It is the essential character of the commerce, not the accident
of local or through bills of lading, which determines federal or
state control thereover.
Commerce takes its character as interstate or foreign when it is
actually started in the course of transportation to another state
or to a foreign country.
In this case, staves and logs intended by the shippers to be
exported to foreign countries and shipped from points within the
state to a seaport also therein from which they were to be exported
were in interstate and foreign commerce notwithstanding they were
shipped on local bills of lading for the initial journey and were
subject to interstate and not intrastate charges, and within
federal and not state jurisdiction.
184 F. 989 affirmed.
The facts, which involve determining whether a shipment intended
for export to a foreign country, but shipped to the exporting
seaport on local bills of lading, was interstate or intrastate
commerce, and whether it was subject to federal or state
jurisdiction, are stated in the opinion.
Page 229 U. S. 337
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Suit in equity to declare void certain orders of the railroad
commission of the State of Louisiana, and to restrain the
enforcement of penalties for the alleged violation thereof. The
ground of the suit is that the orders and the penalties constitute
a regulation of interstate commerce, and therefore are in violation
of the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United
States.
An amended and supplemental bill was filed by leave of the
court, making the appellant Walter Guion, Attorney General of the
state, a party on the ground that he had asserted a right and
intention to bring suits in the state courts to collect the fines
and penalties imposed by the state railroad commission.
A demurrer was filed to the bill, stating as grounds thereof (1)
that neither the original nor the supplemental bill stated any
cause for the relief prayed; (2) that the suit was one against the
state, being one brought to restrain the state in her sovereign
character and capacity from instituting suits to recover and
enforce the collection of penalties imposed under and by virtue of
the provisions of her Constitution of a penal nature; (3) that the
amount involved is not sufficient to give the court jurisdiction,
not being over $2,000.
The demurrer was overruled. An answer was then filed. The case
was referred to a master, who reported his conclusions of fact and
of law and recommended that the bill be dismissed, basing his
recommendation on
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe R. Co. v.
Texas, 204 U. S. 403.
The circuit court, however, drew a different conclusion from the
facts, and entered a decree perpetually enjoining the fines
imposed. The decree was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals,
expressing, without discussion, its concurrence with the court
below that, on
Page 229 U. S. 338
the facts found by the master, the commerce involved in the case
was interstate.
The facts as found by the master may be summarized as
follows:
The appellee railroad companies are corporations engaged in
interstate and intrastate commerce from points within and without
the State of Louisiana to the City of New Orleans, and the freight
transported by them is subsequently loaded on board ships and
transported to foreign ports and countries. The Railroad Commission
of Louisiana, on May 25, 1905, promulgated and put in effect an
order which fixed the freight rates that the railroads should be
entitled to charge on all intrastate traffic, and the rates were
effective and in force at the date of the shipment in controversy.
In the months of July, August, and September, 1905, certain persons
(their names are unimportant) delivered to the St. Louis, Iron
Mountain & Southern Railway Company at certain stations on the
line of its road, within the state, eighteen carloads of logs and
staves. The logs and staves were transported by the railway from
said stations and delivered to Alexandria, and there delivered to
the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, which transported them to
New Orleans, where they were unloaded from the cars, put on board
ship, and exported to foreign countries.
When the shipments were made, the local tariff filed with and
approved by the State Railroad Commission was ten cents per hundred
pounds; the local tariff filed with and approved by the Interstate
Commerce Commission on such shipments at that time, was twelve
cents per hundred pounds.
The consignees were notified of the arrival of the cars at New
Orleans, and the Texas & Pacific Railway Company was ordered by
them to deliver the freight to certain steamships ships plying
between New Orleans and European ports. The freight was delivered
in accordance with the
Page 229 U. S. 339
orders and exported from Louisiana. A freight rate of twelve
cents per hundred pounds was charged on the shipments and collected
by the railway company.
In March, 1905, a shipper delivered to the Kansas City Southern
Railway Company at Leesville, Louisiana, on its line of road three
carloads of tank staves, which were loaded in cars of the Texas
& Pacific Railway Company to be transported to a named
consignee at New Orleans. The rate established by the State
Railroad Commission was ten cents per hundred pounds; the
interstate rate filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission was
fifteen cents per hundred pounds. The staves were hauled to
Shreveport, Louisiana, and there delivered to the Texas &
Pacific Railway Company, which hauled them to New Orleans. The
customary notice of their arrival was given to the consignee, and
they were directed by him to be delivered to a particular
steamship, to which they were delivered, being switched to the
lines of two other carriers and transported to Hamburg. The Texas
& Pacific Railway Company collected freight charges thereon
from the consignee at fifteen cents per hundred pounds. The
consignee at the date of the shipment of the freight resided at New
Orleans and was engaged in the business of shipping broker in
negotiating for cargo space, routes, and attending to shipments for
consignors in the United States. The consignees of the eighteen
carloads of logs and staves were engaged at New Orleans in the
business of exporting staves to foreign countries; the staves they
deal in are not treated, manufactured, or changed from the original
shape in which they are received at New Orleans for export, and 98%
of the shipments by them at New Orleans are exported to foreign
countries.
At the time of the shipment, the rules of the State Railroad
Commission allowed four days' free time for unloading cars at New
Orleans, except where the consignment
Page 229 U. S. 340
was for export, then twenty days were allowed. No demurrage was
tendered by the shipper or consignee or received by the carrier on
account of delays in handling beyond the four days allowed by the
rules. Every one of the shipments paid to the carrier three-fourths
of a cent per hundred pounds for handling charges, this being the
amount paid on all export shipments. The shipments were in the
physical custody of the railroad company until arrival at New
Orleans, and thereafter in the physical custody of the steamships,
which issued bills of lading therefor to the shippers of the
cargo.
The bills of lading in each instance provided for the delivery
of freight from the initial point to New Orleans, there to be
delivered to the shipper or consignee's order. But, notwithstanding
this, the staves and logs were intended by the shippers to be
exported to foreign countries, and were treated by both the
shippers and the carriers accordingly, the shippers always holding
the cars on the railroad track until they could accumulate cargo to
fill their export orders and arrange for transportation. The
railroad company allowed the shippers the usual twenty days' time
for delivery, as in the case of export shipments, without charging
demurrage, which the company would have had the right to charge,
after the expiration of four days, if the shipments had been
considered and treated as purely intrastate.
The sole question in the case is whether the shipments were
foreign or intrastate commerce, or, speaking more accurately,
whether they were within federal or state jurisdiction. The circuit
court and the circuit court of appeals both decided, as we have
seen, that they were within federal jurisdiction.
Appellants attack the conclusion and rely on, as the master
relied on, the case of
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe R. Co. v.
Texas, supra. The argument is that the service rendered by the
railroad companies was wholly
Page 229 U. S. 341
within the state and had "no contractual or necessary relation
to foreign transportation." It was, it is argued, "manifestly
preliminary thereto, independently contracted for, and not
necessarily connected therewith." And the principle is urged
that
"locality therefore determines the jurisdiction [separation
between federal power and state power] unless it is shown that,
though the local movement is actually within, it is legally
outside, the state."
To make the movement within legally outside of the state,
appellants insist there must be bills of lading and other means of
connection between the railroads and the ocean carriers. To make
application of this principle, it is contended that "not a single
fact appears or exists, physical or other, which connects the
railroads with the ocean carrier," and that the intention of the
shippers or consignees is made absolutely controlling.
To the principle urged, so far as its applicability to the case
at bar is concerned, we may oppose
Southern Pacific Terminal
Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 219 U.
S. 498;
Ohio Railroad Commission v.
Worthington, 225 U. S. 101, and
Texas & New Orleans R. Co. v. Sabine Tram Co.,
227 U. S. 111.
In those cases, there was necessarily a local movement of
freight, and it necessarily terminated at the seaboard. But it was
decided that its character and continuity as a movement in foreign
commerce did not terminate, nor was it affected by being
transported on local bills of lading. The principle enunciated in
the cases were that it is the essential character of the commerce,
not the accident of local or through bills of lading, which
determines federal or state control over it. And it takes character
as interstate or foreign commerce when it is actually started in
the course of transportation to another state or to a foreign
country. The facts of the case at bar bring it within the ruling.
The staves and logs were
Page 229 U. S. 342
intended by the shippers to be exported to foreign countries,
and there was no interruption of their transportation to their
destination except what was necessary for transshipment at New
Orleans.
Decree affirmed.