West Virginia Northern R. v. United States ex rel. Kingwood Coal Co.

134 F. 198, 67 C.C.A. 220, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4507
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
DocketNo. 541
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 134 F. 198 (West Virginia Northern R. v. United States ex rel. Kingwood Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Virginia Northern R. v. United States ex rel. Kingwood Coal Co., 134 F. 198, 67 C.C.A. 220, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4507 (4th Cir. 1904).

Opinion

FULLER, Circuit Justice

(after stating the facts). Inasmuch as It appeared that the West Virginia Northern Railroad Company was not the owner of any of the cars used on its line for the transportation of coal, but that all such cars were furnished by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, over whose tracks the coal ultimately reached market, and that after the delivery of the cars to the West Virginia Northern Railroad Company they were distributed by it among the mines along its line, the question to be determined under the pleadings was stated in the careful opinion of Goff, Circuit Judge, returned as part of the record before us, and reported in 125 Fed. 252, to be whether the West Virginia Northern Railroad Company, in distributing the cars, made a just allotment of them among the three mines, or so assigned them as to unlawfully discriminate in favor of two of the mines against the other.

After pointing out that railroad companies could, by discrimination in distribution among competing coal companies, build up some and eventually destroy others, since the output was largely controlled by the number of cars available for use in sending the coal to market, prudent management requiring that no more coal should be mined at any time than could be promptly forwarded, and remarking on the danger of discrimination where the power of controlling the car supply happened to be dominated by an interest in the output and profits of some mines as contradistinguished from others, the Circuit Court ruled that in reaching a proper basis for the distribution of railroad cars it was necessary that the different elements which were essential factors in the finding of the daily output of the respective mines to share in the allotment should be carefully examined and considered, and this embraced such matters as “the working places, the number of mine cars and their capacity, the switch and tipple efficiency, the number and character of the mining machines in use, the hauling system and the power used, the number of miners and other employés, the mine openings and the miners’ houses”; and that, while none of these elements could be safely said to be absolutely controlling, the working places, the. available points at which coal could be profitably mined, were likely to be the most important, for “at each true working place a certain quantity of coal, to be determined by the thickness of the seam and conditions peculiar to the different coal fields, can be excavated and removed during stated periods of time; and so it follows that, if other essentials are adequate, the daily output of a mine can be computed by the number of its available working places.” And the court said;

“The capacity of a coal mine for rating purposes is the amount of coal it is able to place in the railroad cars in a given time, and that depends on its working places, the thickness of its coal seams, its switches, workmen, mine cars and tipples, its general equipment, and its management. The output of a mine is the amount of coal it in fact places in the railroad cars for shipment, and that is regulated by the number of such cars it is able to secure, provided its general equipment is efficient; and it may be and generally is less than its capacity, but can never exceed it.”

The Circuit Court found from the evidence that the three mines had all the mining paraphernalia requisite for the excavating and load[202]*202ing of more coal than could be transported in the railroad cars allotted to them respectively; that each mine possessed all of the equipment required to handle all of the coal that co.uld be mined from its working places; and that at the time the suit was instituted the Kingwood Coal Company could fairly count and work at least 65 working places, the Irona Coal Company at least 103, and the Atlantic Coal & Coke Company at least 45; and concluded' that the distribution should have allotted to the Kingwood Coal Company 31 per cent., to the Irona Coal Company 48 per cent., and to the Atlantic Coal & Coke Company 21 per cent, of the cars allowed the West Virginia Northern Railroad by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, whereas the West Virginia Northern Railroad Company apportioned to the Kingwood Coal Company 18 per cent., to the Irona Coal Company 56 per cent., and to the Atlantic Coal & Coke Company 26 per cent. The court held upon the facts that this allotment was not in accordance with the actual conditions, and that thereby the West Virginia Northern Railroad Company had arbitrarily increased the number of cars the Irona Coal Company was entitled to receive from 48 to 56 per cent., and the number to which the Atlantic Coal & Coke Company was entitled from 21 to 26 per cent., while it unjustly, reduced the number due the King-wood Coal Company from 31 to 18 per cent.

The order of court setting the cause for hearing shows, and it is admitted by counsel, that “by consent of parties” a jury was waived, and the cause submitted to the court for determination; but the record does not disclose any “stipulation in writing waiving a jury,” as prescribed by statute, and the only question of law reviewable on error would be the sufficiency of the alternative writ, or of the findings to support the judgment. Andes v. Slauson, 130 U. S. 435, 9 Sup. Ct. 573, 32 L. Ed. 989; Spalding v. Manasse, 131 U. S. 65, 9 Sup. Ct. 649, 33 L. Ed. 86. And even waiving the rigor of this rule, it is also well settled that on trial by the court the determination of the facts is binding if there be any evidence to sustain it. Dooley v. Pease, 180 U. S. 126, 21 Sup. Ct. 329, 45 L. Ed. 457. The fifth and seventh alleged errors may. therefore be dismissed as without merit, and are indeed not pressed by counsel.

As to the sixth, it appears from the bill of exceptions, which is unavailing if the rule laid down in Andes v. Slauson be applied, that the Circuit Court was requested to make certain special findings of fact, which the court, being of the opinion that they were not justified by the evidence, refused to do “except in so far as a portion thereof deemed material by the court may be found in the written opinion of the court filed in this cause.” We do not understand that the court could be required to make findings of special issues of fact; and, moreover, the ground of complaint is that the judgment of the court was “founded alone upon the working spaces of the mine,” whereas, as already seen, the court took into consideration all the factors asserted to be essential to a proper conclusion. This brings us to the other assignments of error, which involve the questions whether the Circuit Court erred (1) in allowing [203]*203-the alternative writ to be amended, (2) in rendering judgment against the railroad company and Weaver jointly, or (3) against Weaver, or (4) against the railroad company.

1. The alternative writ, pursuing the terms of the petition, commanded respondents, “according to their several and respective powers,” among other things, “to furnish to the said Kingwood Coal Company for the transportation of its coal, without discrimination, and upon conditions as favorable as those given to other shippers, at least thirty-three and one-third per cent, of the total car supply at this time to be distributed by you, or either of you, among the several miners and shippers of coal along the railroad lines of the said West Virginia Northern Railroad,” or to show cause to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
134 F. 198, 67 C.C.A. 220, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-virginia-northern-r-v-united-states-ex-rel-kingwood-coal-co-ca4-1904.