Plaintiff had judgment for car demurrage. Defendant was denied recovery for money it had paid plaintiff under engine hire agreements, with claim of damage doubled under 2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 11035.
For many years defendant has operated a sugar beet factory near Mount Clemens. Its plant is about two miles from the main line of plaintiff's railroad and is reached by a single spur track, from which run a number of stub tracks to defendant's loading and unloading docks and bins.
The sugar manufacturing "campaign" lasts about three months from October 1st. During the campaign some 1,200 to 1,500 cars of beets are received by defendant, sometimes 100 in a day. The rest of the year is quiescent. It is conceded that both intra-state and interstate commerce is involved in the action.
For some 20 years the parties have made an engine hire contract annually for the campaign. The agreement recites that "the Grand Trunk as a common carrier, serves the plant of the Sugar Company;" that "in the successful operation of its plant, the Sugar Company requires considerable service of a locomotive engine and full crew and desires that the Grand Trunk furnish the same;" and provides that the Grand Trunk agrees to furnish its engine and crew "for the purpose of performing switching service for the Sugar Company" for a period of not more than 12 hours per day; the crew to work on Sundays if requested by defendant; the engine to tie up at the defendant's plant each night; the crew to be considered employees of the *Page 369 Grand Trunk and subject to its rules and regulations "when performing said switching service for the Sugar Company;" the Grand Trunk to fuel and oil the engine and pay the crew; the Sugar Company to indemnify the Grand Trunk from damages, etc., arising out of the performance of the contract or condition of the track, etc.; defendant to pay the sum of $8 per hour, with a minimum of $48 per day; the contract to run for five months, with right of defendant to terminate it upon 60 hours' notice.
The engine was employed in hauling cars from the main line, spotting them at the unloading docks and bins and the loading places, hauling out empties and loaded cars, switching cars from place to place at the plant for loading or unloading, moving a clamshell about, and was sometimes idle. In other words, cars were moved as the operations required. Defendant gave few directions to the crew but that it had the contract right to control the car movements at the plant cannot be doubted.
The usual place of delivery was at the unloading bins or docks at defendant's plant. Plaintiff had a published switching tariff of $3.15 per car movement.
Defendant's contention is that, as spotting the cars at the docks or bins is covered by the line haul tariff and the intra-plant movements by the switching tariff and no other service was contemplated by the engine hire agreement, the contract was in violation of the Federal and State commerce acts, consequently was illegal for want of consideration and the money paid thereunder may be recovered with the statutory penalty.
Defendant relies largely on Chesapeake Ohio R. Co. v.Westinghouse, Church, Kerr Co., Inc., 270 U.S. 260 (46 Sup. Ct. 220), where the court held *Page 370 illegal, as without consideration and as affording an undue preference, an engine hire agreement which, however, so far as the opinion shows, was designed only to complete the delivery which the carrier had contracted to make and which was included in its haul tariff.
This case presents the additional and different factor of intra-plant switching, which is no duty of a common carrier, is not a part of "transportation," Terminal Allowance forSwitching at Humboldt, Kan., 192 I.C.C. 67, 70, and is the subject of private contract, Grasselli Chemical Co. v. DirectorGeneral, 81 I.C.C. 562, American Smelting Refining Co. v.Railroad Co., 168 C.C.A. 83 (256 Fed. 737).
Whether the services contemplated in the engine hire agreement were identical with those covered by the tariffs is a question of specific fact, not a mere matter of resemblance. The tariffs cover the usual and ordinary services of a carrier, which has some regard for its own cost and convenience and must have regard for the needs of other shippers. The carrier owes no legal duty to spot cars solely at the shipper's convenience, nor does a published switching tariff obligate it to conduct intra-plant movements of cars to the sole end of efficient operation of the plant. Timken Roller Bearing Company TerminalAllowance, 2091. C. C. 441.
The engine hire agreement at bar provided for defendant a special and superior service not contemplated by the tariff, which placed engine movements under control of defendant and enabled it to direct them at its own convenience and to the efficient and profitable conduct of its plant, without the delays and uncertainty incident to ordinary traffic operation. In effect, it converted the local situation from one of railroading to one of plant operation. *Page 371 Practices of Carriers Affecting Operating Revenues or Expenses— Terminal Services, 209 I.C.C. 11. The distinction is recognized, by way of contrast, in the Chesapeake Case, p. 266:
"The service by special engine and crew contracted for and given was not spotting solely for the convenience of the shipper. It was the spotting service covered by the tariff."
Defendant argues at length that cases covering "interchange yards or tracks" are not in point.
We need not discuss this contention because the essential question is one Of character of the service covered by the contract. In our opinion, the contract provided for a service not covered by plaintiff's duty as a common carrier,Sasinowski v. Railroad Co., (C.C.A.) 74 Fed. (2d) 628;Pennsylvania R. Co. v. M. McGirr's Sons Co., (C.C.A.) 287 Fed. 334; Grasselli Chemical Co. v. Director General, supra;Practices of Carriers Affecting Operating Revenues and Expenses— Terminal Operations, supra. Defendant's counter-claim for return of rent paid was properly disallowed.
Defendant also challenges the judgment for demurrage.
Plaintiff filed bill of particulars of the demurrage, verified by oath. At the hearing, the court held the pleadings sufficient, under Court Rule No. 20, § 5, to constitute a primafacie showing of the facts of plaintiff's case. In opinion at the close of hearing, however, the court, after closer inspection of the pleadings, held defendant's answer sufficient under the rule to put plaintiff to its proof. On motion of plaintiff, the court reopened the case and took testimony on demurrage. Defendant contends this was an abuse of discretion. We think the court decently could not have done otherwise. *Page 372
Plaintiff claimed demurrage under an "average agreement" and the court computed it in accordance with section D of rule 3 of the demurrage tariff, which covers cases where the industry does not do its own switching. Section E of rule 3 applies to industries doing their own switching. Rule 7 applies to cases not subject to an average agreement. Plaintiff claimed under all or the applicable rule. Defendant alleges as error that the court refused to compel plaintiff to elect the rule of computation but it cites no authority for its contention and we know of no rule which requires such election. Having shown the facts, plaintiff was entitled to the rule of damages which fits them. Nor was defendant injured because the court adopted the rule most favorable to it.
Defendant also complains that the testimony does not support the award of demurrage damages. It did not assign as error that the judgment was not supported by testimony nor against the preponderance or weight of the evidence nor did counsel attempt a computation which would indicate the specific error claimed nor the true amount due. Nor did defendant produce its records to show the facts. It is sufficient to say that there was testimony supporting the verdict.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
NORTH, C.J., and WIEST, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, SHARPE and Toy, JJ., concurred. POTTER, J., did not sit. *Page 373