69 Fla. 491 | Fla. | 1915
An alternative writ of mandamus was issued in this cause, requiring respondent to observe and obey Rule 15 of the Rules Governing the Transportation of
The return was filed January 13, 1913, to which the Relators interposed a demurrer and a motion to strike certain portions of the return. Both the demurrer and motion to strike were overruled. State ex rel. Railroad Com’rs. v. Florida East Coast R. Co., 65 Fla. 420, 62 South. Rep. 593.
Rule 15 of the rules and regulations prescribed by the Railroad Commissioners for the “government of the trans
There is a provision to the effect that the rule should not interfere Avith any prevailing legal'rate for the -trans
It was charged in the alternative writ that the respondent, the Florida East Coast Railway Company, refused to obey the rule and was disregarding it in that the respondent had by its tariff of terminal charges then in force fixed switching charges at “two dollars per car to cover switching carload shipments to and from industries located on private sidetracks at all points on this line, this charge to include the movement of empty cars after unloaded, also handling inbound to be loaded,” and that the respondent was charging on “intra-state shipments $2.00 per car for switching carload shipments, of which the company has the line haul, to and from industries located on certain of its own sidetracks which said company designates as private sidetracks at divers points on its said line of railway both for handling cars inbound to be loaded upon such sidetracks and for the movement of empty cars from the said sidetracks after unloading.”
In other words the rule seeks to prohibit any charge whatever by a railroad having the line haul, for placing, for loading, an empty car at any warehouse or other point on its own line or sidetrack; or for switching the loaded car to or from the same either for delivery or transportation, and the writ charged the respondent with violating this feature of the rule.
The return by the respondent, among other things, avers: “(11 That the Florida East Coast Railway has at every station on the line of its road a free delivery track
And this respondent says that the foregoing does not include the switching done at Jacksonville, South Jacksonville and the transfer between Jacksonville and South Jacksonville, on which a small profit has been made, but not sufficient to meet the expenses; that for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1912, the following were the switching charges and the amount received:
No. Cars Switched. Earnings. Expenses.
On line of road..... 5,125 $10,251.50 $12,812.50
Jacksonville, South Jacksonville and transfer between Jacksonville and So. Jacksonville.. 17,283 34,366.00 31,736.00
St. Augustine ..... 1,270 2.539.00 3.507.00
Miami ............ 1,976 5.952.00 6.570.00
25,654 $53,108.50 $54,625.50
There is involved in this controversy the question of the right of the respondent having the line haul to make an extra charge for placing an empty car at any warehouse or other point on its line or sidetrack for loading or for switching the loaded cars to or from the same either for delivery or transportation.
The rule is a general rule applying alike to all railroads in Florida on intra-state shipments and in this case to every place, station, spur or sidetrack of the respondent’s road where the respondent makes a charge in addition to the regular freight rate for placing an empty car at any warehouse or other point on its line for loading or for switching the loaded car to or from the place either for delivery or transportation.
The railroad company has a right to load or unload its cars where its facilities or appliances for such work are, and it would be unreasonable to require it to establish other facilities to accommodate each patron. See Covington Stock-Yards Co. v. Keith, 139 U. S. 128, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 461; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Central Stock Yards Co., 212 U. S. 132, text 144, 29 Sup. Ct. Rep. 246. So in Missouri Pac. R. Co. v. State of Nebraska, 217 U. S. 196, 30 Sup. Ct. Rep. 461, it was held that the carrier could not be required to build more private connections, because the obligation was not involved in the carrier’s public duty and the requirement went beyond the. reasonableness of the State’s protective power. There is however nothing to prevent a railroad from building or permitting to be built private connections such as industrial
The rule sought to be enforced here confines the service to the “switching limits of any place” which within the meaning of the rule “shall be the switching limits usually operated there, but in no case less than three miles.” The alternative writ alleges that the respondent is “charging
The rule is valid upon its face and binding alike upon all the carriers in the State who come within its scope, and each carrier who resists the enforcement of it must show that as to such carrier the rule is arbitrary and unreasonable in that it denies to the carrier a reasonable compensation for the specific special service required. See Missouri Rate Cases 230 U. S. 474, text 508, 33 Sup. Ct. Rep. 975; State ex rel., Railroad Com’rs. v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 64 Fla. 469, 60 South. Rep. 186.
In the Los Angeles Switching Case the Interstate Commerce Commission had upon proceedings instituted before it by the Associated Jobbers of Los Angeles, California, made an order in regard to switching charges within the yard limits of that city. The order required certain railroad companies to desist from exacting a charge of $2.50 per car for delivering and receiving carload freight to and from industries located upon spurs and sidetracks within their respective switching limits in Los Angeles. It also prohibited the exaction of any charge whatever other than the charge for transportation from points of origin to destination, for delivering or receiving carload freight in such cases. The Commission found that the carriers had designated certain territory as within its switching or yard limits in the city, including numerous tracks, main lines, branch lines, industry spurs, classification tracks, team tracks, hold tracks, repair tracks
The court construing the finding of the Commission said: “Nor do we understand that the commission ruled that the receipt and delivery of goods at points located upon spurs or sidetracks could not, in any circumstances be regarded as a distinct service for which separate com
The court accepted the findings of the Commission as conclusions of fact. The rule in the Los Angeles Switching Cases applied only to the City of Los Angeles, and the findings of the Commission related of course only to the conditions as they existed there. The court said that the real question before the Commission was whether “there was really an extra service in the circumstances shown.”
In determining the question of whether the spur track or industrial switching 'complained of in these proceedings, is extra service by the respondent to the persons favored by such service, several matters should be considered, all of which enter into the service and fix its character. The location and extent of the spur, the cost of construction and maintenance, the character of the movement, whether it is part of the haul or a separate and distinct movement of the freight for the accommodation of the patron of the road and if a separate movement, whether it is substituted for the original delivery. The question of the difference in cost to the railroad between a free track delivery and a delivery upon an industrial siding is not a controlling factor to determine the character of the movement, but is evidentiary only. In or near large centers of commerce, where land available for yards is both difficult to obtain and expensive, where commerce is large and taxes the road’s facilities to handle it.
It does not necessarily follow that because a carrier delivers freight in car loads to consignees on private sidetracks that such service was made in substitution of a delivery which might otherwise have been made on the free or station sidetracks. The service of delivering freight to
There are two theories on which the Railroad Commissioners may deal with the subject: one is on the theory that the service is a substituted and not accessorial service and may prohibit any charge therefor, because the carrier has already been compensated by the freight rate which it has received for the transportation of the goods; the other theory is that the service is one which the railroad company has undertaken in addition to the line haul and may regulate the charge by allowing only a 'just
The evidence submitted, we think, clearly and convincingly establishes the contention of the respondent thaL some if not all of the spur or industrial sidetracks of the respondent on which the charge of two dollars is made for switching, are not part of the yard facilities proper at the different places where the service complained of is rendered, but are additional conveniences erected for private interests and the placing of cars thereon either empty or loaded for the convenience of the particular person or interest served, involves an extra service on the part of the respondent and an additional cost. In many cases the industrial or spur tracks were constructed entirely at the cost of the respondent and in every case maintained by it; in many cases the tracks were put in at the request of the industries to be served and for their especial convenience, and under an agreement to pay the respondent a stipulated price for the delivery of the cars to the private track; in most of the places it appears that the regular yard or free tracks of the respondent afford sufficient conveniences for the delivery of all freight, the delivery to private or industrial sidings involve more time, labor and expense to the company. The service appears from our reading of the evidence to be clearly and convincingly accessorial. To require the respondent to render this service free, to treat it as a substituted service for that of delivery on the free tracks of the respondent would under the conditions shown by the return amount to a discrimination by the respondent in favor of the person or corporation for whom the delivery is made and against one engaged in a like business at the same locality, but not specially favored by the respondent.
It is unnecessary to discuss that phase of the question bearing upon the effect upon respondent’s entire earnings of the enforcement of the rule. It having been made to appear by the respondent to the satisfaction of the court that the service complained of is clearly an additional or accessorial service to that of delivery of freight to or upon the free tracks of the road, the peremptory writ is denied.