Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. Greenwood Grocery Co.

51 So. 450, 96 Miss. 403
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 51 So. 450 (Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. Greenwood Grocery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. Greenwood Grocery Co., 51 So. 450, 96 Miss. 403 (Mich. 1909).

Opinion

Mayes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was begun in a justice court of Leflore county by appellant, and the purpose of the suit is to recover from the Greenwood Grocery Company the sum of $67, claimed by appellant to be due it by appellee as demurrage on certain cars containing interstate shipments of goods to appellee. The Greenwood Grocery Company undertook to offset this claim with a counterclaim of $58, claimed by it to be due it by appellant as reciprocal de-murrage charges. The case was tried in the justice court, and appealed to the circuit court, and tried on an agreed record. In the agreed record the facts are stated as concisely as it is possible-for them to be stated, and we shall therefore only touch upon the leading features of the case in so far as the facts are concerned. It is agreed that the cars about which the Greenwood Grocery Company claims the right of reciprocal demurrage contained, interstate shipments.

The real issue in the case is whether or not the Greenwood' Grocery Company can offset its claim for reciprocal demurrage-against the' claim of plaintiff for demurrage charges against it. It is asserted by appellant that this cannot be done, for the reason that the cars contained interstate shipments, and to allow this offset would be in violation of the federal laws. The reciprocal demurrage claim of the Greenwood Grocery Company grows out of delays on the part of appellant, occurring in the-yards of appellant, and after the interstate shipment reached its [412]*412.•’destination. No question of tbe unreasonableness of tbe delay-age charges is involved in tbis case in any way. As counsel for appellant put it in tbeir brief: “Tbe sole question in tbe case is whether it is competent for tbe state railroad commission to promulgate a reciprocal demurrage or delayage rale, which would impose rtpon tbe railroad company a charge for delay in tbe delivery of an interstate shipment. It is a question of tbe power of tbe railroad commission to act in tbe premises.” Tbe trial in tbe court below resulted in a judgment favoring tbe contention of tbe Greenwood.Grocery Company, thereby sustaining the power of the commission to impose these delayage charges on interstate shipments, and from .this judgment an appeal is prosecuted here.

We may say in tbe outset that tbe right and power of tbe state railroad commission to establish these delayage charges, in so far as intrastate shipments are concerned, was upheld in tbe case of Yazoo, etc., R. Co. v. Keystone Lumber Co., 90 Miss. 391, 43 South. 605. In tbe above case there was no question of interstate commerce involved. We may further state that we do not deem it necessary to a decision in this case to determine when a shipment of goods loses its character as interstate commerce. The appellants deny the power of the state railroad commission to promulgate any reciprocal demurrage rule which imposes a charge for delay on appellant, when the charge is sought to be applied to any interstate shipment.

The first case which counsel for appellant cite as sustaining this contention is the case of McNeill v. Southern Ry. Co., 202 U. S. 543, 26 Sup. Ct. 722, 50 L. Ed. 1142. This case does not seem to us to sustain the contention. Let us seé what the facts of the McNeill case were. The Greensboro Ice & Coal Company had a coal and wood yard located some distance from the main track and right of way of the Southern ^Railway Company. From this main track there was a private spur track leading over the land of private persons to the ice and coal company’s place [413]*413of business. It seems that tbe railroad bad delivered tbe freight of tbe ice and coal company at its place of business by hauling-it over this spur at one time; but, a dispute having arisen between tbe railroad company and tbe ice and coal company concerning demurrage on thirteen cars of coal and wood, tbe railroad notified it that thereafter it would only deliver its cars on tbe public track of tbe railroad known as tbe “team” track, on. which track all deliveries were made to tbe public generally. Subsequently tbe ice and coal company ordered other coal and wood for interstate shipment over tbe line of tbe railroad, and when it arrived tbe railroad company placed it on tbe track and notified tbe ice and coal company. Tbe coal company declined to receive tbe cars elsewhere than on tbe spur track, and the railroad company declined to deliver same there. A complaint was filed by tbe coal company with tbe corporations commission, and that commission ordered the railroad company to make delivery beyond its right of way and on tbe private siding. On tbe above facts, tbe court held that tbe order of tbe commission was void,, because it required carriers engaged in interstate commerce to-deliver cars containing such commerce beyond their right of way and to a private siding, thus manifestly imposing a burden so-direct and onerous as to leave no doubt that it was a regulation of interstate commerce. But in this very case tbe supreme court of tbe United States says that it does not draw in question tbe right of a state, in tbe exercise of its police authority, to confer on an administrative agency tbe power to make any reasonable-regulations concerning tbe place, manner, and time of delivery of merchandise moving in tbe channels of interstate commerce..

There is a marked distinction between the McNeill case, above quoted from and cited, and tbe case now being reviewed by this court. In the McNeill case it was sought to compel tbe railroad company to haul tbe goods beyond tbe line of tbe company and beyond their proper destination; that is to say, 'carry them over a private siding to tbe place of business of tbe con[414]*414sign.ee. But in tbe case under review there is no such attempt. Tbe rule simply operates to compel a reasonably quick delivery to tbe consignee on tbe main line of tbe railway, and amounts to nothing more than a regulation as to tbe time of delivery, tbe reasonableness of which is not questioned. • It is simply claimed by appellant that, whether reasonable or unreasonable, tbe railroad commission has no power to make this regulation as to interstate shipments. When tbe whole of the regulation is simply addressed to compelling prompt delivery of tbe goods, thus enabling the cars to be placed in service for other shippers more speedily, what burden can it be said that such a regulation imposes on commerce ? It does not ,seem to us that the case of McNeill v. Southern Railroad Company, cited above, can be said to be any authority for appellant; but it is more an authority for appellee when the facts are analyzed.

The nest case mainly relied upon by appellant’s counsel is the case of Houston R. R. Co. v. Mayes, 201 U. S. 321, 26 Sup. Ct. 491, 50 L. Ed. 772. An analysis of this case in the light of its facts easily distinguishes it from the case on trial. The case last cited involved the constitutionality of a Texas statute'which provided that whenever a shipper should make requisition, in writing, for a number of cars to be furnished at any point indicated within a certain number of days from the receipt of the application, and should deposit one-fourth of the freight with the agent of the company, the company on failing to furnish the cars should forfeit $25 per day for each car failed to be furnished ; the only proviso being that the law should not apply in case of strikes or other public calamity.

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 450, 96 Miss. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yazoo-mississippi-valley-railroad-v-greenwood-grocery-co-miss-1909.