ICC v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 227 U.S. 88 (1913)

Syllabus

U.S. Supreme Court

ICC v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 227 U.S. 88 (1913)

Interstate Commerce Commission v.

Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company

No. 600

Argued October 17, 18, 1912

Decided January 20, 1913

227 U.S. 88

Syllabus

The Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended by the Hepburn Act, gives a right to a full hearing on the subject of rates, and that confers the privilege of introducing testimony and imposes the duty of deciding in accordance with the facts proved.

A finding without evidence is arbitrary and useless, and an act of Congress granting authority to any body to make a finding without evidence would be inconsistent with justice, and an exercise of arbitrary power condemned by the Constitution.

Administrative orders quasi-judicial in character are void if a hearing is denied; if the hearing granted is manifestly unfair, if the finding is indisputably contrary to the evidence, or if the facts found do not, as matter of law, support the order made.

Administrative orders can only be reviewed by the court where a justiciable question is presented, and, where the act provides for judicial review of such orders, it will be construed as providing for a hearing so that the court may consider matters within the scope of judicial power.

Under the Act to Regulate Commerce, the carrier retains the primary right to make rates, and the power of the Commission to alter them depends upon the existence of the fact of their unreasonableness, and, in the absence of evidence to that effect, the Commission has no jurisdiction.

The legal effect of evidence is a question of law, and a finding without evidence is beyond the jurisdiction of the Commission.

Where the party affected is entitled to a hearing, the Interstate Commerce Commission cannot base an order establishing a rate on the information which it has gathered for general purposes under the provisions of § 12 of the act. The order must be based on evidence produced in the particular proceeding.

In this case, the Interstate Commerce Commission having found, after

Page 227 U. S. 89

taking evidence, that the new rates were excessive and that the through rate which exceeded the sum of the locals should have been lowered, instead of the locals being raised to equal the through rate, this Court holds that the finding, having been based on evidence, should not be disturbed, and that the order of the Commission was proper.

The value of evidence in rate proceedings varies, and the weight to be given to it is peculiarly for the body experienced in regard to rates and familiar with the intricacies of ratemaking.

When rail rates are advanced with the disappearance of water competition, no inference adverse to the railroad can be drawn, but when the old rates had been maintained for several years after such disappearance, there is a presumption, if the rate are raised, that the advance is made for other reasons.

In this case, the order of the Commission restoring local rates that had been in force many years between New Orleans and neighboring cities and making a corresponding reduction in through rates was not arbitrary, but was sustained by substantial, although conflicting, evidence, and the courts cannot settle such a controversy or put their judgment against that of the Commission, which is the ratemaking body.

The facts, which involve the construction of the Act to Regulate Commerce in regard to the provisions of the Hepburn Act for fixing rates, are stated in the opinion.


Opinions

U.S. Supreme Court

ICC v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 227 U.S. 88 (1913) Interstate Commerce Commission v.

Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company

No. 600

Argued October 17, 18, 1912

Decided January 20, 1913

227 U.S. 88

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES COMMERCE COURT

Syllabus

The Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended by the Hepburn Act, gives a right to a full hearing on the subject of rates, and that confers the privilege of introducing testimony and imposes the duty of deciding in accordance with the facts proved.

A finding without evidence is arbitrary and useless, and an act of Congress granting authority to any body to make a finding without evidence would be inconsistent with justice, and an exercise of arbitrary power condemned by the Constitution.

Administrative orders quasi-judicial in character are void if a hearing is denied; if the hearing granted is manifestly unfair, if the finding is indisputably contrary to the evidence, or if the facts found do not, as matter of law, support the order made.

Administrative orders can only be reviewed by the court where a justiciable question is presented, and, where the act provides for judicial review of such orders, it will be construed as providing for a hearing so that the court may consider matters within the scope of judicial power.

Under the Act to Regulate Commerce, the carrier retains the primary right to make rates, and the power of the Commission to alter them depends upon the existence of the fact of their unreasonableness, and, in the absence of evidence to that effect, the Commission has no jurisdiction.

The legal effect of evidence is a question of law, and a finding without evidence is beyond the jurisdiction of the Commission.

Where the party affected is entitled to a hearing, the Interstate Commerce Commission cannot base an order establishing a rate on the information which it has gathered for general purposes under the provisions of § 12 of the act. The order must be based on evidence produced in the particular proceeding.

In this case, the Interstate Commerce Commission having found, after

Page 227 U. S. 89

taking evidence, that the new rates were excessive and that the through rate which exceeded the sum of the locals should have been lowered, instead of the locals being raised to equal the through rate, this Court holds that the finding, having been based on evidence, should not be disturbed, and that the order of the Commission was proper.

The value of evidence in rate proceedings varies, and the weight to be given to it is peculiarly for the body experienced in regard to rates and familiar with the intricacies of ratemaking.

When rail rates are advanced with the disappearance of water competition, no inference adverse to the railroad can be drawn, but when the old rates had been maintained for several years after such disappearance, there is a presumption, if the rate are raised, that the advance is made for other reasons.

In this case, the order of the Commission restoring local rates that had been in force many years between New Orleans and neighboring cities and making a corresponding reduction in through rates was not arbitrary, but was sustained by substantial, although conflicting, evidence, and the courts cannot settle such a controversy or put their judgment against that of the Commission, which is the ratemaking body.

The facts, which involve the construction of the Act to Regulate Commerce in regard to the provisions of the Hepburn Act for fixing rates, are stated in the opinion.

MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.

The New Orleans Board of Trade, in October and November, 1907, brought three separate proceedings against

Page 227 U. S. 90

the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, asking the Commerce Commission to set aside as unfair, unreasonable, and discriminatory certain class and commodity rates (local) from New Orleans to (1) Mobile, to (2) Pensacola, and (3) through rates, via those cities, to Montgomery, Selma, and Prattville. The railroad answered. A hearing was had, the issue as to commodity rates was adjusted by agreement, and on December 31, 1909, the Commission made a single order in which it found the class rates complained of to be unreasonable, directed the old locals to be restored, and a corresponding reduction made in the through rates. The railroad thereupon, on January 26, 1910, filed a bill in the United States Circuit Court for the Western District of Kentucky, praying that the Commission be enjoined from enforcing this order, which it alleged was arbitrary, oppressive, and confiscatory, and deprived the company of its property and right to make rates, without due process of law.

After a hearing before three circuit court judges, the carrier's application for a temporary injunction was denied. 184 F. 118. Testimony was then taken before an examiner. Later the suit was transferred to the newly organized Commerce Court, the United States being made a party. There, in addition to the evidence in the circuit court, the railroad exhibited all that had been introduced before the Commission as a basis for the contention that this evidence utterly failed to show that the rates attacked were unreasonable. This view was sustained by the Commerce Court, which in a lengthy opinion held (one judge dissenting) that the order was void because there was no material evidence to support it.

On the appeal here, the government insisted that, while the Act of 1887 to regulate commerce (24 Stat. 379, §§ 14-16, c. 104) made the orders of the Commission only prima facie correct, a different result followed from the provision in the Hepburn Act of 1906 (34 Stat. 584, § 4, c. 3591),

Page 227 U. S. 91

that rates should be set aside if, after a hearing, the "Commission shall be of the opinion that the charge was unreasonable." In such case, it insisted that the order based on such opinion is conclusive, and (though Int. Com. Comm. v. Union Pacific R. Co., 222 U. S. 547, was to the contrary) could not be set aside, even if the finding was wholly without substantial evidence to support it.

1. But the statute gave the right to a full hearing, and that conferred the privilege of introducing testimony and at the same time imposed the duty of deciding in accordance with the facts proved. A finding without evidence is arbitrary and baseless. And if the government's contention is correct, it would mean that the Commission had a power possessed by no other officer, administrative body, or tribunal under our government. It would mean that, where rights depended upon facts, the Commission could disregard all rules of evidence, and capriciously make findings by administrative fiat. Such authority, however beneficently exercised in one case, could be injuriously exerted in another, is inconsistent with rational justice, and comes under the Constitution's condemnation of all arbitrary exercise of power.

In the comparatively few cases in which such questions have arisen, it has been distinctly recognized that administrative orders, quasi-judicial in character, are void if a hearing was denied, if that granted was inadequate or manifestly unfair, if the finding was contrary to the "indisputable character of the evidence." Tang Tun v. Edsell, 223 U. S. 681; Chin Yow v. United States, 208 U. S. 13; Low Wah Suey v. Backus, 225 U. S. 468; Zakonaite v. Wolf, 226 U. S. 272), or if the facts found do not, as a matter of law, support the order made (United States v. B. & O. S.W. R. Co., 226 U. S. 14. Cf. Atlantic C.L. v. North Carolina Corp. Comm'n, 206 U. S. 20; Wisconsin, M. & P. R. Co. v. Jacobson, 179 U. S. 301;

Page 227 U. S. 92

Oregon Railroad v. Fairchild, 224 U. S. 510; ICC v. Illinois Central, 215 U. S. 470; Southern Pacific Co. v. Interstate Com. Comm., 219 U. S. 433; Muser v. Magone, 155 U. S. 247.

2. The government's claim is not only opposed to the ruling in ICC v. Union Pacific, 222 U. S. 547, and the cases there cited, but is contrary to the terms of the Act to Regulate Commerce, which, in its present form, provides (25 Stat. 861, § 17) for methods of procedure before the Commission that "conduce to justice." The statute, instead of making its orders conclusive against a direct attack, expressly declares that they may "be suspended or set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction." 36 Stat. 539 (15). Of course, that can only be done in cases presenting a justiciable question. But whether the order deprives the carrier of a constitutional or statutory right, whether the hearing was adequate and fair, or whether for any reason the order is contrary to law are all matters within the scope of judicial power.

3. Under the statute, the carrier retains the primary right to make rates, but if, after hearing, they are shown to be unreasonable, the Commission may set them aside and require the substitution of just for unjust charges. The Commission's right to act depends upon the existence of this fact, and if there was no evidence to show that the rates were unreasonable, there was no jurisdiction to make the order. Int. Com. Comm. v. Northern Pacific Ry., 216 U. S. 544. In a case like the present, the courts will not review the Commission's conclusions of fact (Int. Com. Comm. v. Delaware &c. Ry., 220 U. S. 235, 220 U. S. 251) by passing upon the credibility of witnesses or conflicts in the testimony. But the legal effect of evidence is a question of law. A finding without evidence is beyond the power of the Commission. An order based thereon is contrary to law, and must, in the language of the statute, be "set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction." 36 Stat. 551.

Page 227 U. S. 93

4. The government further insists that the Commerce Act (26 Stat. 743) requires the Commission to obtain information necessary to enable it to perform the duties and carry out the objects for which it was created, and, having been given legislative power to make rates, it can act, as could Congress, on such information, and therefore its findings must be presumed to have been supported by such information, even though not formally proved at the hearing. But such a construction would nullify the right to a hearing, for manifestly there is no hearing when the party does not know what evidence is offered or considered, and is not given an opportunity to test, explain, or refute. The information gathered under the provisions of § 12 may be used as basis for instituting prosecutions for violations of the law, and for many other purposes, but is not available, as such, in cases where the party is entitled to a hearing. The Commission is an administrative body and, even where it acts in a quasi-judicial capacity, is not limited by the strict rules as to the admissibility of evidence which prevail in suits between private parties. Int. Com. Comm. v. Baird, 194 U. S. 25. But the more liberal the practice in admitting testimony, the more imperative the obligation to preserve the essential rules of evidence by which rights are asserted or defended. In such cases, the Commissioners cannot act upon their own information, as could jurors in primitive days. All parties must be fully apprised of the evidence submitted or to be considered, and must be given opportunity to cross-examine witnesses, to inspect documents, and to offer evidence in explanation or rebuttal. In no other way can a party maintain its rights or make its defense. In no other way can it test the sufficiency of the facts to support the finding; for otherwise, even though it appeared that the order was without evidence, the manifest deficiency could always be explained on the theory that the Commission had before it extraneous, unknown, but

Page 227 U. S. 94

presumptively sufficient information to support the finding. United States v. Baltimore & Ohio S.W. R. Co., 226 U. S. 14.

As these contentions of the government must be overruled, it is necessary to examine the record with a view of determining whether there was substantial evidence to support the order.

5. The Louisville & Nashville railroad ran from New Orleans to Mobile and to Pensacola. From both of these cities it also had lines extending to Montgomery. When the road from Mobile to New Orleans was completed, about 1871, there was in operation a boat line carrying freight from the latter city to Mobile and Pensacola. In order to meet this water competition, a low rail rate was compelled, and was put in force by the rail carrier.

In 1887, the through rate from New Orleans to Montgomery was adjusted so as to conform to an award by Judge Cooley under which rates from certain Ohio River points to Montgomery were to be the same irrespective of any difference in distance. Rates to Montgomery from Kentucky points on the Mississippi were to be two cents lower, and rates to Montgomery from Memphis, Vicksburg, and New Orleans were to be two cents lower still. With the exception of a change made necessary by the construction of a short line from Memphis to Birmingham, the class rates in that territory were, as a rule, maintained in conformity with the Cooley award, though, from time to time, commodity rates were made to meet special conditions.

Changes in rates from New Orleans to Mobile, to Pensacola, and from those cities to Montgomery, were made in 1907. The carrier insists that the situation at Pensacola was not the same as at Mobile. But the controlling principle is applicable to the rates at all the points involved. And in order to prevent a treble discussion of the three cases, the rates from New Orleans to Mobile to Montgomery

Page 227 U. S. 95

may be regarded as typical. The increase in class rates varied from 1 to 13 cents per 100 pounds. The increase in Class 3 was greatest, and it will therefore be taken as affording the best concrete example of the situation before and after the change of 1907.

Under the Cooley award the tariff on Class 3 had been fixed as follows:

New Orleans to Mobile (local) . . . . 25

Mobile to Montgomery (local). . . . . 30

__

Combination of locals . . . . . . . . 55

But while these locals aggregated only 55 cents, there was at the same time, a through rate:

New Orleans to Montgomery . . . . . . 68

The carrier's filed tariffs contained a provision that, wherever the rate between two points on its line was greater than the sum of the locals between the same places, the combination of the two locals should be collected. There was nothing to indicate that shipments from New Orleans to Montgomery were not entitled to this combination rate, but it seems that the privilege was rarely, if ever, granted to New Orleans merchants, who, in order to get the advantage of the low locals (25), were obliged to ship to Mobile, there unload, reload, and rebill to Montgomery at the 30-cent rate. By this inconvenient method, they could secure the 55-cent rate to Montgomery. Otherwise, they paid the rate of 68 cents on the same goods, over the same line, between the same points.

The carrier was notified that this practice was in violation of the Commission's ruling that, except in special cases, the through rate must not exceed to the sum of the locals. An enforcement of this rule would have compelled the carrier to reduce the through rate (68) to the sum of the locals (55), and so, in less proportion, as to all other class rates involved in this case.

Page 227 U. S. 96

The company, however, met the situation by increasing the local, instead of reducing the through rate. For example, the rate on Class 3 from New Orleans to Mobile was raised from 25 to 38, so that, when added to the 30-cent rate from Mobile to Montgomery, the combination 68 equaled the existing through rate of 68 cents from New Orleans to Montgomery. Similar action was taken as to all other rates between New Orleans and Mobile and New Orleans and Pensacola and thence to Montgomery.

At the hearing, the facts thus recited were established. The reports of the carrier, showing its earnings and expenses in detail, were in evidence. Its tariffs and those of other railroads were offered as a basis for comparing the rates under attack with those charged by this and other companies for similar and longer distances. Numerous merchants from New Orleans testified that, since the increase of August 13, 1907, they had been unable to sell in Mobile and Pensacola, and that the through rate to Montgomery made it impossible to deal in that city. In its report, the Commission found that the rates to Mobile, Pensacola, and Montgomery from other and more distant points were actually or relatively lower than those for the shorter distance from New Orleans; that the ton-mile rate on the average of the first six classes was greater from New Orleans to Montgomery than from Memphis; that many departures had been made from the Cooley award; that the company's tariff contained a provision that the through rates should not exceed the sum of the locals; that, while increasing the local on eastbound freight from New Orleans to Mobile and Pensacola, no corresponding increase had been made on the westbound freight from those points to New Orleans; that the old low local out of New Orleans had been so long in force as to create a presumption that it was reasonable and compensatory. It concluded by entering an order adjudging that the rates in the tariff filed August 13, 1907, were unreasonable, and

Page 227 U. S. 97

directing the carrier to restore the old class rates (local) from New Orleans to Mobile and to Pensacola, and to make a corresponding reduction in the through rates from New Orleans to Montgomery, Selma, and Prattville.

This order was attacked generally and specially by a bill which, at length and in minute detail, assailed each specific fact stated in the report on the ground either that the fact found was without evidence to support it or that it was irrelevant to the issue involved, and furnished no basis whatever for the order which followed.

The Commerce Court rendered a lengthy and elaborate opinion in which it reviewed all of the matters referred to in the Commission's report and held that the finding were irrelevant, or without evidence to support them, or contrary to the uncontradicted testimony; that the fact that rates from more distant points to Montgomery, Pensacola, and Mobile were actually or relatively lower than from New Orleans to the same points, furnished no basis for the order unless it was shown that the conditions were similar, while it affirmatively appeared that these lower rates were compelled by water competition; that no conclusion could be drawn from the fact that such rates to Montgomery from other points were lower on the ton-mile basis in view of the universal rule that the longer the haul, the lower the rate. That the departures from the Cooley award related only to commodity rates, which were not involved in this hearing, and that the complaints of the merchants as to inability to sell in Mobile, Pensacola, and Montgomery were referable only to commodity rates, and not to class rates. It found that no legal inference could be drawn from the fact that the low locals had been maintained on westbound shipments after the carrier, on August 13, 1907, raised the locals on eastbound shipments from New Orleans to Mobile and Pensacola, inasmuch as there is no legal objection to having lower rates in one direction than in another. It found that the sole ground

Page 227 U. S. 98

for making the order was the fact that the carrier had raised rates after they had been in force for more than twenty years, although the presumption of reasonableness disappeared in view of the uncontradicted testimony that the old rates had been compelled by water competition.

6. It is unnecessary in this case to review each of the matters discussed, ruled, and found by the Commission in its report, and only the more salient facts will be mentioned. For the validity of the order does not necessarily depend upon the correctness of each of these findings, so that the breaking of one or many links by disproof would destroy the chain upon which the order depended. These findings are collateral, and if correct might be confirmatory of the ruling, which, however, might still be sustained if some of these statements were eliminated. The question is whether there was substantial evidence to support the order.

7. The pleadings charged that the new rates were unjust in themselves and by comparison with others. This was denied by the carrier. The Commission considered evidence and made findings relating to rates which the carrier insists had been compelled by competition and were not a proper standard by which to measure those here involved. The value of such evidence necessarily varies according to circumstances, but the weight to be given it is peculiarly for the body experienced in such matters and familiar with the complexities, intricacies, and history of ratemaking in each section of the country. So, too, the fact that a commodity rate is low may cast some light on the reasonableness of the higher rate on the class from which that commodity was taken or to which it might legally be restored.

It is true that the old low locals from Mobile (west) to New Orleans were maintained, while those from New Orleans (east) to Mobile were raised is not conclusive against the reasonableness of new tariff put in force in 1907. But it

Page 227 U. S. 99

was a fact tending to support the conclusion, unless the difference was shown to have been warranted by proper ratemaking rules. Of the sufficiency of the explanation, including the extent of the difference in empty car movement, the Commission was authorized to judge. It also had before it the company's financial statement and general tariff sheets, against which was the testimony for the carrier tending to prove that the rate to New Orleans was low in fact and by comparison with those in force over other parts of the carrier's system and on other lines in the same territory, even though this particular part of the road ran through a sparsely settled country, with expensive trestles and bridges, frequently damaged by storms from the Gulf and expensive to maintain.

8. But these facts did not stand alone. It appeared that, for many years prior to 1907, the carrier had maintained low locals from New Orleans to Mobile and Pensacola. When first put in force, they were abnormally low because compelled by water competition, and therefore furnish no just standard of reasonableness. And if, when that competition disappeared, the rates had been advanced, no inference adverse to the railroad could have been drawn from the increase. Int. Com. Comm. v. Chicago G.W. Ry., 209 U. S. 108. The answer of the railroad company admits that this water competition had ceased to exist. The date is not definitely stated, but it is fairly inferable that the water competition was not potential for some years before the increase in rates in 1907. When made, the increase was not because of the absence of water competition, but to make the sum of the locals correspond with the through rates. Under the circumstances, the maintenance of these low rates after the water competition disappeared tends to support the theory that, by an increase of business or other cause, they had become reasonable and compensatory.

9. From the appellee's standpoint, probably a principal

Page 227 U. S. 100

objection to the order complained of is that it will upset the Cooley award, under which rates have been adjusted throughout a large section. But that, too, was a matter for consideration by the Commission, which by this order has not lost power to restore the old rates, or to make changes in the new if it shall be found that those put in force unjustly discriminate in favor of New Orleans against other cities.

The order of the Commission restoring a local rate that had been in force for many years, and making a corresponding reduction in the through rate, was not arbitrary, but sustained by substantial, though conflicting, evidence. The courts cannot settle the conflict, nor put their judgments against that of the ratemaking body, and the decree is reversed.