112 F. 487 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania | 1902
rA reconsideration of this case has failed to change my opinion that the court was justified in directing a* verdict in favor of the plaintiff. For present purposes it
It did appear, however, that coal was carried by the plaintiff from the disputed point of shipment for use in its own engines; this coal having been mined by the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, which was dearly-proved to be the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company in another dress. The identity of interest between the two corporations was só plain that it seemed idle to question it, so far as its practical effect upon the matter at issue was concerned, although, of course, the court did not intend to treat as nonexistent' for all purposes the legal distinction between the two separate corporate entities. But dealing with real things, and not with mere shows, it was clear to my mind that (for the purposes of the case before me) the coal company was mining as the scarcely veiled hand of the railroad company, and therefore that it made no difference at all what rate of freight was formally charged by the railroad company for hauling the coal. In essence, the railroad company mined, carried, and burnt its own coal; and, under such circumstances, I still think it was correct to say that a charge for freight would be little more than a bookkeeping entry.
A-new trial is refused.