23 F.2d 248 | 6th Cir. | 1928
The railway company maintains extensive yards at Russell, Ky. The coal bound north or west from the coal company’s mines all passes through Russell. During the governmental administration of the railroads and for a period afterward there was a great shortage of cars at the mines. All parties concerned adopted a practice by which the cars, as soon as loaded, were shipped from the mines to Russell without formal billing, but only on cards or tickets. There they were weighed, the railroad company was supplied with the name of the consignee, and they were shipped out on a B/L as if directly from the mines to destination. At this time the general demurrage rules required demurrage to bo paid upon any ears held by or for shippers beyond the minimum limit, but the ear distribution roles provided that, if the mine did not use all of its quota delivered to it on one day, the remainder should be charged against its quota for the next day, and the general demurrage rule was displaced at the mines by this distribution rule.
In this period of great demand' for coal there was not much delaying of cars on the track at Russell, but such delay as did occur was treated as if it had occurred at the mine and as covered by the distribution rule, and demurrage was not charged. After the more active demand for coal ceased and loaded cars began to be held unduly at Russell without shipping directions, the company, by formal notice, withdrew the tariff clauses which had permitted this situation to be treated under the distribution rule, and gave notice that thereafter demurrage would be charged under the regular tariff provisions therefor. The coal company protested against this arrangement and did not pay demurrage, and there accumulated a considerable sum, for the recovery of which the railway brought this suit in the court below against the coal company. The case was-tried by stipulation without a jury and upon an agreed statement of facts, which was given status as findings of fact.
Only two questions were presented below or here. The defendant’s first point was that the demurrage charge, otherwise unescapable, was not applicable, because the tariff rule on the subject excepted “ears under load with coal, at such mines, mine sidings, etc.,” and it is said that these Russell yard tracks (perhaps 100 miles away) by usage had become mine sidings. The acquiescence of all parties in this theory might have justified some delays at Russell under the practice which formerly had been pursued, while that acquiescence continued; but it could not change the geographical fact, nor avail after the emergency had passed and the emergency practice had been discontinued. As the District Judge accurately said:
“The shipping of coal-loaded ears to the Russell yards by card billing, as the method was called, was initiated during the war to relieve the shortage in ears used for transportation of coal. The demand for coal was greater than the supply. In this way the transportation of coal could be handled more efficiently than it was being done under the usual method. It contemplated no storage of ears at Russell yards, and there was none. The storage of the ears in question came about through the depression in the coal business which ensued, and when the supply exceeded the demand. It was entirely optional with defendant whether it would continue to ship according to this method, and, had it limited its shipments to its sales, there would have been no demurrage.”
We agree with the trial court that there was no such ambiguity in the demurrage tariff as made it open to a binding practical construction that “mine siding” meant “Russell yards,” even if that joint practical construction had not been discontinued long before this demurrage claim arose.
The second point presented by the coal company is that the B/L, by section 8 of the conditions in the standard form approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission, February 27, 1900, provided: “The owner or consignee shall pay the freight and all other lawful charges accruing on said property, and, if required, shall pay the same before delivery.” It is said that by collecting from the consignee the regular freight charges from the mines to destination, without demand of demurrage, the railroad company waived or became estopped to assert any demand against the consignor, as owner, for
The judgment is affirmed.