The Interstate Commerce Act does not attempt to equalize
fortune, opportunities, or abilities; it contemplates payment of
reasonable compensation by carriers for services rendered, and
instrumentalities furnished, by owners of property transported, the
only power of the Commission being to determine the maximum of such
compensation. Contracts made by various railroads for elevation
expenses of grain at points of transshipment at rates not exceeding
those fixed by the Commission as reasonable
held not to be
illegal discriminations or rebates when paid to owners of elevators
on their own grain although such owners performed services other
than those paid for at the same time to their own advantage.
176 F. 409 modified and affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 43
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are appeals from injunctions issued upon bills brought by
the appellees against the enforcement of two orders made by the
Interstate Commerce Commission. 176 F. 409. The stages by which the
Commission came to its present conclusion, against its earlier
view, will be found reported in 10 I.C.C. 309, 12 I.C.C. 85, 14
I.C.C. 315.
See 14 I.C.C. 317, 510, 551. In the circuit
court, these cases were tried upon the same evidence, and they
raise the same question; but as the Peavey suit presents that
question in its initial and simplest form, we will state the facts
of that case first.
The Union Pacific Railroad, after passing through a grain
country, has its eastern termini at Omaha and Kansas City, on the
Missouri River. Much the greater part, nine-tenths, more or less,
of the grain gathered and carried by the road, passes beyond the
termini, especially to points farther east. During the season, the
Union Pacific needs all its cars to collect the grain, and
therefore wants to get them back as quickly as possible from the
end of its line. Furthermore, the shipments eastward are made more
profitably in heavier loads than can be collected from the local
stations. For these reasons the Union Pacific sought to prevent its
own cars' being carried beyond the termini, over connecting lines,
and to have the grain shifted to other cars. To make the change, it
is commercially necessary to pass the grain through an elevator,
where also it is weighed, another necessary step in the
transportation.
See 14 I.C.C. 317, 318. An additional
consideration is that Omaha and Kansas City are great grain
markets, where there are sales largely in excess
Page 222 U. S. 44
of local needs, and this also requires the grain to pass through
elevators at these points. If the Union Pacific could not use these
instruments of transfer, it could not compete with other roads that
have through lines from the grain fields across the Missouri River
to the East.
See 14 I.C.C. 317, 327.
Acting on these motives, the railroad company, in 1899, made a
contract in good faith with Peavey, under which he built an
elevator at Council Bluffs, on the other side of the river from
Omaha. He was to receive not exceeding 1 1/4 cents per hundred
pounds for the first ten years, and 1 cent for the next ten, for
grain transferred through his elevator. Later another elevator was
brought into the arrangement, now with Peavey & Company, a
corporation. Peavey & Company is a large dealer in grain, and
receives the same allowance for its own grain that it receives for
that of others. It is important to remark that in no case is any
additional charge made to the shipper for the elevator service. In
1904, the Interstate Commerce Commission investigated the matter
and upheld the contract, including the allowance for Peavey &
Company's own grain. 10 I.C.C. 309.
The Commission also made a report to Congress, and after further
investigation, notwithstanding the fact that the incidental
advantages to grain owners from such allowances had been made
apparent, Congress passed the Act of June 29, 1906, c. 3591, 34
Stat. 584. By this it was provided in § 1, amending the
earlier statute, that
"the term 'transportation' shall include . . . all
instrumentalities and facilities of shipment or carriage,
irrespective of ownership or of any contract, express or implied,
for the use thereof, and all services in connection with the
receipt, delivery, elevation, and transfer in transit, ventilation,
refrigeration, or icing, storage, and handling of property
transported, and it shall be the duty of every carrier subject to
the provisions of this act to
Page 222 U. S. 45
provide and furnish such transportation upon reasonable request
therefor, and to establish through routes,"
etc. By § 2, the carrier was required to state separately
in its schedules all terminal charges and all privileges of
facilities granted or allowed, and by § 4,
"If the owner of property transported under this act directly or
indirectly renders any service connected with such transportation,
or furnishes any instrumentality used therein, the charge and
allowance therefor shall be no more than is just and reasonable,
and the Commission may, after hearing on a complaint, determine
what is a reasonable charge as the maximum to be paid by the
carrier or carriers for the service so rendered, or for the use of
the instrumentality so furnished."
Thus, Congress clearly recognized that services such as those
rendered by Peavey & Company were services in transportation,
and were to be paid for notwithstanding the possibility that some
advantage might be gained as a result. Meantime, other elevators
had sprung up, and in 1906, the Union Pacific extended the
allowance made to Peavey & Company, to all elevators in Omaha,
Council Bluffs, and Kansas City.
But the Interstate Commerce Commission had begun to change its
view upon further reflection. In 1907, upon rehearing, it cut down
the allowance to Peavey & Company, to 3/4 of a cent, estimating
that to be the actual cost, and being of opinion that to allow any
profit would be in effect to permit a rebate. 12 I.C.C. 85. The
order made required the railroad company to desist from paying more
than 3/4 of a cent per hundred pounds, for service rendered in the
transfer or elevation of grain at Council Bluffs or Kansas City, to
anyone interested in the buying, selling, or shipment of grain at
those places, especially naming the appellees. This is one of the
orders complained of. The chief object of complaint, however, is an
order made in the following year, on June 29, 1908. In that, the
Commission took the last
Page 222 U. S. 46
step, and ordered the Union Pacific to desist from paying any
allowance to Peavey & Company on grain in which they have any
interest that is not reshipped from their elevators within ten
days, or that has been mixed, treated, weighed, or inspected in any
of their elevators at the above-named points. 14 I.C.C. 315.
The ground on which the payment to owners of grain finally was
held to be a rebate had been considered from the beginning, and, as
we have said, had been brought to the mind of Congress. It is that,
when the owners of the elevators own the grain put into them, they
have the opportunity to perform other services to the grain in the
way of treatment, or cleaning, clipping, and mixing the grain,
which, although not included under the term "elevation," or paid
for by the railroad, it is an advantage to them to be able to
perform at the same time. This advantage is thought to create an
undue preference and unjust discrimination. Of course, the
opportunities for fraud are adverted to, but the ground of the
decision is that even an honest payment of the bare cost of
elevating grain in transit gives an undue advantage if the elevator
owner also owns the grain. As was pointed out by the court below,
the final order is confined to grain that has been treated,
weighed, inspected, or mixed.
We agree with the court below that this decision is erroneous in
its conception of the grounds on which, under the statute, an
advantage may be pronounced undue, and in its assumption that
Congress has left the matter open by merely permissive words. The
principle as to advantages is recognized in
Penn Refining Co.
v. Western New York & Pennsylvania R. Co., 208 U.
S. 208,
208 U. S. 221.
The law does not attempt to equalize fortune, opportunities, or
abilities. On the contrary, the Act of Congress in terms
contemplates that, if the carrier receives services from an owner
of property transported, or uses instrumentalities furnished by the
latter, he shall pay for them. That is
Page 222 U. S. 47
taken for granted in § 15, the only restriction being that
he shall pay no more than is reasonable, and the only permissive
element being that the Commission may determine the maximum in case
there is complaint (or now, upon its own motion. Act of June 18,
1910, c. 309, § 12, 36 Stat. 539, 553). As the carrier is
required to furnish this part of the transportation upon request,
he could not be required to do it at his own expense, and there is
nothing to prevent his hiring the instrumentality instead of owning
it. In this case, there is no complaint that the rate out of which
the allowance is made is unreasonable, and it is admitted that 3/4
of a cent barely would pay the cost of the service rendered,
without any reasonable profit to Peavey & Company, for the
work.
See Interstate Commerce Commission v. Stickney,
215 U. S. 98.
In the Diffenbaugh case, the order of the Commission bore the
same date, June 29, 1908, as that against Peavey & Company, and
the Union Pacific. It was directed against the Chicago, Burlington
& Quincy Railroad Company and other competitors of the Union
Pacific, and forbade their paying any sum as compensation for
service rendered in the elevation of grain at Kansas City,
Missouri, and other Missouri River points upon their lines.
Competition, which was an element in the motives of the Union
Pacific, led these other roads to make a similar arrangement.
Probably, being through lines, they would not object to the
Commission's order if that to the Union Pacific could be sustained.
The opinion of Mr. Commissioner Prouty in this case takes somewhat
different ground from that on which the orders in the Peavey case
are based. 14 I.C.C. 317.
See 15 I.C.C. 90, 93.
See
also H. Gund & Co. v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. 18
I.C.C. 364. Especially it throws doubt upon the allowance being
properly a transfer allowance at this present day. As the contract
with Peavey & Company purports to be only for grain
transferred, it is not necessary to consider
Page 222 U. S. 48
whether elevation could be allowed for as practically necessary
under modern conditions, even if the grain did not go on. For the
purposes of this case, so much of the order as meets the
above-mentioned doubt by confining payments to grain reshipped
within ten days seems proper enough, and not open to review on the
matter of fact. But when the grain has been treated, the
prohibition of an allowance is universal, and therefore the
question that we have answered is raised by the record -- the
question, that is, of the power of the Commission to prohibit such
allowances to grain owners in general terms. In this order it was
stated expressly that the purpose of the Commission was to prohibit
and stop the payment of the elevator allowances everywhere. 14
I.C.C. 510, 551.
The Union Pacific made the allowances in question to elevators
at its termini; it had no motive to make them anywhere else. The
competitors of the Union Pacific concerned in the Diffenbaugh case
were compelled by competition to make the same allowance at
Missouri River points, but they also make it nowhere else. The
Traffic Bureau, Merchants' Exchange of St. Louis, complained to the
Commission that the result was a discrimination against St. Louis
of 3/4 of a cent per 100 pounds. But the principle of the decision
is that the allowance to elevators upon their own grain is to be
stopped everywhere unless they are prevented from using the
opportunity for treating their grain. Therefore this question of
preference between cities does not need to be discussed. But, as
remarked below, the Union Pacific could not be complained of on
this ground, 176 F. 424, and it would be impossible to deny the
same right to competing roads merely because, as the result of the
conditions, one city would gain and another lose.
Louisville
& Nashville R. Co. v. Behlmer, 175 U.
S. 648.
Although the order cutting down the allowance to
Page 222 U. S. 49
Peavey & Company to the estimated cost may have been
influenced by erroneous views touching the powers of the Commission
and the elements proper for consideration (
see Southern Railway
Co. v. St. Louis Hay & Grain Co., 214 U.
S. 297), we are of opinion that no sufficient reason
appears for disturbing that. The Commission has decided what
compensation is reasonable, and we infer that Peavey & Company
would be content under the circumstances to render the service for
3/4 of a cent per hundred pounds, rather than give it up.
The jurisdiction in the Diffenbaugh case was doubted, although
the Commission did not press the point, as it wishes a final
decision. We are content to leave that matter on the statement of
the court below. 176 F. 416, 417. The plaintiffs are affected by
the order, and it is just that they should have a chance to be
heard, although not parties before the Commission.
The result is that the decree of the Circuit Court must be
affirmed in its main point, but that the Commission's order of
1907, diminishing the allowance to 3/4 of a cent, and so much of
the Peavey order of 1908 as confines allowances to grain reshipped
within ten days, should be allowed to stand.
Decree of Circuit Court modified and affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, dissenting:
I am unable to concur in the opinion of the court.
The Commission did not hold that elevation may not properly be
furnished by a railroad, or be allowed for to a shipper, but held
that "such elevation must be charged for at what it is reasonably
worth," and without discrimination. And I understand elevation to
mean "the transfer of the grain from the car of the inbound
carrier, through an elevator, to the car of the outbound carrier"
within a
Page 222 U. S. 50
given period. "In such elevation," Mr. Commissioner Harlan said,
and his language I adopt,
"there is nothing either preferential or discriminatory, whether
done in an elevator operated by the carrier, or in an elevator
operated for it by the owner,"
but
"any allowance by the carrier to the owner of an elevator on
grain belonging to him that has been weighed, inspected, cleaned,
mixed, or otherwise treated in the process of elevation is
unlawful. As a facility for the convenience of the carrier, free
elevation is unobjectionable; but when the owner is permitted to
and does use the elevation as a transit privilege for himself, by
means of which to secure commercial advantages on his own grain,
the result is an unlawful preference and discrimination."
The conclusion is not a misconstruction of the statute.
Transportation simply is the business of the railroad company.
Weighing, inspecting, cleaning, and mixing -- that is, raising the
quality of the grain to suit the demand of the market -- is the
business of the grain dealer or others, and the two businesses are
not to be confounded, and it was not, I think, the purpose of the
statute to confound them. The statute makes the term
"transportation" include "all instrumentalities and facilities of
shipment or carriage," and it is only when the owner of property
renders services "connected with such transportation, or furnishes
any instrumentality used therein" that he may be compensated by the
railroad. What goes beyond that transcends the statute, and
becomes, as the Commission held, a discrimination.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE HUGHES concurs in this
dissent.