Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Ry. Co. v. J. B. Doppes Sons Lumber Co.

Jones, E. H., J.

These cases involve one question, and were presented at one time.

The plaintiffs below, viz., The J. B. Doppes Sons Lumber Company and The Richter Grain Company, in their petitions seek to recover on each of their several causes of action the penalty of $150 prescribed by Section 9002, General Code, for a violation of the provisions of Section 9000, General Code. The latter section reads as follows:

“Sec. 9000. A company owning a track or tracks lying contiguous to coal mines, stone quarries, manufacturing establishments, elevators, warehouses, navigable waters or sidetracks, and within the proper terminal limits of or about a city or village, shall be entitled to receive from the company whose cars are so switched, loaded and unloaded at such mines, quarries, manufacturing establishments, elevators, warehouses, navigable waters or sidetracks, no more than one dollar per car for switching one-half mile or less on such tracks; for distances over one-half mile, and not exceeding two and one-half miles, not to exceed one dollar and fifty cents per car; for distances over two and one-half miles and not exceeding five miles, not more than two dollars per car; and for all distances of more than five miles, not more than three dollars per car. When such service is on the roads of two or more companies, then such *24charges shall be divided between the companies in proportion to the distances of each road. But each company shall be entitled to at least one dollar for such service, regardless of distance, but there shall be no charge for returning empty cars from such mines, quarries, manufacturing establishments, elevators, warehouses, navigable waters or sidetracks. Such company may perform the service or do the switching work herein provided for, in the daytime. Whatever private sidetracks are or may be constructed, the company must switch cars thereon at the rates herein specified.”

Plaintiffs allege in their petitions that they were required to pay an excessive rate for shipments in carload lots of lumber and grain between points within the terminal limits of the city of Cincinnati. For instance, in the first case, the petition alleges:

That the plaintiff shipped a car of lumber from Fernbank, on the tracks of the Big Four, to its private switch on the tracks of the Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Company; that all the places concerned, including Fernbank, are in the switching limits of Cincinnati; and that The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company and The Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Company demanded and received from plaintiff,, for switching from the tracks of the said Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company on to and over the tracks of the other defendant company to the plaintiff’s siding, the sum of six dollars, in addition to charging five dollars for transporting said car from Fernbank over The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company to Cincinnati.

*25The several complaints against the railroad companies are the same in nature, although the charges and points between which shipments were made differ.

It is claimed in making the charges for these intracity shipments no heed was given by the carriers to the provisions of Section 9000, General Code, that the transporting of the car over one of the roads is a “switching” within the meaning of that section, and that the charge therefor must be governed accordingly.

The sole .question- in this case, therefore, is whether or not the rates prescribed in Section 9000 must be observed by the railroad companies in collecting for shipments such as those described in the petitions herein.

After reading the briefs of counsel and examining the authorities cited therein, we have reached the conclusion that Section 9000 has no application to shipments such as those under consideration within the terminal limits of a city. We are of the opinion that the word “switching” as used iri said section applies only to movements of freight cars within such city that are incidental only to the shipment as a whole; or, as one of counsel puts it, “to the main journey.” While the railroads are required by Sections 8998 and 8999, under the penalty prescribed in Section 9002, to make transfers of freight cars to avoid the necessity of reloading same, they are entitled to be paid for shipments from one local station within the city to another local station therein at the regular tariff rates in effect between said stations. Such an interpretation of the statute is not only warranted by its *26language and that of preceding sections, but to our minds is required by a sense of justice and fairness to all parties concerned. It is also well supported by decisions of higher courts, which we follow in deciding this case. See Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Michigan Ry. Comm., 231 U. S., 457, and Dixon v. Central Ry. Co., 110 Ga., 173.

The distinction between a switching and a transportation movement is well expressed in the first proposition of the syllabus of Dixon v. Railway Co., supra.

The judgment in case No. 95 will be reversed, and the judgments in cases Nos. 318 and 319 affirmed.

Judgment accordingly.

Swing and Jones, Oliver B., JJ., concur.