By the Act to Regulate Commerce, Congress has provided a system
for establishing, maintaining, and altering rate schedules and of
redressing injuries, and committed to a single tribunal authority
to investigate complaints, enforce conformity to prescribed
standards, and order reparation to injured parties for
nonconformity with those standards.
No action for reparation for exactions for railroad freight
payments can be maintained in any court, federal or state, in the
absence of an appropriate finding and order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission. The rule laid down in
Texas & Pacific
Railway Co. v. Abilene Oil Co., 204 U.
S. 426, as to suits for recovery of unreasonable rates
applies also to suits for recovery of rates as discriminatory.
Section 14 of the Act to Regulate Commerce, making decisions of
the Interstate Commerce Commission as published in the official
reports competent evidence, does not relieve a party relying on a
decision from putting it in evidence -- or require courts to take
judicial notice thereof; the statute relieves from expense and
inconvenience in connection with producing evidence, but it does
not otherwise change the rules of evidence.
In this case,
held that an action could not be
maintained for discriminatory exaction on coal rates of fifty cents
a ton when loaded from wagons and not from tipples, as the
complaint had not shown that the schedule had been the subject of
complaint to the Interstate Commerce Commission and held by it to
be discriminatory.
64 W.Va. 406 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of charges of common
carriers on coal shipments and whether illegal discrimination
existed, are stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 507
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
In February, March, and May, 1903, Robinson, the plaintiff in
error, shipped eleven carloads of coal from Fairmont, West
Virginia, to points in other states over the railroad of the
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, the defendant in error, and
paid the rate thereon which was prescribed in a schedule published
and filed conformably to the act to regulate interstate commerce,
and then in full force. By this schedule, the rate was fifty cents
more per ton when the coal was loaded into the car from wagons than
when the loading was from a tipple. Robinson's shipments came under
the higher rate, and the charges paid by him were $150 in excess of
what would have been exacted if his coal had been loaded from a
tipple. Conceiving that the schedule unjustly discriminated between
shipments loaded from tipples and those loaded from wagons, he
brought, in the Circuit Court of Marion County, West Virginia, on
April 19, 1906, an action against the railroad company to recover
the excess so paid. The case was heard upon an agreed statement of
facts, which set forth with some detail the matters just stated and
recited that it embodied "all the facts and evidence in the cause."
But the statement did not disclose, or even suggest, that the
schedule had been the subject of a complaint to the Interstate
Commerce Commission, or had been found by the Commission to be
unjustly discriminatory, or that the railroad company had been
ordered by the Commission to desist from giving effect to the
schedule, or to make reparation to Robinson or any other shipper
because of prior exactions thereunder. Being of opinion that, upon
the agreed statement, Robinson was not entitled
Page 222 U. S. 508
to recover, the court entered a judgment dismissing his action,
and that judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeals of
the state. 64 W.Va. 406. He then sued out this writ of error upon
the ground that, by the judgment of affirmance, he was denied
rights specially set up under the act to regulate interstate
commerce.
The first question to be considered is whether, consistently
with the provisions of that act, Robinson could maintain his action
for reparation in the absence of an order by the Interstate
Commerce Commission finding that the established schedule whereby
the additional fifty cents per ton was exacted was unjustly
discriminatory, determining what reparation should be made because
of prior exactions thereunder, and directing the carrier to desist
from such discrimination in the future, and to make the reparation
indicated. It was contended by him in the Supreme Court of Appeals
of the state, and is contended now, that the question should be
answered in the affirmative because of the provision in § 22
that
"nothing in this act contained shall in any way abridge or alter
the remedies now existing at common law or by statute, but the
provisions of this act are in addition to such remedies."
But it must be ruled otherwise, and for these reasons:
The act, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379, c.. 382, 25 Stat. 855, c. 61, 28
Stat. 643, c. 708, 32 Stat. 847, whilst prohibiting unreasonable
charges, unjust discriminations, and undue preferences by carriers
subject to its provisions, also prescribed the manner in which that
prohibition should be enforced -- that is to say, the act laid upon
every such carrier the duty of publishing and filing, in a
prescribed mode, schedules of the rates to be charged for the
transportation of property over its road, declared that the rates
named in schedules so established should be conclusively deemed to
be the legal rates until changed as provided in the act, forbade
any deviation from them
Page 222 U. S. 509
while they remained in effect, invested the Interstate Commerce
Commission with authority to receive complaints against rates so
established, and to inquire and find whether they were in any wise
violative of the prohibitions of the act, and, if so, what, if any,
injury had been done thereby to the person complaining or to
others, and further authorized the Commission to direct the carrier
to desist from any violation found to exist, and to make reparation
for any injury found to have been done. Provision was also made for
the enforcement of the order for reparation by an action in the
circuit court of the United States if the carrier failed to comply
with it.
Thus, for the purpose of preventing unreasonable charges, unjust
discriminations, and undue preferences, a system of establishing,
maintaining, and altering rate schedules and of redressing injuries
resulting from their enforcement was adopted whereby publicity
would be given to the rates, their application would be obligatory
and uniform while they remained in effect, and the matter of their
conformity to prescribed standards would be committed primarily to
a single tribunal clothed with authority to investigate complaints
and to order the correction of any nonconformity to those standards
by an appropriate change in schedules and by due reparation to
injured persons.
When the purpose of the act and the means selected for the
accomplishment of that purpose are understood, it is altogether
plain that the act contemplated that such an investigation and
order by the designated tribunal, the Interstate Commerce
Commission, should be a prerequisite to the right to seek
reparation in the courts because of exactions under an established
schedule alleged to be violative of the prescribed standards. And
this is so because the existence and exercise of a right to
maintain an action of that character, in the absence of such an
investigation and order, would be repugnant to the declared
Page 222 U. S. 510
rule that a rate established in the mode prescribed should be
deemed the legal rate, and obligatory alike upon carrier and
shipper until changed in the manner provided, would be in
derogation of the power expressly delegated to the Commission, and
would be destructive of the uniformity and equality which the act
was designed to secure.
In the case of
Texas and Pacific Railway Co. v. Abilene
Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S. 426,
204 U. S. 440,
where such a right was asserted and denied, it was said by this
Court:
"Indeed, the recognition of such a right is wholly inconsistent
with the administrative power conferred upon the Commission, and
with the duty which the statute casts upon that body of seeing to
it that the statutory requirement as to uniformity and equality of
rates is observed. Equally obvious is it that the existence of such
a power in the courts, independent of prior action by the
Commission, would lead to favoritism, to the enforcement of one
rate in one jurisdiction and a different one in another, would
destroy the prohibitions against preferences and discrimination,
and afford, moreover, a ready means by which, through collusive
proceedings, the wrongs which the statute was intended to remedy
could be successfully inflicted. Indeed, no reason can be perceived
for the enactment of the provision endowing the administrative
tribunal which the act created with the power, on due proof, not
only to award reparation to a particular shipper, but to command
the carrier to desist from violation of the act in the future, thus
compelling the alteration of the old or the filing of a new
schedule, conformably to the action of the Commission, if the power
was left in courts to grant relief on complaint of any shipper,
upon the theory that the established rate could be disregarded and
be treated as unreasonable, without reference to previous action by
the Commission in the premises. This must be, because, if the power
existed in both courts and the Commission to originally hear
complaints on this subject, there might
Page 222 U. S. 511
be a divergence between the action of the Commission and the
decision of a court. In other words, the established schedule might
be found reasonable by the Commission in the first instance, and
unreasonable by a court acting originally, and thus a conflict
would arise which would render the enforcement of the act
impossible."
It is true, as was urged in argument, that in that case, the
complaint against the established rate was that it was
unreasonable, while here the complaint is that the rate was
unjustly discriminatory. But the distinction is not material. The
power of the Commission over the two complaints is the same -- one
is as likely to become the subject of diverging opinions and
conflicting decisions as is the other, and if a court, acting
originally upon either, were to sustain it and award reparation,
the confusing anomaly would be presented of a rate being adjudged
to be violative of the prescribed standards, and yet continuing to
be the legal rate, obligatory upon both carrier and shipper.
Of course, the provision in § 22, as also the provision in
§ 9, must be read in connection with other parts of the act,
and be interpreted with due regard to its manifest purpose; and,
when that is done, it is apparent that neither provision recognizes
or implies that an action for reparation, such as is here sought,
may be maintained in any court, federal or state, in the absence of
an appropriate finding and order of the Commission.
Texas and
Pacific Railway Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co., supra, pp.
204 U. S. 442,
204 U. S.
446.
The next question to be considered is whether judicial notice
should have been taken of the decision of the Commission in
Glade Coal Co. v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co.,
wherein, as it is said, the rate here in question was found to be
unjustly discriminatory and the railroad company was directed to
desist from its enforcement. The decision was rendered April 28,
1904, and authoritatively published in 10 I.C.C. 226, but was not
mentioned in the pleadings or in the agreed statement of facts. In
the Supreme
Page 222 U. S. 512
Court of Appeals of the state, it was contended that the
decision should have been judicially noticed by the trial court,
but the contention was rejected, and that ruling is now challenged
as contravening the provision in § 14 of the act, which
reads:
"The Commission may provide for the publication of its reports
and decisions in such form and manner as may be best adapted for
public information and use, and such authorized publications shall
be competent evidence of the reports and decisions of the
Commission contained therein, in all courts of the United States
and of the several states, without any further proof or
authentication thereof."
Undoubtedly, this provision makes the decisions of the
Commission, as so published, admissible in evidence without other
proof of their genuineness, but it does not require that they be
judicially noticed, or relieve litigants from offering them in
evidence as they would any other competent evidence intended to be
relied upon. Its purpose is to relieve litigants from the
inconvenience and expense of obtaining certified copies of the
decisions by authorizing the use of the published copies, but it
does not otherwise change the rules of evidence. The ruling
therefore was not in contravention of the statute.
The result, however, would have been the same had the decision
been properly before the court. An examination of it discloses that
it did not contain any finding or direction as to what, if any,
reparation should be made because of prior exactions of the rate
which it condemned. It did find that the complaining party in that
proceeding had been injured by the refusal of the railroad company
to furnish cars on certain occasions for the shipment of coal, and
did direct that reparation therefor be made, but that is without
bearing here.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed, and it is so
ordered.
Affirmed.