Whether commerce is interstate or intrastate must be determined
by the essential character of the commerce, and not by mere billing
or forms of contract.
The reshipment of an interstate shipment by the consignees in
the cars in which received to other points of destination does not
necessarily establish a continuity of movement or prevent the
shipment to a point within the same state from having an
independent and intrastate character.
In this case,
held that shipments of coal when
reshipped, after arrival from points without the state and
acceptance by the consignees, to points within the state on new and
regular billing forms constituted intrastate shipments, and were
subject to the jurisdiction of the State Railroad Commission.
Whether the common law or statutory provisions apply to a case
is for the state court to determine, and so
held that, in
Iowa the State Railroad Commission has power under the state law to
require common carriers to use the equipment of connecting carriers
to transport shipments from the points of original destination to
other points within the state.
A state may, so long as it acts within its own jurisdiction and
not in hostility to any federal regulation of interstate commerce,
compel a carrier to accept, for further reshipment over its lines
to points within the state, cars already loaded and in suitable
condition, and an order to that effect by the State Railroad
Commission is not
Page 233 U. S. 335
unconstitutional a depriving the carrier of it property without
due process of law.
Where it appears that an order of the State Railroad Commission
simply required the carrier to continue a former practice, and the
record does not disclose that it involve additional expense over
the new practice proposed, this Court is not justified in holding
that the order is unconstitutional a depriving the carrier of its
property without due process of law because it subject it to an
unreasonable expense.
This Court cannot, at the instance of the carrier, hold an order
of the State Railroad Commission, otherwise valid, requiring the
carrier to forward interstate shipments after receipt to intrastate
points in the same equipment, void as interfering with interstate
commerce because the cars are vehicles of interstate commerce when
no actual interference with such commerce is shown, nor is any such
question raised between the shippers and the owners of the car.
152 Ia. 317 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity and also the
constitutionality under the commerce clause of, and the Fourteenth
Amendment to, the federal Constitution of an order of the State
Railroad Commission of Iowa in regard to carload shipments of coal,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 233 U. S. 339
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the State of Iowa to obtain a mandatory
injunction requiring the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
Company to comply with an order of the State Railroad Commission
promulgated December 22, 1909. The defendant answered, denying the
validity of
Page 233 U. S. 340
the order, and also filed a cross-petition to set it aside,
alleging that it was repugnant to the Constitution of the United
States as an attempt to regulate interstate commerce and to deprive
the company of its property without due process of law, and further
that the Commission was without authority under the laws of the
state to make the order. Judgment, sustaining the action of the
Commission and directing compliance, was affirmed by the supreme
court of the state. 152 Ia. 317.
It appeared that the railway company, in 1909, had refused to
accept shipments of coal in carload lots at Davenport, Iowa, for
points in that state when tendered in cars of other railroad
companies by which the coal had been brought to Davenport from
points in Illinois. The railway company insisted that it was
entitled to furnish its own cars. The Clark Coal & Coke
Company, operating a branch at Davenport, complained of this rule
to the Railroad Commission, stating that it was a departure from
the practice which had obtained for several years with respect to
such shipments, that the Clark Company paid all charges to
Davenport, and, on receiving orders from its customers, tendered
written billing for transportation from Davenport to the designated
points, and that it was unreasonable for the railway company to
require in such cases that the coal should be unloaded and reloaded
in its own cars. A hearing was had before the Commission at which
other shippers intervened, adopting the coal company's complaint.
The facts were presented in an agreed statement, as follows:
"The Clark Coal & Coke Company of Davenport, Iowa, have been
making shipments of coal from points in Illinois to Davenport by
the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company and the
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company; that said coal
is then placed by the railroad bringing it into Iowa on an
interchange track at Davenport; that all charges from point of
origin
Page 233 U. S. 341
in Illinois to Davenport, Iowa, are paid by the Clark Coal &
Coke Company to the railroad company bringing said coal; that
thereupon complainant has notified the respondent railway company
of the placement of said coal, and that it desired to ship said
coal by the respondent railway company to different points on its
own line, and tendered a written billing from Davenport to the
point so designated; that thereupon respondent railway company has
accepted said billing from Davenport to said point, and taken said
cars from said interchange track to its own line, and transported
the same in accordance with said written billing; that the
respondent railway company has changed its method of doing business
in the above respects by its printed order, and now refuses to
accept said written billing and take said cars from said
interchange track and transport them over its own line to the point
designated by said billing unless said coal is loaded in equipment
belonging to respondent railway company. Respondent railway
company, by its answer to the complaint, alleges that it"
"will furnish cars for shipment of coal from Davenport to any
point in Iowa, as provided by Iowa Distance Tariff, but will not
accept shipments originating at Davenport, billed from Davenport,
in the equipment of other carriers,"
"and its readiness and ability to furnish cars of its own for
shipment is not controverted, and will therefore be taken to be
true. It will thus be observed that, before the respondent railway
company will take coal for transportation on its own line, in
equipment other than its own, it requires that the same shall be
unloaded and reloaded into its own cars."
Thereupon, the Commission rendered a decision in favor of the
shipper and entered the following order, to which this controversy
relates:
"In accordance with the conclusions heretofore expressed, it is
therefore ordered by the Board of Railroad Commissioners of Iowa
that, upon arrival of loaded cars of
Page 233 U. S. 342
coal at the City of Davenport, upon any line of railroad, when
said cars are placed upon the interchange track at Davenport, as
ordered or requested by the owner or consignee of said cars, and
the freight paid thereon, and the ordinary billing in use by the
respondent railway is tendered to it for a billing of said cars so
placed to a point on its own line within the State of Iowa, that
the respondent railway company be and is hereby ordered and
required to accept said billing, receive said car or cars so
billed, and transport them on its own line to the point designated
by the owner or consignee in said billing, and that it receive said
car or cars in whatever equipment the same may be loaded, without
requiring an unloading and reloading into its own equipment, and
transport said car or cars over its own line to points within this
so loaded, without unloading and reloading as above set forth, in
the same manner that it receives cars from connecting lines, loaded
in its own equipment. It is expressly understood, however, in this
order that no questions in relation to switching charges are
determined."
The railway company contended both before the Commission and in
the state court that the shipments in question were interstate, and
it was alleged in its answer that the method of transportation
resorted to was a device of shippers to secure, by adding the rate
from the initial point in Illinois to Davenport to the rate
established by the Iowa distance tariff from Davenport to other
points in the state, a lower rate than that applicable to an
interstate shipment from the point in Illinois to the point of
final destination.
The Railroad Commission held that the transportation desired
from Davenport was a purely intrastate service, saying:
"Under the admitted facts, the City of Davenport became a
distributing point for coal shipped by the consignor. The certainty
in regard to the shipments of coal ended at Davenport. The point
where the same was to be
Page 233 U. S. 343
shipped beyond Davenport, if at all, was determined after the
arrival of the coal at Davenport. The coal was under the control of
the consignee, and he could sell it in transit or at Davenport or
reconsign it to a point on respondent's railway or any other
railway, at his own discretion."
Upon the trial of the present suit in the state court, the state
introduced in evidence the proceedings, decision, and order of the
Commission, and without further evidence, both parties rested. The
supreme court of the state took the same view of the facts that the
Commission had taken, and accordingly held that the shipments were
intrastate. The court said that the facts showed that the coal was
originally consigned to the coal company in Davenport, that it was
there held until sales were made, that the consignee had taken
delivery, paying the freight to the initial carrier, and assuming
full control. 152 Ia. 317, 319.
The record discloses no ground for assailing this finding. It is
undoubtedly true that the question whether commerce is interstate
or intrastate must be determined by the essential character of the
commerce, and not by mere billing or forms of contract.
Ohio
Railroad Commission v. Worthington, 225 U.
S. 101;
Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Sabine Tram
Co., 227 U. S. 111;
Railroad Commission of Louisiana v. Texas & Pacific Ry.
Co., 229 U. S. 336. But
the fact that commodities received on interstate shipments are
reshipped by the consignees, in the cars in which they are
received, to other points of destination does not necessarily
establish a continuity of movement or prevent the reshipment to a
point within the same state from having an independent and
intrastate character.
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v.
Texas, 204 U. S. 403;
Ohio Railroad Commission v. Worthington, 225 U.
S. 101,
225 U. S. 109;
Texas & N.O. R. Co. v. Sabine Tram Co., 227 U.
S. 111,
227 U. S.
129-130. The question is with respect to the nature of
the actual movement in the particular
Page 233 U. S. 344
case, and we are unable to say upon this record that the state
court has improperly characterized the traffic in question here. In
the light of its decision, the order of the Commission must be
taken as referring solely to intrastate transportation originating
at Davenport.
In this view, the validity of the Commission's order is
challenged upon the ground that, at common law, the carrier was
entitled to use its own equipment, and that the statute of the
State of Iowa as to the receiving of cars from connecting carriers
(Code, § 2116) is inapplicable for the reason that, with
respect to the transportation in question, the plaintiff in error
was the initial carrier. But the obvious answer is that what is
required by the law of Iowa has been determined by the supreme
court of that state. That court, examining the various provisions
of the Iowa Code which have relation to the matter, has held that
the order was within the authority of the Railroad Commission. 152
Ia. 317, 320-321.
Further, the plaintiff in error insists that the enforcement of
the order would deprive it of its liberty to contract and of its
property without due process of law, and would deny to it the equal
protection of the laws in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. We
find these objections to be without merit. It was competent for the
state, acting within its jurisdiction and not in hostility to any
federal regulation of interstate commerce, to compel the carrier to
accept cars which were already loaded and in suitable condition for
transportation over its line. The requirement was a reasonable one.
It cannot be said that the plaintiff in error had a constitutional
right to burden trade by insisting that the commodities should be
unloaded and reloaded in its own equipment. Upon this point, the
case of
Wisconsin &c. R. Co. v. Jacobson, 179 U.
S. 287, is decisive. There is no essential difference,
so far as the power of the state is concerned, between such an
order as we have here and one compelling the
Page 233 U. S. 345
carrier to make track connections and to receive cars from
connecting roads in order that reasonably adequate facilities for
traffic may be provided.
See also Minneapolis & St. Louis
v. Minnesota, 186 U. S. 257,
186 U. S. 263;
Atlantic Coast Line v. North Carolina Corp. Comm'n,
206 U. S. 1,
206 U. S. 19,
206 U. S. 27;
Missouri Pad. Ry. Co. v. Kansas, 216 U.
S. 262;
Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Michigan Railroad
Commission, 231 U. S. 457,
231 U. S.
468.
It is argued that it was unreasonable to subject the railway
company to the expense incident to the use of the cars of another
carrier when it was ready to furnish its own. The record affords no
sufficient basis for this contention. What the expense referred to
would be was not proved, and, in the absence of a suitable
disclosure of the pertinent facts, no case was made which would
justify the conclusion that, in its practical operation, the
regulation would impose any unreasonable burden. On the other hand,
the agreed statement makes it evident that, prior to the change
which gave rise to this controversy it was the practice of the
company to accept such shipments.
Finally, it is said that the order of the Commission interferes
with interstate commerce because the cars in question were the
vehicles of that commerce, and were brought into the state as such.
No question, however, is presented here as between the shippers and
the owners of the cars, and no actual interference with interstate
commerce is shown. Nor does it appear that any regulation under
federal authority has been violated.
The plaintiff in error has failed to establish any ground for
invalidating the order of the Commission, and the judgment must be
affirmed.
Affirmed.