effect was posted up in the waiting room of the depot; that these rates could have been obtained by the shipper by calling upon the agent; that the rates themselves were not posted up in the depot, for the reason that they were being constantly torn down, and that the Interstate Commerce Commission had written his company that filing the schedules with the agent, subject to inspection by shippers, with notice of that fact posted in the depot or waiting-room, was sufficient com[205]*205pliance with the law; that in his territory the schedule of rates themselves had not been posted up for some years, but only a notice that such schedules were there subject to inspection.

So far as the record before us shows, the following is all that appears for defendant:

“John Sloop, being sworn, testified:
“I reside in Queen City, Missouri, and have resided there about thirty-two years. I am the defendant in this case.
“Q. Before you made this shipment in controversy, Mr. Sloop, what conversation did you have with the plaintiff’s agent at the depot there?
“Objected to for the reason that the defendant alleges that he had a written contract for the shipment of the seed; that being the ease, all previous conversations are presumed to be merged into that.
“Q. By Mr. Higbee: I’ll ask you if you did not have a written contract, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 S.W. 607, 200 Mo. 198, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-railroad-v-sloop-mo-1906.