Montpelier & Wells River R. R. v. Caldbeck-Cosgrove Corporation

Decision Date03 October 1939
Citation8 A.2d 681,110 Vt. 390
PartiesMONTPELIER & WELLS RIVER R. R. v. CALDBECK-COSGROVE CORPORATION
CourtVermont Supreme Court

May Term, 1939.

Interstate Commerce Act---1. Payment of Legal Rate Required---2. No Reduction by Contract or Estoppel of Carrier---3. Conflict between Rate and Route in Bill of Lading Prepared by Shipper---4. Delivery to Competitor at Point of Origin Not Required---5. Consignee Held Liable for Amount of Under charge.

1. The Interstate Commerce Act requires the carrier to collect, and the party legally responsible therefor to pay, the lawful rate existing at the time of shipment, without deviation through mistake, ignorance or otherwise, and the party liable for such charges is conclusively presumed to know the lawful rate.

2. Under the Interstate Commerce Act no contract of the carrier can reduce the amount legally payable for carriage of a shipment, nor can any act or omission of the carrier (except the running of the statute of limitations) estop or preclude it from enforcing payment of the full amount by a person liable therefor.

3. Where a shipper prepares his own bill of lading, with specific instructions as to the route over which the shipment is to be moved, and inserts therein a rate which is inapplicable to that route, it is the duty under the Interstate Commerce Act of the agent of the carrier to whom the shipment is delivered to call attention to the conflict between rate and route and obtain from the shipper full and definite instructions, and if this duty is not performed, the carrier is required to protect the rate over the cheapest route affording it a line haul.

4. Under the rule applicable where there is a conflict between route and rate in a bill of lading prepared by the shipper and the agent of the carrier to whom the shipment is delivered fails to call attention to the conflict, the initial carrier is not required to deliver the shipment to a competitor at the point of origin, even though that competitor participates in a cheaper rate to destination of a particular shipment, as the originating carrier is entitled to a line haul.

5. When the route specified in a bill of lading prepared by a shipper was not alone the cheapest but the only route that afforded the initial carrier a line haul, but the rate specified in the bill was a cheaper rate applicable over another route in which the initial carrier named in the bill did not participate, the failure of the agent of the initial carrier to inform the shipper that a cheaper rate could be obtained elsewhere could not prevent the exaction of the lawful and established rate for the route taken, and the consignee, who had paid the charges based on the rate specified in the bill, was liable to the terminal carrier for the difference between the charges paid and those based on the rate applicable to the route specified.

ACTION OF CONTRACT to recover balance of freight charges claimed to be due on shipment in interstate commerce. Pleas, the general issue and payment. Trial by court on an agreed statement of facts in Montpelier municipal court, Arthur C. Theriault Municipal Judge. Judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff excepted. The opinion states the case.

Judgment reversed and judgment for the plaintiff to recover the sum of $ 156.63, with interest from the date of delivery to the defendant, August 3, 1933, and costs.

H C. Shurtleff for the plaintiff.

Porter Witters & Longmoore for the defendant.

Present: MOULTON, C. J., SHERBURNE, BUTTLES, STURTEVANT and JEFFORDS, JJ.

OPINION
MOULTON

This cause was tried below upon an agreed statement of facts, and judgment was rendered for the defendant, to which the plaintiff excepted.

The defendant was the consignee of a shipment of metal roofing ordered by it from the Sheet Metal Manufacturing Company of Youngstown, Ohio, hereinafter referred to as the consignor. The consignor prepared the bill of lading, by which the shipment was routed via the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to Toledo, Ohio; Pere Marquette Railroad to Detroit, Michigan Canadian Pacific Railway to Wells River, Vermont; and Montpelier and Wells River Railroad (the plaintiff) to destination at Barre, Vermont; with stopover privilege at St. Johnsbury, Vermont, for partial...

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