A provision in the constitution of a state that a carrier must
deliver its cars to connecting carrier without providing adequate
protection for their return, or compensation for their use, amounts
to a taking of property without due process of law within the
meaning of the Fourteenth
Page 212 U. S. 133
Amendment, and so held as to § 213, 214 of the Constitution
of Kentucky.
The law must save the rights of parties, and not leave them to
the discretion of the courts as such.
Where a general provision in the constitution of a state is void
as taking property without due process or compensation, and
compensation has not been provided by statute, the defect cannot be
cured by the courts' inserting provisions for compensation in
judgments under such constitutional provision.
The duty of a carrier to accept goods tendered at its station
does not require it to accept cars offered by competing roads at
arbitrary points near its terminus for the purpose of using its
terminal station. A law requiring the carrier so to do is
unconstitutional as taking property without due process of law.
7 S.W. 778 reversed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 212 U. S. 138
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a proceeding in equity prosecuted in the courts of
Kentucky, similar in the main to one in the United States courts
between the same parties, that was decided by the circuit court of
appeals in 118 F. 113 and by this Court in
192 U. S. 192 U.S.
568. The latter was brought by the Central Stock Yards Company, a
Delaware corporation, against the railroad company, a Kentucky
corporation, to compel it to receive livestock tendered to it
outside the State of Kentucky for the Central Stock Yards station,
and to deliver the same at a point of physical connection between
its road and the Southern Railway, for ultimate delivery to or at
the Central Stock Yards. The Central Stock Yards station is at the
Central Stock Yards, just outside the boundary line of Louisville,
Kentucky, on the Southern Railway Company's line, and, by agreement
between the two companies, the Central Stock Yards were the
livestock depot for the purpose of handling livestock to and from
Louisville on the Southern Railway. The Louisville & Nashville
Railroad, by a similar arrangement, had made the Bourbon Stock
Yards its
Page 212 U. S. 139
livestock depot for Louisville, and declined to receive
livestock billed to the Central Stock Yards, or to deliver
livestock destined to Louisville elsewhere than at the Bourbon
Yards. There were physical connections between the Louisville &
Nashville and the Southern tracks at a point between the two
stockyards which was passed by the greater portion of the livestock
carried by the Louisville & Nashville Company, and at another
point that would be more convenient for delivery, a little further
to the northward. In order to deliver as prayed, the Louisville
& Nashville would have been compelled either to build chutes or
to hand over its cars to the Southern Railway. The right was
claimed under the Interstate Commerce Act of February 4, 1887, c.
104, § 3, 24 Stat. 379, and the Constitution of Kentucky,
especially § 213. The circuit court of appeals and this Court
agreed that the right was not conferred by the former act. As to
the Constitution of Kentucky, the circuit court of appeals held
that, if it could be given any such construction as to make it
purport to give the plaintiff a right to the relief sought, it
would be making a void attempt to regulate interstate commerce.
This Court, on the general principle that a construction was to be
adopted, if possible, that would save the instrument from
constitutional objections, followed the suggestion of the circuit
court of appeals, read the section as not requiring the railroad to
deliver its own cars, and affirmed a decree dismissing the
bill.
The material sections of the Constitution of Kentucky are as
follows:
"SEC. 213. All railroad, transfer, beltlines, and railway bridge
companies, organized under the laws of Kentucky or operating,
maintaining, or controlling any railroad, transfer, beltlines, or
bridges, or doing a railway business in this state, shall receive,
transfer, deliver, and switch empty or loaded cars, and shall move,
transport, receive, load, or unload all the freight in car loads or
less quantities, coming to or going from any railroad, transfer,
beltline, bridge, or siding thereon, with equal promptness and
dispatch, and without any discrimination as to
Page 212 U. S. 140
charges, preference, drawback, or rebate in favor of any person,
corporation, consignee, or consignor, in any matter as to payment,
transportation, handling, or delivery, and shall so receive,
deliver, transfer, and transport all freight as above set forth
from and to any point where there is a physical connection between
the tracks of said companies. But this section shall not be
construed as requiring any such common carrier to allow the use of
its tracks for the trains of another engaged in like business."
"SEC. 214. No railway, transfer, beltline, or railway bridge
company shall make any exclusive or preferential contract or
arrangement with any individual, association, or corporation for
the receipt, transfer, delivery, transportation, handling, care, or
custody of any freight or for the conduct of any business as a
common carrier."
The present case was begun by the defendant in error earlier
than the one just stated, and sought similar relief without regard
to the place where the stock was received. A preliminary injunction
was issued, and soon led to proceedings for contempt on the charge
that it had been disobeyed. The court of first instance held that
the injunction applied to an interstate shipment when the owner had
sought to bill it to the Southern Railway at Louisville for
delivery to the Central Stock Yards and had been refused, and
thereafter at the breakup yards, so called, of the Louisville &
Nashville road, by giving notice to change the destination, had
attempted to bring about the desired result. This decision was
reversed by the court of appeals (
Louisville & Nashville R.
Co. v. Miller, 112 Ky. 464), and thereupon the
before-mentioned bill in the United States court was brought, to
deal with interstate shipments, with a prayer also that the
railroad be required to recognize changes of destination; while the
present proceeding was kept on foot to cover all that it lawfully
might. At a later date, the petition, as it is called, in this
case, was amended so as to pray that the plaintiff in error might
be required, upon tender by the Southern Railway, to receive, at a
point of physical connection
Page 212 U. S. 141
with the Southern Railway, livestock from the Central Stock
Yards and to deliver the same to the consignee at the Bourbon Stock
Yards or any depot on its line.
After the decision in the other case, the railroad company asked
leave to plead the decree as a bar to so much of the relief in the
present action as relates to stock shipped or desired to be shipped
from points outside of Kentucky to points within Kentucky. The
trial court, being of opinion that the decree would not be a bar,
refused leave, but ordered the proposed amendment to be made part
of the record for the purpose of appeal. After final hearing, a
judgment was entered for the plaintiff, the defendant in error,
granting all the prayers of the bill. The railroad company was
ordered (1) to receive at its stations in Kentucky, and "to bill,
transport, transfer, switch, and deliver in the customary way," at
some point of physical connection with the tracks of the Southern
Railway, and particularly at one described, all livestock or other
freight consigned to the Central Stock Yards or to persons doing
business there. (2) It was ordered, further, to transfer, switch,
and deliver to the Southern Railway at the said point of
connection, "any and all livestock or other freight coming over its
lines in Kentucky consigned" to the Central Stock Yards or persons
doing business there. (3) It was ordered, further, to receive at
the same point and to "transfer, switch, transport, and deliver all
livestock" consigned to anyone at the Bourbon Stock Yards, "the
shipment of which originates at the Central Stock Yards," with
proviso requiring pay or tender of proper charges for its services
whenever demanded at the time such livestock or other freight is
offered. (4) Finally, the railroad company was required, whenever
requested by the consignor, consignee, or owner of the stock, "at
any of the stations, and particularly at its break-up yards in
South Louisville, Kentucky," to recognize their right to change the
destination, and, upon payment of the full Louisville freight rate
and proper presentation of the bill of lading, duly indorsed, the
railroad was required to change the destination and deliver at a
point of connection with the Southern Railway tracks for
Page 212 U. S. 142
delivery by the latter to the Central Stock Yards. This judgment
was affirmed by the court of appeals, whereupon this writ of error
was brought. The points relied upon are that due credit was denied
to the decree by the United States court; that, if the Constitution
of Kentucky purports to authorize the requirement in the judgment
as to delivery of shipments from outside the state, it attempts to
regulate commerce among the states; that, if the same instrument
authorizes the requirement in the judgment that the railroad
company should give up possession of its cars to the Southern
Railway Company, it attempts to deprive the railroad of its
property without due process of law, and that the same
constitutional objection applies to the attempt to make the
railroad do switching work over its terminal property in Louisville
between two points in the city when the shipment was neither coming
into the city nor going out of the city over the lines of the
plaintiff in error's road.
The court of appeals found itself unable to pass over the bridge
laid by this Court in its construction of the state constitution,
§ 213. It held that that section did purport to require the
plaintiff in error to deliver its own cars, under the circumstances
of the case, to the extent of the judgment that it affirmed. It
declined to follow the decision of this Court that, for the
purposes of the case before it, the two stockyards stood on the
same footing as if they were the stations of two railroads placed
side by side. It decided that the state constitution, as construed
by it, did not attempt to regulate commerce among the states, and,
no doubt for that reason, disregarded the former decree between the
same parties, thinking, we presume, that, as the former bill dealt
only with interstate commerce, the decree could have no binding
effect as against a judgment which it deemed to affect only matters
within the control of the state.
We are surprised that the court of appeals should have decided
that the judgment appealed from did not deal with commerce among
the states. The portion that we have numbered (2) ordered a
delivery to the Southern Railway of all livestock and freight
coming over its lines consigned to the Central Stock
Page 212 U. S. 143
Yards, and this includes, of course, that coming from other
states. The same is to be said of the requirement in (4) as to
change of destination. When the livestock reached the point of
connection or the break-up yards, the carriage was not at an end,
as appears by the very intent of the judgment, and as was decided
in
McNeill v. Southern Ry. Co., 202 U.
S. 543,
202 U. S. 559.
Moreover, that decision cited and approved the language of the
circuit court of appeals, to which we have referred already, in the
case between these parties, to the effect that, if the Kentucky
Constitution could be construed as the state court of appeals has
construed it, it would be attempting what it could not do.
Ibid., 202 U. S. 562.
We think discussion of this part of the case unnecessary, and we
should have to hold the provision of the state constitution void as
applied, if we followed the construction given to it by the state
court; but we are relieved of that necessity by the fact that those
portions of the judgment of which we are speaking are invalid by
reason of the previous adjudication of the United States court.
As we have indicated, the decree was pleaded as a bar only
"to so much of the claim for relief as relates to stock shipped
or transported, or desired to be shipped or transported, from
points outside of Kentucky to points within Kentucky."
It was not argued that a decision that certain words in a
Constitution have a certain meaning, in a suit founded upon them,
is conclusive as between the same parties in another suit upon the
same words, for the same purpose, except that one is to enforce
them with regard to matters outside the control of the state, and
the other to enforce them with regard to matters within its
control. Therefore we express no opinion upon the point. It was
argued, however, that the requirement that the plaintiff in error
should deliver its own cars to another road was void under the
Fourteenth Amendment as an unlawful taking of its property. In view
of the well known and necessary practice of connecting roads, we
are far from saying that a valid law could not be passed to prevent
the cost and loss of time entailed by needless transshipment or
breaking bulk, in case
Page 212 U. S. 144
of an unreasonable refusal by a carrier to interchange cars with
another for through traffic. We do not pass upon the question. It
is enough to observe that such a law perhaps ought to be so limited
as to respect the paramount needs of the carrier concerned, and at
least could be sustained only with full and adequate regulations
for his protection from the loss or undue detention of cars, and
for securing due compensation for their use. The Constitution of
Kentucky is simply a universal undiscriminating requirement, with
no adequate provisions such as we have described. The want cannot
be cured by inserting them in judgments under it. The law itself
must save the parties' rights, and not leave them to the discretion
of the courts as such.
See Security Trust & Safety Vault
Co. v. Co. v. Lexington, 203 U. S. 323,
203 U. S. 333;
Roller v. Holly, 176 U. S. 398,
176 U. S. 409;
Connecticut River R. Co. v. County Commissioners, 127
Mass. 50, 53;
Ash v. Cummings, 50 N.H. 591;
Moody v.
Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West R. Co. 20 Fla. 597;
Ex
Parte Martin, 13 Ark. 198;
St. Louis v. Hill, 116 Mo.
527. It follows that the requirement of the state constitution
cannot stand alone under the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the
judgment in this respect also, being based upon it, must fall. We
do not mean, however, that the silence of the Constitution might
not be remedied by an act of legislature, or a regulation by a duly
authorized subordinate body if such legislation should be held
consistent with the state constitution by the state court. We
should add that the requirement in the first part of the judgment,
which we have been discussing, is open to the objections mentioned
in the former decision so far as it practically requires the
Louisville & Nashville Railroad to deliver cars at Louisville
elsewhere than at its own terminus.
192 U. S. 192
U.S. 570,
192 U. S.
571.
There remains for consideration only the third division of the
judgment, which requires the plaintiff in error to receive at the
connecting point, and to switch, transport, and deliver all
livestock consigned from the Central Stock Yards to anyone at the
Bourbon Stock Yards. This also is based upon the sections
Page 212 U. S. 145
of the Constitution that have been quoted. If the principle is
sound, every road into Louisville, by making a physical connection
with the Louisville & Nashville, can get the use of its costly
terminals and make it do the switching necessary to that end, upon
simply paying for the service of carriage. The duty of a carrier to
accept goods tendered at its station does not extend to the
acceptance of cars offered to it at an arbitrary point near its
terminus by a competing road, for the purpose of reaching and using
its terminal station. To require such an acceptance from a railroad
is to take its property in a very effective sense, and cannot be
justified unless the railroad holds that property subject to
greater liabilities than those incident to its calling alone. The
court of appeals did not put its decision upon any supposed special
liability, but upon the broad ground that the state constitution
requires it, and lawfully may require it, of a common carrier by
rail. Therefore, the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, dissenting:
I am unable to concur in the opinion of the court so far as it
applies to the transportation of cattle wholly within Kentucky. The
difference between that and interstate transportation is important,
for it was conceded at the argument that at least sixty percent of
the business was of domestic cattle.
This is a second review of the controversy between the parties.
It was originally started in one of the courts of Kentucky, and
there, meeting obstacles arising from the want of jurisdiction over
interstate commerce, the latter was made the subject of a suit in a
United States circuit court, where the Central Stock Yards Company
suffered defeat, its bill being dismissed for want of equity. This
judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals (118 F. 113)
and subsequently by this Court.
192 U. S. 192 U.S.
568. This is pointed out in the opinion, but it may be well to see
what was decided. In the circuit court
Page 212 U. S. 146
of appeals, these propositions were decided: (1) Independently
of statute, the railway could not be required to deliver to the
Southern Railway Company for transportation to the Central Stock
Yards Company the livestock, though shipped to and ultimately
destined to the stockyards company. The Louisville & Nashville
Company, the court said, performed its duty under the common law
when it provided a place for disembarkation of the stock at the
Bourbon Stock Yards, though that place was fixed by contract with
the latter company. (2) That the refusal of the Louisville &
Nashville Company to make such transfer of stock to the Southern
Railway Company was not a violation of § 3 of the Interstate
Commerce Act. (3) Considering the case more broadly and as
involving the right to require one railroad to interchange traffic
with another, the position of the Central Stock Yards Company would
be untenable because, as it was held at common law, a railroad is
only bound to transport freight at its own terms. (4) If the
Constitution of Kentucky could be construed to require such
delivery of the livestock, it was invalid insofar as it affected
interstate commerce. The case therefore left local commerce
untouched. It declared no principle that precluded a state, by
legislation, constitutional or statutory, to require such transfer
of stock if it applied only to commerce within the state. The case
came to this Court, and here also it was considered only as it
affected interstate commerce. It is true it was said that,
"if the cattle are to remain in the defendant's cars, it cannot
be required to hand those cars over to another railroad without a
contract, and the courts have no authority to dictate a contract to
the defendant, or to require it to make one."
This expressed only a limit upon the power of the courts, not of
a legislature or a constitution, for it was also said, "there is no
act of Congress that attempts to give courts a power to require
contracts to be made in a case like this." And the cases which were
cited sustain the view that the impotency of the courts was not
because of a right in the railroads, which were exempt from
legislative regulation, but a right only exempt from control by the
courts in the
Page 212 U. S. 147
absence of legislation. None of the cases declare otherwise.
They interpreted the then-existing legislation, and did not attempt
to decide what legislation might be competent. Indeed, Judge
Jackson (afterwards a justice of this Court) in
Kentucky &
I. Bridge Co. v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 37 F. 567,
634, strongly intimated that Congress had the power to do what he,
exercising the powers of the circuit court, could not do without
legislative authority.
I will assume, therefore, the power of the state to require an
exchange of cars between railroads, and consider only what are the
limitations upon the exercise of the power -- not broadly, for the
case has been brought into the narrow requirements of provision for
compensation and security. Must such provisions be explicit in the
law? May not the principle or rule of regulation be prescribed by
law, statutory or constitutional, and the conditions of its
application be ascertained and enforced by the courts or an
administrative body? To what extent a court may be made an
instrumentality in the administration of the laws of a state I may
refer to the
Virginia Railroad Commission cases.
Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line Co., 211 U.
S. 210.
See also Kohl v. United States,
91 U. S. 367.
If the state may so distribute its power of regulation, it is
certainly not within the province of this Court to say that it has
not done so, against a contrary view, expressed or assumed, by the
courts of the state. We can only deal with the result -- that is,
the ultimate action of the state, through any of its
instrumentalities, as offending the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States. The procedure is for the
determination of the state. This principle is conspicuously
illustrated in
Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Texas, ante, p.
212 U. S. 86, and
is also illustrated by the decisions under the Massachusetts and
New Hampshire Mill Acts,
infra. What, then, is the effect
of the judgment under review?
It will be observed that the Constitution puts an obligation
upon railroad companies to "receive, transfer, deliver, and switch
empty or loaded cars," and to
"move, transport, receive, load, or unload all the freight in
carloads or less quantities
Page 212 U. S. 148
coming to or going from any railroad . . . with equal promptness
and dispatch, and without any discrimination as to charges,
preference, drawback, or rebate in favor of any person . . . in any
matter as to payment, transportation, handling, or delivering,"
and to "receive . . . and transport all freight, . . . from and
to any point where there is a physical connection between the
tracks of said companies." The Constitution therefore imposes a
duty, it is true, but not a duty to be uncompensated. The special
emphasis of the prohibition of favor as to charges makes
conspicuous and indisputable the right to make and enforce them if
made and enforced without "favor to any person." There could be no
discrimination "as to charges," if there were no charges, no
drawback or rebate from them, and the right to require security for
the return of the cars is left untouched. Nor have the
constitutional provisions been limited by the decree under
review.
It does not adjudge that the service required of the Louisville
& Nashville Railroad should not be compensated. The right of
the railroad company to charge for the use of its cars is declared.
The court said that the transfer of the cars was a use of them in
the interest of the public. "If this," the court further
observed,
"is, in a sense, the taking of its property for private
purposes, appellant must [plaintiff in error], as a common carrier,
submit to it, for it is only a temporary and necessary use of its
property. Appellant cannot suffer loss by such use of its cars. If
it delivers its cars to the Southern Railway to be taken to
appellee's [Central] stockyards for the loading or unloading of
stock, that company has no right to detain them longer than a
reasonable time for that purpose, and must return them. Appellant
may charge a reasonable amount for the use of its cars, and if they
are not returned, or, if detained an unreasonable time, it may sue
the delinquent road for damages, or apply to a court of equity for
a mandatory injunction to compel the return of the cars. Indeed, it
can suffer no loss which the law may not remedy."
And the court pointed out that, by regulations between
railroads, cars were interchanged
Page 212 U. S. 149
between them at a fixed charge. It is entirely consistent with
the opinion that plaintiff in error may charge for the delivery of
its cars, either when the cattle are shipped or when their
destination is changed, or at the time of delivery to the Southern
Railway Company. It is also entirely consistent with the opinion of
the court that plaintiff in error can exact such stipulations from
the Southern Railway Company as will protect it fully. The practice
of connecting roads should be regarded, I think, when considering
so simple a servitude as imposed in this case upon property devoted
to a public use, and subject, because of such use, to regulation by
the state. In this, every right of plaintiff in error would be
preserved. In this, every power of the state would be preserved. I
do not stop to make a comparison between such right and such power,
but I submit this Court should put no limit upon the latter that is
not clearly necessary to preserve the other.
Plaintiff in error makes no question of precedent or ultimate
payment for the use of its cars, or the absence of provisions for
their return. It is contended that, in some way (in what way is not
pointed out), the state must exercise its right of eminent domain,
and, unless the right be exercised through an impartial tribunal,
there is not due process of law. It is also contended that there is
an attempted transfer of terminals, and the duty of a local
transfer company imposed on plaintiff in error, which, in some way,
takes its property without due process of law. The question made,
then, is of an inviolable right, impregnable in constitutional
protection, against a legislative regulation such as in the case at
bar, and to what contemplation does this bring us? If the right is
impregnable in constitutional protection against regulation in the
interest of
intrastate commerce, it is also impregnable in
such constitutional protection against regulation in the interest
of
interstate commerce. Are we prepared to announce that
conclusion? The consequences of it are certainly quite serious.
The act of June 29, 1906, 34 Stat. 584, c. 3591, provided that
"the term
transportation' shall include . . . all [of the
articles] instrumentalities
Page 212 U. S.
150
and facilities of shipment or carriage," and further
provides that every carrier subject to its provisions
shall
"provide and furnish such transportation upon reasonable request
therefor, and to establish through routes and just and reasonable
rates applicable thereto."
(Section 1.)
The act also provides that such carriers, upon the application
of any lateral branch line of railroad or of any shipper, shall
construct and operate switch connections and shall furnish cars for
the traffic thereover. And the Commission is given power to enforce
such duty.
The Commission is also given the power to divide a joint rate
and establish joint rates and through routes. The Commission
further has the power to fix the compensation to be paid to the
owner of property transported for any instrumentality furnished by
him.
These are some of the regulations of interstate commerce --
regulations of great reach and consequence -- and they are not more
specific as to compensation or security for the use or loss of cars
than the Constitution of Kentucky. And I submit that the power of a
state over its domestic commerce is as great as the power of the
nation over interstate commerce.
The exigencies of this case do not require me to distinguish
between those sovereign powers of the state denominated the power
of eminent domain and the police power. Both may be exercised over
private property. By the exercise of the first power, property is
taken, and compensation for it is a necessary condition; by the
exercise of the second power, property is subjected to regulation,
and a provision for compensation is not necessary. When regulation
is transcended and becomes a taking of property may at times be a
close question, but the power of regulation must not be overlooked
or underestimated. It is, as I have said, an exercise of the police
power, and that is the most absolute of the sovereign powers of the
state. We said in
Bacon v. Walker, 204 U.
S. 311, that it "extends to so dealing with the
conditions which exist in a state as to bring out of them the
greatest welfare of its people." In
Otis Co.
v. Ludlow Co., 201
Page 212 U. S. 151
U.S. 140, this Court sustained the Massachusetts Mill Act, which
gave the right of one owner of land on a stream to flow the land of
another against the charge that it was contrary to the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Constitution of the United States as taking
property without due process of law, in that it made no adequate
provision for the payment of damages caused by an exercise of the
rights conferred by the act. The provision for payment was an
action for damages. The use of property in that case was as
complete and more enduring than in this, and we said of it:
"The right of the lower owner only becomes complete when the
land is flowed, and as, even then, it is not a right to maintain
the water upon the plaintiff's land, but merely a right to maintain
the dam subject to paying for the harm actually done, we see
nothing to complain of in that regard."
See Head v. Amoskeag Mfg. Co., 113 U. S.
9. This Court therefore has decided that a simple action
of damages is sufficient security for compensation for that use of
property which this Court, and almost every court in the Union, has
held to be a taking.
Pumpelly v. Green Bay
Co., 13 Wall. 166.
It is true it is held by the Supreme Judicial Court of
Massachusetts that the principle upon which the Mill Act is founded
is not the right of eminent domain, but the resulting general good
of all, or the public welfare.
Murdock v. Stickney, 8
Cush. 113. And this Court, yielding also to that purpose, has quite
recently declared that a state might, in order to meet new
conditions, elevate into a public use of property that which, under
other conditions, had universally been held to be a private use.
Clark v. Nash, 198 U. S. 361;
Strickley v. Highland Boy Mining Co., 200 U.
S. 527.
See also Offield v. New York, N.H. & H.
R. Co., 203 U. S. 372.
Other cases may be adduced for illustration. I think, therefore,
that it might easily be contended that the service required of
plaintiff in error cannot be considered, in any legal or practical
sense, a taking of property. Let us keep steadily in mind what it
is that is required, and what the requirement involves of the use
of plaintiff in error's cars. It is a use not different from
that
Page 212 U. S. 152
they served from the moment of starting, or would serve if the
end of the transportation be the Bourbon Stock Yards. If the end of
the transportation be made the Central Stock Yards, there is the
added element only that a limited and temporary possession of the
cars is given to the Southern Railway Company -- a possession, it
must be said, not required in the interest of that company, but in
the interest of the commerce of which it and the plaintiff in error
are but instrumentalities, and as aids to which they were organized
and are permitted to exist.
But I do not have to take this position, strongly supported as
it may be. It is enough for my purpose that the Constitution of the
state provides for compensation for the duty it imposes on the
railroads.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE
MOODY concur in this dissent.