Although the Interstate Commerce Commission found as a fact that
the competition at Nashville, which forms the basis of the
contention in this case, was of such a preponderating nature that
the carriers must either continue to charge a lesser rate for a
longer haul to Nashville than was asked for the shorter haul to
Chattanooga or to abandon all Nashville traffic, nevertheless they
were forbidden by the Act of February 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat.
379, to make the lesser charge for the longer haul; but since that
ruling of the Commission was made, it has been settled by this
Court in
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v.
Behlmer, 175 U. S. 648, and
other cases cited, that competition which is controlling on traffic
and rates produces in and of itself the dissimilarity of
circumstance and condition described in the statute, and that,
where this condition exists, a carrier has a right of his own
motion to take it into view in fixing rates to the competitive
point, and it follows that the construction affixed by the
Commission to the statute upon which its entire action in this case
was predicated was wrong.
The only principle by which it is possible to enforce the whole
statute is the construction adopted by the previous opinions of
this Court -- that is, that
Page 181 U. S. 2
a competition which is real and substantial, and exercises a
potential influence on rates to a particular point, brings into
play the dissimilarity of circumstance and condition provided by
the statute, and justifies the lesser charge to the more distant
and competitive point than to the nearer and noncompetitive place,
and that this right is not destroyed by the mere fact that,
incidentally, the lesser charge to the competitive point may
seemingly give a preference to that point, and the greater rate to
the noncompetitive point may apparently engender a discrimination
against it.
It is plain that all the premises of fact upon which the
propositions of law decided by the circuit court of appeals rest
are at variance with the propositions of fact found by the
Commission, insofar as that body passed upon the facts, and this
Court accordingly reversed the decree of that court, and ordered
the case remanded to the circuit court with instructions to set
aside its decree adjudging that the order of the Commission be
enforced, and to dismiss the application made for that purpose with
costs, the whole to be without prejudice to the right of the
Commission to proceed upon the evidence already introduced before
it, or upon such further pleadings and evidence as it may allow to
be made or introduced and to hear and determine the controversy
according to law.
The Board of Trade of Chattanooga, Tennessee, a chartered
corporation, petitioned the Interstate Commerce Commission for
relief under the Act to Regulate Commerce. The defendants, the East
Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railway, and numerous other rail
and steamship companies, were alleged to be common carriers subject
to the Act to Regulate Commerce, and engaged in the transportation
of passengers and freight by all rail, or partly by rail and water,
from Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and other places on
the eastern seaboard to Chattanooga, Nashville, and Memphis, in the
State of Tennessee.
It was alleged that the defendants conveyed freight from the
eastern seaboard, through and beyond Chattanooga, to the cities of
Nashville and Memphis for a lesser rate to such long distance
points than was charged by them for like freight to Chattanooga,
the shorter distance. This, it was averred, was a violation of
section 4 of the act, prohibiting a greater charge for the shorter
than for the longer haul under substantially similar circumstances
and conditions. And the disregard of the statute in the particular
just stated, it was asserted, necessarily gave rise to violations
of other provisions of the Act to
Page 181 U. S. 3
Regulate Commerce --
viz., of section 1, which forbids
unjust and unreasonable charges, and of section 3, making unlawful
the giving of undue or unreasonable preferences.
It is unnecessary to consider the complaint of the lesser charge
to Memphis, the longer, than to Chattanooga, the shorter, distance,
since this grievance was in effect held by the Commission to be
without substantial merit, and its conclusion on this subject was
not reviewed by either of the courts below, and it is not now
seriously, if at all, questioned. After hearing, the Commission
made elaborate findings of fact and stated the legal conclusions
which were deduced therefrom. 5 I.C.C. 546, 4 I.C.C. 213. An order
was made forbidding the defendant carriers from charging a greater
compensation for the transportation for the shorter distance to
Chattanooga than was demanded to Nashville, the longer distance.
The execution, however, of this order was suspended until a date
named so that the carriers might have opportunity to apply to the
Commission to be relieved from the operation of the order. No
application to be exempted having been made, and the carriers not
having conformed to the behests of the Commission, this proceeding
to compel obedience was commenced in the circuit court. In that
court, additional testimony was taken, but it was all merely
cumulative of that which had been adduced before the Commission.
The circuit court, 85 F. 107, whilst not approving the reasoning by
which the Commission had sustained the order by it entered,
nevertheless on other grounds affirmed the command of the
Commission. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, to
which the case was taken, whilst it held that the Commission had
misapplied the law, and although it did not approve of the
reasoning given by the circuit court for its decree, nevertheless
affirmed the action of that court. 99 F. 52.
Page 181 U. S. 4
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after making the foregoing statement of the
case, delivered the opinion of the Court.
To comprehend the contentions which are made on this record, it
is essential to give a summary of the condition as depicted in the
findings of the Commission, and upon which the relief which it
granted was based.
The state of affairs was as follows: freight from the eastern
seaboard to Cincinnati and other western points north of the Ohio
River was controlled by the classification and tariff of rates
prevailing in what was denominated as the northern or trunkline
territory. On the other hand, the area south of the Ohio River,
which was denominated the southern territory, was governed by the
classification and tariff of rates prevailing in that territory;
such classification and tariff giving rise in most instances to a
higher charge than that which prevailed in the northern territory.
This general difference between the rates in the northern and those
in the southern territory the Commission found arose from inherent
causes, and, although they might in some aspects disadvantageously
influence traffic in the southern territory, were yet the result of
such essentially normal conditions as to give rise to no just cause
of complaint. On this subject the Commission said:
"There may be some disadvantage to Chattanooga from this
circumstance, since an article of a given class under the
first-named system may be in a lower class under the other system,
but the injury, if any, resulting from differences of that
character is not believed to be serious."
"The general range of rates in the territory covered by the
Southern Railway & Steamship Association is materially higher
than in the territory of the Trunk Line Association, the difference
resulting mainly from the much greater volume of traffic in the
latter section, and it is inevitable that difficulties should exist
and complaints arise along the line of division between varying
systems of classification and unlike methods of traffic
construction."
The grievance alleged arose in this wise: where freight destined
to a point in the southern territory, instead of being sent
Page 181 U. S. 5
by the southern routes, was shipped from the eastern seaboard by
the northern or trunkline, via Cincinnati or other trunkline points
north of the Ohio River, it would be classified and charged for
according to the northern trunkline rates. But such freight thus
shipped through the trunkline or northern route, bound for
Chattanooga or other southern points, on leaving Cincinnati and on
entering the southern area for the purpose of completing the
transit, became subject to the southern classification and rates.
Thus, irrespective of the mere form, and considering the substance
of things, the charge on freight shipped in this way was made
according to the northern classification and rate for the
transportation in the northern territory to points on the Ohio
River, plus the southern classification and rates from those points
to the place in the southern territory to which the freight was
ultimately destined, this being equivalent to the rate which the
merchandise would have borne had it been shipped so as to subject
it wholly to the southern territory rates.
This was, however, not universally the case. The single
exception (eliminating Memphis from view) was this: the Louisville
& Nashville Railroad, operating from Cincinnati to Nashville,
instead of causing the merchandise shipped from the eastern
seaboard through Cincinnati to Nashville to bear the southern
territory classification and rate from Cincinnati to Nashville,
submitted the traffic between Cincinnati and Nashville to the
northern, instead of to the southern, territory rates. It hence
followed that merchandise shipped from the eastern seaboard to
Nashville through the northern territory bore a less charge than it
would have borne if shipped to Nashville through the southern
territory.
To compete with the Louisville & Nashville Railroad for
Nashville traffic, the carriers in the southern territory fixed
their rate to Nashville so as to make it as low as that charged to
that point by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. It hence
came to pass that freight shipped from the eastern seaboard to
Chattanooga paid the southern rate, whilst freight shipped to
Nashville, although it passed through Chattanooga, went on to
Nashville at the lower rate there prevailing, which
Page 181 U. S. 6
lower rate was caused by the action of the Louisville &
Nashville Railroad in exceptionally reducing its charge to
Nashville. We say by the action of the Louisville & Nashville
Railroad because the findings of the Commission expressly establish
that the exceptional rate to Nashville, which was established by
the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, was not caused by water
competition at Nashville, but was exclusively the result of the
action of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad in exceptionally
charging a lower rate to Nashville different from that which it
demanded for traffic to other points through the southern
territory. That the other carriers through the southern territory,
including those operating from Chattanooga to Nashville, were, in
consequence of this condition at Nashville, compelled either to
adjust their rates to Nashville to meet the competition or abandon
all freight traffic to Nashville was found by the Commission to be
beyond dispute. On both these subjects, the Commission said, p.
219:
"There might, of course, be such an advance in rail rates that
shipments from the east would take the water route from Cincinnati.
What amount of difference would produce that result it is
impossible to determine from the testimony, but we find that such
difference might be substantially greater than it is at present
without important effect upon the railroad tonnage from the east,
and that the through rate to Nashville is in no sense controlled by
water competition at that point, either actually encountered or
seriously apprehended."
"
* * * *"
"The lower rates accepted by the carriers engaged in the
transportation of eastern merchandise to Nashville via Chattanooga
are not forced upon them by any water competition at the former
place. In performing this service for the compensation fixed by the
present tariffs, these carriers are not affected by the
circumstance that water communication exists between Cincinnati and
Nashville. The Nashville rate is independent of the lines operating
through Chattanooga, and those lines have no voice in determining
its amount. That rate is made by the all-rail carriers via
Cincinnati, and their action is uncontrolled by the defendant
lines. The competition which the latter meet
Page 181 U. S. 7
at Nashville is distinctly the competition of the trunklines and
the Louisville & Nashville system, whose northern termini are
at points on the Ohio River which receive trunkline rates on
eastern shipments. The competitors of the defendants for this
Nashville traffic therefore are the railroads from the Atlantic
seaboard reaching Nashville by way of Cincinnati, etc., all of
which are interstate carriers subject to the Act to Regulate
Commerce. These carriers established rates and united in joint
tariffs from eastern points to Nashville long before the lines
through Chattanooga engaged in the Nashville business. The
acceptance of the rates so fixed by the rail lines via Cincinnati
was the necessary condition upon which the lines via Chattanooga
could compete for Nashville traffic."
Although the Commission thus found that the competitive
conditions at Nashville rendered it absolutely necessary for the
other roads to adjust their charges so as to meet the competition
if they wished to engage in freight traffic to Nashville, it
nevertheless held that the carriers had no lawful right to consider
the competition at Nashville in adjusting their rates to that
place. This was predicated solely upon the fact that the
competition existing at Nashville was caused by carriers who were
subject to the Act to Regulate Commerce, and, under the view which
the Commission entertained of the law to regulate commerce,
competition of that character could not be availed of by a carrier
as establishing substantially dissimilar circumstances and
conditions without a prior application by the carrier to the
Commission for the purpose of obtaining its sanction to taking such
competitive conditions into consideration for the purpose of fixing
rates to the competitive point. The Commission, in support of this
construction of the statute, referred to a previous opinion by it
announced in the case of Georgia Railroad Commission v. Clyde
Steamship Company, 5 I.C.C. 324, 4 I.C.C. 120. The proposition
decided in the case cited, which it was held governed the case at
bar, was thus stated:
" The carrier has the right to judge in the first instance
whether it is justified in making the greater charge for the
shorter distance under the fourth section in all cases where
the
Page 181 U. S. 8
circumstances and conditions arise wholly upon its own line or
through competition for the same traffic with carriers not subject
to regulation under the Act to Regulate Commerce. In other cases
under the fourth section, the circumstances and conditions are not
presumptively dissimilar, and carriers must not charge less for the
longer distance except upon the order of this Commission."
Applying this proposition, the Commission said:
"We must hold that the lower rates accorded by the defendants on
shipments to Nashville are without warrant of law, and that the
higher charges exacted on shipments to Chattanooga cannot be
sanctioned in this proceeding."
The order entered by the Commission was confined solely to the
greater charge to Chattanooga, the shorter, than to Nashville, the
longer, distance. Omitting mere recitals, it was adjudged that
certain named defendants,
"or such of them as are or may be engaged in the transportation
of property from New York and other Atlantic seaboard points to
Chattanooga or through Chattanooga to Nashville, in the State of
Tennessee, be and they severally are hereby required to cease and
desist from charging or receiving any greater compensation in the
aggregate for the transportation of like kind of property from New
York, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, or other Atlantic seaboard
cities for the shorter distance to Chattanooga than for the longer
distance over the same line in the same direction to Nashville.
That, for the purpose of enabling said defendants to apply to the
Commission for relief under the proviso clause of the fourth
section of the Act to Regulate Commerce, this order is hereby
suspended until the first day of February, 1893; but the same will
take effect and be in force from and after that date unless such
application be made prior thereto. In case such relief shall be
applied for within the time mentioned, the question of further
suspending this order until the hearing and determination of such
application will be duly considered."
The record makes it clear that, in allowing this order, the
Commission thought that its literal enforcement would bring about
an injustice, and therefore that the order was entered solely
because it was deemed that the technical requirements of the
Page 181 U. S. 9
statute must be complied with. It is also patent from the
reasons given by the Commission for allowing the order that the
Commission refrained from considering or passing on any other
question arising, either expressly or by implication, from the
complaint, such as the reasonableness
per se of the rates
in controversy or the discrimination which might be produced by
them. And it also obviously appears that the examination of the
issues was thus confined solely to the alleged violation of the
long- and short-haul clause because it was deemed that all
questions as to reasonableness of rates
per se or
discrimination arising therefrom could more properly be considered
by the Commission when application was made by the carriers to be
relieved from the restraints of the long- and short-haul clause
within the time and in accordance with the permission granted by
the order which was rendered. The Commission, on these subjects,
said:
"In justice to the various parties in interest, however, it
should be added that this disposition of the case is not intended
to preclude the defendants from applying to the Commission for
relief from the restrictions imposed by the fourth section of the
act on the ground that the situation in which they are placed with
reference to this Nashville traffic constitutes one of the 'special
cases' to which the proviso clause of that section should be
applied."
"It is stated in the foregoing findings that the present
Nashville rate is prescribed by the rail lines reaching that point
via Cincinnati, and that the defendant lines through Chattanooga
have no voice or influence in determining its amount. These lines
are under compulsion, therefore, to meet the rates which other
carriers have established, or leave those carriers in undisturbed
possession of the entire traffic. They have no alternative but to
accept the measure of compensation dictated by independent rivals,
or abandon the large percentage of Nashville business which they
now secure. In addition to this, the geographical position of these
two cities, the diverse character and divergent courses of the
several groups of lines which connect them with the Atlantic
seaboard, the varying systems of classifications by which they are
severally affected, and the greater
Page 181 U. S. 10
volume of traffic at the lower rates prevailing in the trunkline
territory are existing conditions which govern, to some degree at
least, the transportation in question. For these conditions, the
carriers complained of do not appear chiefly responsible, because
the lower rate to Nashville is beyond their control, and the
allowance of the same rate to the shorter-distance point might
reduce their revenues below the limits of fair compensation.
Without in any sense prejudging the case, we hold that the
defendants may invoke its consideration in an appropriate
proceeding."
"Any such intimation, however, should not be understood as
covering an implied indorsement of the present disparity in rates
as between Chattanooga and Nashville, for no such inference is
intended. The suggestion here made goes no further than the
propriety of an unprejudiced investigation when permission to
deviate from the general rule of the statute is applied for by
these carriers on account of the special circumstances by which
they are surrounded. It seems improbable that the discrimination
complained of can be made less oppressive by any increase in the
Nashville rate, and on that assumption, the only practical relief
is a reduction in rates to Chattanooga. We are aware of the
difficulties attending a readjustment upon that basis, but we
cannot regard them insuperable."
"
* * * *"
"We entertain little doubt, therefore, that equity between
shipper and carrier requires some reduction in the rates now
enforced on Chattanooga traffic from Atlantic points, and are
convinced of the necessity for such a reduction to secure relative
justice between that town and Nashville. We refrain from further
statement of the reasons which have induced this conclusion, as the
amount to which the Chattanooga rate should be reduced will not now
be decided. If the carriers engaged in Nashville transportation
through Chattanooga act upon the suggestion above made, and apply
for relief from the restrictive rule laid down in the fourth
section, the subject can be more fully considered in disposing of
that application."
After reciting the fact that the case had been on both sides
presented to the Commission under the assumption that the
Page 181 U. S. 11
rights of the parties could be adequately adjusted by
determining only the controversy arising from the long- and
short-haul clause of the act, the Commission added:
"The question which may arise if permission is sought to depart
from the general rule relating to long- and short-hauls was not
specially discussed. On this ground also it would seem suitable to
allow opportunity for a further hearing before fixing maximum rates
on shipments to Chattanooga."
Taking into view the terms of the order and the reasons given by
the Commission for considering only one aspect of the controversy
and excluding all others, it is obvious that that body construed
the Act to Regulate Commerce as meaning that, however controlling
competition might be on rates to any given place, if it arose from
the action of one or more carriers who were subject to the law to
regulate commerce, the dissimilarity of circumstance and condition
provided in the fourth section could not be produced by such
competition unless the previous assent of the Commission was given
to the taking by the carrier of such competition into view in
fixing rates to the competitive point. This in effect was to say
that the dissimilarity of circumstance and condition prescribed in
the law was not the criterion by which to determine the right of a
carrier to charge a lesser rate for the longer than for the shorter
distance, unless the assent of the Commission was asked and given.
This in substance but decided that the dissimilarity of
circumstances and conditions prescribed in the law was not the rule
by which to determine the right of a carrier to charge a lesser
rate for the longer than for the shorter distance, but that such
right solely sprang from the assent of the Commission. In other
words, that the dissimilarity of circumstances and conditions
became a factor only in consequence of an act of grace or of a
discretion flowing from or exercised by the Commission. This
logical result of the construction of the statute adopted by the
Commission was well illustrated by the facts found by it and to
which the theory announced was in this case applied. Thus, although
the Commission found as a fact that the competition at Nashville
was of such a preponderating nature that the carriers must either
continue to charge a lesser rate for a longer
Page 181 U. S. 12
haul to Nashville than was asked for the shorter haul to
Chattanooga, or abandon all Nashville traffic, nevertheless they
were forbidden to make the lesser charge for the longer haul. In
other words, they were ordered to desist from all Nashville traffic
unless they applied to the Commission for the privilege of
continuing such traffic by obtaining its assent to meet the
dominant rate prevailing at Nashville. But since the ruling of the
Commission was made in this case, it has been settled by this Court
that competition which is controlling on traffic and rates produces
in and of itself the dissimilarity of circumstance and condition
described in the statute, and that, where this condition exists, a
carrier has a right, of his own motion, to take it into view in
fixing rates to the competitive point. That is to say that the
dissimilarity of circumstance and condition pointed out by the
statute, which relieves from the long- and short-haul clause,
arises from the command of the statute, and not from the assent of
the Commission -- the law, and not the discretion of the
Commission, determining the rights of the parties. It follows that
the construction affixed by the Commission to the statute upon
which its entire action was predicated was wrong.
Texas &
Pacific Railway Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
162 U. S. 197;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Alabama Midland Ry. Co.,
168 U. S. 144,
168 U. S. 164;
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company v. Behlmer,
175 U. S. 648,
175 U. S.
654-655.
Although it thus appears that the Commission erred in its
construction of the statute, nevertheless it is insisted that the
action of the Commission should be affirmed. This contention is
supported by propositions which are stated in argument in many
different forms, but are really all reducible to the following
summary:
Granting that the Commission wrongfully held that the carriers
had no right of their own motion to avail of the competition at
Nashville as producing the dissimilarity of circumstance and
condition provided in the statute, nevertheless the order made by
the Commission was right because, as there was a difference between
the rate charged to Nashville and that exacted to Chattanooga,
there necessarily resulted an undue preference in favor of
Nashville and a discrimination against Chattanooga
Page 181 U. S. 13
falling within the inhibition of the third section of the Act to
Regulate Commerce. And it is argued, even conceding this to be
erroneous, as it was established by the proof that the Nashville
rates were adequate, the Chattanooga rates were consequently
unreasonably high, and hence were
per se unreasonable.
Assuming this proposition to be without foundation, it is insisted,
as Chattanooga was a point at which various railroads centered, it
was therefore in a position where, if competition had been allowed
full play, it would have a rate at least as low as that at
Nashville, and as the proof showed that the higher rate prevailing
at Chattanooga was fixed by consent or agreement among the
carriers, therefore Chattanooga, by the effect of such agreement,
was deprived of the benefits of competition, the deduction being
that the carriers who thus by agreement prevented the normal forces
of competition from exerting their proper influence at Chattanooga
should not be allowed to avail of the competition at Nashville to
charge a lesser rate to that point than they did to Chattanooga.
Besides, it is urged that, as it was shown that the lower rate at
Nashville was caused by the conduct of the Louisville &
Nashville Railroad in exceptionally making lower charges from
Cincinnati to Nashville, that road should not be permitted to give
a preference to Nashville, and then avail itself of the preference
thus given to discriminate against Chattanooga, which would be the
case if the difference of rates on freight passing through
Chattanooga to Nashville were allowed to continue. This proposition
being predicated on the assertion that it was established by proof
that the line between Chattanooga and Nashville over which the
traffic via the southern territory, passing through Chattanooga
from the Atlantic seaboard, moved to Nashville, was in legal effect
to be considered the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, since
that corporation was the owner of a majority of the stock of such
line between Chattanooga and Nashville, and therefore in effect
controlled it.
Pausing for a moment to generally consider the foregoing
contentions, it becomes manifest that, insofar as they embody
propositions of law, they concede the error of the legal
construction applied by the Commission, and yet invoke a
seemingly
Page 181 U. S. 14
different construction by which the erroneous rule of the
Commission is to be in substance upheld. It is also clear that the
propositions of fact which they embody cover the field of inquiry
which the Commission excluded from view, and which that body held
could not be ascertained from the record before it, but must be
developed from the new inquiry which it was proposed to make when
leave to depart from the restrictions of the long- and short-haul
clause was invoked by the carriers at the hands of the Commission.
Indeed, it is substantially accurate to say that the propositions
of fact now asserted not only do this, but in effect are repugnant
to the conclusions of fact found by the Commission on the branch of
the controversy to which the Commission actually extended the
inquiry by it made. It might well suffice to allow the result just
stated, to which the propositions necessarily lead, to serve as a
demonstration of their unsoundness. Inasmuch, however, as the legal
contentions embodied in the propositions were in substance adopted
by the circuit court upon the assumption that its action in so
doing was in accord with the decision of this Court in the case of
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Alabama Midland Railway
Co., 168 U. S. 144, and
as some of the propositions of fact received the sanction of the
circuit court of appeals, and were made the basis of its decree
enforcing the order of the Commission, we will proceed to analyze
them to the extent necessary to determine our duty in relation to
them.
Coming to do so, it is at once apparent that the contentions
divide themselves into two classes -- the first, a proposition of
law involving the construction of the Act to Regulate Commerce and
the others embracing ultimate deductions from the facts proven. The
legal proposition is this: that where, in consequence of
competitive conditions existing at a particular point, the
dissimilarity of circumstance provided in the fourth section of the
act arises, it cannot justify a carrier on his own motion in
charging a lesser rate for the longer haul to the competitive point
than is asked for the shorter haul to the noncompetitive point if
in, doing so, a preference in favor of the competitive point arises
or a discrimination against the noncompetitive point is produced.
That is to say, it is insisted that the provision as to
substantially
Page 181 U. S. 15
dissimilar circumstances and conditions of the fourth section
and the commands of the third section as to discrimination and
undue preference, being found in the one statute, must be construed
together, so that the dissimilarity of circumstance and condition
cannot be availed of if either discrimination or preference will
arise from doing so. We quote the exact language in which this
proposition is stated by counsel, reproducing the italics by which
the import of the contention is emphasized:
"
Fifth. That the injury or prejudice to Chattanooga,
shown by the proof to be the effect of the discriminations
practiced against Chattanooga and in favor of Nashville,
brings
the case within the evil which the Act to Regulate Commerce was
designed to remedy, and that competition, no matter how forceful,
should not be held to nullify the law itself -- in other words,
should not be held to justify the very wrongs which the law was
enacted to remedy."
It is argued that this proposition is sustained by the opinions
in the
Alabama Midland case,
168
U. S. 164, and in
Louisville & Nashville
Railroad Co. v. Behlmer, 175 U. S. 648, in
both of which cases, as we have seen, the right of the carrier to
take into view on his own motion competition which substantially
affected traffic and rates as the producing cause of dissimilarity
of circumstance and condition was upheld.
The portion of the opinion relied upon in the
Alabama
Midland case is found on page
168 U. S. 167,
and is as follows:
"In order further to guard against any misapprehension of the
scope of our decision, it may be well to observe that we do not
hold that the mere fact of competition, no matter what its
character or extent, necessarily relieves the carrier from the
restraints of the third and fourth sections, but only that these
sections are not so stringent and imperative as to exclude in all
cases the matter of competition from consideration in determining
the questions of 'undue or unreasonable preference or advantage,'
or what are 'substantially similar circumstances and conditions.'
The competition may in some cases be such as, having due regard to
the interests of the public and of the carrier, ought justly to
have effect upon the rates, and in such cases,
Page 181 U. S. 16
there is no absolute rule which prevents the Commission or the
courts from taking that matter into consideration."
The expressions in the
Behlmer case which are relied
upon are found on page
175 U. S. 674,
of the opinion in that case, and are as follows:
"It follows that, whilst the carrier may take into consideration
the existence of competition as the producing cause of dissimilar
circumstances and conditions, his right to do so is governed by the
following principles: first, the absolute command of the statute
that all rates shall be just and reasonable and that no undue
discrimination be brought about, though, in the nature of things,
this latter consideration may, in many cases, be involved in the
determination of whether competition was such as created a
substantial dissimilarity of condition; second, that the
competition relied upon be not artificial or merely conjectural,
but material and substantial, thereby operating on the question of
traffic and ratemaking, the right in every event to be only enjoyed
with a due regard to the interest of the public, after giving full
weight to the benefits to be conferred on the place from whence the
traffic moved, as well as those to be derived by the locality to
which it is to be delivered."
The reasoning which we have thus quoted in the opinions in
question, it is insisted, maintains the doctrine that, although
competition of the character therein described may serve to
engender dissimilarity of circumstance and condition, which a
carrier can avail of of its own motion, it does not necessarily do
so. Whether it can be allowed to produce this effect, it is argued,
must depend upon all the surrounding circumstances, such as the
preference or discrimination which may arise from allowing it to be
done, and the degree to which the interests of the public may be
injuriously affected by permitting it to do so. To support this
view, it is argued
"that to hold otherwise would be placing Congress in the absurd
position of laying down a rule and then providing that the rule
should not be enforced in the only cases in which violations of the
rule were known to exist. In other words, enacting a law and
providing at the same time that it should be of no effect."
But in substance this reasoning only amounts to the
assertion
Page 181 U. S. 17
that the settled construction of the statute, by which it has
been held that real and substantial competition gives rise to the
dissimilarity of circumstance and condition pointed out in the
fourth section, is wrong, and should be overruled. The language of
the opinions which is relied upon must be read in connection with
its context, and must be construed by the light of the issue which
was in controversy in the cases and which was decided -- that is,
the right of the carrier to take the competitive conditions into
consideration as creating dissimilarity of circumstance and
condition. The right of a carrier to do so could not have been
sustained if the proposition now asserted had not necessarily been
decided to be unsound. The summing up or grouping of the various
provisions of the act which was made in the passages relied upon
but served to point out that the provisions of the statute allowing
competition to become the cause of dissimilarity of circumstance
and condition could operate no injurious effect in view of the
other provisions of the act protecting against discrimination and
preference -- that is, the undue preference and unjust
discrimination against which the other provisions of the statute
were aimed. True it is that all of the provisions of the statute
must be interpreted together, and because this is the elementary
rule, the argument now pressed upon our attention is unsound. If it
were adopted, it would follow of necessity that competition could
never create such a dissimilarity of circumstance and condition as
would justify the lesser charge to the competitive point than was
made to the noncompetitive point. This would be the inevitable
consequence since, under the view which the argument assumes, it
would be impossible for the lesser rate to prevail to the
competitive point without creating a preference in favor of that
point and without giving rise to a discrimination against the
noncompetitive point to which the higher rate was asked. Thus, the
reasoning conduces to the deduction which it is advanced to refute
-- that is, the assumption that the statute at one and the same
time expressly confers a right and yet specifically destroys it.
This is plainly the consequence flowing from the argument that
competition, "however forceful" it may be, cannot produce
dissimilarity of circumstance and condition if discrimination
Page 181 U. S. 18
and preference is held to necessarily arise from the charging of
the lesser rate to the longer-distance competitive point.
It is not difficult to perceive the origin of the fallacy upon
which the contention rests. It is found in blending the third and
fourth sections in such a manner as necessarily to destroy one by
the other, instead of construing them so as to cause them to
operate harmoniously. In a supposed case when, in the first
instance, upon an issue as to a violation of the fourth section of
the act, it is conceded or established that the rates charged to
the shorter-distance point are just and reasonable in and of
themselves, and it is also shown that the lesser rate charged for
the longer haul is not wholly unremunerative, and has been forced
upon the carriers by competition at the longer-distance point, it
must result that a discrimination springing alone from a disparity
in rates cannot be held, in legal effect, to be the voluntary act
of the defendant carriers, and as a consequence, the provisions of
the third section of the act forbidding the making or giving of an
undue or unreasonable preference or advantage will not apply. The
prohibition of the third section, when that section is considered
in its proper relation, is directed against unjust discrimination
or undue preference arising from the voluntary and wrongful act of
the carriers complained of as having given undue preference, and
does not relate to acts the result of conditions wholly beyond the
control of such carriers. And special attention was directed to
this view in the
Behlmer case in the passage which we have
previously excerpted. To otherwise construe the statute would
involve a departure from its plain language, and would be to
confound cause with effect. For, if the preference occasioned in
favor of a particular place by competition there gives rise to the
right to charge the lesser rate to that point, it cannot be that
the availing of this right is the cause of the preference, and
especially is this made clear in the case supposed, since it is
manifest that forbidding the carrier to meet the competition would
not remove the discrimination.
The only principle by which it is possible to enforce the whole
statute is the construction adopted by the previous
Page 181 U. S. 19
opinions of this Court -- that is, that competition which is
real and substantial, and exercises a potential influence on rates
to a particular point, brings into play the dissimilarity of
circumstance and condition provided by the statute, and justifies
the lesser charge to the more distant and competitive point than to
the nearer and noncompetitive place, and that this right is not
destroyed by the mere fact that incidentally the lesser charge to
the competitive point may seemingly give a preference to that
point, and the greater rate to the noncompetitive point may
apparently engender a discrimination against it. We say seemingly,
on the one hand, and apparently on the other, because in the
supposed cases, the preference is not "undue" or the discrimination
"unjust." This is clearly so when it is considered that the lesser
charge upon which both the assumption of preference and
discrimination is predicated is sanctioned by the statute, which
causes the competition to give rise to the right to make such
lesser charge. Indeed, the findings of fact made by the Commission
in this case leave no room for the contention that either undue
preference in favor of Nashville or unjust discrimination against
Chattanooga arose merely from the act of the carriers in meeting
the competition existing at Nashville. The Commission found that if
the defendant carriers had not adjusted their rates to meet the
competitive condition at Nashville, the only consequence would have
been to deflect the traffic at the reduced rates over other lines.
From this it follows that even although the defendant carriers had
not taken the dissimilarity of circumstance and condition into
view, and had continued their rates to Nashville just as if there
had been no dissimilarity of circumstance and condition, the
preference in favor of Nashville growing out of the conditions
there existing would have remained in force, and hence the
discrimination which thereby arose against Chattanooga would have
likewise continued to exist. In other words, both Nashville and
Chattanooga would have been exactly in the same position if the
long- and short-haul clause had not been brought into play.
That, as indicated in the previous opinions of this Court, there
may be cases where the carrier cannot be allowed to avail of
Page 181 U. S. 20
the competitive condition because of the public interests and
the other provisions of the statute is, of course, clear. What
particular environment may in every case produce this result cannot
be in advance indicated. But the suggestion of an obvious case is
not inappropriate. Take a case where the carrier cannot meet the
competitive rate to a given point without transporting the
merchandise at less than the cost of transportation, and therefore
without bringing about a deficiency which would have to be met by
increased charges upon other business. Clearly in such a case the
engaging in such competitive traffic would both bring about an
unjust discrimination and a disregard of the public interest, since
a tendency towards unreasonable rates on other business would arise
from the carriage of traffic at less than the cost of
transportation to particular places. But no condition of this
character is here in question, since the Commission find as
follows:
"There is a conceded margin of profit in the rates now in force
to Nashville and Memphis, with reference to the additional expense
incurred in carrying eastern traffic to those destinations, but
whether that margin affords reasonable compensation for the
services thus rendered cannot be determined from the evidence."
And the fact thus established was not controverted either in the
opinion of the circuit court or in that of the circuit court of
appeals, and is not now denied. Applying the principle to which we
have adverted to the condition as above stated, it is apparent that
if the carrier was prevented under the circumstances from meeting
the competitive rate at Nashville when it could be done at a margin
of profit over the cost of transportation, it would produce the
very discrimination which would spring from allowing the carrier to
meet a competitive rate where the traffic must be carried at an
actual loss. To compel the carriers to desist from all Nashville
traffic under the circumstances stated would simply result in
deflecting the traffic to Nashville to other routes, and thus
entail upon the carriers who were inhibited from meeting the
competition, although they could do so at a margin of profit, the
loss which would arise from the disappearance of such business,
without anywise benefiting the public.
Page 181 U. S. 21
The circuit court, in enforcing the order of the Commission, did
not seemingly adopt the full scope of the proposition which we have
just considered, but applied it in a modified form. Thus it
concluded that, although the charge of the lesser rate to the
longer point in some instances might be justified by the
dissimilarity of circumstance and condition arising from
competition, and therefore would not
per se necessarily
produce a preference, it would do so if, by comparison between the
dissimilarity of circumstance and condition and the dissimilarity
of charge, it was found that the one was disproportionate to the
other.
After referring to the previous rulings of the Commission
maintaining that competition by carriers subject to the act could
not be taken into view by a carrier in fixing rates to the
competitive points without the previous assent of the Commission,
the court (85 F. 117) quoted the following statement of the
Commission in an opinion announced on December 31, 1897:
"Since then, however, the Supreme Court of the United States, by
its decision in the case
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Alabama Midland Railway Company (decided Nov. 8, 1897),
168 U. S.
144, has determined that this view of the law is
erroneous, and that railway competition may create such dissimilar
circumstances and conditions as exempt the carrier from an
observance of the long- and short-haul provision. Under this
interpretation of the law, as applied to the facts found in this
case, we are of the opinion that the charging of the higher rate to
the intermediate points, as set forth, is not obnoxious to the
fourth section. The section declares that the carrier shall not
make the higher charge to the nearer point under 'substantially
similar circumstances and conditions.' If the conditions and
circumstances are not substantially similar, then the section does
not apply, and the carrier is not bound to regard it in the making
of its tariffs."
The court thereupon said:
"Now I do not understand that such a conclusion follows from
that decision. On the contrary, I suppose that, when a violation of
the long- and short-haul provision is charged, competition
Page 181 U. S. 22
is one of the elements which enter into the determination
whether the conditions are similar, and if dissimilarity is found,
then the further question arises whether the dissimilarity is so
great as to justify the discrimination which is complained of. The
language of the act ought not to be tied up by such literal
construction. If it were, then, if it should be found that the
dissimilarity of conditions is really in favor of the locality
discriminated against, the provision would not apply -- a result
contrary to the manifest intent. In other words, my opinion is that
the restraint of section 4 is to be applied upon the scale of
comparison between the dissimilarity of conditions and the
disparity of rates, and that it is competent under that section to
restrain the exaction of the greater charge for the shorter haul,
although there may be a substantial dissimilarity of conditions,
provided the dissimilarity is not so great as to justify the
discrimination made. But the long- and short-haul clause is only
one of the specific provisions employed for the general purpose of
the act. The third section underlies the fourth and supplies the
principle on which it rests, so that, if the literal construction
referred to be put upon the fourth section, the case would still be
exposed to the third section, which forbids undue preference to one
locality or the subjection of another to any undue
disadvantage."
But this reasoning, whilst it does not apparently wholly rest on
the erroneous view which we have previously refuted, in substance
but applies it. Indeed, it not only does this, but it more markedly
destroys one provision of the statute by the other, since it in
effect declares that the greater the competition at any given
point, the less power has this fact to produce the dissimilarity of
circumstance and condition provided in the statute. That such is
the conclusion to which the reasoning resolves itself must be the
case when it is considered that the more active competition is at a
particular point, the less the rate will be to that point, and the
greater therefore the disparity between the charge to the
competitive point and that made to the noncompetitive one. The
proposition, then, is this -- that the greater and more potential
is the influence of competition on rates and traffic, the less will
be its force to engender
Page 181 U. S. 23
dissimilarity of circumstance and condition -- that is to say,
that the causes specified in the statute are to be allowed to
produce their influence in inverse ratio to their strength and
importance.
As the circuit court only affirmed the order of the Commission,
which directed the carriers to desist from charging a greater
compensation for the shorter haul to Chattanooga than for the
longer haul to Nashville, there is no room for the conclusion that
it found affirmatively that, independently of the charge to
Nashville, the rate to Chattanooga was
per se
unreasonable. For, of course, a decree which ordered the carriers
to desist from charging a greater compensation for the lesser than
for the longer haul would be in no way responsive to the conclusion
that the rate for the lesser distance was unreasonable in and of
itself. Such a decree would in effect authorize the carrier to
continue to charge at its election a rate which was, in itself,
unreasonable to the shorter point. Indeed, it cannot be held that
the order rested upon the unreasonableness
per se of the
rate to Chattanooga without implying that the court directed and
commanded the carrier to bring about a preference and
discrimination by charging the same price for the carriage of
traffic to Nashville, the much more distant point, that was exacted
for the carriage to Chattanooga.
Coming, then, to the propositions of fact, we repeat that each
and every one of them involve considerations which were wholly
excluded from view by the Commission, under the construction of the
statute which was applied, because it was deemed that they would
present themselves for consideration when the carrier petitioned
the Commission to be relieved from the restrictions of the long-
and short-haul clause, and, moreover, that these propositions of
fact are not in harmony with the findings made by the Commission on
the particular subject which it passed on. That the propositions of
fact referred to are amenable to the considerations we have just
stated is indisputable when it is considered that, taken together,
they assert the existence of conditions which the Commission
decided could not be ascertained in the state of the record before
it, but could only be arrived at by a further unprejudiced
Page 181 U. S. 24
examination which, under the view taken, it was unnecessary to
make until a future time. And that the facts now relied on are
irreconcilable with what was found by the Commission on the subject
which it passed on is likewise clear. Thus, the contention that the
rate to Chattanooga is shown to have been absolutely fixed by
agreement, and therefore to be abnormally high, is necessarily
repugnant to the express finding of the Commission that the rates
in the southern territory, whilst originally the offspring of
agreement, were also the result of the volume of business in that
territory, and, although they might give rise to some disadvantage,
did not do so to the extent of making the rates in and of
themselves a just subject of complaint. So also, the insistence
that it is shown that Chattanooga, by its position, was entitled to
at least an equality of rates with Nashville is repugnant to the
finding of the Commission that, whilst it was shown that some
reduction would be just at Chattanooga, the degree of that
reduction could not be determined without a further investigation
embracing the relation of Chattanooga to other points, and without
a careful readjustment of the rates to such point. Again, the
assertion that the road from Chattanooga to Nashville growing out
of the stock ownership was in legal effect the Louisville &
Nashville Railroad is necessarily antagonistic to the express
finding of the Commission that the carriers through Chattanooga to
Nashville were placed in a position where they must either meet the
competition at Nashville or abandon all traffic to that point. The
question which then arises is shall this Court now pass upon all
the issues which the Commission excluded from view because of a
mistake in law committed by that body, and in doing so not only
overthrow the findings of fact made by the Commission, but also
adopt new findings antagonistic to those which the Commission made,
and this for the purpose not of affirming the order entered by that
body, but to enable us to reach a result which the Commission
itself declared could only be justly arrived at after a further and
unprejudiced investigation by it of the situation which the
controversy involves?
True, it is insisted that such original action is not required
at
Page 181 U. S. 25
our hands because, it is asserted, the circuit court of appeals
considered and passed on the propositions relied upon, and the
action of that court relieves this Court from the duty of entering
upon an original investigation of the whole evidence to determine
the entire field of controversy.
It requires only, however, a brief reference to the opinion of
the circuit court of appeals to show that this contention is
unfounded. In substance, that court stated in its opinion that it
considered that the rates to Chattanooga, which was in the southern
territory, had been fixed by agreement of the carriers, as had been
the other rates in that territory; that as Nashville, which was
also in the southern territory, was given a low rate because of the
action of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad in exceptionally
lowering its rates from Cincinnati to that point, the situation at
Chattanooga entitled it to the same rates. The court, moreover,
thought that the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which owned the
line from Cincinnati to Nashville, was in no position, as the owner
of a majority of the stock in the road from Chattanooga to
Nashville, to avail of the competition at Nashville as a basis for
charging the lesser rate for the longer haul through Chattanooga to
Nashville. It was, besides, concluded that where a rate to a
particular point was the product of agreement which stifled
competition, such rate could not become the basis upon which to
predicate the right of a carrier to charge a lesser sum for the
carriage of freight passing through that point to a more distant
place because of the competition at such more distant place. The
court summed up its conclusions as follows (99 F. p. 63):
"We are pressed with the argument that to reduce the rates to
Chattanooga will upset the whole southern schedule of rates and
create the greatest confusion; that for a decade, Chattanooga has
been grouped with towns to the south and west of her, shown in the
diagram, and that her rates have been the key to the southern
situation. The length of time which an abuse has continued does not
justify it. It was because time had not corrected abuses of
discrimination that the Interstate Commerce Act was passed. The
group in which Chattanooga is placed, shown by the diagram above,
puts her on an equality
Page 181 U. S. 26
in respect to eastern rates with towns and cities of much less
size and business, and much further removed from the region of
trunkline rates, and with much fewer natural competitive
advantages. If taking Chattanooga out of this group and putting it
with Nashville requires a readjustment of rates in the south, this
is no ground for refusing to do justice to Chattanooga. The truth
is that Chattanooga is too advantageously situated with respect to
her railway connections to the north and east to be made the first
city of importance to bear the heavier burden of southern rates
when Nashville, her natural competitor, is given northern rates.
The line of division between northern and southern rates ought not
to be drawn so as to put her to the south of it if Nashville is to
be put to the north of it. And we feel convinced from a close
examination of the evidence that, but for the restriction of normal
competition by the Southern Traffic Association, her situation
would win for her certainly the same rates as Nashville. It may be
that the difficulty of readjusting rates on a new basis is what has
delayed justice to Chattanooga. It may well be so formidable as to
furnish a motive for maintaining an old abuse."
The decree which was entered, however, did not declare the rates
charged to Chattanooga to be unreasonable, but simply affirmed the
order of the Commission directing that no greater sum be charged
for the carriage of freight to Chattanooga, the shorter, than was
exacted to Nashville, the longer, distance. As we have already
shown, such a decree is not responsive to the conclusion that the
rates to Chattanooga were, in and of themselves, unreasonable,
since the right to continue to exact them was sanctioned, provided
the traffic to Nashville was either abandoned or the rate to
Chattanooga made the same as to Nashville.
Without taking at all into view the legal propositions announced
by the circuit court of appeals in its opinion, and conceding,
without passing upon such questions, that they were all correctly
decided, it is plain that all the premises of fact upon which the
propositions of law decided by the circuit court of appeals rest
are at variance with the propositions of fact found by the
Commission, insofar as that body passed upon
Page 181 U. S. 27
the facts. From this it results that, to decide the case in the
aspect in which it is now presented, we would be obliged to go into
the whole evidence, as a matter of original impression, in order to
determine the complex questions which the case presents. Among
those which of necessity would arise for decision would be whether
the original agreement fixing rates to the southern territory, made
long since and acted on consecutively for years, was of such a
nature as to cause those rates to be illegal, although they might
be found to be just and reasonable in and of themselves. If not,
whether Chattanooga was, from its situation, properly embraced in
the southern territory, and, if not, whether the Louisville &
Nashville Railroad had violated the law by exceptionally reducing
its rates to Nashville. If it had not, did it follow, because the
condition at Nashville gave that city an exceptionally low rate,
that Chattanooga was in a position to be entitled, as a matter of
right, to as low or a lesser rate?
To state these issues is at once to demonstrate that their
decision, as a matter of first impression, properly belonged to the
Commission, since upon that body the law has specially imposed the
duty of considering them. Whilst the Court has, in the discharge of
its duty, been at times constrained to correct erroneous
constructions which have been put by the Commission upon the
statute, it has steadily refused, because of the fact just stated,
to assume to exert its original judgment on the facts where, under
the statute, it was entitled, before approaching the facts, to the
aid which must necessarily be afforded by the previous enlightened
judgment of the Commission upon such subjects. This rule is aptly
illustrated by the opinion in
Louisville & Nashville
Railroad Co. v. Behlmer, (1900)
175 U.
S. 648, in which case, after pointing out the same error
of construction adopted and applied by the Commission in the
present case, the court declined to undertake an original
investigation of the facts, saying (p.
175 U. S.
675):
"If, then, we were to undertake the duty of weighing the
evidence in this record, we would be called upon, as a matter of
original action, to investigate all these serious considerations
which were shut out from view by the Commission, and were
Page 181 U. S. 28
not weighed by the circuit court of appeals, because both the
Commission and the court erroneously construed the statute. But the
law attributes
prima facie effect to the findings of fact
made by the Commission, and that body, from the nature of its
organization and the duties imposed upon it by the statute, is
peculiarly competent to pass upon questions of fact of the
character here arising. In
Texas & Pacific Railway v.
Interstate Commerce Commission, 162 U. S.
197, the Court found the fact to be that the Commission
had failed to consider and give weight to the proof in the record,
affecting the question before it, on a mistaken view taken by it of
the law, and that, on review of the action of the Commission, the
circuit court of appeals, whilst considering that the legal
conclusion of the Commission was wrong, nevertheless proceeded as a
matter of original investigation to weigh the testimony and
determine the facts flowing from it. The Court said (p.
162 U. S. 238):"
"If the circuit court of appeals was of opinion that the
Commission, in making its order, had misconceived the extent of its
powers, and if the circuit court had erred in affirming the
validity of an order made under such misconception, the duty of the
circuit court of appeals was to reverse the decree, set aside the
order, and remand the cause to the Commission in order that it
might, if it saw fit, proceed therein according to law. The
defendant was entitled to have its defense considered, in the first
instance, at least, by the Commission upon a full consideration of
all the circumstances and conditions upon which a legitimate order
could be founded. The question whether certain charges were
reasonable or otherwise, whether certain discriminations were due
or undue, were questions of fact, to be passed upon by the
Commission in the light of all facts duly alleged and supported by
competent evidence, and it did not comport with the true scheme of
the statute that the circuit court of appeals should undertake, of
its own motion, to find and pass upon such questions of fact in a
case in the position in which the present one was."
"We think these views should be applied in the case now under
review. "
Page 181 U. S. 29
The decree of the circuit court of appeals should be
reversed, with costs, and the case be remanded to the Circuit
Court, with instructions to set aside its decree adjudging that the
order of the Commission be enforced, and to dismiss the application
made for that purpose, with costs, the whole to be without
prejudice to the right of the Commission to proceed upon the
evidence already introduced before it, or upon such further
pleadings and evidence as it may allow to be made or introduced, to
hear and determine the matter in controversy according to
law.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissents.