delivered the opinion of the Court.
This аction was brought by the respondent against the petitioner in the Circuit Court of Ripley County, Missouri, to recover treble damages under §§ 9985, 9990, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1919. The petitioner is a common carrier of freight and pаssengers for hire by railroad in Missouri and other States. Section'' 9985 contains the following: “ It shall be unlawful for any such сommon carrier to make or give any undue or unreasonable- preference or advantage to any particular person . . . in the transportation of goods . . . or to subject any particular pеrson . k. .. to any undue or unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage with respect to such transportаtion . . .” Section .9990, among, other things, makes the carrier liable to any person injured by a violation of the аbove quoted provision for three times the amount of damages sustained.
June 12, 1920, respondent, who was engаged in the lumber business, had 20,000 feet of hardwood lumber *406 ready for shipment at Oxly, Missouri, a station on petitioner’s railrоad, and applied for two cars on which to ship the lumber to Saint Louis, Missouri. The petitioner failed to furnish him any cars until August 19, 1920. After he had ordered the cars, ,and before they were delivered, other shippers at Oxly aрplied to the petitioner for, and were furnished, cars for the transportation of lumber. Respondent аlleged that by § 9985 petitioner was prohibited from, so discriminating against him, and that as a result of such unlawful discrimination hе Was damaged in the sum of $1,000. The complaint alleged the foregoing faqts, but contained no allegation that respondent attempted to-designate any route, intrastate or interstate, for the transportation of his lumber. ■ The. answer denied the discrimination and alleged that petitioner moves its cars from Oxly to Saint Louis оver two,routes: one wholly within the State of Missouri; the other by way of Thebes, crossing the Mississippi River at that pоint and running through the State of Illinois into Saint Louis;-that the usual and regular way of routing cats loaded with lumber at Oxly and consigned to Saint Louis would be over the latter route through the State of Illinois and would be interstate, commerсe, and that § 9985 has no application to the facts stated in respondent’s complaint. .
The first trial resulted' in a judgment for respondent which was reversed on appeal.
Congress, in the exertion of its power over commerce among the States, has enacted laws for the regulation of the furnishing of cars to shippers. Interstate Commerce Act, §1, (3), (4), (6), (10), (11), (12), (14); §3 (1); §15 (1). See
United States
v.
New River Company,
Judgment reversed.
