51 Neb. 293 | Neb. | 1897
Tbe Crowell Lumber & Grain Company (hereinafter called tbe grain company) is a corporation organized under tbe laws and doing business in tbe state of Nebraska. Its business consists very largely in buying and shipping grain. Tbe Missouri Pacific Railway Company (hereinafter called tbe railway company) is a common
There is practically no conflict in the evidence as to the first and fifth issues.
As to the second issue, the evidence tends to show that the railway company and a number of other carriers, on the 19th of July, 1890, became members of what is known in this record as the Trans-Missouri Freight Association; that this association fixed the rate for the transportation of grain in car-load lots from certain points in Nebraska to certain Colorado points at thirty cents per hundred; that they caused to be printed and published a tariff sheet setting out the rates fixed by this association and filed this tariff sheet with the interstate commerce commission on the 23d of July, 1890. No such thing as a rule, constitution, or by-law of this association is in the record, and we are not certainly advised how any member of this freight association might withdraw therefrom or cease to be bound by the mutual agreement of its members,
As to the third and fourth issues, the evidence tends to show that prior to the making of the contract in suit the grain company had heard, or had been informed, that the rate fixed on grain from Nebraska to Colorado-by the Trans-Missouri Freight Association had been abrogated or modified; that the officer of the grain company whose duty it was to look after freight rates called upon the assistant general freight agent of the railway company and told him that he had been advised of a modification or abrogation of the thirty-cent rate on grain to Colorado. This freight agent assured him that there had been no modification or change of that rate; that it was still thirty cents per hundred, and thereupon the contract in suit was entered into; that the grain company, relying upon the rate fixed in the contract, purchased and shipped large quantities of grain and sold it to Colorado parties, the purchasers to pay the freight on the delivery of the grain, the grain company guarantying that it should not exceed thirty cents per hundred; that the delivering carrier refused to- surrender the grain unless it was paid a rate of thirty-nine cents per hundred; that the purchasers were' compelled to pay this in order to receive the grain, and that the grain company, in pursuance of its guaranty with its purchasers, paid the excessive freight charges to their purchasers. The verdict of the jury found all the issues in favor of the grain company, and without further comment on the sufficiency of the evidence, we think the jury’s finding is abundantly supported.
Affirmed.