Without preliminary action by the Interstate Commerce Commission
declaring that the carrier had, by the rule adopted in regard to
distribution of cars, discriminated against a shipper in such
distribution, the federal courts have no jurisdiction of suit by
such shipper for damages alleged to be occasioned by undue
discrimination against him and undue preference in favor of his
competitor.
The question as to the reasonableness of a rule of car
distribution is administrative in its character, and calls for the
exercise of the powers and discretion conferred by Congress upon
the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Where the alleged discriminations in distribution of cars
occurred more than two years before its commencement, the action
cannot be stayed to permit an application to the Interstate
Commerce Commission, as, under the Act of June 29, 1906, all of
such claims are barred after two years.
Southern Railway v.
Tift, 206 U. S.
434.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 230 U. S. 308
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
There are a large number of coal mines in the Clearfield
District, Tyrone Division of the coal region, in the State
Page 230 U. S. 309
of Pennsylvania. Between January 1, 1900, and December 31, 1905,
the total output of the mines in the Clearfield District averaged
18,500 tons per day. When there was a car shortage, the
Pennsylvania Railroad allotted to each mine a percentage of cars
assigned to the district, calculated according to the capacity of
the mine.
On this basis, the Morrisdale Coal Company was entitled to about
4.8 percent and the Berwind-White Company to about 18 percent.
In 1908, the Morrisdale Company brought suit against the
railroad for damages alleged to have been occasioned by an unfair
distribution of cars to it and an undue allotment of cars to its
competitor, the Berwind-White Company.
Alleging that, in violation of its duty to see that no undue
preference was given to any other person or corporation in the
district, the carrier failed to assign to the plaintiff its
fair proportion of the entire number of coal cars of the
railroad company, to which plaintiff was entitled, and that
this failure continued from the beginning of 1900 to the close of
1905, the effect of which was to subject plaintiff to unreasonable
prejudice with respect to the facilities for shipping coal, as
contrasted with the facilities furnished other competitors in the
Clearfield District, and as a result of the unfair discrimination
and the failure to furnish a proper allotment of cars and equal
facilities, plaintiff was obliged to buy coal at various times in
the outside market at prices then prevailing, in order to fill its
contracts previously entered into, to its damage, $250,000. The
defendant entered a plea of not guilty and
actio non accrevit
infra sex annos. On the trial, the jury found that the exhibit
showing damages of $67,156.07 was correct.
"If the court shall be of opinion that the questions of law
involved in the case are in whole or in part with the plaintiff, we
find for the plaintiff. If,
Page 230 U. S. 310
however, the court be of the opinion that the questions of law
are with the defendant, then we find in favor of the
defendant."
There was no conflict in the evidence, and in view of the
admissions of the plaintiff, incorporated in the record, the facts
can be briefly stated.
The capacity of plaintiff's mine was 4.8 percent of the output
of the Clearfield region, and having been furnished access to the
books of the carrier, it made up a statement showing that, during
twenty-three months between March, 1902, and December 31, 1905, in
which there was a car shortage, the Morrisdale Company received
less than its 4.8 percent of all the coal cars in the Clearfield
region, while the Berwind-White Company received more than its 18
percent of all the coal cars in the region. This was admitted by
the railroad, which insisted that, during periods of car shortage,
it divided the cars into four classes:
1. Private cars, belonging to persons or corporations operating
mines in the district;
2. Cars of foreign railroads, consigned to designated mines, to
be loaded with fuel for such foreign railroads;
3. Pennsylvania Railroad fuel cars, consigned to designated
mines to be loaded with fuel for railroad use;
4. The balance, or System cars, available for general use, it
distributed among the various mines in the proportion their
capacity bore to the total output of the Clearfield region, the
plaintiff being allotted its due proportion, or 4.8 percent
thereof.
The railroad explained that apparent excess of cars furnished
the Berwind-White Company during the twenty-three months referred
to was due to the fact that that company owned a large number of
private cars on which it appeared that wheelage was paid, and
submitted the following table
Page 230 U. S. 311
showing the number and character of cars in the Clearfield
region during those years:
Indi- Company Commercial
vidual coal System Foreign Box Total
1902 Cars placed 14,221 16,119 31,048 22,544 11 83,943
1903 Cars placed 20,483 15,614 20,947 24,222 13 81,279
1904 Cars placed 16,705 11,477 21,888 14,568 12 64,650
1905 Cars placed 26,716 22,812 24,769 5,542 374 80,213
------ ------ ------ ------ --- ------
Total 78,125 66,022 98,652 66,876 410 310,085
During the trial, plaintiff admitted that there had been no
intentional discrimination against it, but contended that its
statement was made up from the books on the basis of what it
considered to be the law of the case, under which
all cars
available for shipment of coal should be counted in the
distribution.
Plaintiff admitted that, if the Berwind-White Company was
entitled to the use of their private cars without counting them
against what it was entitled to under the percentage, then the
Berwind-White Company did not get an excess of their percentage. It
further admitted that if fuel cars of the Pennsylvania Railroad,
and fuel cars of foreign railroads consigned to particular mines
were not to be counted against such mines, then plaintiff had no
cause of complaint, inasmuch as it had received its percentage of
the balance or System cars.
The circuit court dismissed the case on the ground that, without
preliminary action by the Commission, the court had no jurisdiction
of a suit for damages alleged to be occasioned by undue
discrimination against the plaintiff and undue preference in favor
of its competitor.
The plaintiff took the case to the circuit court of appeals,
complaining of this ruling, and further assigning error in that the
court failed to enter judgment in its favor on the special
verdict.
The circuit court of appeals held, one judge dissenting, that
the plaintiff had the option of taking the question
Page 230 U. S. 312
of jurisdiction by direct writ of error to the Supreme Court of
the United States, or it could take the whole case, including the
matter of jurisdiction, to the circuit court of appeals. That court
thereupon considered the whole record, and (one judge dissenting)
affirmed the judgment of the circuit court on the ground that the
circuit court had no jurisdiction as a federal court until after
the Commission had passed on the reasonableness of the method of
car distribution. The case was brought here, the only question
presented by the record being whether the circuit court as a
federal court had jurisdiction.
The prohibitions of § 3 of the Commerce Act require that
cars shall be fairly allotted to shippers without unjust
discrimination or unfair preference. But the statute does not
define what is the proper method of distribution in case of car
shortage, and, at the time of the transactions out of which this
suit arose, no general rule had been adopted by the carriers or
promulgated by the Commission. As late as 1910, it was said (19
I.C.C. 387) that the question was in a state of flux, and an
examination of the decisions in the numerous cases brought about
that time will show that it was a matter about which there was much
difference of opinion. In some cases, it was held that private cars
and fuel cars of foreign railroads, consigned to particular mines,
should be counted in making the distribution. Others held that such
cars should be counted, but that if the foreign cars or those owned
by the private corporations exceeded their percentage, the excess
might be retained by those coal companies. This view was adopted by
the Commission, which also held that fuel cars belonging to the
carrier should be counted except where the railroad purchased the
entire output of the mine. Traer v. Chicago &c. R. Co., 13
I.C.C. 459; Hillsdale Coal Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 19 I.C.C.
372; Jacoby v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 19 I.C.C. 392; Minds v.
Pennsylvania R. Co., 20 I.C.C. 52.
Page 230 U. S. 313
It was, however, recognized that there could be no hard and fast
rule, and that circumstances might arise which would otherwise
warrant a departure so as to enable the carrier to meet emergencies
arising from a strike on its own road, or embargoes by connecting
lines which refused to haul certain articles of merchandise, in
order to supply communities with necessaries of life. Parks v.
Cincinnati &c. Ry., 10 I.C.C. 47; Thompson v. Pennsylvania R.
Co., 10 I.C.C. 640.
These rulings as to the validity of a particular practice and
the facts that would warrant a departure from a proper rule
actually in force are sufficient to show that the question as to
the reasonableness of a rule of car distribution is administrative
in its character, and calls for the exercise of the powers and
discretion conferred by Congress upon the Commission. It was
distinctly so ruled in the
Pitcairn case,
215 U.
S. 481, and in
I.C.C. v. Illinois Central,
215 U. S. 452.
Those cases involved a consideration of the power of the Commission
over the distribution of cars, and held that the courts could not
by mandamus compel it to make a rule, nor by injunction restrain
the enforcement of one it had promulgated. If in those direct
proceedings the courts could not pass upon the question of
reasonableness of a method of allotting cars, neither can they do
so as an incident to an action for damages.
In view of the decision in the
Abilene, Pitcairn, and
Robinson cases, it is unnecessary again to discuss the
statute, or do more than say that in this case the plaintiff was
not entitled to maintain its action without producing an order of
the Commission that the rule adopted by the Pennsylvania Railroad
was unreasonable.
The plaintiff, however, seeks to take the case out of the
principle of those decisions, insisting that this is a suit for
damages occasioned by a violation of the rule, and that therefore,
without any order of the Commission, it
Page 230 U. S. 314
is entitled to institute a suit for the recovery of damages
resulting from the failure to distribute cars according to the
method established by the railroad itself. The record, however,
does not sustain this position, for the evidence does not show any
breach of the rule or any failure to deliver to the Morrisdale
Company all of the cars to which it was entitled under the method
of allotment in force between 1900 and 1906. On the contrary, it
was admitted at the hearing that there had been no discrimination
against the plaintiff in the application of the rule, the complaint
being that the basis of allotment was unreasonable, and that all
cars in the district should be distributed according to the
capacity of the mine, without deducting private cars, foreign fuel
cars, or the carrier's own fuel cars. Whether this should be done
as a general rule, or under the peculiar conditions prevailing on
defendant's road at that time, was, as we have seen, an
administrative question, and to be decided by the Commission as
preliminary to the right to maintain this suit. The circuit court
rightly held that, until this was done, it had no jurisdiction as a
federal court of the cause of action sought to be enforced.
It is argued in the plaintiff's brief that, if this view of the
law should be sustained, the case should not be dismissed, but
stayed until the plaintiff could apply to the Commission and obtain
a ruling on the question as to whether the method adopted by the
Pennsylvania Railroad was not, during the years 1900 to 1906,
unjustly discriminatory. Attention is called to
Southern Ry.
Co. v. Tift, 206 U. S. 434,
which it is said would support such a provision in the mandate. In
that case, the shippers filed, on April 14, 1903, a bill to enjoin
an advance in rate. The injunction was refused, and the advance
went into effect. The cause was stayed while the complainants were
pressing their application for an order from the Commission that
the rates were unreasonable. Its report was in their favor, and
Page 230 U. S. 315
on it, the circuit court made an order of restitution (
206 U. S. 206
U.S. 436). But, in that case, the statute of limitations had not
run when the bill was filed, when the stay order was granted, nor
when the application was made to the Commission, while in the
present case, the plaintiff was barred of the right to apply to the
Commission at the date the suit was filed in the United States
circuit court. The damages which were claimed arose from a failure
to deliver cars prior to December 31, 1905. The suit was brought
July 17, 1908, more than two and a half years later, and after the
passage of the Act of June 29, 1906, 34 Stat. 590, c. 3591,
that
"all complaints for the recovery of damages shall be filed with
the Commission within two years from the time the cause of action
accrues, and not after, and a petition for the enforcement of an
order . . . shall be filed in the circuit court within one year
from the date of the order, and not after: provided that claims
accrued prior to the passage of this act may be presented within
one year."
The provisions of this statute would prevent the modification
asked for, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY dissents.
See ante, p.
230 U. S.
267.