There being nothing in the record to show that any of. the
shipments involved in this case, in which the state court gave a
judgment against the carrier for damages for discrimination in
secret allowance of rebates to other shippers of like goods under
the state law, were interstate shipments, and the court having
found that all the shipments were intrastate, the judgment is
affirmed.
241 Pa.St. 536 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of a judgment recovered in
the state court by a shipper of coal for damages sustained through
unlawful discrimination by the carrier in allowing and paying
rebates to other shippers, are stated in the opinion.
Page 238 U. S. 252
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error brings under review a judgment recovered by a
shipper of coal for damages sustained through unlawful
discrimination consisting in the secret allowance and payment of
rebates to other shippers for whom the carrier was rendering a like
and contemporaneous service. 241 Pa.St. 536. The action was brought
and the judgment rendered under the law of the state, and the
complaint now made is that damages were awarded in respect of
several shipments which were not intrastate, but destined to points
outside the state, and as to which no recovery could be had in this
action consistently with the Interstate Commerce Act.
See
Mitchell Coal and Coke Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
230 U. S. 247. The
plaintiff's statement of claim described the shipments as
intrastate -- that is, as made from one point to another in the
state -- and up to the time that the referee came to compute the
damages, it does not appear to have been questioned that all the
shipments were of that class. A stipulation was then entered into
specifying the number of tons shipped by the plaintiff during each
of several periods and describing the shipments as made from the
plaintiff's mines in Pennsylvania "to points within the state," but
appended to the stipulation was a note wherein the defendant
insisted that, according to the evidence, part of the shipments --
those to Greenwich, Pennsylvania, "included coal
Page 238 U. S. 253
destined to points beyond the state," and that no recovery could
be had in this action in respect of interstate shipments, and also
a note on the part of the plaintiff controverting what was asserted
in the defendant's note. The referee concluded that the shipments
were all intrastate, and, while recognizing that some of the coal
"might have been" reshipped from Greenwich to places outside the
state, said: "The plaintiff might have sold the coal at that place.
To have moved the coal from Greenwich, a new contract for carriage
would have been necessary." The referee's conclusion was sustained
by the trial court and by the supreme court of the state, the
latter saying:
"The shipments to Greenwich, Philadelphia, were intrastate, and
hence were properly included in this action. They were consigned to
plaintiff at Greenwich, and there the contract of carriage between
the plaintiff and the defendant was fully performed and ended. What
disposition the plaintiff made of the shipments at Greenwich,
whether it sold them or sent them within or beyond the state, is
immaterial as affecting the question whether, as between the
plaintiff and the defendant, they were intrastate or
interstate."
We find nothing in the record to sustain the contention that
some of the shipments were interstate. While it appears that part
of the coal was shipped from the mines to Greenwich, that the
plaintiff there turned some of it over to other coal dealers, sold
some of it outright, and possibly reshipped some to other places,
it does not appear that any of it went out of the state, or, if it
did, that the circumstances were such that its carriage from the
mines to Greenwich was in fact but part of an intended and
connected transportation beyond the state.
See Gulf, Col &
Santa Fe Ry. v. Texas, 204 U. S. 403;
Ohio R. Commission v. Worthington, 225 U.
S. 101;
Texas & New Orleans R. Co. v. Sabine
Tram Co., 227 U. S. 111;
Louisiana R. Commission v. Tex. & Pac. Ry.,
229 U. S. 336. The
record
Page 238 U. S. 254
does not purport to contain all the evidence bearing upon this
point, but it does show that, in some of the exhibits, the
shipments included in the recovery were all listed and designated
as "Coal -- Intrastate." In this situation, the conclusion reached
by the state courts cannot be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed.