To require a railroad company to charge such rates for
transportation as prevent it from obtaining a reasonable return for
the service rendered amounts to deprivation of property without due
process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and is
beyond the power of the state.
Atlantic Coast Line v. North
Carolina Commission, 206 U. S. 1.
Rates that a railroad company may charge for transportation as
fixed by the legislation of a state are presumptively valid, but
not conclusively so, and the company is entitled to have the
question of whether the prescribed rates are confiscatory and
therefore deprive it of its property without due process of law
determined in appropriate judicial proceedings.
A common carrier is not at liberty to accept or decline
shipments of lawful merchandise, but must accept them and name to
the shipper the rate of transportation.
While it may be within the power of the state to impose double
or treble damages on a carrier for overcharging transportation
rates, it is beyond its power to impose a fixed amount as
liquidated damages in every case regardless of, and as a general
rule many times in excess of, the actual damages. To do so would
deprive the carrier of its property without due process of law in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
A state statute which does not permit a carrier to have the
question of sufficiency of rates determined by a court of competent
jurisdiction, and which imposes such conditions upon the appeal for
judicial relief as works an abandonment of the right, rather than
face those conditions, is unconstitutional as depriving the carrier
of its property without due process of law.
Ex Parte
Young, 209 U. S. 123,
209 U. S.
147.
That part of the statute of Kansas of 1905 establishing maximum
rates for transportation of oil, gasoline, etc., which fixes $500
as liquidated damages in favor of the shipper for any excess charge
regardless of the amount thereof, is so arbitrary and oppressive as
to render it
Page 230 U. S. 341
unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment as taking the
property of the carriers without due process of law.
82 Kan 222 reversed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality under the
Fourteenth Amendment of the statute of 1905 of the State of Kansas
establishing maximum rates for transportation of oil, gasoline,
etc., which fixes five hundred dollars as liquidated damages for
violations of the act, are stated in the opinion.
Page 230 U. S. 346
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an Act of February 17, 1905, the Legislature of the State of
Kansas prescribed a schedule of maximum rates to be charged by
common carriers for the transportation, between points in that
state, of "illuminating oil, gasolene, fuel oil, or crude
petroleum, in cans, barrels, tanks, or tank cars," and provided
that every such carrier
"which shall demand, exact, or receive for such transportation
or delivery any sum in excess of the rates hereby made lawful shall
be liable to any person injured thereby in the sum of $500 as
liquidated damages, to be recovered by action in any court of
competent jurisdiction, together with a reasonable attorney's fee,
to be fixed by the court."
Laws 1905, c. 353, p. 589.
In December, 1906, there were shipped from Humboldt, Kansas, to
Cawker City, in that state, 25 barrels of fuel oil, of which J. W.
Tucker was the consignee. The shipment was carried from the point
of origin about 253 miles over the railroad of the Santa Fe Company
to Concordia, and thence to the point of destination, about 47
miles, over the line of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company.
According to the statute, the charge for the entire transportation
should have been $12, but the Missouri Pacific Company demanded and
collected therefor from Tucker, the consignee, $3.02 in excess of
that sum. He thereupon brought an action in one of the courts of
the state, under the act before named, to recover from that company
$500 as liquidated damages and a reasonable attorney's fee, to be
fixed by the court. The company defended upon the grounds that the
statutory rates were confiscatory and void, and that the statute,
and particularly the provision for the recovery of $500 as
liquidated damages, was so arbitrary and unreasonable as to be
repugnant to the due process of law and equal protection
Page 230 U. S. 347
clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the
United States. Other defenses, based on the state constitution,
were interposed, but we need not notice them. The plaintiff
recovered a judgment for the $500, which was affirmed by the
supreme court of the state, the federal questions being decided
adversely to the company, 82 Kan. 222, and the latter prosecutes
this writ of error.
As the right of recovery and the judgment sustaining it were
rested upon the provision imposing a liability for liquidated
damages in the sum of $500, we come at once to the question of the
validity of that provision under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Primarily it is to be observed that the rates prescribed by the
legislature, while presumptively valid, are not conclusively so;
that to require the company, in the operation of its road, to give
effect to rates which prevent it from obtaining a reasonable return
for the service rendered to the public is to deprive it of its
property without due process of law, and that whether the
prescribed rates are thus in excess of the state's power (
see
Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. North Carolina Corporation
Commission, 206 U. S. 1,
206 U. S. 24-26,
and cases cited) is a question which the company is entitled to
have determined in appropriate judicial proceedings. And it also is
to be observed that the Act of 1905 and other laws of the state, as
construed by the state court, afford the company no opportunity for
securing a judicial determination of the validity of these rates
otherwise than as it may do so in a defensive way when charged, in
a case like this or in some criminal prosecution, with failing to
give effect to them.
Being a common carrier, the company is not at liberty to accept
or decline shipments of oil. It must receive and carry them when
offered, and must be ready to name to shippers the rates at which
that service will be rendered. If the statutory rates permit a
reasonable return, they are
Page 230 U. S. 348
controlling; if they prevent it, they are invalid. But of their
obligatory character the company is not the judge. And yet it must
choose whether it will give effect to them or no, and then must
abide the result of its action. If they be so unreasonably low as
to be invalid, it cannot give effect to them without sustaining a
serious and irreparable loss, and if effect be not given to them
and they be subsequently adjudged lawful, the enforcement of the
prescribed liabilities and penalties will likewise entail a most
serious loss, for the transactions involved must necessarily be
numerous. In one of the briefs it is said that the intrastate oil
shipments on the company's lines in Kansas in a single year are as
many as 10,000. Thus, it will be perceived that the position of the
company, with no right itself to institute a proceeding to
determine for itself and all shippers the validity of the
legislative rates, is one of exceeding perplexity.
On the other hand, the interests of shippers and consumers of
oil must be considered no less than those of the carrier.
Experience teaches that to secure adherence to rates, even when
lawfully prescribed, it is essential that deviations from them be
discouraged by adequate liabilities and penalties.
It is in the light of these considerations that the validity of
the provision imposing a liability for liquidated damages in the
sum of $500 for every charge in excess of the legislative rates
must be tested.
It will be perceived that this liability is not proportioned to
the actual damages. It is not as if double or treble damages were
allowed, as often is done, and as we think properly could have been
done here. Nor is it as if there would be difficulty in proving or
ascertaining the actual damages, thereby furnishing a reason for
prescribing a liquidated amount reasonably approximating the
probable damages, taking one case with another.
Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy R. Co. v. Cram, 228 U. S.
70. What the
Page 230 U. S. 349
statute does is to authorize a recovery of $500 in every case,
whether the shipment be of one barrel, or of ten or twenty-five
barrels, or of a tank car, and this although it is of common
knowledge that the possible damages in respect of the charge for
carrying any of these from one point in the state to another could
never be more than a small fraction of that sum. In the present
case, the shipment was of 25 barrels for a distance of 300 miles,
and the excess over the legislative rate, $3.02, was less than
1/150 of the authorized recovery.
The state court, although recognizing that the solution of the
problem is not free from difficulty, reached the conclusion
that,
"so long as the defendant [the carrier] cannot be made to suffer
until a competent court had passed upon the justice of the
legislative rates, the guaranties of the federal Constitution are
not infringed."
But that this view fails to recognize the real plight of the
carrier is made plain by the following extract from the opinion in
Ex Parte Young, 209 U. S. 123,
209 U. S.
147:
"If the law be such as to make the decision of the legislature
or of a commission conclusive as to the sufficiency of the rates,
this Court has held such a law to be unconstitutional.
Chicago
&c. Railway Co. v. Minnesota, 134 U. S.
418. A law which indirectly accomplishes a like result
by imposing such conditions upon the right to appeal for judicial
relief as works an abandonment of the right, rather than face the
conditions upon which it is offered or may be obtained is also
unconstitutional. It may therefore be said that, when the penalties
for disobedience are by fines so enormous and imprisonment so
severe as to intimidate the company and its officers from resorting
to the courts to test the validity of the legislation, the result
is the same as if the law in terms prohibited the company from
seeking judicial construction of laws which deeply affect its
rights."
"It is urged that there is no principle upon which to
Page 230 U. S. 350
base the claim that a person is entitled to disobey a statute at
least once, for the purpose of testing its validity, without
subjecting himself to the penalties for disobedience provided by
the statute in case it is valid. This is not an accurate statement
of the case. Ordinarily a law creating offenses in the nature of
misdemeanors or felonies relates to a subject over which the
jurisdiction of the legislature is complete in any event. In the
case, however, of the establishment of certain rates without any
hearing, the validity of such rates necessarily depends upon
whether they are high enough to permit at least some return upon
the investment (how much it is not now necessary to state), and an
inquiry as to that fact is a proper subject of judicial
investigation. If it turns out that the rates are too low for that
purpose, then they are illegal. Now, to impose upon a party
interested the burden of obtaining a judicial decision of such a
question (no prior hearing having ever been given) only upon the
condition that, if unsuccessful, he must suffer imprisonment and
pay fines as provided in these acts, is, in effect, to close up all
approaches to the courts, and thus prevent any hearing upon the
question whether the rates as provided by the acts are not too low,
and therefore invalid. The distinction is obvious between a case
where the validity of the act depends upon the existence of a fact
which can be determined only after investigation of a very
complicated and technical character, and the ordinary case of a
statute upon a subject requiring no such investigation, and over
which the jurisdiction of the legislature is complete in any
event."
What was said in that case is conclusive of the question here.
True, the act then under consideration subjected the officers and
agents of the carrier to penalties not found in the act now before
us, but, notwithstanding this, we think the liabilities and
penalties imposed by the Kansas statute bring it within the
controlling principle of that
Page 230 U. S. 351
decision. As applied to cases like the present, the imposition
of $500 as liquidated damages is not only grossly out of proportion
to the possible actual damages, but is so arbitrary and oppressive
that its enforcement would be nothing short of the taking of
property without due process of law, and therefore in contravention
of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v.
Texas, 212 U. S. 86,
212 U. S. 111;
Standard Oil Co. v. Missouri, 224 U.
S. 270,
224 U. S. 286.
Upon this ground, the judgment is reversed, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
Reversed.