Wells, Fargo & Co. v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co.

19 F. 20, 9 Sawy. 601, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2004
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 19 F. 20 (Wells, Fargo & Co. v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells, Fargo & Co. v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co., 19 F. 20, 9 Sawy. 601, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2004 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Deady, J.

On December 11, 1882, plaintiff commenced a suit in this court to compel the defendant to allow and furnish it express facilities on its lines of transportation; and on March 19th, after a hearing on the hill, an injunction was allowed requiring the defendant to furnish the plaintiff such facilities on and over its lines of railway and steam navigation as it then was and had been doing before the commencement of the suit and upon the same terms. On November 20, 1883, the plaintiff filed a petition in the cause, verified by the oath of its superintendent, Mr. Dudley Evans, asking that the manager of the defendant, Mr. 0. H. Prescott, and certain of its pursers and conductors, be ordered to show cause why they should not be punished as for contempt, for not obeying said injunction as therein alleged. The petition and affidavits in support of it show that at and before the allowance of said injunction- and since, the defendant was and is the owner and operator of two certain steamboats, then and now plying on the Columbia river, between Portland and Astoria and way ports, and also a certain steam-ship plying between Portland and San Francisco, as well as the lessee and operator of a certain narrow gauge railway running from White Station to [21]*21Sheridan and Airlie, in Oregon; that until October 1, 1883, the defendant allowed the plaintiff to have the services of pursers and conductors on said vessels and road, to take charge of its treasure-box and letter-hag, and deliver and receive all matter transported therein, as its agents and messengers along tho routes traveled by them, for which it has and is willing to pay a reasonable compensation and indemnify the defendant against any loss by reason of the carriage of such express matter; and that since said date the defendant had refused to allow or furnish the plaintiff these facilities, contrary to the injunction herein, and notwithstanding it is furnishing the same to the Northern Pacific Express Company, a corporation, tho stock of which is largely owned by the persons who control the defendant.

The order was made as asked for, and on .December 4th the manager of the defendant answered for it nod Pirn'■elf, admitting the facts alleged in the petition, and stating (Amt l ¿ did not understand that the defendant was required by «Do Injunction to allow its pursers and conductors to act as ¡igouts and messengers of the plaintiff; that acting upon this ii/ipt cr ¿on one advice of counsel that such services were not indiid' .s in >"’o injunction, and were not express facilities anyhow, h . '¡nd directed the pursers and conductors of the defendant not to wgi ; ■ ¿he agents and messengers of the plaintiff; and that tho r lypomAut did not intend to violate or disobey the injunction of Dio coiH-k Only two of the pursers and conductors—C. A. Gould, oir Di,: narrow gauge, and John B. Maynard, of the steamship Colturtl¿i. —appear to have been served with the order to show cause, surd ¿hoy answered jointly, saying that the injunction was not served on them, and they were not aware of its terms, and did not suppe -e fli.it it required them to act as agents of the plaintiff, but that in : .using to do so they did not intend to disobey tho injunction, nnd were simply acting in obedience to the orders of their super KT„

Tiit- scope and meaning of the phrase “express facilities” does not , d«iif of absolute definition. Its force and effect must often depend >n circumstances, of which local usage, the conduct, and conven.nice of the parties may be important considerations. For instance, h ike tlio service which the plaintiff claims at the hands of the purser of the steam-ahip. It consists simply of receiving the plaintiff’s treasure-box and letter-bag in his office, on the vessel, and putting it in the safe arid keeping it there until the arrival of the vessel at Portland or San Francisco, as the case may be,, and there delivering the same, on board, to the agent of the plaintiff. Thereby the defendant incurs neither expense nor risk, and the plaintiff saves the hire and transportation of a special agent between these ports. The inconvenience to the defendant is nothing, while the inconvenience to the plaintiff is very considerable. It is an arrangement which commends itself at once, as reasonable and well calculated to promote the conduct of the business in which the parties are engaged, [22]*22namely, the transportation and delivery of parcels with certainty and celerity on the one hand, and the furnishing the means and conveniences for so doing on the other.

And it is not apparent on what ground the defendant can reasonably refuse this facility, unless it desires to impede rather than promote the plaintiff’s business, which is contrary to its duty and- obligations as a common-carrier. "While the plaintiff was the only company doing business on the defendant’s routes, it was furnished this facility as a matter of course. It was mutually profitable. "Under the circumstances, the defendant could furnish it much cheaper than the plaintiff could supply it. That it was the proper and convenient thing to do,' seems then not to have been questioned. But when a rival corporation enters this field to compete with the plaintiff in the express business, the defendant withdraws this facility from the latter, and extends it to the former. The only reasonable explanation of this conduct is that the defendant intends to favor the one company, which is in fact itself or its near ally in interest, and hinder the other in the conduct of its business.. The same may be said of the services of the conductors on the narrow guage,road.' Presumably the business thereon is so light that it is a burdensome expense to send a special messenger over the road with the express matter, while the duties of the conductor are so inconsiderable that he can attend to it as well as not.

The injunction requires the defendant to furnish the plaintiff with the express facilities'that it was allowed at and before the filing of the bill; and this facility, as we have seen, was one of them. If, however, the defendant or its manager thought that this was such a facility or convenience as it ought not, under the circumstances, to be required to furnish, and would not if the court’s attention was specially called to the matter, he should have applied for a modification of the injunction in this respect, and not have undertaken to disregard it, with a view of testing the matter or otherwise. The merit or propriety of the injunction is not open to consideration in this proceeding. It is the duty of all the parties to obey the injunction until it is set aside or modified. Craig v. Fisher, 2 Sawy 345. As it is, the respondents are clearly guilty of a violation of the -, injunction, and are liable to be punished as for a contempt, regard- ' less of the question whether this service is one which the defendant ought to furnish the plaintiff as an “express facility” or not. But even if the defendant had never furnished the plaintiff with this facility, and even if it is not, under the circumstances or otherwise, an absolute express facility, yet the defendant has by its conduct, so far made it one that it is bound, both by the terms of the injunction and its duty and obligation as a common carrier, to furnish it to the plaintiff. Having voluntarily furnished the Northern Pacific with this convenience in the transaction of its business, it cannot refuse it to Wells, Fargo & Oo. In giving this convenience to the. one com[23]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. 20, 9 Sawy. 601, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-fargo-co-v-oregon-ry-nav-co-uscirct-1884.