143 Ky. 73 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
Reversing.
The appellant, Crescent Coal Company, is the. business name assumed by Joe Higdon, who in 1908 was engaged in buying and selling coal in the city of Henderson. The appellee, Louisville & Nashville'Railroad Company, was at the time and is a corporation organized under the laws of Kentucky and engaged in the business of a common carrier of passengers and freight. Its main line of road runs into and through the city and in addition to its main line it operates and controls what is called a
In April, 1908, Higdon in the name of - the Crescent Coal Company conceived the plan of'supplying the industrial plants in the city of Henderson that had spur connections with the main or belt line of the appellee company with coal mined from the Keystone mine. His purpose was to have cars furnished by the appellee company loaded with coal at the mine, and then transferred by the appellee company to the industrial plants in Henderson that had spur connections. With this object in view, he entered into a contract with the Keystone Company, by the terms of which he was to be furnished by it ■during the year beginning July 1, 1908, 20,000 tons of coal, which it was stipulated in the contract should be delivered to him on the spur track at its mine. Another contract made in May, 1908, gave him the right with certain conditions to sell the output of the mine in excess of 20,000 tons. After making these contracts with the Keystone Company, he contracted with various industrial plants having spur connections with the line of the ap-pellee company to deliver to them at their plants in carload lots, at a stipulated price, a large quantity of coal. On July 1, 1908, he applied to the appellee company to furnish him cars at the Keystone Company’s mine to be loaded with coal and hauled by it to the industrial plants, and proposed to pay for the services four dollars per car, which would be about ten cents per ton. The appellee ■ company refused to furnish any cars for this service until July 13, 1908, when it notified Higdon that it would furnish cars but would charge for the service lift/ cents per ton. This offer, which was kept open until August 13, 1908, Higdon refused to accept, and on August 13, the appellee company informed him that it would not furnish cars for this service at any price. Thereupon Higdon
A number of legal questions are presented by the record, and we will endeavor to dispose of such of them as seem essential to a solution of the matters in controversy. The first and perhaps the most important question is: Was the appellee company under a duty as a common carrier of passengers and freight to render this -service?
The evidence for appellee conduces to show that the coal mine and the industrial plants located in Henderson, to which Higdon desired to deliver coal were all located within what are called the “switching limits” of the ap-pellee company. It is, therefore, said that it should not be treated as a common carrier or charged with the duty of transporting freight as a common carrier from one point within these limits to another point within them. A common carrier, such as the appellee company was, may undoubtedly have what may be called yard facilities, including switches, spurs and side tracks for its convenience in the handling, storing and distribution of its "cars and freight, and it would not be obliged as a common carrier to transport from one point to another in these yards or on these spurs or switches, freight for the convenience of shippers who might desire to have freight hauled from one point on a switch or spur in the yard to another point in the yard. In the use of tracks laid in its yards for its own convenience- in handling, storing and distributing cars and freight, a common carrier cannot fairly be said to be engaged in the business of a common carrier in the sense that it must receive and deliver as at other points on its line of road freight or passengers. A rule like this would impose an unreasonable duty upon a common carrier and unnecessarily hinder and interfere with the conduct of its business. It is essential in the operation of railroads that they should have at terminals and other places where the business requires it, yards and facilities that they may use in the conduct of their business, in such a way as not to be incon
It is shown by the evidence that the appellee company in 1908, and for a number of years prior thereto, had been in the habit of transporting carloads of freight from industrial plants in Henderson with spur connections to •other industrial plants in Henderson with spur connections, but that it had never performed this service for the Keystone Company. For example, it would haul a carload of corn from an elevator, connected with its belt or main line by a spur track, to a mill connected with its main or belt line by a spur track; but it would not haul a carload of coal from the mine to either the elevator or the mill. In explanation of this practice, and for the purpose of showing that it involved a different character of service from that sought by Higdon, it attempted to show and did so do by its traffic agents, that the service it performed in hauling products from one industrial plant to another, such as from the corn elevator to the mill, was merely auxiliary or incidental to a transportation service that preceded or followed this local movement. Or, in other words, when it hauled for a nominal charge a carload of corn from the elevator to the mill to be converted into foodstuff of some kind, this foodstuff would necessarily be sold to parties outside of Henderson and, therefore, it would get what it calls a transportation charge for hauling the food product from the mill at Henderson to the place it was shipped. And so it would be compensated in the transportation haul for the service it rendered in switching the cars from the' elevator to the mill at a nominal price. It is said, however, that if coal was hauled from the Keystone mine to a factory to be there consumed, the carrier could not get another haul out of this coal or the substance to which it was re
It follows from these conclusions that the appellee company was not justified in refusing to render the service requested by Higdon.
The next question is, What rate did it have authority to charge for. his service? In April, 1908, the appellee company published and issued a book containing- its tariff rates. In this book we find the following: “The Louis
We have examined the case of Dixon v. Central of Georgia R. Co., 110 Ga., 173, 35 S. E., 369, but do not find it applicable to the state of facts presented by the record before us. In that case the question before the court was whether or not the service was “transportation service” or “switching service,” and under the facts of that case it was held to be “transportation service,” and, therefore, the charge established for “switching service” was not applicable. In the case we have, our conclusion that the rate of four dollars per car was applicable to the service demanded, although it is described in the tariff sheet as “switching service,” is largely rested upon the ground that the company charged this rate to other shippers for a like service. In the Dixon case it does not appear that the question that influenced our decision upon this point was before the court. If the question of the applicability of the tariff rate we have quoted was submitted to us freed from the construction given to it by the appellee company in its dealings with reference to the transfer of freight between other industries, we would say that it did not apply to the service sought by Higdon. It seems to us that the service Higdon desired was not “switching,” but “transportation” service. It was the same kind of service that the appellee company would have performed if a car was loaded with coal at a mine at any point on its road, and then hauled to the customer to whom it was consigned. But the appellee company in its course of conduct treated what might properly be called “transportation service” as “switching service,”
Coming now to the amount of damages Higdon is entitled to recover, he had two contracts with the Keystone Company. In one contract, dated April 5,1908, it agreed to furnish to him during the year not more than 20,000 tons, and it was in reliance upon this contract and the four-dollar rate he anticipated the appellee company would charge that he contracted to furnish to various industries about 14,000 tons. He also had other contracts to furnish coal to industries having spur connections, made before the contract with the coal mine, that it appears he could have filled with its coal. By the terms of the other contract, made in May, 1908, the Keystone Company appointed Higdon its sole agent in the city of Henderson to sell for it in the city coal in carload lots. But this contract stipulated that:
“The first party (Keystone Company) does not obligate itself to furnish for or on account of the second party (Higdon) under this contract any given quantity of coal, nor shall it be required to furnish any coal which shall interfere with the supply of coal on the local market in less than carload lots or by wagon loads. It being the mutual understanding that the first party shall supply its local trade by wagon delivery, shall fill the contract made with the Crescent Coal Company, signed by said Joe Higdon, and if then it has any coal on hand the said Joe Higdon shall have the refusal and the first party shall not have any right to ship it elsewhere if the second party should desire to use it under this contract in carload lots.”
It will be observed that it was virtually optional with the Keystone Company whether it furnished Higdon any coal under the May, 1908, contract, and upon the record before us we do not think he is entitled to any damages under this contract, as it does not appear that on the faith of it he made any contracts that caused him to suffer any loss. On the contract made in April he is entitled to recover the difference between what it cost him to fill the contracts he had made, whether before or after July 1,1908, with industries having spur connections, and that he could have filled with coal from the Keystone mine between July 1,1908, and July 1,1909, and what it would
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed for a new trial in conformity with this opinion.