Minnesota Rate Cases, ante, p.
230 U. S. 352,
followed to effect that an intrastate rate fixed by a state
railroad commission is not an unconstitutional interference with
interstate commerce.
A carrier has the right to contest the validity of rates
prescribed by a body clothed by the legislature with power to
establish rates on the ground they are confiscatory, and this right
is not impaired by putting the rates into effect if they prove to
be confiscatory.
Minnesota Rate Cases, ante, p.
230 U. S. 352,
also followed to effect that, where the proofs submitted by a
carrier attacking rates as confiscatory are
Page 230 U. S. 554
not sufficient to justify a finding that the rates are
confiscatory, the bill should be dismissed.
187 F. 290 reversed.
These two suits were brought to restrain the enforcement of the
act of the legislature passed February 9, 1907, fixing the maximum
fare for passengers at two cents a mile, and also the orders of the
railroad commission made June 4, 1908, prescribing maximum freight
and passenger rates. The facts involved in both cases are stated in
the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Legislature of Arkansas, on February 9, 1907, passed an act
fixing the maximum passenger fare within the state, on railroads
over 85 miles in length, at two cents a mile. On June 4, 1908, the
railroad commission of the state adopted Standard Distance Tariff
No. 3, which superseded the former freight tariff and established
maximum intrastate freight rates for all classes and commodities.
The requirement with respect to maximum passenger fares as provided
by the legislature was also promulgated by the commission.
In July, 1908, the appellees, the St. Louis, Iron Mountain &
Southern Railway Company and the St. Louis Southwestern Railway
Company, respectively, filed their bills in the circuit court
alleging that the action of the legislature and the commission in
fixing these rates was unreasonable and confiscatory, and also that
it amounted
Page 230 U. S. 555
to an unconstitutional interference with interstate commerce.
Answers were filed by the defendants, the members of the railroad
commission, and voluminous evidence was taken. The court found the
rates to be confiscatory, and a decree was entered enjoining their
enforcement. 187 F. 290. The railroad commissioners appeal.
The contention of the complainants based upon the asserted
interference with interstate commerce was rightly overruled by the
court below (
Minnesota Rate Cases, ante, p.
230 U. S. 352),
and the only question which remains for our consideration is
whether the proof was sufficient to sustain the finding of
confiscation.
It is said on the part of the commissioners that the freight
tariff No. 3, adopted in 1908, was substantially similar to that
which had been prescribed in 1904, and that the latter was in
substance a repetition of the first tariff of the commission, which
had been put into effect in 1900 -- that is to say that, while
changes had been made from time to time to provide suitable
adjustments, there were no substantial differences in the rates
imposed by the last tariff, of which complaint was made, as
compared with those of the earlier years when considered with
respect to the effect upon the freight revenue in its entirety. It
is urged, however, by the companies that there were reductions in
fact, and that, apart from this, there had been a continuous
increase in the expenses incident to operation in the state and in
the burdens imposed upon the companies, and also that the passenger
fare Act of 1907 had largely reduced the revenues of the roads. We
deem it to be clear that the right of the complainants to contest
the validity of the rates, if, as applied to changed conditions,
they were found to be confiscatory, was not impaired by their
action in putting them into effect. When these suits were brought,
the passenger fare act had been in force for more than a year, but
this gave opportunity to
Page 230 U. S. 556
ascertain the actual results, and, even if it were assumed that
the new freight tariff of 1908 did not greatly reduce the former
rates, the complainants were certainly not barred from presenting
to the court their contention that the operation of the rates as a
whole deprived them of a fair return from their entire intrastate
business.
No question is presented as to the value of the properties
within the state which were used by the companies in the public
service. This was the subject of a formal stipulation by which it
was conceded that the assessments made by the state tax commission,
multiplied by two, should represent the value of these properties,
respectively, for the purposes of these suits. Upon this basis, the
value of the property of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain &
Southern Railway Company was found to be $39,986,564, and that of
the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company $14,029,634.
In the case of the Iron Mountain road, the period taken for the
purpose of calculation was the six months ending December 31, 1907.
According to the statement of the company, the total earnings from
the business in Arkansas, interstate and intrastate, for this
period were $6,675,076.79. The total operating expenses, together
with taxes and rentals, amounted, for the same period, to
$5,175,301.44. The net earnings for the six months were thus
$1,499,775.35, and this amount was equivalent to a return at the
annual rate of 7.5 percent upon the entire value of the
property.
The statement submitted by the St. Louis Southwestern Company
for the six months ending December 31, 1907, showed operating
revenues within the state, from both interstate and intrastate
business, amounting to $2,288,173.40, and operating expenses,
taxes, and rentals aggregating $1,388,075.94, leaving as net
earnings for the six months, $900,097.46. We have also, in the case
of this company, its statement for the entire fiscal year
ending
Page 230 U. S. 557
June 30, 1908, which gives the total operating revenues within
the state, interstate and intrastate, as $4,130,011.45, and
operating expenses, together with taxes and rentals, amounting to
$2,691,287.44, thus leaving net earnings of $1,438,724.01, or more
than 10 percent upon the value of the property.
The showing thus made of the returns from the combined business
makes it entirely clear that the ultimate conclusion must depend
upon the certainty of the proof with respect to the segregation of
the results of the intrastate operations. That is, the controlling
questions concern the division of the expenses between interstate
and intrastate transportation and the determination of the share of
the total value of the property which is assignable to the latter
and upon which the rate of net return is to be computed.
As to the apportionment of value, it appears that the method
adopted below was to divide the value of the entire property, as
found, between the interstate and intrastate business according to
the relation of gross revenue. In view of the fundamental
objections to this method, which were considered in
Minnesota
Rate Cases, ante, p.
230 U. S. 352, the
results that have been obtained by resort to it in these cases
cannot be accepted as affording a sufficient basis for the
conclusion that the state has confiscated the property of the
company.
In dividing the expenses of operation, the defendants undertook
definitely to establish the cost of intrastate traffic as compared
with that which was interstate. For this purpose, it was endeavored
to attribute to the local and through train services, respectively,
their proper share of expense, and in each case to divide the
amount of the ascertained share according to the traffic carried.
In the case of the Iron Mountain Company, traffic statistics were
taken for the month of October, 1907; these were analyzed, and a
division of expenses was made in accordance with
Page 230 U. S. 558
a plan devised by expert accountants. The computations with
respect to the St. Louis Southwestern Company were based upon the
operations of October, 1908, as the company had compiled data for
that month in making a test of comparative cost. According to these
calculations of the defendants, the net return from the entire
intrastate business was at the annual rate of 7.09 percent for the
Iron Mountain road, and 9.16 percent for that of the St. Louis
Southwestern.
It was objected, however, that the periods selected for these
tests were not representative; that the month of October, 1907, in
particular, was abnormal because of an unusual congestion of
traffic, and that the use of the statistics for October, 1908, was
also open to objection as they did not show such a fair average of
the business as would enable the court to reach a correct
conclusion. The court below took this view, but it was of the
opinion that proper allowances might be made which would equalize
these conditions. In this view, and for the purpose of correcting
assumptions deemed to be erroneous, the court defined the basis of
apportionment of the various items of outlay in accordance with
which new computations were made. The effect of these calculations
was to charge the intrastate freight traffic on the Iron Mountain
road with an extra cost of 201.5 percent per ton mile. The court,
concluding that certain items of the extra cost of local traffic
had been omitted, decided that an additional charge of 8.5 percent
would be reasonable, and that the total extra cost of the
intrastate traffic should be placed at 210 percent. In the case of
the St. Louis Southwestern Company, the extra cost of the
intrastate freight traffic was fixed at 250 percent, this being, it
is understood, per ton-mile. With respect to the passenger traffic,
the court was of the opinion that the intrastate service should be
charged with ten percent additional cost in the case of the Iron
Mountain Company, but that no allowance for extra cost was
Page 230 U. S. 559
necessary in that of the St. Louis Southwestern Company. From
the computations on these bases, the conclusion was derived that
the net return from the entire intrastate business of the Iron
Mountain Company was at the annual rate of less than one percent,
and from that of the St. Louis Southwestern Company, 2.6 percent
upon the shares of the total property value assigned respectively
to the intrastate business.
We shall not attempt to review in detail these calculations upon
which the decree is based. While they represent a most serious
effort to effect a reasonable apportionment, we are convinced, from
our examination of the evidence, that they have the same infirmity
which was found to exist in the computations in the
Minnesota and
Missouri Rate Cases. Minnesota
Rate Cases, ante, p.
230 U. S. 352;
Missouri Rate Cases, ante, p.
230 U. S. 474. On
finding, in the present cases, that the periods selected for the
purposes of test could not be regarded as fairly representative,
the court was left without sufficient data upon which to compute
the extra cost of intrastate transportation with such a degree of
certainty as would justify the annulment of the state's
requirements. Controlling factors used in the computations
represent general estimates of the conditions of transportation,
which may or may not be accurate, and there was an absence of
satisfactory evidence to take the place of the rejected tests,
giving with requisite particularity the actual movement of traffic
at the times in question, and affording a proper basis for the
determination of relative cost. The wide variation in results
obtained on the different hypotheses, each of which is earnestly
supported in argument, illustrates the necessity for the keeping of
suitable accounts, at least during typical periods, which will
furnish correct statistical information bearing upon the cost of
intrastate transportation as compared with interstate, instead of
leaving a matter of such intricacy
Page 230 U. S. 560
to general expressions of judgment. It was not sufficient for
the complainants to criticize the tests relied upon by the
defendants, but, in seeking to override the action of the state
upon constitutional grounds, it was incumbent upon them to
establish the invalidating facts by definite and convincing
proof.
We are of the opinion that the evidence failed to show
confiscation.
The decrees are reversed and the cases remanded, with
directions to dismiss the bills, respectively, without
prejudice.