Marietta & Vincent Railroad v. Public Utilities Commission
Marietta & Vincent Railroad v. Public Utilities Commission
Opinion of the Court
The Vincent Hardware & Lumber Company, in December, 1918, filed its complaint with the Public Utilities Commission against the plaintiff in error, an Ohio railroad corporation, alleging that the freight rates charged it by the company as a common carrier were unjust and unreasonable. It alleged that the railroad is owned and operated by The Cleveland Stone Company, a corporation engaged in the manufacture of grindstones, with works along the line of thé road, and that the road is operated for the benefit of said Stone Company, unjustly discriminating against the complainant and other shippers of freight.
The defendant in its answer denied that its rates are unjustly discriminatory or unjustly preferential, and denied that it is owned and operated by the Stone Company, but admits that the Stone
On the hearing before the commission that body rendered its decision in favor of the complainant, and ordered the rates reduced from $45 minimum weight 50,000 pounds to $25 per car, and freight in less than car lots from fifty cents per hundred to twenty-five cents per hundred, with the minimum charge of fifty cents. This proceeding is brought to reverse the order of the commission.
The railroad is 10.2 miles long, running from Moore’s Junction to Vincent. It was formerly part of the Marietta, Cleveland & Columbus railroad, which was sold at receiver’s sale, plaintiff in error having afterwards acquired title to this part by purchase in June, 1918, when it established the rates complained of.
The testimony shows that the country through which the road runs is a farming community, and along the road are one large village and several smaller ones; that the topography of the country is hilly and the public highways in winter muddy and almost impassable. A number of witnesses were called by the complainant, among whom one Secrest, who had had considerable experience in
There was testimony by other witnesses as to the close and intimate association between the Stone Company and the plaintiff in error and as to the apparent control of the latter by the former in its own interests. There was testimony that the present rates were unreasonable and excessive and that practically no freight business would be done hereafter for shippers along the company’s line.
The evidence shows that the section is a large apple-producing section, that considerable quantities of wheat, hay and other agricultural products were raised, but that the rates, fixed were so high as to make the use of the road practically impossible. In fact the main contention of the complainant and its witnesses seemed to be that the plaintiff in error did not desire freight business except such as was given to it by the Stone Company, and the Stone Company frankly says that it would not be in the railroad business at all if it were not for the necessity of hauling its own product. It seems to be clear that the company does not seek the patronage of the general public.
With reference to the contention of the plaintiff in error that a decrease in rates would be con
The commission was of the opinion that the adoption of the lesser rate would lead to an increase of the business of 'the company, and that a flat rate of $25.00 per car, regardless of distance moved or The weight or contents, would be and is a compensatory rate, but it retained jurisdiction of the case and provided that if after a trial under these rates for a period of one year they do not prove to be remunerative it will on application again take the matter up for further consideration, based on the results of actual operation.
From the whole record we think it is apparent that much more business can be done at but a small increase in the present expense. But if actual experience after a fair trial shows the rates to be insufficient the proper order can be made on the hearing of a new application.
Of course when operated as a common carrier it is entitled to just compensation, and when the locality through which it runs is sparsely settled, and the demand and necessity for transportation small, these matters must be taken into consideration and more than the rate customary in more favorable districts allowed while the common carrier is operated.
The order is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.