Court Opinion

ID: 4916341
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-22 00:10:00.140126+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:52.722285
License: Public Domain

Cockrell, J.
The issues raised by the amended return filed herein July 26, 1904, are the same as those raised in the Atlantic Coast Line case, just decided, that is whether the phosphate rate sought to be enforced herein is in and of itself unreasonable, and whether said rate taken in connec*151tion with the other rates enforced by the State Railroad Commission on local business would deprive the railway of its property without due process of law or deny to it the equal protection of the law within the inhibition of the Federal constitution. Under the law the burden is upon the respondent to establish both these propositions.
The only proof offered was the sworn report of the railway company to the Railroad Commission of Florida for the year ending June 30, 1904; this report was admitted without objection. There is nothing in the report that tends to show that the rate is of itself unreasonable nor in fact any evidence that bears even remotely upon the specific rate, nor what the present voluntary rate is.
There was merely a suggestion in the argument that such rate is inherently unreasonable because the railway might be called upon to carry phosphate for one mile- only and that this could not be done profitably at the rate prescribed. Such an argument is too speculative to be safely followed, and in the absence of an affirmative showing that the common carrier is face to face with such problem, that the actual test has been applied, we do not feel that the solemn finding of the Railroad Commission should be overthrown. There is no showing that phosphate is carried locally nor what may be charged for shipping the commodity in interstate or foreign commerce.
The respondent further fails to meet the burden of showing that the rate prescribed together with the other rates in force deprive the respondent of a right guaranteed by the constitution of the United States. It is impossible to ascertain from this showing what may be the operating expenses or the value of the road in Florida. There are given figures to show that the total cost of construction, equipment, etc., of the road in Florida has been about fifteen and a half million dollars, but nothing to show what the depreciation has been nor what the present value is. To questions asked by the Railroad Commission as to expenses of fuel and other operating items, the respondent replied that it could not an*152swer by States. It seems that the respondent in operating its line through several States has a scheme of distributing its incomes and expenses according to States, but this scheme is not made clear to us, nor has it so divided its domestic and foreign business that we can say that the net earning of only 3 per cent, on the total cost of construction, equipment, etc., is a confiscation of its property, or in anywise an infringement upon its constitutional rights.
The court finds that the rate in question is not unreasonable and the court further finds that such rate taken in connection with the other rates prescribed by the Florida Railroad Commission does not deprive the respondent of its property without due process of law nor of the equal protection of the law.
Mr. Justice Carter, before being called away by reason of illness in his family, took part in the consideration of this case and concurred in the conclusions announced.
The peremptory writ will be awarded.
Taylor, C. J. Shackleford, Hocker and Whitfield, JJ., concur.
Carter, J., absent.