Court Opinion

ID: 8177696
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:23:22.929779+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:02.958077
License: Public Domain

Robinson, Pbesident:
The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company made a charge for demurrage on a car of hay shipped from Newark, Ohio, to the Saunders-Weider Company at Huntington. The charge made was based on the published rates of the railway company, filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission pursuant to the acts of Congress in that behalf. The rate so published and established was one dollar per day. The railway company, applying that rate to the number of days which it claimed the car had been left on its tracks, exacted from the 'Saunders-Weider Company the sum of nineteen dollars.
The same was paid by the latter company under protest, so *557that possession could be taken of the contents of the ear. Later, the Saunders-Weider Company, claiming that it was responsible for only nine days of delay in unloading the car, instituted before a justice of the peace of Cabell county its action for the recovery of ten dollars from the railway company, as an amount of overcharge. A plea denying jurisdiction of tlie justice was overruled. Upon the trial, the justice, finding that nine days .instead of nineteen was the proper basis for the application of the one dollar per day rate, rendered judgment for the plaintiff against the defendant for ten dollars. Thereupon, the' railway company obtained, in the vacation of this court, from a judge thereof, a rule requiring the justice and the plaintiff in the action to appear and show cause why the writ of prohibition should not issue, stopping further proceedings in the action. The respondents have made -return, and the ease has been duly submitted for decision.
The petitioner maintains that the justice is wholly without jurisdiction in the premises. It insists that the Interstate Commerce Commission must first pass on the matter and declare the charge to be too much before the plaintiff in the action can resort to a state court to recover back the amount, overpaid. Robinson v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, 64 W. Va. 406, and other cases, are relied on.
That a rate filed and published by a railway company pursuant to the acts of Congress must stand as the legal rate until the Interstate Commerce Commission declares it un-resonable, and that a state court -has no jurisdiction in any action to determine that such rate is unreasonable, is undoubtedly established by the cases cited by the petitioner. But in the case before us the justice has not undertaken to determine that the rate is unreasonable. That rate he has respected' as a legally established one. Tie has however! found that such legal rate was applied to a greater number of days than the number for which the Saunders-Weider Company should be responsible. The question before him in the action was not as to the reasonableness of the rate, but as to the number of days for which' the rate, accepted as a legal and reasonable one, should be charged. That he had jurisdiction to determine such a question, we have no doubt. *558The acts of Congress in relation to commerce do not inhibit him from the determination of such an ordinary question of common right as between litigants. They vest in the Interstate Commerce Commission the jurisdiction to say whether the rate is reasonable or unreasonable, but they do not take from a state court power to determine a fact haying nothing to do with the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the rate. Whether the railway company applied the rate untruthfully to a number of days when the car was not subject to demurr-age, was the litigable question in the action. The action did not affect the rate, nor in any way infringe on the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission in regard to it. Ret us suppose a railway company charges1 one the regular rate per car for ten cars when it only hauled nine, must he go to the Interstate Commerce Commission to settle the question as to whether there were ten cars or nine cars? Is a state court by the interstate commerce laws deprived of jurisdiction to determine the fact whether a railway company has actually rendered to one all the service it claims to have rendered? We know of no provision' which transfers from a state court to the Interstate Commerce Commission such everyday litigable facts.
The justice may have erred in his finding as to the number of days for which the demurrage should be charged. But he had jurisdiction to hear and determine the fact, rightly or wrongly. Prohibition does not lie as against an erronepus determination of facts, where the court has power to hear and determine in the premises.
We are of opinion to discharge the rule and to deny the writ sought.

Writ refused.