The insistence in the state court by an interstate carrier that
a shipper cannot recover excess collected over a special contract
rate because the rate collected conformed to the applicable
provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act is an adequate assertion
of a right or immunity under that act, and this Court can review
judgment in favor of the shipper.
On writ of error to the state court, this Court may examine the
entire record, including the evidence, to determine whether what
purports to be a finding of fact is not so involved with, and
dependent upon, questions of federal law as to be really a decision
thereof.
In this case, the finding of the state court as to a rate
charged by an interstate carrier necessarily involved the
interpretation and construction of the Interstate Commerce Act, and
this Court can examine the evidence and ascertain for itself the
validity of the rate under the statute.
Posting the schedules of rates of interstate carriers as
required by § 6 of the Interstate Commerce Act is a means of
affording special facilities to the public for ascertaining the
rates actually in force, but is not essential to make the rates
legally operative.
The sanction by connecting carriers of through rates published
by another carrier is only essential as to their application to the
haul from common points; rates from other points are individual,
and not joint.
Where a schedule of joint rates is not restricted to particular
lines designated, it will be presumed, where there is testimony to
that effect, as applying to shipments received from any connecting
line of goods originating at the designated points.
Although the testimony offered may not be the best evidence, it
cannot be disregarded if offered and admitted without objection.
Diaz v. United States, ante, p.
223 U. S. 442.
Where there is no applicable through rate established,
shipments,
Page 223 U. S. 574
even if moving on through bills of lading, must take the local
rate unless displaced by a lawful special agreement.
A special rate agreement which departs from the established
local rate for the benefit of a single shipper, no schedule of
which is filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, violates §
6 of the Interstate Commerce Act.
A carrier is not liable to action to refund the excess over an
illegal special rate if the rate actually collected is the
applicable legal published rate.
79 Kan. 59 reversed.
The facts, which involve the right of recovery from an
interstate carrier of difference between contract rates and rate
actually charged, and the validity under the Interstate Commerce
Laws of the rates contracted for and collected, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 223 U. S. 584
MR. JUSTICE VANDEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a proceeding in garnishment under the laws of the state
of Kansas. The C. H. Albers Commission Company had recovered a
judgment in the district court of Crawford County, in that state,
against Robert L. Forrester and Joseph M. Forrester, doing business
as Forrester Brothers, in the sum of $10,333.72, with interest, and
had brought the Kansas City Southern Railway Company into the case,
as a garnishee, upon a general allegation that it was indebted to
Forrester Brothers. The railway company, which will be spoken of as
the garnishee, appeared and denied that allegation. Under the
practice in that state, the issue so framed was, without other
pleadings, brought on for trial as a civil action. The trial was
begun before the court and a jury, but later the jury was
discharged, with the consent of the parties, and the trial
proceeded before the court alone. The case made by the evidence was
this:
The garnishee was operating a railroad extending from Kansas
City, Missouri, to Texarkana, Texas. Another railroad, which will
be spoken of as the northern line, connected with it at Kansas City
and extended northward to Omaha, Nebraska. Forrester Brothers were
buyers and sellers of grain, with offices at St. Louis, Missouri.
In the late summer or early fall of 1901, the two roads, at the
solicitation of Forrester Brothers, entered into an oral agreement
with the latter whereby they were granted a special rate on corn
and oats to be shipped in carload lots from Omaha via Kansas City
to Texarkana. The evidence was conflicting as to whether the rate
agreed upon for the through haul was 12 1/2 or 16 1/2 cents per
hundred pounds, but it was one or the other, and the garnishee was
to charge and receive 8 cents for the haul over its road, and the
remainder was to go to the northern line. The evidence
Page 223 U. S. 585
was also conflicting as to whether the agreement was to
terminate on the thirty-first of October or was to continue until
all the shipments then contemplated by Forrester Brothers were
completed. After the agreement was made, and in reliance thereon,
Forrester Brothers made large purchases of corn and oats at Omaha
for shipment to and sale at Texarkana, as they had contemplated
doing when soliciting the special rate. The agreement was observed
by the garnishee until and including the thirty-first of October,
and during that time the shipments were carried on through bills of
lading. Thereafter the garnishee disregarded the agreement,
required that the shipments be rebilled at Kansas City, and
collected a 10-cent rate for the haul over its road until November
10, and thereafter a 14-cent rate. The payment of the larger rates
was made by an agent of Forrester Brothers at Kansas City, who did
not know of the agreement. By exacting the larger rates, the
garnishee received $10,527.55 more than it would have received
under the 8-cent rate. No schedule embodying the 12 1/2 or 16
1/2-cent rate, whichever it was, for the through haul, or the
8-cent rate for the haul over the garnishee's road, was filed with
the Interstate Commerce Commission, and neither was any memorandum
or statement of the oral agreement so filed. Apart from the
agreement, there was no joint through rate applicable to these
shipments.
When the agreement was made, there was in force on the
garnishee's road a "proportional rate" of 10 cents per hundred
pounds on corn and oats moving from Kansas City to Texarkana. This
rate was not applicable to shipments originating at Kansas City,
but only to such as originated elsewhere on connecting lines. Nor
was it invariably confined to the movement from Kansas City to
Texarkana, for it included also the haul, when there was such, to
Kansas City from certain common points, such as St. Joseph,
Atchison, and Leavenworth, which usually
Page 223 U. S. 586
enjoyed the Kansas City rates, and were not reached by the
garnishee's road, but by other roads. Thus, shipments originating
on lines connecting at the common points with the roads leading to
Kansas City took this rate from the common points to Texarkana. As
applied to such shipments, the rate was joint as well as
proportional, and as applied to others it was a proportional rate
of the garnishee alone. It was embodied in a schedule duly filed
with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and remained in force
until November 10, when it was superseded by a like rate of 14
cents, shown in an amendatory schedule so filed. These schedules
bore a heading indicating that they were adopted by the garnishee
"in connection with" other designated railroads, they being the
roads over which the haul, when there was such, from the common
points to the garnishee's road would be made. The northern line was
not one of them, nor was Omaha one of the common points. There was
a like provision for the haul, when there was such, from Texarkana
to common points therewith, and also a designation of the railroads
over which that haul would be made, but as that feature of the
schedules is immaterial here, it may be eliminated from
consideration.
As explaining a proportional rate and indicating the correct
application of the one just named, F. M. King, an experienced
station agent of the garnishee, testified:
"Q. I will ask if you know whether or not the words
'proportional rates' have a well defined and understood meaning in
railroad business and on the Kansas City Southern."
"A. They have; yes, sir."
"Q. Now, just tell briefly what those terms mean, those words
'proportional rates,' if you know."
"A. A proportional rate is a rate put in to cover business . . .
coming to our lines from other points, applying to commodities
where we have no through rates. It is put in in order to protect a
shipper on a long haul. For instance, a shipment coming from . . .
points
Page 223 U. S. 587
out of Kansas, where there is no through rate published, . . .
we accept it from the connecting line and bill it out then on a
proportional rate, which is less than the local tariff rate."
"Q. Now, you spoke there of a local tariff rate; if those words
have a well defined meaning, I wish you would state what those
are."
"A. A local rate is a rate applying locally from one station to
another on the same road."
"Q. In that term 'local rate,' as distinguished from
'proportional rate,' how about the origin of the shipment?"
"A. That is where it originates and terminates on the same
line."
And E. E. Smythe, the general freight agent of the garnishee,
under whose direction the schedules embracing this proportional
rate were prepared and filed, testified:
"Q. Mr. Smythe, what is meant in railroading by 'common
points?'"
"A. Common points are points which take the same rate. . .
."
"Q. Common points are comparatively close together, taking the
same rates?"
"A. Yes, sir."
"Q. How far north is Omaha from Kansas City?"
"A. 220 or 226 miles. . . ."
"Q. How far north from Kansas City is Atchison and
Leavenworth?"
"A. Between 30 and 40 miles."
"Q. And St. Joe about 60 miles north of Kansas City?"
"A. Yes, sir, 60."
"Q. Is Omaha a common point with Leavenworth, Atchison, St. Joe,
and Kansas City?"
"A. No, sir. . . ."
"Q. Now, Mr. Smythe, I will ask you to state what is known in
railroading as 'proportional rates,' what does that expression
mean, if it has any fixed or definite meaning?"
"A. Proportional rates are rates established in a great many
centers -- grain centers, if you please -- on grain coming from any
territory which may be shipped there for reshipment. . . ."
"Q. I will ask you if the words 'proportional rates' have a
fixed and definite meaning among railroad men, especially among
traffic men?"
"A. Yes, sir. . . ."
"Q. Can you give us an illustration, so we will understand it
more definitely? Give your own illustration of shipments coming
into Kansas City and
Page 223 U. S. 588
going out again."
"A. We will take Wichita, Kansas. Some Kansas City firm will buy
hay and grain there from a Wichita dealer, or some point in that
territory, and ship that hay to Kansas City to John Jones
Commission Company. Mr. Jones pays the freight on that car, and in
the meantime . . . he may have sold that car of hay or grain to go
to New Orleans, . . . and he accordingly comes to you, or presents
to the general agent the expense bill covering the freight in, and
when that is checked to see that the correct rate is applied, it
goes out on a proportional rate from Kansas City or any other point
where the proportional rate applies, at the proportional rate named
in the tariff. . . ."
"Q. Explain in your own way."
"A. You want me to explain what that tariff [the proportional
one now under consideration] means? What it would apply on?"
"Q. Yes, sir, just explain the meaning of this expression 'in
connection with the Chicago Great Western' and the other
roads."
"A. That tariff would apply on grain coming into Kansas City on
any railroad in America [and bound] to Texarkana. . . ."
"Q. You say it would apply on grain coming into Kansas City from
any point in the world? Yes, sir, any place in America."
This testimony, bearing upon the meaning of the proportional
rate schedules, was not in any way contradicted.
It was not shown whether those schedules were sanctioned by the
other railroads over which the haul, when there was such, from the
common points to the garnishee's road was to be made, and while it
was shown that those schedules were regularly printed, and that
copies thereof were sent to the freight offices of the garnishee at
Kansas City and other points, and were there kept open to public
inspection, it was not shown that copies were posted in public and
conspicuous places in those offices.
Respecting the existence of an applicable local rate on the
northern line from Omaha to Kansas City, the witness Smythe
testified:
"Q. I will ask you to state if you know
Page 223 U. S. 589
what the rate was in 1901 on grain between Omaha and Kansas
City?"
"A. Yes, sir."
"Q. I will ask you to state what it was."
"A. The rate was 9 cents."
"Q. Is that what you call a legal rate?"
"A. It was the legal rate; yes, sir."
"Q. That is, between Omaha and Kansas City?"
"A. Yes, sir."
"Q. On what roads was that in effect?"
"A. In effect over the Burlington, Missouri Pacific, and all
lines reaching Omaha running into Kansas City."
This testimony was offered and admitted without objection, and
its effect was in no way impaired or qualified, save as the same
witness, as also others, testified to the existence of a rate of 6
1/2 cents, called the "Missouri arbitrary," on grain carried from
Omaha to Kansas City when destined to points beyond. If this latter
was an individual rate of the northern line, and not a conventional
division of some joint through rate, as to which the testimony was
somewhat uncertain, it was applicable to the shipments in question;
otherwise the 9-cent rate was applicable. In either event, there
was a lawful local rate covering the haul over the northern
line.
At the trial, the plaintiff took the position not that the
proportional rate was unreasonable, preferential, discriminatory,
or otherwise objectionable under the interstate commerce act, but
that the special agreement was valid, and the garnishee
consequently was under a common law liability to Forrester Brothers
for all that it had collected in excess of the stipulated 8-cent
rate for the haul over its road. And the garnishee's position,
insisted upon throughout the trial, is reflected by the following
declarations of law which it tendered and the court rejected:
"Where an interstate shipment of merchandise passes from the
point of origin to the point of destination over the lines of two
separate carriers, and such carriers have not, by agreement,
established a joint rate over their said lines, and filed and
published the same in the manner required by the Interstate
Commerce Act, then the only lawful charge for transportation to be
applied to such
Page 223 U. S. 590
shipment is the published tariff rate of the first carrier from
the point of origin of the shipment to the point of connection with
the second carrier, plus the published tariff charge of the second
carrier from the point of connection with the first carrier to the
point of destination."
"On interstate shipments of merchandise, the only lawful rates
applicable thereto are such rates as have been filed and published
in the manner required by the Interstate Commerce Act."
And, applying those declarations to the evidence, the garnishee
insisted that, during the time of the shipments in question,
lawfully established local rates applicable thereto were in force
upon the two roads, and that those rates were not superseded or
displaced by the special agreement with the shipper; that the rates
agreed upon -- that is, the joint through rate and the 8-cent rate
-- never became legally operative, because never embraced in any
schedule filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission; and,
finally, that the charges exacted for the haul over its road
conformed to the lawfully established rate, and were the only
charges which lawfully could have been accepted.
The trial court sustained the plaintiff's position, made a
general finding in its favor, and entered judgment thereon against
the garnishee. The supreme court of the state affirmed the finding
and judgment (79 Kan. 59), and this writ of error was then
allowed.
Consideration must first be given to a motion to dismiss,
advanced upon two grounds: (1) that no right or immunity under a
statute of the United States was "specially set up or claimed,"
within the meaning of Rev.Stat. § 709, in the state courts, and (2)
that in those courts, the facts were found generally against the
garnishee, that the finding is conclusive upon this Court, and that
the errors assigned, when rightly considered, but challenge the
finding, and therefore present nothing which is open to review.
Page 223 U. S. 591
The first ground obviously is not tenable. The garnishee
insisted throughout the proceedings that no recovery could be had
against it consistently with the Interstate Commerce Act, because,
in disregarding the agreement for the special rate and in exacting
the proportional rate, first of 10 and later of 14 cents, it but
conformed to the provisions of that act governing the rates to be
applied to interstate shipments. This was an adequate assertion of
a right or immunity under that act, for it named the act, indicated
wherein it was claimed to be applicable, and invoked its
protection.
Nutt v. Knut, 200 U. S.
12;
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Abilene
Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S. 426.
The second ground has more color, but is also untenable. While
it is true that, upon a writ of error to a state court, we cannot
review its decision upon pure questions of fact, but only upon
questions of law bearing upon the federal right set up by the
unsuccessful party, it equally is true that we may examine the
entire record, including the evidence, if properly incorporated
therein, to determine whether what purports to be a finding upon
questions of fact is so involved with and dependent upon such
questions of law as to be in substance and effect a decision of the
latter. That this is so is amply shown by our prior rulings. Thus,
in
Mackay v.
Dillon, 4 How. 421,
45 U. S. 447,
where the state courts had given to certain evidence an effect
claimed to be unwarranted by an applicable law of Congress, it was
held that their decision "on the effect of such evidence may be
fully considered here." In
Dower v. Richards, 151 U.
S. 658,
151 U. S. 667,
where the conclusiveness of findings of fact by a state court was
elaborately considered, it was recognized that where the question
is "of the competency and legal effect of the evidence as bearing
upon a question of federal law, the decision may be reviewed by
this court." In
Stanley v. Schwalby, 162 U.
S. 255,
162 U. S. 274,
162 U. S.
277-279, which was an action of ejectment,
Page 223 U. S. 592
the validity of an authority exercised under the United States
was drawn in question, and depended upon whether the United States
had a good title to the land in controversy. That question turned
upon whether the attorney for the United States, who had
represented it in the acquisition of the land, knew at the time of
a prior deed to one McMillan, and the state court found that he had
such knowledge. In this Court it was insisted, on the one hand,
that the finding was conclusive, and on the other that the evidence
was insufficient as matter of law to warrant the finding, and could
be examined to determine whether this was so. In that connection,
this Court, although recognizing the general rule that findings
upon pure questions of fact are not open to review, said:
"But, so far as the judgment of the state court against the
validity of an authority set up by the defendants under the United
States necessarily involves the decision of a question of law, it
must be reviewed by this Court, whether that question depends upon
the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States, or upon
the local law, or upon principles of general jurisprudence."
And, upon examining the evidence, this Court held it to be
"wholly insufficient, in fact and in law, to support the conclusion
that the attorney had any notice of the previous deed to McMillan,"
and accordingly reversed the judgment of the state court. And in
Schlemmer v. Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg Ry. Co.,
205 U. S. 1, a case
arising under the Federal Safety Appliance Law wherein the state
court found that the deceased contributed to his injury by his own
negligence, thereby preventing a recovery, this Court exercised the
power to examine the evidence, notwithstanding a contention that
the finding was conclusive, and reversed the judgment upon the
ground that it appeared that what had been found to be contributory
negligence was, at most, an assumption of the risk, which was not a
defense under the federal statute.
Page 223 U. S. 593
Perhaps the most frequent exercise of this power occurs in cases
arising under the clause of the Constitution forbidding a state to
pass any law impairing the obligation of a contract, the existence
of the contract in such cases being a mixed question of law and
fact.
Louisville Gas Co. v. Citizens' Gas Co.,
115 U. S. 683,
115 U. S. 697,
a leading case upon the subject, contains this statement of the
settled rule:
"Whether an alleged contract arises from state legislation, or
by agreement with the agents of a state, by its authority, or by
stipulations between individuals exclusively, we are obliged, upon
our own judgment, and independently of the adjudication of the
state court, to decide whether there exists a contract within the
protection of the Constitution of the United States."
A like exercise of this power is shown in cases arising under
the clause of the Constitution requiring full faith and credit to
be given in each state to the judicial proceedings of every other
state.
Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U.
S. 657,
146 U. S. 683,
was such a case. It was a suit in Maryland upon a judgment obtained
in New York under a statute of the latter state imposing a
liability for the debts of a corporation upon a director making a
false certificate respecting its condition. The Court of Appeals of
Maryland held that the judgment was for a strictly penal liability,
and therefore not within the protection of the full faith and
credit clause. But when the case came here it was held that
"if the state court declines to give full faith and credit to a
judgment of another state because of its opinion as to the nature
of the cause of action on which the judgment was recovered, this
Court, in determining whether full faith and credit have been given
to that judgment, must decide for itself the nature of the original
liability."
And, upon reaching the conclusion that in that instance the
original liability was not strictly penal, this Court reversed the
judgment of the Court of Appeals of Maryland.
Page 223 U. S. 594
When due regard is had for the rule before indicated, and so
often applied in other cases, it does not admit of doubt that, in
the present case, we may examine the evidence, which has been
properly incorporated in the record, to determine whether the
general finding necessarily involved the decision of questions of
law bearing upon the federal right set up by the garnishee. And
when this is done, it is manifest, as is amply illustrated by the
resume which we have given of the evidence and contentions of the
parties, that the finding necessarily involved the decision of
questions of the interpretation and application of the Interstate
Commerce Act (24 Stat. 379, c. 104, 25 Stat. 855, c. 382), and also
of other questions of law bearing upon the federal right, such as
the legal effect of evidence.
Coming, then, to the questions arising upon the case made by the
evidence, we have seen that, when the agreement for the special
rate was made and during the time of the shipments in question,
there was in force on the garnishee's road a lawful proportional
rate, at first of 10 and later of 14 cents, applicable to these
shipments unless it was objectionable in some of the following
particulars:
(
a) Although it was shown that the schedules embodying
this rate were regularly printed, duly filed with the Interstate
Commerce Commission, and kept open to public inspection at the
freight offices of the garnishee at Kansas City and other points,
it was not shown that copies were posted in public and conspicuous
places in those offices, as required by § 6 of the Interstate
Commerce Act. Posting, however, was not essential to make rates
legally operative, and was required only as a means of affording
special facilities to the public for ascertaining the rates
actually in force.
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Cisco Oil
Mill, 204 U. S. 449.
(
b) It was not shown that these schedules were
sanctioned by the other railroads designated therein, they
Page 223 U. S. 595
being the roads over which the haul to the garnishee's road from
the common points was to be made when the shipments were received
from connecting lines at those points. Such a showing, however, was
not necessary here. The other roads had no interest in the rate as
applied to shipments received by the garnishee from the northern
line at Kansas City, as were the shipments in question. As applied
to them, the rate was not joint, but an individual rate of the
garnishee. The sanction of the other roads was essential only to
its application to the haul from the common points, when there was
such.
(
c) As before stated, the heading of those schedules
indicated that they were adopted by the garnishee "in connection
with" other designated railroads, they being the ones just
mentioned as interested in the rate when applied to shipments
received from connecting lines at the common points. This, it is
contended, meant that the rate was applicable only to shipments
received by the garnishee from those roads. But an examination of
the schedules satisfies us that they had no such meaning. The
heading merely reflected the fact that the rate, in some of its
applications, was to be a joint one as between the garnishee and
the designated roads. The schedules themselves did not restrict the
rate to shipments received from those roads, but, on the contrary,
indicated that it was applicable to shipments received by the
garnishee at Kansas City from any connecting line. This view of it
was fortified, unnecessarily, as we think, by the uncontradicted
testimony of expert witnesses who declared that the rate was
applicable to shipments originating on any connecting line, whether
received by the garnishee at Kansas City or by one of the
designated roads at a common point.
The uncontradicted testimony of witnesses likely to be informed
on the subject disclosed the existence of an applicable lawful rate
on the northern line from Omaha to
Page 223 U. S. 596
Kansas City. True, this testimony was not the best evidence,
but, being offered and admitted without objection, it was evidence
which could not be disregarded.
Diaz v. United States,
223 U. S. 442;
Schlemmer v. Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg Railway
Co., 205 U. S. 1,
205 U. S. 9;
United States v. McCoy, 193 U. S. 593,
193 U. S. 598.
And while it may have been left somewhat uncertain as to which of
two such rates, one of 6 1/2 and the other of 9 cents, was the
applicable one, it was disclosed with certainty that it was one or
the other.
Such being the state of the evidence, the necessary conclusion,
as matter of law, is that an applicable and lawfully established
local rate was in force on each road. And, as it was conceded that
there was no established joint through rate, it likewise is a
necessary conclusion that the shipments, even if moving on through
bills of lading, should have taken these local rates unless the
latter were superseded or displaced by the special agreement.
We are thus brought to the question of the validity of that
agreement. Not only did it contemplate a departure from the
established local rates for the benefit of a single shipper, but no
schedule embracing the rates agreed upon was filed with the
Interstate Commerce Commission. Section 6 of the Interstate
Commerce Act, as it existed at the time, laid upon every carrier
subject to the provisions of the act the duty of filing with the
Commission and publishing schedules of the rates to be charged for
the transportation of property over its road, provided for changing
and superseding such rates by new schedules so filed and published,
and made it unlawful for such a carrier to depart from any rate so
established and in force at the time. That section also required
connecting carriers, agreeing upon joint through rates, to file
schedules thereof with the Commission, made similar provision for
changing and superseding rates so established, and likewise
Page 223 U. S. 597
prohibited any deviation from an established joint rate while
remaining in force. Other sections contained provisions against
unreasonable rates, unjust discriminations, undue preferences, and
the like. The chief purpose of the act was to secure uniformity of
treatment to all, to suppress unjust discriminations and undue
preferences, and to prevent special and secret agreements in
respect of rates for interstate transportation, and to that end to
require that such rates be established in a manner calculated to
give them publicity, to make them inflexible while in force, and to
cause them to be unalterable save in the mode prescribed. In every
substantial sense, local rates and joint through rates were placed
on the same level. Both required to be openly established and
uniformly applied. True, the carriers were obliged to establish
local rates, and were left free to agree upon joint through rates,
or not, as they chose; but if they did agree thereon, the rates
could become legally operative only by being established as
prescribed in the act. The true effect of the statute in this
regard -- we speak of the statute as it existed in 1901 -- is
clearly stated in the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Eighth Circuit in
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway
Co. v. United States, 157 F. 830, 833, as follows:
"If an initial carrier accepts traffic for transportation and
issues its bill of lading over a route made up of connecting roads
for which no joint through rate has been published and filed with
the Commission, the lawful rate to be charged is the sum of the
established local rates published and filed by the individual
roads, or if, as was the case here, there is a local rate over one
road and a joint rate over the others for the remainder of the
route, all published and filed with the Commission, the lawful
through rate to be charged is the sum of the local and joint rates.
By failing to establish or concur in a joint through rate for
traffic accepted for interstate transportation,
Page 223 U. S. 598
each participating carrier impliedly asserts that the rate which
it has duly established, published, and filed for its own line
shall be a component part of the through rate to be charged. It is
competent for carriers, if conditions justify it, to make their
proportions of a through rate less than the local charges upon
their own lines, but in doing so they should observe legal methods,
and if no action to that end is taken, they in effect adhere to the
rates established, published, and filed by them as applying not
only to local but to through traffic."
We conclude as matter of law that the special agreement was
void, that the established local rates were unaffected by it, that
the rate collected by the garnishee was the applicable legal rate,
and that the finding and judgment should have been in favor of, and
not against, the garnishee.
To avoid any misapprehension in respect of the character of the
liability sought to be enforced in this case, we deem it well to
repeat that there was no claim of any right to reparation or
damages under the Interstate Commerce Act, and no claim that the
rate collected was unreasonable, preferential, discriminatory, or
otherwise violative of that act, but only an attempt to enforce a
supposed liability for a breach of the special agreement.
See
Texas and Pacific Railway Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co.,
204 U. S. 426;
Robinson v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co., 222 U.
S. 506.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Kansas is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.