Where a railroad company transports property and troops of the
United States over a continuous line of railroad, part of which is
free-haul and the remaining part is pay line, the character of the
shipment fixes the rate, and the government can be charged a
proportionate part of the through rate only, and not the local rate
on that part of the haul which is over the pay line.
A provision in a railroad land grant statute that the government
shall always have the right to ship over the line at fair and
reasonable rates not to exceed those paid by private parties
entitles the government
Page 237 U. S. 203
to the benefit of the long haul rate and to pay the
proportionate part of the rate and not be charged the local rate
over the pay line.
48 Ct.Cl. 227 affirmed.
The facts, which involve questions relating to the amount which
the United States can be charged for transportation over a land
grant railway, are stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, the Southern Pacific Company, operates under a
lease a line of road from San Francisco, via Roseville Junction, to
Portland. The line to Roseville Junction, a distance of 108.03
miles, was built as part of the main line extending from San
Francisco to Ogden, Utah, by the Central Pacific Railroad Company
under an act of Congress of July 1, 1862 (12 Stat. 489). By §
6 of that act, the land grants for the construction of the road
were made
"upon condition that said company . . . shall at all times . . .
transport mails, troops and munitions of war, supplies, and public
stores upon said railroad for the government, whenever required to
do so by any department thereof, and that the government shall at
all times have the preference in the use of the same for all the
purposes aforesaid (at fair and reasonable rates of compensation,
not to exceed the amounts paid by private parties for the same kind
of service). . . ."
The line from Roseville Junction to Portland, a distance of
663.91 miles, was constructed under the Act of
Page 237 U. S. 204
Congress approved July 25, 1866 (14 Stat. 239). Section 5 of
that act provided:
"And said railroad shall be and remain a public highway for the
use of the government of the United States free of all toll or
other charges upon the transportation of the property or troops of
the United States, and the same shall be transported over said road
at the cost, charge, and expense of the corporations or companies
owning or operating the same, when so required by the government of
the United States."
Between August, 1897, and March, 1902, the Southern Pacific
Company transported for the United States persons and property over
said line via Roseville Junction
"from points on either said thereof to points on the other side;
thus, from San Francisco, Ogden, and other points . . . to Portland
via Roseville Junction. The shipments in question did not originate
at Roseville Junction nor terminate at Roseville Junction, but were
carried through on one continuous transit over both the free haul
and the non-free haul portion of the road precisely as any through
shipment is carried for a private shipper."
(Finding VI.)
For the services thus rendered, the company presented its bills
to the accounting officers of the government in which, while
nothing was charged for services rendered over the portion of the
road which was free, the local rate was exacted between San
Francisco and Roseville Junction. We say the local rate because it
is certain that, at the times in question, the railroad had duly
established and published schedules of rates embracing local rates
to Roseville Junction as well as through rates to Portland and
other points via Roseville Junction, the local rates being higher
than the through rates. The accounting officers refused to allow
the claims in full, insisting that the government was entitled to
the benefit of the through rate. They therefore distributed the
through rate over
Page 237 U. S. 205
the whole distance, and deducted from the aggregate of the bills
the difference between the sum which had been made up by charging
the local rate and the sum which would be due charging only the
through rate ascertained upon the mileage basis as above stated.
The sum remaining due under the operation of this method was
received by the railroad company under protest and this suit was
commenced in the court below to recover the difference.
Upon the finding of the facts above stated and the legal
conclusion that, under the statutes, the railroad was without right
to refuse to allow the through, and charge the local, rate, its
claim was rejected. 48 Ct.Cl. 227. This appeal was then
prosecuted.
There is no controversy concerning the method by which the sum
of the applicable through rate was ascertained by the accounting
officers of the government. There are, hence, as stated in the
argument of appellant, no disputed facts, and the question for
decision is a narrow one, since, as further stated in that
argument:
"The present appeal presents but a single question of law, and
that is as to the legal rate of compensation to which the railroad
company is entitled for the transportation of property and troops
of the United States over a continuous line of railroad, part of
which is free-haul and the remaining part of which is pay
line."
The entire theory upon which it is contended that the through
shipments could be subjected to a local rate from San Francisco
northward to Roseville Junction, and southward from Roseville
Junction to San Francisco, finds clear expression in the argument
on behalf of the railroad company as follows:
"While there is a continuous rail line between those two points
[San Francisco and Portland], the line itself, from the standpoint
of compensation or pay to the railroad company,
breaks at
Roseville Junction;
south of the point it is 'pay' line;
north thereof it is 'free-haul' line, and it
Page 237 U. S. 206
so happens that appellant company, as lessee, operates
both lines."
1. But the error of the proposition is manifest, as it confounds
cause and effect, since it assumes the unassumable -- that is, that
the question of whether traffic is to have the benefit of the
lesser through rate or be subjected to the higher local rate is to
be determined by the sum of the compensation asked for its
carriage, instead of by the nature and character of the movement of
the traffic -- that is, whether it was a through or a local
movement. In other words, the proposition is not that the character
of the movement fixes the rate, but that the rate determines the
character of the movement. The confusion involved in, and the
destructive results which would flow from, the proposition cannot
be better illustrated than by considering that the foundation upon
which a lesser charge is justified for a through shipment than is
exacted for a local shipment is the less cost to the carrier of
doing the through business than is incurred in doing the local
business. Therefore, to adopt the proposition would require a
reversal of the standards by which the character of traffic is
fixed. And the terms in which the contention is stated bring out in
bold relief the fallacy which it contains, since, while it admits
"there is a continuous rail line between those two points" (San
Francisco and Portland), it yet declares that "the line itself,
from the standpoint of compensation or pay to the railway company,
breaks at Roseville Junction" -- that is, not that the
continuous physical line of rail over which the through
transportation moves is in any way broken, but that, by a break
(change) in the line of compensation, an imaginary break in the
physical line itself is to be assumed, to the end that a shipment
which is inherently through may be converted into one which is
essentially local.
2. But, apart from the mere question of the abstract error in
the proposition relied upon, it is clear that to
Page 237 U. S. 207
accept it would give rise to a plain violation of the provisions
of the act of Congress governing the movement of traffic over the
road from San Francisco to Roseville Junction, since that act
exacts that the government shall at all times have the right to
ship over the road "at fair and reasonable rates of compensation,
not to exceed the amounts paid by private parties for the same kind
of service." As the findings clearly establish that the schedules
filed and published contained a through rate for a shipment from
San Francisco to Portland via Roseville Junction, and
vice
versa, it would seem to be indisputable that, by the very
terms of the act, such through rate, so published and filed, was
open and available to the United States for its through shipments.
This must be the case unless it can be said that, because the
United States had acquired an increased advantage concerning the
movement of its shipments from Roseville Junction to Portland,
therefore it had lost the right to have its through shipments
treated as such from San Francisco to Roseville Junction. And it is
to be observed that there is no ground for saying that the
existence of the right in favor of the United States to a free haul
beyond Roseville Junction to Portland subjected the road in hauling
from Roseville Junction to San Francisco, or
vice versa,
to a greater cost, since the findings in express terms establish
that the freight shipped through by the United States was carried
by a continuous movement under exactly similar conditions as was
all other through freight carried for private individuals.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.