Where there is dissimilarity in the services rendered by a
telegraph company to different persons, a difference in charges is
proper, and no recovery can be had unless it is shown not merely
that there is a difference in the charges, but that the difference
is so great as, under dissimilar conditions of service, to show an
unjust discrimination, and the recovery must be limited to the
amount of the unreasonable discrimination.
There is no body of federal common law, separate and distinct
from the common law existing in the several states, in the sense
that there is a body of statute law enacted by Congress separate
and distinct from the body of statutes enacted by the several
states.
The principles of the common law are operative upon all
interstate commercial transactions, except so far as they are
modified by Congressional enactment.
Questions of fact, when once settled in the courts of a state,
are not subject to review in this Court.
This was an action commenced on April 29, 1891, in the District
Court of Lancaster County, Nebraska, by the Call Publishing Company
to recover sums alleged to have been wrongfully charged and
collected from it by the defendant, now plaintiff in error, for
telegraphic services rendered. According to the petition, the
plaintiff had been engaged in publishing a daily newspaper in
Lincoln, Nebraska, called the Lincoln Daily Call. The Nebraska
State Journal was another newspaper published at the same time in
the same city, by the State Journal Company.
Page 181 U. S. 93
Each of these papers received Associated Press dispatches over
the lines of defendant. The petition alleged:
"4th. That during all of said period, the defendant wrongfully
and unjustly discriminated in favor of the said State Journal
Company and against this plaintiff, and gave to the State Journal
Company an undue advantage, in this: that, while the defendant
demanded, charged, and collected of and from the plaintiff for the
services aforesaid seventy-five dollars per month for such
dispatches, amounting to 1,500 words or less daily, or at the rate
of not less than five dollars per 100 words daily per month, it
charged and collected from the said State Journal Company for the
same, like, and contemporaneous services only the sum of $1.50 per
100 words daily per month."
"Plaintiff alleges that the sum so demanded, charged, collected,
and received by the said defendant for the services so rendered the
plaintiff as aforesaid was excessive and unjust to the extent of
the amount of the excess over the rate charged the said State
Journal Company for the same services, which excess was $3.50 per
100 words daily per month, and to that extent it was an unjust and
wrongful discrimination against the plaintiff and in favor of the
State Journal Company."
"That plaintiff was at all times and is now compelled to pay
said excessive charges to the defendant for said services, or to do
without the same; that plaintiff could not dispense with such
dispatches without very serious injury to its business."
The telegraph company's amended answer denied any unjust
discrimination, denied that the sums charged to the plaintiff were
unjust or excessive, and alleged that such sums were no more than a
fair and reasonable charge and compensation therefor, and similar
to charges made upon other persons and corporations at Lincoln and
elsewhere for like services. The defendant further claimed that it
was a corporation engaged in interstate commerce; that it had
accepted the provisions of the act of Congress entitled "An Act to
Aid in the Construction of Telegraph Lines and to Secure to the
government the Use of the Same for Postal, Military, and other
Purposes," approved July 24, 1866; that it had constructed its
lines under the authority
Page 181 U. S. 94
of its charter and that act, and denied the jurisdiction of the
courts of Nebraska over this controversy. A trial was had resulting
in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, which judgment was
reversed by the supreme court of the state. 44 Neb. 326. A second
trial in the district court resulted in a verdict and judgment for
the plaintiff, which was affirmed by the supreme court of the state
(58 Neb.192), and thereupon the telegraph company sued out this
writ of error.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The contention of the telegraph company is substantially that
the services which it rendered to the publishing company were a
matter of interstate commerce; that Congress has sole jurisdiction
over such matters, and can alone prescribe rules and regulations
therefor; that it had not at the time these services were rendered
prescribed any regulations concerning them; that there is no
national common law, and that whatever may be the statute or common
law of Nebraska is wholly immaterial, and that therefore, there
being no controlling statute or common law, the state court erred
in holding the telegraph company liable for any discrimination in
its charges between the plaintiff and the Journal Company. In the
brief of counsel, it is said:
"The contention was consistently and continuously made upon the
trial by the telegraph company that, as to the state law it, could
not apply, for the reasons already given, and that, in the absence
of a statute by Congress declaring a rule as to interstate traffic
by the telegraph company, such as was appealed to by the publishing
company, there was no law upon the subject."
The logical result of this contention is that persons dealing
with
Page 181 U. S. 95
common carriers engaged in interstate commerce and in respect to
such commerce are absolutely at the mercy of the carriers. It is
true, counsel do not insist that the telegraph company or any other
company engaged in interstate commerce may charge or contract for
unreasonable rates, but they do not say that they may not, and if
there be neither statute nor common law controlling the action of
interstate carriers, there is nothing to limit their obligation in
respect to the matter of reasonableness. We should be very loth to
hold that, in the absence of congressional action, there are no
restrictions on the power of interstate carriers to charge for
their services; and, if there be no law to restrain, the necessary
result is that there is no limit to the charges they may make and
enforce.
It may be well at this time to notice what the exact rulings of
the state court were. The charge to the plaintiff was $5 per 100
words, and to the State Journal Company $1.50 per 100 words. When
the case came to the supreme court for examination of the
proceedings in the first trial, it appeared that no proper
exceptions to the instructions had been preserved, and the only
question, therefore, for consideration was the sufficiency of the
evidence to sustain the verdict, and the court held that the mere
fact of a difference in charge was not sufficient to invalidate the
contract made with the plaintiff, and that there was no
satisfactory evidence that the difference in the charge was
unreasonable. In the course of its opinion, the court said:
"There was no evidence tending to show that the charge to the
Call Company was, in itself, unreasonably high, that the charge to
the Journal Company was unreasonably low, or that the charge to
either was greater or less than the ordinary or reasonable charge
to others for similar services. It follows, therefore, that the
verdict was sustained by the evidence if, as a matter of law, it
was sufficient to show either that another person was obtaining
dispatches for a less sum than the plaintiff without regard to
differences in conditions, or, if it was sufficient to show a
difference in rate accompanied by a difference in conditions,
leaving to the jury, without other evidence, the duty of comparing
the difference in rates with the difference
Page 181 U. S. 96
in conditions, and determining without other aid whether or not
the difference in rates was disproportionate to the difference in
conditions. But the verdict was not sustained by the evidence if a
mere difference in rates without regard to conditions was
insufficient to ground a right of action, or, a difference both in
rates and conditions being shown, it was also necessary to
establish by evidence that these differences were disproportionate.
. . . As we have already stated, a considerable difference in the
absolute rate charged the Call Company and the Journal Company was
shown, but there was also shown a difference in conditions
affecting the expense and difficulty of rendering the services,
which at common law would justify some difference in rates, and
this difference was one which the proviso quoted from the seventh
section of our statute expressly recognizes as justifying a
discrimination in this state. There was no evidence to show that
the rate charged the Call Company was unreasonably high. There was
no evidence to show that the rate charged the Journal Company was
unreasonably low. There was no evidence to show what difference in
rates was demanded or justified by the exigencies of the
differences in conditions of service. We do not think that the
enforcement of contracts deliberately entered into should be put to
the hazard of a mere conjecture by a jury, without evidence upon
which to base its verdict. How can it be said that a jury acts upon
the evidence and reaches a verdict solely upon consideration
thereof when, having established a difference in rates and a
difference in conditions, without anything to show how one
difference affects the other, or to what extent, it is permitted to
measure one against the other, and to say that to the extent of one
dollar or to the extent of one thousand dollars the difference in
rates was disproportionate to the difference in conditions? It may
be said that it would be difficult to produce evidence to show to
what extent such differences in conditions reasonably affect rates.
This may be true, but the answer is that, whatever may be the
difficulties of the proof, a verdict must be based upon the proof,
and a verdict must be founded upon evidence, and not upon the
conjecture of the jury or its
Page 181 U. S. 97
general judgment as to what is fair, without evidence whereon to
found such judgment."
Under this construction of the law, the first judgment was
reversed, and the second trial proceeded upon the lines thus laid
down by the supreme court. On that trial, the court charged:
"You are instructed that not every discrimination in rates
charged by a telegraph company is unjust. In order to constitute an
unjust discrimination, there must be a difference in rates under
substantially similar conditions as to service; the rate charged
must be a reasonable rate; under like conditions, it must render
its services to all patrons on equal terms; it must not so
discriminate in its rates to different patrons as to give one an
undue preference over another."
"It is not an undue preference to make one patron a less rate
than another where exist differences in conditions affecting the
expense or difficulty in performing the services which fairly
justify the difference in rates, and where it is shown that a
difference in rate exists, but there is also a substantial
difference in conditions affecting the difficulty or expense of
performing the service, no cause of action arises without evidence
to show that the difference in rates is disproportionate to the
difference in conditions."
"In this action there is shown to exist not only, on the one
hand, a difference in the rates charged to the patrons of the
telegraph company, the Call Publishing Company, and the State
Journal Company, but, on the other hand, also a difference in the
conditions under which the telegraph services were rendered to the
two companies, and the question that you have particularly to
direct your attention to is how far this difference in condition
justified the difference in rates charged -- to what extent, if
any, the difference in rates charged the rival companies was
disproportioned to the difference in conditions under which the
services were rendered. If you find such disproportions to have
existed, and that, by reason thereof, the amount charged the
plaintiff was in excess of what a reasonable rate would be under
the circumstances, then you are to find, if facts have been
presented to you by which you can find,
Page 181 U. S. 98
the amount of such excess as the amount which the plaintiff
would be entitled to recover."
"The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to show by a
preponderance of the evidence the existence of the discrimination
claimed by it; also that the differences in conditions shown are
disproportionate to the difference in charges made, as well as all
the other material allegations of its petition."
"You should approach this case not in an attitude as if you were
charged with the duty of determining rates for the telegraph
company. Its stock is the property of private individuals, who have
elected officials for that purpose. They are there to manage the
affairs of their corporation in their own way, so long as what they
do is within reason. Courts of law are maintained to correct
abuses, and it is only after the plaintiff has convinced you that
the telegraph company has abused its privileges that the court will
interfere. The telegraph company is a common carrier, and is said
to exercise
quasi-public functions. On the other hand, the
Call Publishing Company has certain legal rights. It embarks in an
enterprise in the City of Lincoln. It has for a competitor the
State Journal Company, and perhaps others. In its race for success
it ought not to be unfairly handicapped. For the purpose of getting
the news both it and the Journal use the Associated Press
dispatches. In fixing its charges to these two competing companies
for these dispatches, it is the duty of the telegraph company not
to unjustly discriminate in favor of either, as explained to you in
these instructions; and, as before stated to you, if the plaintiff
has been able to convince you that the defendant had so
discriminated, then the telegraph company would be required to
answer to the plaintiff in whatever damages the plaintiff has
satisfied you he has suffered."
"In arriving at your verdict, you should consider whatever
evidence there is going to show charges made by the telegraph
company to other persons or in other places for like services under
like conditions; the increased cost of operating plant occasioned
by increased work, if any; the difference of volume of business
between the telegraph company's day and night work, as it would be
a reasonable discrimination for the company
Page 181 U. S. 99
to make this difference the basis for a difference in charges;
the difference in charges between day and night services generally,
as shown by the evidence; also the difference in the character of
the night and day work; the time required to perform it, as shown
by the evidence; the charges made by the company for other services
unless made under circumstances and conditions different from those
under consideration, so as not to furnish a fair criterion as to
charges; the general operating expenses of the company as affected
by rates charged, as well as all other facts before you which may
aid you in arriving at a conclusion. However, this is to be
understood: that, for the plaintiff to recover, it must show the
discrimination; that the discrimination was unjust, as explained in
these instructions; and, further, you must be able from the
evidence furnished you to measure the damages, if any, sustained by
the plaintiff. You are not to fix the damages in any haphazard
manner, nor by mere speculation, but by reasons sustained by the
evidence and showing in a reasonable way the amount thereof."
"The jury are instructed that the defendant telegraph company is
not presumed to have unjustly discriminated against any of its
patrons and in favor of certain other of its patrons, but, on the
contrary, it is presumed to have properly and justly established
its rates according to the various kinds of service it may be
called upon to render, considering its duty to the public and to
its stockholders."
And it was under these instructions that the jury returned a
verdict for the plaintiff. The case therefore was not submitted to
the jury upon the alleged efficacy of the Nebraska statute in
respect to discriminations, but upon the propositions, distinctly
stated, that where there is dissimilarity in the services rendered,
a difference in charges is proper, and that no recovery can be had
unless it is shown not merely that there is a difference in the
charges, but that that difference is so great as, under dissimilar
conditions of service, to show an unjust discrimination, and that
the recovery must be limited to the amount of the unreasonable
discrimination.
No one can doubt the inherent justice of the rules thus laid
down. Common carriers, whether engaged in interstate commerce
Page 181 U. S. 100
or in that wholly within the state, are performing a public
service. They are endowed by the state with some of its sovereign
powers, such as the right of eminent domain, and so endowed by
reason of the public service they render. As a consequence of this,
all individuals have equal rights both in respect to service and
charges. Of course, such equality of right does not prevent
differences in the modes and kinds of service and different charges
based thereon. There is no cast iron line of uniformity which
prevents a charge from being above or below a particular sum or
requires that the service shall be exactly along the same lines.
But that principle of equality does forbid any difference in charge
which is not based upon difference in service, and, even when based
upon difference of service, must have some reasonable relation to
the amount of difference, and cannot be so great as to produce an
unjust discrimination. To affirm that a condition of things exists
under which common carriers anywhere in the country, engaged in any
form of transportation, are relieved from the burdens of these
obligations is a proposition which, to say the least, is startling.
And yet, as we have seen, that is precisely the contention of the
telegraph company. It contends that there is no federal common law,
and that such has been the ruling of this Court; there was no
federal statute law at the time applicable to this case, and, as
the matter is interstate commerce, wholly removed from state
jurisdiction, the conclusion is reached that there is no
controlling law, and the question of rates is left entirely to the
judgment or whim of the telegraph company.
This Court has often held that the full control over interstate
commerce is vested in Congress, and that it cannot be regulated by
the states. It has also held that the inaction of Congress is
indicative of its intention that such interstate commerce shall be
free, and many cases are cited by counsel for the telegraph company
in which these propositions have been announced. Reference is also
made to opinions in which it has been stated that there is no
federal common law different and distinct from the common law
existing in the several states. Thus, in
Smith v. Alabama,
124 U. S. 465, it
was said by Mr. Justice Matthews, speaking for the Court:
Page 181 U. S. 101
"There is no common law of the United States in the sense of a
national customary law distinct from the common law of England as
adopted by the several states, each for itself, applied as its
local law, and subject to such alteration as may be provided by its
own statutes.
Wheaton v. Peters, 8 Pet.
591. A determination in a given case of what that law is may be
different in a court of the United States from that which prevails
in the judicial tribunals of a particular state. This arises from
the circumstance that the courts of the United States, in cases
within their jurisdiction where they are called upon to administer
the law of the state in which they sit, or by which the transaction
is governed, exercise an independent, though concurrent,
jurisdiction, and are required to ascertain and declare the law
according to their own judgment. This is illustrated by the case of
Railroad
Co. v. Lockwood, 17 Wall. 357, where the common law
prevailing in the State of New York in reference to the liability
of common carriers for negligence received a different
interpretation from that placed upon it by the judicial tribunals
of the state; but the law as applied is nonetheless the law of that
state."
P.
84 U. S.
478.
Properly understood, no exceptions can be taken to declarations
of this kind. There is no body of federal common law separate and
distinct from the common law existing in the several states in the
sense that there is a body of statute law enacted by Congress
separate and distinct from the body of statute law enacted by the
several states. But it is an entirely different thing to hold that
there is no common law in force generally throughout the United
States, and that the countless multitude of interstate commercial
transactions are subject to no rules and burdened by no
restrictions other than those expressed in the statutes of
Congress.
What is the common law? According to Kent:
"The common law includes those principles, usages, and rules of
action applicable to the government and security of person and
property which do not rest for their authority upon any express and
positive declaration of the will of the legislature."
1 Kent 471. As Blackstone says:
"Whence it is that, in our law, the goodness of a custom depends
upon its having been used time
Page 181 U. S. 102
out of mind, or, in the solemnity of our legal phrase, time
whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. This it is
that gives it its weight and authority, and of this nature are the
maxims and customs which compose the common law, or
lex non
scripta, of this Kingdom. This unwritten, or common, law is
properly distinguishable into three kinds: 1. General customs;
which are the universal rule of the whole Kingdom, and form the
common law, in its stricter and more usual signification."
1 Blackstone 67. In Black's Law Dictionary, page 232, it is thus
defined:
"As distinguished from law created by the enactment of
legislatures, the common law comprises the body of those principles
and rules of action relating to the government and security of
persons and property, which derive their authority solely from
usages and customs of immemorial antiquity, or from the judgments
and decrees of the courts recognizing, affirming, and enforcing
such usages and customs, and, in this sense, particularly the
ancient unwritten law of England."
Can it be that the great multitude of interstate commercial
transactions are freed from the burdens created by the common law,
as so defined, and are subject to no rule except that to be found
in the statutes of Congress? We are clearly of opinion that this
cannot be so, and that the principles of the common law are
operative upon all interstate commercial transactions except so far
as they are modified by congressional enactment.
But this question is not a new one in this Court. In
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad, 145 U. S. 263,
145 U. S. 275,
a case which involved interstate commerce, it was said by MR.
JUSTICE BROWN, speaking for the Court:
"Prior to the enactment of the Act of February 4, 1887, to
regulate commerce, commonly known as the Interstate Commerce Act,
24 Stat. 379, c. 104, railway traffic in this country was regulated
by the principles of the common law applicable to common
carriers."
In
Bank of Kentucky v. Adams Express Co. and
Planters' Bank v. Adams Express Co., 93 U. S.
174,
93 U. S. 177,
the express companies received at New Orleans certain packages for
delivery at Louisville. These were interstate shipments. In the
course of transit,
Page 181 U. S. 103
the packages were destroyed by fire, and actions were brought to
recover the value thereof. The companies defended on the ground of
an exemption from liability created by the contracts under which
they transported the packages. Mr. Justice Strong, delivering the
opinion of the Court, after describing the business in which the
companies were engaged, said:
"Such being the business and occupation of the defendants, they
are to be regarded as common carriers, and, in the absence of
stipulations to the contrary, subject to all the legal
responsibilities of such carriers."
And then proceeded to show that they could not avail themselves
of the exemption claimed by virtue of the clauses in the contract.
The whole argument of the opinion proceeds upon the assumption that
the common law rule in respect to common carriers controlled.
Reference may also be made to the elaborate opinion of District
Judge Shiras, holding the Circuit Court in the Northern District of
Iowa, in
Murray v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway, 62
F. 24, in which is collated a number of extracts from opinions of
this Court, all tending to show the recognition of a general common
law existing throughout the United States, not, it is true, as a
body of law distinct from the common law enforced in the states,
but as containing the general rules and principles by which all
transactions are controlled, except so far as those rules and
principles are set aside by express statute. It would serve no good
purpose to here repeat those quotations; it is enough to refer to
the opinion in which they are collated.
It is further insisted that, even if there be a law which
controls, there is no evidence of discrimination such as would
entitle the plaintiff to the verdict which it obtained. But there
was testimony tending to show the conditions under which the
services were rendered to the two publishing companies, and it was
a question of fact whether, upon the differences thus shown, there
was an unjust discrimination. And questions of fact, as has been
repeatedly held, when once settled in the courts of a state, are
not subject to review in this Court.
Dower v. Richards,
151 U. S. 658;
Egan v. Hart, 165 U. S. 188;
Chicago, Burlington &c. Railroad v. Chicago,
166 U. S. 226,
166 U. S. 242;
Hedrick
Page 181 U. S. 104
v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad,
167 U. S. 673,
167 U. S. 677;
Gardner v. Bonestell, 180 U. S. 362.
These are the only questions of a federal nature which are
presented by the record, and, finding no error in them, the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Nebraska is
Affirmed.