Under § 4 of the Act of June 29, 1906, c. 3591, 34 Stat.
589, giving the Interstate Commerce Commission power to establish
through routes and joint rates where no reasonable or satisfactory
through route exists, the existence of such route may be inquired
into by the courts, notwithstanding a finding by the
Commission.
When one through route exists which is reasonable and
satisfactory, the fact that the public would prefer a second which
is no shorter or better cannot overcome the natural interpretation
of a provision in the statute to the effect that jurisdiction
exclusively depends upon the fact that no reasonable or
satisfactory route exists
As the Northern Pacific route from the points named to points
between Portland and Seattle is reasonable and satisfactory, the
fact that there are certain advantages in the Union Pacific or
Southern route does not give the Interstate Commerce Commission
jurisdiction to establish the latter as a through route against the
objection of the Northern Pacific Railway Company.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 216 U. S. 542
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill to restrain the enforcement of an order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission. 16 I.C.C. 300. A preliminary
injunction was granted by four circuit judges on the ground that
the Commission had exceeded its powers, and the case was brought
here by appeal. The order was made in a proceeding instituted by
the Commission upon its own motion, and required the establishment
of through routes and joint rates for passengers and their baggage,
east and
Page 216 U. S. 543
west, from and to points on the Chicago & Northwestern
Railway between Chicago and Council Bluffs, Iowa, inclusive, and
from and to points on the Union Pacific Railroad between Colorado
common points and Omaha, Nebraska, and Kansas City, Missouri,
inclusive; via Portland, Oregon; to and from points on the Northern
Pacific Railway between Portland and Seattle. The joint rates are
to be the same as the present rates between the same points via the
Northern Pacific road and its connections. This order concerns
passenger travel in one direction only. It does not affect round
trips, and it does not deal with freight.
The points between Portland and Seattle can be reached from the
places mentioned at the other end of the route, by way of the
Northern Pacific alone from St. Paul, or by way of the Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy to Billings, Montana, and then by the
Northern Pacific for the last thousand miles; the Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy being jointly owned and controlled by the
Northern Pacific and the Great Northern roads. But an average of
8,000 persons a year go by way of the Union Pacific to Portland,
where, to go further, passengers have to change to the Northern
Pacific line. Under present arrangements, the Union Pacific issues
a coupon with its tickets, entitling the holder to a first-class
passage on from Portland, but he has to exchange the coupon for a
ticket, to recheck his baggage, and to pay the additional Pullman
fare. The effect of the order is to put the Union Pacific on an
equal footing with the Northern Pacific in the use, for through
travel, of the road belonging to the latter between Portland and
Seattle. It is said that this road, with the expensive terminals of
the Northern Pacific at Tacoma and Seattle, would not be supported
by local business, but depends on the traffic of the whole Northern
Pacific system. Therefore, the Northern Pacific objects to the
order and brings this bill.
The authority of the Commission to establish through routes and
joint rates is conditioned by the proviso that "no
Page 216 U. S. 544
reasonable or satisfactory through route exists." Act of June
29, 1906, c. 3591, § 4. 34 Stat. 589. It is urged that this
condition is addressed only to the opinion of the Commission, and
cannot be reexamined by the courts as a jurisdictional fact. The
difficulty of distinguishing between a rule of law for the guidance
of a court and a limit set to its power is sometimes considerable.
Words that might seem to concern jurisdiction may be read as simply
imposing a rule of decision, and often will be read in that way
when dealing with a court of general powers.
Fauntleroy v.
Lum, 210 U. S. 230,
210 U. S. 235.
But even in such a case, there may be a difference of opinion,
id., 210 U. S. 245,
and when we are dealing with an administrative order that seriously
affects property rights, and does so by way rather of fiat than of
adjudication, there seems to be no reason for not taking the
proviso of the statute in its natural sense.
See Interstate
Commerce Commission v. Illinois Central R. Co., 215 U.
S. 452,
215 U. S.
470.
We are of opinion, then, that the Commission had no power to
make the order if a reasonable and satisfactory through route
already existed, and that the existence of such a route may be
inquired into by the courts. How far the courts should go in that
inquiry we need not now decide. No doubt, in complex and delicate
cases great weight at least, would be attached to the judgment of
the Commission. But in the present instance there is no room for
difference as to the facts, and the majority of the Commission
plainly could not and would not have made the declaration in their
order that there was no such through route, but for a view of the
law upon which this Court must pass. It is admitted that the
Northern Pacific route is shorter than that of the Union Pacific by
way of Portland, and the running time somewhat less, and it is
added by the majority that the "passenger goes in as good a car and
is provided with as good a berth and as good a meal."
There is some suggestion that at times the northern route may
not be as good as the southern, although at other times
Page 216 U. S. 545
it may be better, but the ground of the order avowedly was that
the personal preferences of many travelers is to go by the southern
way. If they do, it is said, they can select from a great variety
of routes as far as Ogden, Utah; they can visit cities not reached
by the northern lines; they can search over a wide area for
homesteads; they can behold the natural beauties that may be
rivaled but not repeated on the other roads. It appears to us that
these grounds do not justify the order. The most that can be said
of them is that they are reasons for desiring a second through
route, but they are not reasons warranting the declaration that "no
reasonable or satisfactory through route exists." Obviously, that
is not true, except by an artificial use of words. It cannot be
said that there is no such route because the public would prefer
two. The condition in the statute is not to be trifled away. Except
in case of a need such as the statute implies, the injustice
pointed out by the chairman in his dissent is not permitted by the
law.
Decree affirmed.