This record requires the court to determine whether the court
below rightly refused to enforce an order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission by which it was found that an alleged terminal
charge, made by the defendants in error, for the delivery of
livestock to the stockyards in Chicago, was unjust and
unreasonable, and hence a violation of the Act to Regulate
Commerce.
As the right of the defendant carriers to divide their rates was
conceded by the Commission, and upheld, no contention on this
subject arises.
The through rate existing prior to June 1, 1894, is presumed to
have provided compensation for services in making delivery at the
stockyards.
The proposed conclusion that the rates were unjust and
unreasonable cannot be sustained.
The decree of the circuit court of appeals was right, and must
be affirmed, but nothing therein is to be construed as preventing
that body from commencing proceedings to correct unreasonableness
in the rates as to territory to which the reduction did not
apply.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This record requires us to determine whether the court below
rightly refused to enforce an order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission by which it was found that an alleged terminal charge
made by the defendants in error for the delivery of livestock to
the stockyards in Chicago was unjust and unreasonable,
Page 186 U. S. 321
and hence violative of the Act to Regulate Commerce. To avoid
the confusion which must be engendered by considering a number of
irrelevant issues, and to reach the single question to which the
controversy is reducible, it is essential to state the facts, which
are uncontroverted, concerning the making of the charge in
question, and to bear in mind the results of a controversy relating
to such exaction, which arose when it was first imposed by the
railroad road companies.
Prior to 1865, there were four different places in the City of
Chicago at which livestock shipped to that city was delivered and
marketed. The railroads by which such livestock was brought into
Chicago were accustomed to deliver at any one of these four points
as directed by the shipper, and no distinct terminal charge was
made, the charge, if any, for the terminal services being embraced
in the through rate exacted for carriage from the point of shipment
to the place of delivery. In 1865, a corporation was formed called
the Union Stock Yards and Transit Company, which will be hereafter
referred to as the stockyards company. Under its charter, this
corporation was given the right to construct the necessary
buildings and conveniences for the receipt, keeping, and marketing
of livestock. The corporation was given power to construct tracks
connecting its facilities with the different lines of railway
entering Chicago, and it was provided that, when such tracks were
constructed, the stockyards company might engage in the business of
transporting stock and other freight over these tracks on its own
account, or it might lease the privilege to do so upon such terms
as might be deemed best. The facilities and the tracks were
constructed, and it consequently came to pass that the general
market for livestock in Chicago was transferred from the places at
which such business had been previously carried on to the
establishment of the stockyards company. Leaving aside all question
of charges on freight other than livestock, from the incipiency of
the opening of the stockyards in 1865 down to June, 1894, the
railroads bringing in livestock to Chicago were accustomed to use
the tracks of the stockyards company for the purpose of delivering
carloads of cattle, and for the use of these tracks by the various
companies for the
Page 186 U. S. 322
purpose above stated, no charge for trackage or otherwise was
made against the railroads by the stockyards company except a small
sum for the unloading of the cattle. During these thirty years, the
railroads did not divide their rates by separately charging for
carriage from the point of shipment to Chicago and for terminal
services rendered at Chicago, but asked one rate from the place of
shipment to delivery at the stockyards.
In June, 1894, the stockyards company imposed a trackage charge
for carrying in carloads of cattle to the stockyards and in
bringing the empty cars out. The railroads therefore became subject
to an additional burden, the amount of which depended upon the
distance which each road was obliged to carry its carloads of stock
in going in and coming out over the tracks belonging to the
stockyards company. The situation of the various roads was such
that no one of them, in consequence of this new exaction, paid less
than 80 cents per car, that is, 40 cents each way, and none paid
more than $1.50, that is, 75 cents each way. The railroad officials
thereupon entered into an agreement that each road would impose a
terminal charge of $2 upon each car of cattle taken into the
stockyards. A joint circular was issued on behalf of the railroads
informing shippers on the subject, the circular being as
follows:
"On and after June the 1st, 1894, a terminal charge of $2 per
car will be made in addition to the Chicago rates as shown in the
tariffs of the Western Freight Association on livestock and other
freight received from or delivered to the stockyards or industries
located on the tracks of the Union Stock Yards Railway, the Indiana
Line Railway, and the Northern Indiana Railroad."
The provisions of this circular were, besides, separately
reiterated by the various railroads concerned in the agreement, and
in their posted tariffs, as in those filed with the Interstate
Commerce Commission, a memorandum was made showing the additional
charge substantially in the form above stated. In other words,
because the stockyards company imposed on the railroads a charge
for the use of its tracks, varying between a minimum of 80 cents
per car of cattle to a maximum of $1.50 per
Page 186 U. S. 323
car, the railroads immediately exacted a terminal charge on each
car of $2.
One of the roads which imposed this terminal charge was the
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe. It was in the hands of a receiver
appointed by the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Northern District of Illinois. Keenan, a shipper, who carried on
his business at the stockyards, refused to pay the added charge,
and the receiver consequently declined to deliver to him a
consignment of cattle. Keenan thereupon petitioned the court to
instruct its receiver to make delivery of the cattle without the
payment of the charge in question. Several persons interested in
the receipt of cattle at the stockyards intervened, and prayed the
court to make an order forbidding the receiver from exacting the
additional $2. The circuit court granted the relief prayed for. It
held that it had been settled in
Covington Stock Yards Co. v.
Keith, 139 U. S. 128,
that a carrier could not lawfully divide his charge so as to
separate the sum to be paid for terminal services from that exacted
for the through carriage, unless the terminal services embraced
some character of service not by operation of law included in the
contract of carriage. 64 F. 992.
The case was taken to the circuit court of appeals, where the
decree of the circuit court was reversed. That court thought that
the circuit court had misapplied the case of
Covington Stock
Yards Co. v. Keith, and, interpreting that case, held that it
was not authority for the proposition that a carrier in a case like
the one before the court could not divide its rate so as to
separate the terminal charge from that for carriage from the point
of shipment to the place of delivery. The court held that it was
disclosed by the record that Keenan was engaged in business at the
stockyards, that the cattle shipped to him were intended for
delivery there, and hence the contract contemplated such delivery
beyond the rails of the final carrier; that it was therefore
immaterial whether such carrier had facilities of its own for
delivering cattle at any other place than the stockyards, because
even if such other facilities had existed, they would not have been
used under the contract, since it contemplated that the
Page 186 U. S. 324
cattle were to be delivered at the stockyards and at no other
place.
The court concluded its opinion as follows:
"It is not suggested, assuming any such charge as is here in
question to be legal at all, that the amount is unreasonable. The
contention that the carriers must move cattle from their lines of
road over the track of the stockyards company to the stockyards,
without compensation other than as contained in their charges for
hauling to points on their respective lines in Chicago (and this is
what the claim of these appellees amounts to), is invalid."
Some months after the decision of the circuit court of appeals,
the Cattle Raisers' Association of Texas, an organization composed
of owners and raisers of cattle in Kansas, Montana, North and South
Dakota, Texas, and the Indian territory, filed a petition before
the Interstate Commerce Commission against the Fort Worth &
Denver City Railway Company and its receiver, and various other
railroad companies, and against the stockyards company. The
petition, in substance, complained that the terminal charge of $2
per each car of stock carried to the stockyards was unjust and
unreasonable, was a discrimination against Chicago and in favor of
other points to which cattle were shipped from the same territory,
because at such other points no such terminal charge was exacted.
In view of the method of charging adopted by the stockyards company
as to dead freight passing over its lines from the lines of many
railroads entering Chicago, the terminal charge above referred to
was, moreover, alleged to be a discrimination against livestock as
a species of traffic and in favor of dead freight. Subsequently the
Chicago Live Stock Exchange, an association of commission men and
raisers and owners of cattle, intervened and attacked the terminal
rate on substantially the grounds set out in the petition just
referred to. The defendant railways answered. It suffices to say
that the answers asserted that the terminal rate complained of was
just and reasonable, and the discrimination alleged was denied. It
was averred that, for years previous to the imposing of the
terminal rate complained of, the carriers, under their contracts to
carry and deliver cattle
Page 186 U. S. 325
in Chicago, had delivered such cattle to the stockyards without
making any charge therefor, as in effect rate asked for the
carriage and delivery to Chicago of cattle
did not include any
terminal charge whatever, and such service was hence rendered
gratuitously; that, owing to the imposition in 1894, by the
stockyards company, of the charge for trackage the carriers had
exacted the $2 per car, which was only a just and reasonable
equivalent for the cost incurred and service rendered in delivering
the cattle to the stockyards. It was further alleged that, at the
time the terminal charge was imposed, the rate to Chicago for
cattle from the various points referred to in the complaint was
unreasonably low, and the addition of the terminal charge
complained of was, in any event, but a just and reasonable addition
to the through rate. It was besides alleged that such increase had
not only been notified to the public by the circular issued in the
name of the various railroads previously referred to, but had also
been included in the rate sheets of the various railroads filed
with the Interstate Commerce Commission in accordance with law. The
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, moreover, pleaded the
decree rendered in the
Keenan case, and averred in effect
that such decree conclusively established the right to make the
terminal charge in question. The various defendants, moreover,
moved to dismiss the Chicago Live Stock Exchange from the
proceedings for reasons not necessary to be stated.
After hearing, the Commission filed its report. The motion to
dismiss the intervention of the Chicago Live Stock Exchange was
denied. The stockyards company was dismissed from the cause on the
ground that it was not a common carrier subject to the Act to
Regulate Commerce. The facts as found by the Commission concerning
the terminal charge have been in substance given in the previous
statements, and, omitting for the moment reference to a finding of
the Commission as to a reduction made by the carriers in the
through rate after the terminal charge in controversy had been
imposed, the conclusions reached by the Commission are embodied in
the following summary:
First. Although the decree of the circuit court of appeals in
the
Keenan case was held not to constitute
res
judicata
Page 186 U. S. 326
because of a want of identity of the parties concerned in the
Keenan case and those involved in the case before it, the
Commission nevertheless declared that it was its duty to follow and
apply to the case before it the legal principles announced in the
Keenan case. The Commission therefore announced that it
recognized that each and all of the defendant carriers were
entitled to divide their rates by making one separate and distinct
charge for the carriage from the point of shipment to Chicago, and
another separate and distinct charge for terminal services in
Chicago beyond their own lines. This principle, however, the
Commission found not to be decisive of the case before it, since,
even although the right to divide the rate was fully recognized,
the question remained whether the defendant carriers had in fact
divided their rates, and whether the charge complained of was just
and reasonable.
Second. Coming to consider the two questions just stated, the
Commission held that the action of the carriers in giving notice to
the public of the imposition of the $2 terminal charge and the
filing of the rate sheets with the Commission, as required by law,
did not constitute a division of the rates so as to separate the
charge for carriage to Chicago from the charge for terminal
services at that point, but amounted simply to a retention of the
aggregated through rate existing before the $2 terminal charge was
asked, and the adding of this $2 charge to the previous rate. It
was found as a matter of fact that there was no evidence tending to
show that the previous through rate was either unreasonably high or
unreasonably low, and therefore the presumption was that the
through rate prevailing prior to the imposition of the $2 charge
was just and reasonable.
Third. Considering the cost of delivery to the stockyards over
the rails of the stockyards company, including the sum paid for
trackage and all other expenses, the Commission found, as a matter
of fact, that $2 per car would be just and reasonable. A reference
to this subject, found in the report of the Commission, is
excerpted in the margin. [
Footnote
1] To remove all possible
Page 186 U. S. 327
doubt as to the fact, the Commission, in its opinion, on a
rehearing, to which opinion we shall hereafter advert, said:
"The defendants were proceeding to show by testimony in each
case that the actual cost to them of transporting these carloads of
livestock, including the trackage charge and the cost of unloading,
was equal to or in excess of $2. Thereupon it was suggested by the
Commission, admitted by the intervener, and at first partly
admitted by the complainant, that the cost of service, including
the trackage charge and the cost of unloading, was sufficient to
justify the imposition of this terminal charge, provided,
under
the circumstances of the case, it could properly be imposed.
We understand that the defendants are given the full benefit of
this in the report and opinion already filed. To remove all doubt
upon that subject, however, if it is not clearly found, we now find
that, looking entirely to the cost of service, and including as a
part of that cost the trackage charge paid the Union Stock Yards
and Transit Company and the unloading charge paid that same
company, the amount of this terminal, if, under the circumstances
of this case, it is proper to impose the charge, is reasonable.
Page 186 U. S. 328
If any modification of the present findings is necessary, they
are hereby modified to that extent."
The fact, however, that the terminal charge of $2 was
intrinsically just and reasonable was held by the Commission not to
show that such charge was just and reasonable "under the
circumstances of the case," for the following reasons: as for many
years the carriers had delivered to the stockyards for the through
rate prevailing from the point of shipment to the point of
delivery, they could not be assumed to have gratuitously performed
the service of delivery. It was therefore held that pay for such
service must be presumed to have been embraced in the through rate.
The through and reasonable rate previously existing having been
thus found to have embraced the cost of the terminal service, the
Commission decided that it was unjust and unreasonable to add to
the charge for terminal services, thus previously exacted, the
arbitrary sum of $2 per car, because the stockyards company had
imposed for the first time, in 1894, an average charge of $1 per
car. In other words, the $2 terminal charge, although it was
intrinsically reasonable when considered alone, became unreasonable
because it was an addition to the terminal charge necessarily
embraced in the pay for terminal services which had been included
in the through rate existing for so many years.
The opinion of the Commission leaves no room for doubt that such
were its views on the subject. Thus, stating the question which
required to be decided, it was said:
"Whether they (the carriers) ought to make the charge they do,
or any charge, or whether the charge for delivery is already fairly
included in the rate, is a proposition of fact for
consideration."
Again, referring to the matter, the Commission said:
"We do not believe that these carriers should be allowed to add
an arbitrary charge to the Chicago rate for doing a thing which
they for thirty years have said was included in that rate, and
which we believe, considering the manner in which rates are made up
and in which this rate has been made up, ought to be included in
the rate,"
and the following excerpts make the same thought more clearly
manifest:
"We think and find that the Chicago rate on May 31, 1894,
included, as it had included for the last
Page 186 U. S. 329
thirty years, a delivery and unloading of the stock at the Union
Stock Yards, and that rate, upon the record in this case, was a
just and reasonable one."
Further, in calling attention to the fact that the $2 terminal
charge for the service of delivery at the stockyards would be just
and reasonable "if that service was performed by some independent
agency," the Commission pointed out that the charge was not just
and reasonable when made by the defendants, "because they were
already receiving compensation for this service, they ought not to
charge for it the second time." Further, it was said: "It is
unreasonable to impose this terminal charge for the reason that the
rate to Chicago already includes that charge," and the conclusion
is pointedly summed up by the observation: "Surely the fact that
the railroad company is already receiving pay for this service is
good ground for holding that a second charge is unreasonable."
The finding of the Commission was that the $2 additional
terminal charge was unjust and unreasonable insofar as that charge
exceeded the sum which the carriers were actually obliged to pay in
consequence of the trackage charge imposed by the stockyards
company. In other words, the Commission held that the average sum
which the defendants were obliged to pay for the trackage charge
was $1, and that this sum might be added without causing the
existing rate to become unreasonable.
A reargument of the case was permitted. The Commission adhered
to its original conclusions, and in addition held that, as the
terminal charge violated the statute because it was unreasonable,
it therefore operated a discrimination against Chicago, and hence
was repugnant to the Act to Regulate Commerce in this additional
respect. The reasons by which the Commission was controlled were
reiterated in an opinion which so clearly expresses the views
entertained by it, which we have previously summarized, that an
extract from the report of the Commission on the rehearing is
excerpted in the margin. [
Footnote
2]
Page 186 U. S. 330
An order was issued by the Commission to carry out its
conclusions. In substance, the order commanded the defendants
Page 186 U. S. 331
whose lines of railway entered the City of Chicago to desist, on
and before a named date, from charging, demanding, collecting,
Page 186 U. S. 332
or receiving, in addition to their regular published
transportation charges, the sum of $2 per carload of livestock as
compensation for terminal services rendered in making delivery
thereof at the yards of the Union Stock Yards and Transit Company
in the City of Chicago. Embodied in the order was the following
recommendation:
"That said defendants be, and they severally are, hereby
recommended not to charge, demand, collect, or receive in excess of
$1 per carload as compensation for terminal or switching services
rendered in the delivery of livestock at the yards of the Union
Stock Yards and Transit Company in said City of Chicago, which said
sum of $1 per carload as compensation for such terminal or
switching services is found and declared in and by said report and
opinion to be just, reasonable, and lawful."
In its opinion on the rehearing, the Commission pointed out the
reasons which caused it to recommend that each railroad exact only
$1 for the additional terminal charge, instead of the actual sum
which the railroads were obliged to disburse for the trackage
charge. The passage from the opinion referring to this subject is
excerpted in the margin. [
Footnote
3]
It is to be observed that the Commission, in the course of its
opinion, expressly recognized the right of the defendant
carriers
Page 186 U. S. 333
to increase their rates if they were unreasonably low. It is
also to be borne in mind that, by necessary implication arising
from the opinion of the Commission, it is also clear that that body
likewise recognized the right of the defendant carriers under the
circumstances of the particular case to segregate their rates by
separating the charge made for carriage from the point of shipment
to Chicago from the terminal services at that point.
The defendants refusing to comply with the order of the
Commission, that body filed a petition in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Northern District of Illinois to compel
compliance. The defendants annexed and made part of their answers
the responses which they had filed in the proceedings before the
Commission. All the answers in effect averred the reasonableness of
the charge of $2, denied the discrimination, and expressly alleged
that the charge in question constituted a separate terminal charge,
embracing compensation for all the terminal services, and alleged
that the effect of the filing of the rate sheets with the
Interstate Commerce Commission and the notice given to the public
concerning the charge of $2 had been to segregate the rates so as
to distinguish the entire terminal charge from the through rate. It
was, moreover, expressly averred that, at the time the terminal
charge was imposed, the rates to Chicago on cattle from the points
covered by the proceedings before the Interstate Commerce
Commission were unreasonably low, and, in view of the outlay
Page 186 U. S. 334
occasioned at Chicago in the rendering of the terminal services,
the terminal charge of $2 was in any event a just and reasonable
increase of the then existing unreasonably low rate.
Before the circuit court, the Commission contented itself with
introducing in evidence certified copies of the proceedings had
before it, other than the evidence taken by the Commission, and
with offering such evidence as competent proof in the case.
Although, on objection, the court excluded the evidence in
question, it was subsequently stipulated that the transcript
thereof need not be incorporated in the certificate of evidence
signed by the district judge, and that, notwithstanding the
objections interposed, the transcript might be produced to and
inspected by the circuit court of appeals for any proper purpose in
case such inspection was deemed allowable. The evidence introduced
on behalf of the railroad companies consisted only of the circulars
and tariff sheets which had been issued and filed with the
Commission, promulgating the charge in question. After hearing, the
circuit court found that such charge was just and reasonable, and
entered a decree dismissing the petition. 98 F. 173. On appeal, the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit affirmed the
decree of the circuit court. 103 F. 249.
The court held, as to the right of the carrier to make a
terminal charge, under the circumstances disclosed by the record,
that the case was controlled by the ruling of the circuit court of
appeals in the case to which we have previously referred,
Walker v. Keenan, 73 F. 755, and the reasoning in that
case was expressly approved. Coming to consider the question of the
reasonableness of the terminal charge, the court held, as that
rate, abstractly considered, was just and reasonable, it was in the
concrete also just and reasonable, because the through rate which
had prevailed for thirty years, and under which the carriers had
delivered to the stockyards, embraced no charge for terminal
services, such service having been performed during all the years
in question gratuitously. Besides, the court considered that the
filing of the schedules in 1894 with a memorandum as to the
terminal charge of $2 had operated the segregation of the two
rates. The views of the court
Page 186 U. S. 335
on this subject were thus stated in its opinion:
"Prior to June 1, 1894, the railway companies seem to have
assumed this burden themselves, but at this time, a trackage was
imposed by the stockyards of from 40 to 75 cents each way upon
every car going and returning from the tracks of the railway
company to the stockyards. It is insisted that, as this is the only
extra expense then occasioned, any charge beyond that was
unreasonable and improper. I do not think that necessarily follows.
While the imposition of this trackage charge by the Union Stock
Yards was doubtless the immediate occasion for a reformation of its
tariff, the railway companies were then at liberty to adopt a new
schedule with relation to these terminal facilities, and charge
what they actually cost them."
We are thus brought to consider the issue involved -- that is,
the reasonableness of the rate.
As the right of the defendant carriers to divide their rates and
thus to make a distinct charge from the point of shipment to
Chicago and a separate terminal charge for delivery to the
stockyards, a point beyond the lines of the respective carriers,
was conceded by the Commission and was upheld by the circuit court
of appeals, no contention on this subject arises. If, despite this
concurrence of opinion, controversy was presented on the subject,
we see no reason to doubt, under the facts of this case, the
correctness of the rule as to the right to divide the rate,
admitted by the Commission and announced by the court below. This
is especially the case in view of the sixth section of the Act to
Regulate Commerce, wherein it is provided that the schedules of
rates to be filed by carriers shall
"state separately the terminal charges and any rules or
regulations which in anywise change, affect, or determine any part
or the aggregate of such aforesaid rates and fares and
charges."
Whether the rule which we approve as applied to the facts in
this case would be applicable to terminal services by a carrier on
his own line which he was obliged to perform as a necessary
incident of his contract to carry, and the performance of which was
demanded of him by the shipper, is a question which does not arise
on this record, and as to which we are therefore called upon to
express no opinion.
Page 186 U. S. 336
We come, then, to consider whether there was a separation of the
charge for carriage and the charge for the terminal services, and
whether the rate -- separated or aggregated, as may be found to be
the case -- was just and reasonable. To determine these questions,
it is essential to fix the situation prior to June, 1894, at which
time the increased terminal charge was first imposed. Undoubtedly,
prior to that date, the published rate sheets of the defendants
embraced only a rate from the point of shipment to Chicago, the
place of delivery. There is room, even, for no pretense that there
was in such schedules a setting apart of the terminal charge from
the through rate. There is also no room for question that, during
the many years these rate sheets were in force, the carriers, under
their contracts to carry to Chicago, delivered carloads of cattle
to the stockyards without making any charge other than that which
was specified in the through rate. Under these circumstances, in
the absence of proof, can it be assumed that the carriers were, for
the many years in question, gratuitously performing the terminal
services? That such assumption may not be indulged in results from
the ruling in
Covington Stock Yards v. Keith, 139 U.
S. 128, where it was decided that, as for a through rate
to a given point, the carrier contracted to deliver at that point,
the presumption was that the through rate included adequate
compensation for the services rendered at the point of delivery.
Applying this principle, it results that the through rate existing
prior to June the 1st, 1894, certainly in the absence of proof to
the contrary, must be presumed to have provided in and of itself
compensation for the services rendered in making delivery at the
stockyards. Did the carriers, in June, 1894, when they imposed the
alleged terminal charge of $2, separate in their schedules this
charge from the through rate? That is, did they divide their
charges by setting apart the terminal charge embraced in their
previous through rate so as to segregate it from the through rate,
thus making one distinct terminal charge and another distinct
through rate? The mere inspection of the schedules demonstrates
that such division was not made. This is the convincing result,
since the schedules did not purport to draw out from the previous
through rate the sum of compensation contained therein for
Page 186 U. S. 337
terminal services. On the contrary, the entire previous through
rate was retained, and a memorandum was placed upon the schedules
to the effect that thereafter an additional charge of $2 for
delivery at the stockyards would be exacted. This was a mere
addition to the sum of the terminal charge embraced in the prior
through rate. We think that it cannot be said that to add an
additional amount to a former charge was necessarily to divide such
former charge, without holding that to add one sum to another is
necessarily to divide the other. The Act to Regulate Commerce
exacts that the schedules to be printed and filed by carriers must
plainly state
"the places upon its railroad between which property and
passengers will be carried, and shall contain the classification of
freight in force, and shall also state separately the terminal
charges and any rules or regulations which in anywise change,
affect, or determine any part or the aggregate of such aforesaid
rates and fares and charges."
The purpose of this provision was to compel the schedules to be
so drawn as to plainly inform of their import, was to exact that,
when the rates were changed the change should be so stated as not
to mislead and confuse, all of which would be frustrated if the
schedules relied upon were given the effect which the defendants
now claim for them. And the reasons just given dispose of the
contention that, because it was found that the terminal charge of
$2, abstractly considered, would be just and reasonable, therefore
it should have been held to have been just and reasonable as
applied to the case in hand. This obscures the fact that
compensation for the terminal service was presumptively included in
the through rate existing for so many years, and therefore the $2
did not constitute the terminal rate, but that such rate after the
$2 was imposed consisted of that sum plus the amount of
compensation for the terminal service which had always been
contained in, and which continued to be embraced in, the through
rate.
Under the foregoing conditions, was the imposition by the
railroads of the additional charge of $2 just and reasonable,
measured by the criterion which the Commission adopted -- that is,
"under the circumstances of the case?" It needs no reasoning to
demonstrate that the Commission correctly held that the
Page 186 U. S. 338
mere imposition by the stockyards company of a new burden
averaging $1 per car did not justify an additional charge by the
carriers of $2 per car. It is likewise equally plain that if the
prior rate was just and reasonable, as the Commission found it to
be, that the addition, without reason, of $1 per car, caused the
rate to become unjust and unreasonable to the extent of the $1
extra.
It follows that the order of the Commission was right if its
correctness depends upon the considerations previously stated. But
such is not the case. In the report on the original hearing, the
Commission said:
"If the through rate were what was really aimed at by the
complaint, then all ground of complaint has been removed since the
complaint itself was filed. About October the 1st, 1896, rates on
livestock from points embraced in the territory covered by this
complaint to all western markets, including Chicago, were reduced
five cents per one hundred pounds. This would amount to from ten to
fifteen dollars per car. Therefore, the Texas shipper would
actually deliver his stock in Chicago for from eight to thirteen
dollars per carload cheaper than he could before the $2 rate was
imposed, and all the complaint asks for is the abolishment of that
terminal charge. This charge is imposed by the terminal carriers at
Chicago, and those carriers receive and retain the amount of that
charge. The complaint is that this charge is an unlawful one; that,
no matter what the Chicago rate may be, the addition of this
particular sum to that rate is in violation of the Act to Regulate
Commerce."
In other words, it was held that the rate, which was unjust and
unreasonable solely because of the $1 excess continued to be unjust
and unreasonable after this rate had been reduced by from $10 to
$15. This was based not upon a finding of fact -- as, of course, it
could not have been so based -- but alone on the ruling by the
Commission that it could not consider the reduction in the through
rate, but must confine its attention to the $2 terminal rate, since
that alone was the subject matter of the complaint. But, as we have
previously shown, the commission, in considering the terminal rate,
had expressly found that it was less than the cost of service, and
was therefore
Page 186 U. S. 339
intrinsically just and reasonable, and could only be treated as
unjust and unreasonable by considering "the circumstances of the
case" -- that is, the through rate and the fact that a terminal
charge was included in it which, when added to the $2 charge,
caused the terminal charge as a whole to be unreasonable. Having
therefore decided that the $2 terminal charge could only be held to
be unjust and unreasonable by combining it with the charge embraced
in the through rate, necessarily the through rate was entitled to
be taken into consideration if the previous conclusions of the
Commissioner were well founded. It cannot be in reason said that
the inherent reasonableness of the terminal rate, separately
considered, is irrelevant because its reasonableness is to be
determined by considering the through rate and the terminal charge
contained in it, and yet when the reasonableness of the rate is
demonstrated, by considering the through rate as reduced, it be
then held that the through rate should not be considered. In other
words, two absolutely conflicting propositions cannot at the same
time be adopted. As the finding was that both the terminal charge
of $2 and the through rate as reduced when separately considered
were just and reasonable, and as the further finding was that as a
consequence of the reduction of from ten to fifteen dollars per
car, the rates, considered together, were just and reasonable, it
follows that there can be no possible view of the case by which the
conclusion that the rates were unjust and unreasonable can be
sustained.
These views dispose of the case, but, before concluding, we
advert to a statement made by the Commission in its opinion
delivered on the reargument. The expression referred to is as
follows:
"It is also said that, since the imposition of this terminal
charge, the Chicago rate has been reduced so that the total amount
today, including the terminal charge, is much less than it was in
1894, when the charge was imposed. The case finds that such a
reduction was made about October 1, 1896. The reduction did not,
however, apply to all the territory to which the terminal charge
applies, but only to certain limited portions of that territory,
and the purpose of it was to equalize the rate
Page 186 U. S. 340
from those sections as compared with other sections. There is no
claim that this reduction was made on account of the imposition of
the terminal charge, or that it would not have been made had no
terminal charge been imposed, nor that, if the Chicago rate, June
1, 1894, ought to have carried with it a delivery at the
stockyards, the present rate should not likewise do so."
It is apparent that there is an irreconcilable conflict between
the statement thus made and the facts as recited by the Commission
in its first report, for therein it was declared that the reduction
applied "to livestock from points embraced in the territory covered
by this complaint to all western markets including Chicago. . . ."
The report deduced from this premise of fact the conclusion that,
if the through rate could be considered, "all ground of complaint
has been removed" by the reduction. We find it in reason difficult
to treat the statements made after the reargument as substantive
findings of fact, overthrowing the facts stated in the first
report, for this reason: in the passage which we have already
excerpted from the report of the Commission announced after the
reargument, it will be seen that it is declared that the previous
findings are modified to the extent necessary to make it clearly
appear that the terminal rate of $2, independently considered, had
been found unquestionably to be reasonable, and there is no
expression in the report on the reargument tending to show that it
was the purpose to modify in other particulars the findings as
previously made. The case therefore reduces itself to this: the
finding in the first report is that the reduction applied to the
whole territory and removed all ground of complaint if the through
rate could be considered, whilst the statement in the report after
the reargument is that the reduction in the through rate did not
apply to the whole territory, but was only partial. Aside from this
difficulty, another confronts us. The first finding of the
Commission was that both the through rate and the terminal rate,
separately considered as distinct charges, were in and of
themselves just and reasonable at the time the complaint was filed,
and this is expressly reiterated in the report delivered after the
reargument. Now the passage which we
Page 186 U. S. 341
have just previously excerpted from the report after the
reargument states that the reduction of the through rate was
partial, and applied only to portions of the territory, and that it
was made in order to "equalize the rates from those sections as
compared with other sections." But it is impossible in reason to
accept this conclusion, even if it be treated as a finding of fact,
if the finding made originally and reiterated after the reargument
is to be applied, that is, that the rates when separately
considered were just and reasonable. This is necessarily the case,
since, in consonance with reason, it cannot at the same time be
declared that the rates, separately considered, were just and
reasonable at the time the complaint was filed, and yet it be found
that some of the just and reasonable rates were unequal, and hence
unjust, and required to be changed in order to remove the
inequality, and therefore the unreasonableness, which existed in
them. If, however, the conflicts to which we have referred be put
out of view, and the statement in the report after the reargument,
to which we have adverted, be treated as a substantive finding and
as overthrowing by implication the findings expressly made in the
first report and some of those expressly reiterated in the second
report, we find ourselves nevertheless unable to reverse the court
below and direct the execution of the order entered by the
Commission. That order was general, and operated upon all the
carriers in the whole territory covered by the complaint. But if
the statement on the rehearing which we are considering be taken as
a finding and given,
arguendo, the force previously
stated, then it follows that the rate from the points in the
territory to which the reduction applied were just and reasonable,
and as to those points the order should not have been rendered, and
there is no finding establishing the points to which the reduction
applied which would enable us to separate the reasonable from the
unreasonable rates. It results that the findings do not afford the
basis of even sustaining the order in part. Whether or not, in
making the reduction, the terminal charge entered into the minds of
the carriers is a matter of no concern. The question is was the
rate as reduced just and reasonable?
Being then constrained to the conclusion that the order of
Page 186 U. S. 342
the Commission was not sustained by the facts upon which it was
predicated, we cannot enter into an independent investigation of
the facts, even if it be conceded the record is in a condition to
enable us to do so, in order that new and substantive findings of
fact may be evolved upon which the order of the Commission may be
sustained.
Louisville &c. R. Co. v. Behlmer,
175 U. S. 648,
175 U. S.
675.
It follows that the decree of the circuit court of appeals which
affirmed the decree of the circuit court refusing to command
compliance with the order of the Commission was right, and it must
therefore be affirmed. We think, however, in view of what has been
said and in order to prevent all possible misconception, that it
should be stated that nothing in the decree refusing to execute the
order of the Commission should be construed as preventing that
body, if it deems it best to do so, from hereafter commencing
proceedings to correct any unreasonableness in the rate resulting
from the additional terminal charge as to any territory to which
the reduction referred to in the opinion, if any such there be, did
not apply.
The decree of the court of appeals is therefore affirmed
without prejudice to the right of the Commission to hereafter
proceed in accordance with the reservation expressed in the opinion
just announced.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN took no part in the decision of this
cause.
[
Footnote 1]
The intervener conceded upon the trial, and the complainants did
not seriously question, that the amount of this charge was
reasonable if, under the circumstances, the charge should be
imposed. Before the close of the testimony, the several defendants
were requested by the Commission to furnish statements showing the
actual or estimated expense to them in each case of making delivery
from their several tracks to the Union Stock Yards.
Such statements have been filed, and they make the following
showing:
Illinois Central Railroad, via 75-cent trackage route . $
2.23
Via 40-cent trackage route. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.65
Average . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.94
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad . . . . . . . . .
2.25
Chicago & Alton Railroad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.05
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, via one route. .
2.67
Via other route . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.25
Average . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.46
Atchison, Topeka, Santa Fe Railway. . . . . . . . . . . 2.28
Chicago Great Western Railway (average of
10 cars to train) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.20
Chicago & Northwestern Railway. . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.34
Wabash Railroad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.86
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway. . . . . . . . .
1.65
------
Total via nine lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $20 03
Average. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.22
[
Footnote 2]
"The Commission itself did, however, state upon the hearing at
various times in terms upon which the defendants were justified in
relying, that no question could be successfully made as to the
reasonableness of this charge [the terminal charge in question] in
certain aspects. Just exactly the scope of that intimation can be
understood by referring to the circumstances under which it was
given. The defendants were proceeding to show by testimony in each
case that the actual cost to them of transporting these carloads of
livestock, including the trackage charge and the cost of unloading,
was equal to or in excess of $2. Thereupon it was suggested by the
Commission, admitted by the intervener, and at first partly
admitted by the complainant, that the cost of service, including
the trackage charge and the cost of unloading, was sufficient to
justify the imposition of this terminal charge, provided, under the
circumstances of this case, it could be properly imposed. We
understand that the defendants are given the full benefits of this
in the report and opinion already filed. To remove all doubt upon
that subject, however, if it is not clearly found, we now find
that, looking entirely to the cost of service, and including as a
part of that cost the trackage charge paid the Union Stock Yards
and Transit Company and the unloading charge paid that same
company, the amount of this terminal, if, under the circumstances
of this case, it is proper to impose the charge, is reasonable. If
any modification of the present findings is necessary, they are
hereby modified to that extent. That finding must, however, be
carefully read in connection with the other facts in the case and
the conclusion of the Commission that the imposition of this
terminal charge is reasonable. The defendants say it was admitted
that this charge was reasonable 'provided any charge could be
legally made for the terminal service.' The intimation of the
Commission was, as indicated in the above extract from the record,
'that, if this charge was proper to be imposed, it was a reasonable
charge.' The reason for the conclusion of the Commission is to be
found in the distinction between these two statements. What the
Commission passed upon finally was not whether a terminal charge of
this sort could be legally made -- that had been already determined
by the courts -- but whether this particular charge could be
properly imposed under the circumstances of this case. To avoid
misapprehension, we will restate here the grounds for our decision,
and for that purpose we confine attention to this rate as it
existed on May the 31st and June the 1st, 1894. On May the 31st,
there was in effect a certain rate on livestock from various points
to Chicago, and that rate, upon the record in this case, must be
taken to be a just and reasonable one. The defendants intimate in
their answer that this rate has been forced down until it was too
low, and something was said in the proof looking in the same
direction. Upon the other hand, the complainants started in to
prove that the rate at that time was too high, but, as is found by
the case, both these claims were virtually abandoned. There is
nothing in the record before us to show that the rate was other
than a right one, and we assume that, on May the 31st, the rate in
effect was just and reasonable. Now just what did this livestock
rate to Chicago include? The defendants insisted on the reargument
of this case that it covered the transportation of that livestock
to the point where, on its way to the Union Stock Yards, it left
the tracks of these several defendants, and nothing more. The
complainants insisted that that rate covered a delivery of the
stock at the stockyards. We are unable to see any ground whatever
for the contention of the defendants. As a matter of law, the
undertaking to transport livestock from one place to another
includes a delivery of the stock. Originally livestock brought to
Chicago by these defendants must be delivered at any one of four
different points. This was necessitated by the actual competitive
conditions at that market. The railway companies for the purpose of
avoiding the expense and inconvenience of this kind of delivery
created the present stockyards."
"
* * * *"
"It was entirely at their suggestion, and entirely for their
benefit at the outset. From the time the stockyards were
constructed down to June 1, 1894, the various defendants had, by
arrangement with the stockyards company, the right to use the
tracks of that company for the delivery of this stock at the Union
Stock Yards. By the action of the various carriers that became the
only place in Chicago at which livestock could ordinarily be
delivered. Whenever a carload of livestock was shipped to Chicago,
in the absence of special directions, it was taken to the Union
Stock Yards. This was understood both by the carrier and by the
shipper. No defendant had any facilities previous to June 1 for
delivering livestock in any quantity at any other point than at the
Union Stock Yards. Now, in view of the legal liability resting upon
the carrier to make a delivery somewhere, in view of the fact that
this delivery must be made at the stockyards, and was habitually
made there, it seems impossible that the defendants, in making this
rate from the point of shipment to Chicago, did not include in that
rate, and contemplate as a part of the service covered by that
rate, a delivery at the Union Stock Yards. It is absurd to say that
the Chicago rate paid for the transportation of that stock up to
some switch in the field, or in the city where there was no
facility for a delivery, and that the transportation beyond that
point was a gratuity. We think and find that the Chicago rate on
May 31, 1894, included, as it had included for the last thirty
years, a delivery and unloading of the stock at the Union Stock
Yards, and that rate, upon the record in this case, was a just and
reasonable one."
"June 1, 1894, these defendants, by concerted agreement among
themselves, increased this rate to $2.00 per car. If the rate on
May 31 was a just and reasonable one, the rate on June 1 was an
unjust and unreasonable one unless some new condition justified the
imposition of that additional charge. We have found that, to the
extent of $1.00 a new condition did justify the additional charge,
for the reason that then, for the first time, the stockyards
company exacted this trackage charge. In other words, the cost of
service to the defendants was increased by just $1.00 on that day.
It must follow, therefore, as a necessary conclusion that of the
increase which the defendants made, $1.00 was justifiable and $1.00
was unjustifiable. This is not, however, because $2.00 is an
unreasonable charge for transporting a car to the stockyards, if
that service was performed by some independent agency, but because,
since the defendants were already receiving compensation for this
service, they ought not to charge for it the second time. Of this
proposition we have no doubt. Upon the assumption that the rate May
31 was a just one, we regard the imposition of anything above what
the defendants were then compelled for the first time to pay as an
unwarranted exaction and a violation of the first section of the
Act to Regulate Commerce, if it is possible to violate that
section."
[
Footnote 3]
"The original opinion intimates that the only logical conclusion
from the reasoning there stated would be to allow each carrier to
retain whatever that particular carrier is obliged to pay the Union
Stock Yards and Transit Company by way of this trackage charge.
That would, however, result in compelling all companies to retain
the smallest amount paid, since the terminal by all routes must be
the same. We understood that, in allowing $1 to be retained, we
were virtually giving to the carriers 20 cents upon each car, but
in view of the fact that many of the defendants were compelled to
pay $1.50 by way of trackage charge, this seemed, on the whole,
reasonable. Upon the reargument, the defendants were inquired of
whether they desired a modification of this order so that each one
be allowed to retain the amount actually paid, and, without
exception, they stated that they did not ask such a modification.
Attention is called to this fact at this time for the purpose of
showing that what is apparently an inconsistency in the conclusion
of the Commission is really in favor of the defendants, and that
the defendants do not for that reason desire to have that
inconsistency removed."