Court Opinion

ID: 8009220
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:56:20.239185+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:00.322309
License: Public Domain

Norton, C. J.-
This suit is based upon an alleged contract, whereby it was agreed that plaintiff should ship grain of various kinds from certain stations in the state of Kansas to Chicago, Illinois, and that, on presentation of bills for such shipments, the plaintiff should pay the usual and ordinary rates therefor according to defendant’s tariff rates, and that defendant should repay to plaintiff all sums of money which defendant should receive over and above the rate agreed upon between the parties. The object of the suit is to recover from defendant the difference between the amounts paid to plaintiff according to defendant’s tariff rates, and the amount that was by the agreement of the parties to be paid. The answer of defendant was a general denial. On the trial plaintiff had judgment, from which the defendant has appealed. There were six counts in the petition, each one of them alleging different shipments made under the same contract.
The first error assigned is, the action of the court in overruling a motion filed by defendant asking the court to make an order requiring plaintiff to make his petition *456more definite and certain, in this, that fie be required to state where and by what officers of defendant tfie alleged agreement was made with plaintiff, and whether tfie same was verbal .or in writing, and if in writing, tfiat plaintiff be required to file the same in court for defendant’s inspection. It is field, in tfie case of Hannibal & St. Joe Railroad Company v. Kundson, 62 Mo. 569, tfiat when a suit is brought upon an instrument in writing alleged to have been executed by the other party, it must be filed with tfie petition unless it is alleged to have been lost or destroyed. If it is not filed and no reason given for not filing it, tfie remedy is either by motion to dismiss, or motion to require tfie party to file it. In this case it does not appear tfiat tfie suit was founded on a • contract in writing alleged to have been executed by defendant. It can be construed in no other way than as a verbal contract, and tfie evidence adduced on tfie trial shows it was of tfiat character. It is provided by section 3529, Revised Statutes, among other things that, “ when tfie allegations or denials of a pleading are so indefinite or uncertain tfiat tfie precise nature of tfie charge or denial is not apparent *s * * tfie court [on motion of tfie adverse party] may require tfie pleading to be made definite and certain.” No such indefiniteness as is contemplated by this statute exists in tfie petition. It alleges tfiat a contract was made with defendant’s agent, sets out its terms, avers a breach thereof and tfie amount of damages claimed therefor.
Tfie defendant objected to tfie introduction of any •evidence on tfie ground that tfie contract set up in tfie petition was in violation of tfie constitution and statute of the state, and was void as being against public policy. This objection was overruled, and this action of tfie court is assigned for erroi’, and in support of tfie contention we have been cited to a number of authorities, and among them to tfie case of Schofield v. *457Railroad, 43 Ohio St. 571, where, in an elaborate opinion, all the other authorities to which we have been cited by counsel are reviewed and discussed. In that case, it appears that the railway company having tariff rates for the public generally, contracted with the Standard Oil Company, that in consideration of said company giving to the railway company its entire freight business in the products of petroleum, they would transport such freight for the company, at certain rates, about ten cents per barrel cheaper than for any other customers, and the railway company not only agreed and undertook to carry at the reduced rate, but also, that they would not ship for any other at less than kill tariff rates, and if they did, the said Standard Oil Company would take from the railway company all its business, and deprive it of its patronage. Schofield and others being also engaged in the manufacture, and also dealers in refined and other products of petroleum, offered their products to the railway company for shipment on the same terms granted to the Standard Oil Company, and on being refused shipment on the terms, brought their bill to enjoin the railway company from charging and collecting from them for freight on said line rates and amounts in excess of those charged to the Standard Company for like goods to the same points, or from discriminating against them in favor of the Standard Company.. The prayer of the bill was granted, the court holding as follows : That where a lower rate is given by a railroad company, engaged as a common carrier, to a favored shipper which is to give, and necessarily gives, an exclusive monopoly to the. favored shipper, affecting the business and destroying the trade of other shippers, the latter have a right to require an equal rate for all, under like circumstances. Where such a corporation as a common carrier, in consideration of the fact that a shipper furnished a greater quantity of freight than other shippers, during a given term, *458agrees to make a rebate on the published tariff rate on such freights, to the prejudice of like freight under the same circumstances, such a contract is an unlawful discrimination in favor of the larger shipper, tending to create a monopoly, destroy competition, and injure, if not destroy, the business of smaller operators, and is contrary to public policy, and will be declared void at the instance of parties injured thereby.
The principles thus enumerated have their foundation in the common law, and sections 12 and 23, article 12, of our constitution, and section 821 of the revision of 1879, are but declaratory of the common law in reference to the subject of which said sections treat. A common carrier has the right to contract to ship freight at a lower rate than the published tariff rate if he choose to do so, and such a contract is not against public policy unless the privilege to ship at such a rate is granted exclusively to the shipper with whom it is made, or is denied to other shippers. It is the exclusiveness of the privilege granted to one and denied to another which makes the discrimination and renders the contract void, as against public policy. No such exclusiveness or discrimination appears in the contract sued upon, and the objection of defendant to the. reception of any evidence was properly overruled.
In the case of Railroad v. Elliott, 76 Ill. 67, the precise question involved in this case was considered, and it is there held, that such a contract as the one before us was not illegal as being in violation of the law to prevent unjust discrimination, as the company was to carry at the customary rates ; and that the rebate in the charges was a matter of private agreement between the carrier and the shipper, and the contract was not fraudulent as to the purchaser of the corn.
In view of the evidence, which tended to show that the sum claimed by plaintiff had been paid and received by defendant, and in view of the fact, that when, *459previous to the institution of the suit, plaintiff presented to defendant freight bills showing the amounts claimed to have been paid and demanded repayment, and such payment was resisted, not on the ground that defendant had not received the amount claimed to have been paid, but on the sole ground that no such contract as plaintiff set up had been made, the seventh instruction of which defendant complains was not improperly given, the said instruction in effect telling the jury that, from the fact that defendant resisted the claim of plaintiff for repayment on the sole ground that no such contract as he set up had been made, they might infer that the amounts claimed to have been paid had been received by defendant.
We perceive no error in the record justifying an interference with the judgment and it is hereby affirmed.
All concur, except Ray, J., absent.