The Commerce Court has jurisdiction of a petition of a carrier
to restrain an affirmative order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission that it desist from paying allowance for lighterage to
one shipper unless it pay the same to other shippers, and also has
power to determine whether such order was entitled to be
enforced.
The Commerce Court has power to allow a preliminary injunction
against the enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission directing the carrier to desist from paying allowances
for lighterage.
An appeal to this Court from an interlocutory order of the
Commerce Court allowing a preliminary injunction against the
enforcement of an affirmative order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission lies under § 2 of the act creating the court, now
§ 210 of the new Judicial Code.
Under § 210 of the Judicial Code, injunction orders can be
issued by the Commerce Court restraining the enforcement of an
order of the Interstate Commerce Commission in the following
classes of cases:
First. A temporary restraining order staying in whole or in part
the operation of the order for not more than sixty days to be
allowed by the court or a judge thereof.
Second. A preliminary injunction to restrain or suspend in whole
or in part the operation of the Commission's order
pendente
lite to be granted by the court.
Third. A perpetual injunction upon entry of final decree.
Page 225 U. S. 307
The requirements in § 210, Judicial Code, that a
restraining order must contain a statement of facts as to
irreparable damage resulting from the order of the Commission
relates only to the first class of cases.
This Court will not apply to the construction of the equity
powers of a statutory court general principles of equity if the
effect would be to destroy the law creating the court by expunging
therefrom the very powers which Congress intended to grant, and so
held that the power given by § 210, Judicial Code, to
the Commerce Court to issue an injunction
pendente lite
was to enable that court to have proper time for consideration, and
the right of appeal to this Court was given as a safeguard against
a possible abuse of the power to issue the order, and the order
will not be reversed in the absence of such abuse. Where Congress
creates a special tribunal for a special class of cases with an
appeal to this Court, it is the duty of this Court to give effect
to that purpose and uphold the lawful authority of the court so
created and to also correct abuse of power when it appears.
In this case,
held that there was no abuse of power in
issuing the order for an injunction
pendente lite, and the
order is affirmed and the case remanded so that there may be
opportunity to dispose of it in the forum selected by Congress for
that purpose.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of the Commerce Court
and its power to issue restraining orders and injunctions, are
stated in the opinion.
Page 225 U. S. 314
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit instituted in the Commerce Court to enjoin the
enforcement of an order by the Interstate Commerce Commission.
The complainants in the bill are the Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Company, the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey, the
Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company, the Erie
Railroad Company, the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, the New York,
Ontario & Western Railway Company, and the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company. The Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal and John
Arbuckle and William A. Jamison, copartners trading as the Jay
Street Terminal, intervened and were made parties complainant, they
being interested to defeat the order of the Commission.
The defendant named in the bill is the United States. The
Interstate Commerce Commission appeared, and the Federal Sugar
Refining Company intervened and was made a party defendant.
Page 225 U. S. 315
The order which it was the purpose of the suit to enjoin was
made in a proceeding commenced before the Commission on behalf of
the Federal Sugar Refining Company to compel the railroads above
named to desist and abstain from paying to Arbuckle Brothers,
claimed to be operating what is known as the Jay Street Terminal,
certain so-called allowances for floatage, lighterage, and terminal
services rendered by them to the complainants in connection with
sugar transported by them in New York harbor to and for the
complainants, while at the same time paying no such allowances to
the said Federal Refining Company on its sugar.
We substantially adopt as accurate a summary statement made of
the subject matter of the controversy in the brief of counsel for
the railroad companies:
"The Federal Sugar Refining Company has a refinery at Yonkers,
New York, and Arbuckle Brothers have a refinery in the Borough of
Brooklyn, New York City. The railroad companies operate what are
known as trunk line railroads, extending from New York to western
and southern points. In order to receive and deliver freight in New
York City, they are obliged to transport the same across the waters
of New York harbor on lighters by what is called lighterage
service, or, when the freight is carried through in railroad cars,
on car floats by what is called floatage service."
"At numerous points along the New York City waterfront within
the lighterage limits, they have established public stations for
the receipt and delivery of freight."
"They have also established boundaries known as 'lighterage
limits,' including substantially all of what may be called
manufacturing and commercial portion of the waterfront of New York
City and the opposite shore of New Jersey, and within these
boundaries they receive and deliver freight at any accessible point
on the waterfront without any additional charge above the New York
rates, which are, generally speaking, the same as the rates
Page 225 U. S. 316
to and from the terminals on the New Jersey shore. At 'public'
docks open to any vessel, the railroad pays the wharfage; at
private docks the shipper or consignee must arrange for the
necessary dockage."
"At a number of points in the Boroughs of Brooklyn and the
Bronx, the railroad companies or some of them furnish public
stations through arrangements made with terminal companies to
furnish union public stations and terminal facilities for the
receipt and delivery of freight in cars and through freight houses,
and for the transportation of such freight between such terminal
stations and the railroad companies' rails on the western shore of
the harbor, all of which is done for and in the name of the
railroad companies under provisions of their tariffs filed with the
Interstate Commerce Commission under which their New York rates
apply to and from such union public stations."
"One of these public terminal stations, known as the Jay Street
Terminal, is owned and operated by William A. Jamison and John
Arbuckle, conducting a separate business in that respect as
copartners under the name and style of 'Jay Street Terminal,' in
accordance with the laws of the State of New York. Jay Street
Terminal is named as a station of the railroad companies,
appellees, in their respective tariffs, and is conducted under
contract with the railroad companies like any other freight
station, bills of lading issued from and to it on behalf of the
railroad companies and in their names, on the regular uniform form,
charges being collected and accounts kept, the Jay Street Terminal
performing the entire physical and clerical service and furnishing
the necessary docks, freight yard, and station buildings and
equipment, excepting cars. The Jay Street Terminal also floats or
lighters all shipments between the terminal and the rails of the
railroad companies on the New Jersey shore. For these services and
facilities each railroad company pays to the
Page 225 U. S. 317
Jay Street Terminal an aggregate compensation figured on the
freight handled for it, based on the rate of 4 1/5 cents per
hundred pounds on freight originating at or destined to points at
or west of the westerly limits of Trunk Line Territory, so called,
and 3 cents per hundred pounds on freight originating at or
destined to points east of the westerly limit of Trunk Line
Territory. The same amounts per hundred pounds are paid to other
terminal companies furnishing similar service at New York."
"The refinery of Arbuckle Brothers, a copartnership composed of
William A. Jamison and John Arbuckle, is within two blocks of the
Jay Street Terminal, and they truck sugar from their refinery to
this terminal and load it into cars at their own expense and
deliver it to the Jay Street Terminal, and obtain the railroad
company's bill of lading for it from the Jay Street Terminal just
as other shippers do with other freight."
"The refinery of the Federal Sugar Refining Company at Yonkers,
New York, formerly operated by the Federal Sugar Refining Company
of Yonkers, is located on the Hudson River, 10 miles north of the
limits of the lighterage limits. The sugar manufactured at this
refinery and shipped over the lines of these appellees is loaded
onto lighters of the Ben Franklin Transportation Company, an
independent boat line with which the Federal Sugar Refining Company
has made a contract under which the boat line lighters its sugar to
the terminals of the railroad companies for 3 cents per hundred
pounds. The boat line brings the sugar to the terminals of the
railroads on the western shore of New York harbor and delivers it
to them for rail transportation."
"The Federal Sugar Refining Company's refinery at Yonkers is
located directly on the tracks of the New York Central & Hudson
River Railroad Company. Over this railroad, the rates to the points
in the shipping territory of the Federal Sugar Refining Company
are, with few
Page 225 U. S. 318
exceptions, the same as the rates via the lines of the railroad
companies. To ship at the New York rate over the lines of the
roads, the Federal Sugar Refining Company can deliver its shipments
to the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad at Yonkers,
thence to be transported by that railroad to New York, and there
delivered to the said railroad companies within lighterage limits.
None of these railroads has lines extending to Yonkers. Because of
alleged delay in the handling and transportation of shipments via
this route, the Federal Sugar Refining Company sometimes prefers to
deliver said shipments by lighter to the said railroad companies at
their stations on the New Jersey shore of New York harbor."
"Prior to July, 1909, these shipments were carried by the Ben
Franklin Transportation Company directly to the rail terminals on
the Jersey shore from Yonkers without stop. Since that date, the
lighters stop en route at Pier 24, North River. The reason for
stopping at Pier 24 is found in the decision made by the Commission
in case No. 1082, brought by the Federal Sugar Refining Company of
Yonkers, the predecessor of the Federal Sugar Refining Company,
against the same railroad companies, appellees here (17 I.C.C. 40).
The complaint in that proceeding claimed a discrimination against
the Federal Sugar Refining Company of Yonkers and in favor of the
Jay Street Terminal and the Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal, an
incorporated company operating a similar terminal station in
another section of Brooklyn, because of the refusal of the railroad
companies to pay it the same amounts on account of the lighterage
performed by the Ben Franklin Transportation Company from Yonkers
to the rail terminals of the railroad company on the western shore
of New York harbor as were paid to the two terminal companies above
named on account of the various services performed and terminal
facilities furnished by them in connection with the transportation
of sugar shipped by
Page 225 U. S. 319
Arbuckle Brothers and the American Sugar Refining Company,
respectively. This complaint was dismissed because the extension of
the lighterage limits in New York harbor of the railroad companies
was a matter of business discretion, and that the Commission had no
authority to require such extension beyond the then prescribed
boundaries, and that the Federal Sugar Refining Company, being
located outside of the prescribed lighterage limits, was not
subject to unlawful discrimination by reason of the practice of the
railroad companies in affording free lighterage on shipments
originating at a distance to points within said lighterage limits
while refusing to so afford on shipments of the Federal Sugar
Refining Company."
"As a result of this decision of the Commission, the lighters of
the Ben Franklin Transportation Company were stopped en route from
Yonkers at Pier 24, North River, where certain formalities with
reference to shipping orders were had for the purpose of making it
appear as a matter of law that these shipments were made not from
Yonkers, but from Pier 24, North River, a point within lighterage
limits. A new complaint was filed with the Commission, setting
forth the same grounds of discrimination as the prior one, but on
the theory that the decision of the Commission did not apply
because the shipments of the Federal Sugar Refining Company were
now lightered from Pier 24, a point within lighterage limits, and
not from Yonkers. The Commission held as a matter of law that the
stoppage of the lighters of the Ben Franklin Transportation Company
for instructions at Pier 24 differentiated the case from the former
one, and made the following order:"
" It is ordered that the above-named defendants [the appellees]
be and they are hereby notified and required to cease and desist on
or before the 15th day of April, 1911, and for a period of not less
than two years thereafter abstain from paying such allowances to
Arbuckle Brothers
Page 225 U. S. 320
on their sugar, while at the same time paying no such allowance
to said complainant [Federal Sugar Refining Company] on its sugar,
which said allowances so paid to said Arbuckle Brothers by said
defendants are found by the Commission in said report to be unduly
discriminatory and in violation of the Act to Regulate
Commerce."
"The so-called 'allowances' referred to in this order are a part
of the payments making up the compensation of the Jay Street
Terminal, figured at the rates of 3 cents and 4 1/5 cents per
hundred pounds, as above described."
This is the order the enforcement of which was the subject
matter of the controversy in the court below.
The United States, the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the
Federal Sugar Refining Company promptly filed motions to dismiss
the petition and the intervening petition of the Jay Street
Terminal upon the ground of want of equity and because the order of
the Commission was an adjudication of matters of fact as to which
its judgment was conclusive. The petitioners, on the other hand,
applied for an injunction
pendente lite suspending the
order of the Commission until the final determination of the
action. The motions to dismiss were denied. On the same day, the
motion for a temporary injunction -- which had been heard upon the
petition and intervening petitions and affidavits submitted by
petitioners in support of the averments of the petition and
intervening petition -- was granted, and the assailed order "and
its force and effect" were suspended until the further order of the
court. This appeal was then taken.
There was clearly a right in the court below to entertain
jurisdiction of the petition, and to determine whether the
affirmative order of the Commission was entitled to be enforced.
There was clearly also power in the court to allow a preliminary
injunction, since that authority is conferred in express terms by
§ 3 (208) of the act. And
Page 225 U. S. 321
the right to appeal from such an order is also in express terms
conferred by § 2 (210) of the act.
It is urged on behalf of the United States and the Interstate
Commerce Commission that, wholly irrespective of the merits of the
petition, the order granting the interlocutory injunction must be
reversed because of what is insisted to be the express requirements
of the act imposing the duty on the Commerce Court or a judge of
that court, if a restraining order is granted under the conditions
in the statute, to state the facts from which it is found that
irreparable injury would arise if a restraining order were not
allowed. The section containing the provision relied upon is as
follows:
"That suits to enjoin, set aside, annul, or suspend any order of
the Interstate Commerce Commission shall be brought in the Commerce
Court against the United States. The pendency of such suit shall
not of itself stay or suspend the operation of the order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission, but the Commerce Court, in its
discretion, may restrain or suspend, in whole or in part, the
operation of the Commission's order pending the final hearing and
determination of the suit. No order or injunction so restraining or
suspending an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission shall be
made by the Commerce Court otherwise than upon notice and after
hearing, except that, in cases where irreparable damage would
otherwise ensue to the petitioner, said court, or a judge thereof,
may, on hearing, after not less than three days' notice to the
Interstate Commerce Commission and the Attorney General, allow a
temporary stay or suspension in whole or in part of the operation
of the order of the Interstate Commerce Commission for not more
than sixty days from the date of the order of such court or judge,
pending application to the court for its order or injunction, in
which case the said order shall contain a specific finding, based
upon evidence submitted to the judge making the
Page 225 U. S. 322
order and identified by reference thereto, that such irreparable
damage would result to the petitioner, and specifying the nature of
the damage. The court may, at the time of hearing such application,
upon a like finding, continue the temporary stay or suspension in
whole or in part until its decision upon the application."
Without ambiguity, we think the statute contemplates three
classes of orders: first, a temporary restraining order staying in
whole or in part the operation of the order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission for not more than sixty days from the date of
the suspensive order, to be allowed by the court or a judge
thereof; second, a preliminary injunction -- that is, an injunction
pendente lite, which, to quote the words of the statute,
may be granted by the court to "restrain or suspend, in whole or in
part, the operation of the Commission's order pending the final
hearing and determination of the suit;" third, in the nature of
things, a perpetual injunction upon the entry of the final decree.
The order in this case, made after notice and hearing, suspending
the force and effect of the order of the Commission until the
further order of the court, was obviously an exercise of the power
conferred to grant a preliminary injunction or injunction
pendente lite, and not of the power to allow a temporary
restraining order embraced in the first of the classes stated. As
we think it clear that the requirements of the statute relied upon
respecting the statement of facts as to irreparable damages relate
only to the first class of cases -- that is, the power to issue a
temporary restraining order -- we hold the objection to be without
merit.
This brings us to consider the scope of our reviewing authority
under the right conferred by the statute to appeal from the
allowance by the court below of a preliminary injunction or
injunction
pendente lite. To determine this question
requires a consideration of the nature and character of the powers
which the court had a right to
Page 225 U. S. 323
exert over the subject matter presented to it by petition filed
to perpetually enjoin the enforcement of the order of the
Commission.
We have determined in the
Procter & Gamble case,
ante, p.
225 U. S. 282,
that the Commerce Court was but endowed in considering whether an
affirmative order of the Commission should be enforced, on the one
hand, or set aside and declared nonenforceable, on the other, with
the jurisdiction and power existing at the time that act was passed
in the circuit courts of the United States. And as, at that time,
it was conclusively settled that the courts had only authority to
reexamine the findings of the Commission as to subjects like the
one here under consideration for the purpose of ascertaining
whether the action of the Commission was repugnant to the
Constitution, in excess of the statutory powers conferred upon it,
or manifested such an abuse as to be equivalent to an excess of
authority, it clearly results that the court below was likewise
limited in passing upon the petition before it in this case. This
being true, it is also necessarily true that virtually the sole
authority of the court below was in a sense confined to determining
questions of law arising upon the case as presented on the face of
the pleadings. Under the general principles of equity, where a
court is called upon to decide whether it will allow a preliminary
or
pendente lite injunction, the duty arising requires it
to be determined whether, on the face of the papers presented,
there is such an equitable cause of action presented as justifies
the issue of a preliminary injunction to preserve the status
pending the suit -- that is, to afford an opportunity for a trial
of the issues presented. Necessarily it is true also that, where an
appeal is allowed from an order granting a preliminary injunction,
the reviewing court is put to the duty of determining whether, on
the face of the papers, the court below erred as a matter of law in
granting the preliminary injunction. Do these principles apply to
the case before
Page 225 U. S. 324
us is then the first consideration. The result of holding that
they do will inevitably cause the expunging from the Act of the
express authority conferred to issue a preliminary injunction,
since, viewed under the general principles of equity, the criteria
by which to determine the rightfulness of such an order in view of
the nature an character of the jurisdiction of the Commerce Court
is exactly and exclusively the same criteria by which the
rightfulness of a final decree of that court, issuing a perpetual
injunction in conformity to such decree, would require to be
tested. Our duty, however, is not to destroy the law, but to
enforce it, and in doing so to seek to discover the intention of
the lawmaker, the wrong intended to be prevented, and the remedy
designed to be afforded by the enactment of the statute. Coming to
consider the statute for this purpose, we have pointed out in the
Proctor & Gamble case that the great remedy intended
to be accomplished was the concentration in a single court of the
power to consider the rightfulness of enforcing or setting aside
orders of the Commission; that, to prevent unnecessary delays, the
limitations as to restraining orders and their duration, and the
hearing which is commanded as to irreparable injury, were enacted.
It must therefore in reason be that the power to issue a
preliminary injunction was recognized and preserved so as to afford
the court the proper time for deliberation and consideration of the
questions to be decided by the Commission, instead of compelling
that body, virtually
eo instante upon the presentation of
a petition, to reach a final conclusion. And it would seem also to
be the case that the right to appeal from such an order was given
as a safeguard against a possible abuse of discretion by an
unwarranted, arbitrary, and unreasonable exercise of the power
conferred. In other words, we think that the enlightened purpose of
Congress was that the court which it created, in the exercise of
the important trusts confined to its authority,
Page 225 U. S. 325
and where occasion required it as a consequence of the gravity
and complexity of the legal questions which might arise, should be
afforded ample opportunity for due consideration and ripe judgment,
and that it was not intended to compel precipitate, and perhaps ill
considered, action.
Coming to consider the case presented in the light of these
principles, in view of the doubt which existed as to the scope and
effect of the powers conferred upon the Commission, as shown by the
decision of the Court in the
Procter & Gamble case, of
the nature and character of the subject matter here under
consideration and its importance, of the action of the Commission
had on that subject prior to the making of the order of the
Commission which was assailed by the petition, and especially of
the diversity of opinion which existed among the members of the
Commission on the subject, we think there is no room for saying
that the preliminary injunction issued was in excess of the power
conferred upon the court, because of the plain want of necessity
for it, resulting from the obvious nature and character of the
legal questions as to which the judgment of the court was invoked
in consequence of the filing of the petition calling for the
exertion of the authority conferred upon it by Congress.
It is not disputable that, although the right to appeal to this
Court from an order like the one here in question is conferred, yet
obviously the purpose which must have caused the creation of the
Commerce Court must have been the desire to interpose between the
action of the Commission and this Court an intermediate tribunal,
having the powers which the statute delegates to it. Our duty is to
give that purpose effect and to uphold the lawful authority of the
court without deviation, and yet without hesitancy, where there has
been an abuse of discretion, to correct it in the completest way.
But, as this case manifests no such abuse, our duty is not to
reverse the action of the court, but to remand the case, so
that
Page 225 U. S. 326
there may be an opportunity to dispose of it on the merits in
the forum selected by Congress for that purpose. Of course, in
saying this, we must not be understood as deciding or in any way
implying that the duty would not exist to examine the merits of a
preliminary order of the general character of the one before us in
a case where it plainly, in our judgment, appeared that the
granting of the preliminary order was in effect a decision by the
court of the whole controversy on the merits, or where it was
demonstrable that grave detriment to the public interest would
result from not considering and finally disposing of the
controversy without remanding to enable the court below to do
so.
Affirmed.