Where a suit to enjoin the enforcement of an order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission is based upon the ground that the
order exceeded the statutory powers of the Commission, and hence is
void, the courts may entertain jurisdiction notwithstanding no
attempt has been made by the plaintiff to obtain redress from the
Commission itself. P.
249 U. S.
562.
Where rates allowed by the Commission in a proceeding initiated
by carriers for relief from the long and short haul clause were
later increased as a result of orders made when the proceeding was
reopened on the application of a state commission and a merchants
association,
held that the new orders were to be regarded
as resting upon the original petition of the carriers, so that,
under the jurisdictional Act of October 22, 1913, a suit to enjoin
their enforcement was properly brought in a judicial district where
one of the carriers, a party defendant, had its residence. P.
249 U.S. 563.
The clause in § 4 of the Commerce Act, as amended June 18,
1910, providing that, when a railroad carrier shall, in competition
with a water route, reduce rates between competitive points, it
shall not be permitted to increase them unless, after hearing by
the Commission, it shall be found that the proposed increase rests
upon changed conditions other than elimination of water
competition, has no application where the reduction was with the
approval of the Commission, ordered after hearing, upon application
by the carrier for relief from the long and short haul clause. P.
249 U. S.
564.
Held that, in this case, changed conditions "other than
the elimination of water competition" were found by the Commission.
P.
249 U. S.
569.
An order under § 4 of the act granting relief from the long
and short haul clause is subject to future modification by the
Commission without any application from the carrier. P.
249 U. S.
570.
Affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 558
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The last paragraph of § 4 of the Act to Regulate Commerce,
as amended by Act June 18, 1910, c. 309, § 8, 36 Stat. 539,
547, declares that:
"Whenever a carrier by railroad shall, in competition with a
water route or routes, reduce the rates on the carriage of any
species of freight to or from competitive points, it shall not be
permitted to increase such rates unless, after hearing by the
Interstate Commerce Commission, it shall be found that such
proposed increase rests upon changed conditions other than the
elimination of water competition."
On August 21, 1916, Skinner and Eddy Corporation brought this
suit in the District Court of the United States for the District of
Oregon to enjoin an increase in carload rates on iron and steel
products from Pittsburgh to Seattle. The United States, the
Commission, and sixteen railroads were joined as defendants. The
bill charged that the action of the carriers in increasing
Page 249 U. S. 559
their rates and that of the Commission in authorizing such
increase violated the above provision of the Commerce Act, and,
being beyond their respective powers, was void. The relief asked
against the carriers was to prevent the collection of the proposed
increased rates until the
"Commission shall have held a hearing to determine whether the
proposed increases rest upon changed conditions other than the
elimination of water competition."
The relief asked against the Commission was to prevent its
taking any steps to enforce certain orders "so far as the same
permit" such increases. An application for an interlocutory
injunction, heard before three judges on December 29, 1916, was
denied, and later the bill and a supplemental bill, filed December
16, 1916, were dismissed on the ground that they do not state any
cause of action. The case comes here by direct appeal. The
essential facts are these:
After the decision by this Court in
Intermountain Rate
Cases, 234 U. S. 476, and
while the
Sacramento case (
United States v. Merchants'
& Manufacturers' Traffic Association, 242 U.
S. 178) was pending in the district court, carriers
forming connecting lines between Pittsburgh and Seattle applied to
the Commission in the same proceeding for further modification of
Amended Fourth Section Order No. 124 so as to permit a reduction in
carload rates or iron and steel products from Pittsburgh to Seattle
without making such reduced rates applicable to intermediate points
of destination. An order granting leave for a reduction from 80
cents [
Footnote 1] to 65 cents
per 100 pounds was entered March 1, 1916. Rates on Iron and Steel
Articles, 38 I.C.C. 237. The carriers soon thereafter filed tariffs
making that reduction
Page 249 U. S. 560
effective April 10, 1916, and on that date, the 65-cent rate
became operative.
During March, 1916, two applications had been made to the
Commission in the same proceeding on behalf of shippers to reopen
for further consideration other fourth section applications of
carriers concerning westbound transcontinental rates and for
modification of orders issued thereon. The petitioners for such
modification were the Spokane Merchants' Association and the
Railroad Commission of Nevada, which had theretofore taken an
active part in the proceedings. Railroad Commission of Nevada v.
Southern Pacific Co., 21 I.C.C. 329; Commodity Rates to Pacific
Coast Terminals, 32 I.C.C. 611. Their prayer was for removal of the
existing discrimination in transcontinental freight rates against
the intermountain territory and in favor of the Pacific Coast
ports. The ground alleged for seeking the modification was that, by
reason of slides in the Panama Canal and the increased demand for
shipping due to the world war, water competition, which had
theretofore been held to justify lower rates to the Pacific Coast
ports, had in large part disappeared. Thereupon, the Commission
reopened, on April 1, 1916, these applications, including that on
which was entered the order of March 1, 1916, respecting iron and
steel rates from Pittsburgh to Seattle, and a hearing was ordered
"respecting the changed conditions which are alleged in
justification of a modification of the Commission's orders."
None of the railroads had requested the reopening of the
applications or the hearing, and, when it was held, all opposed
further modification of the transcontinental rates. No increased
rates were proposed by them, and no specific increased rates were
considered by the Commission. The petitioners introduced evidence
respecting the changed conditions as a basis for modifying the
several fourth section orders. On June 5, 1916, the Commission
Page 249 U. S. 561
filed a report (Reopening Fourth Section Applications, 40 I.C.C.
35), in which it found that, while the Panama Canal had been
meanwhile reopened, there was not then "any effective water
competition between the two coasts," or likely to be any in the
near future, and that
"the war and an unparalleled rise in prices for ocean
transportation have so changed the situation as to transform a
relation of rates which was justified when established to one that
is now unjustly discriminatory against intermediate points."
It found also that these conditions were temporary. An order
(amended July 13, 1916) was then entered, effective September 1,
1916, rescinding those previously entered on the several
applications of carriers, including that of March 1, 1916,
authorizing the 65-cent Pittsburgh-Seattle rate, and the carriers
were directed to reduce the degree of discrimination then existing
in favor of Pacific Coast ports as against intermediate
territory.
Upon entry of this order, the carriers filed tariffs effective
September 1, 1916, raising, among others, the Pittsburgh-Seattle
iron and steel rates from 65 cents to 94 cents. Promptly, on August
4, 1916, Skinner & Eddy Corporation protested, requested that
the tariffs be suspended until a hearing could be had thereon, and
alleged that the proposed increase violated, as later set forth in
its bill of complaint, the last paragraph of the fourth section.
Their request was not then granted. Thereafter, by action of the
Commission and the carriers not necessary to detail, the effective
date of the tariff fixing the 94-cent rate was postponed to
December 30, 1916, and meanwhile these tariffs were, with consent
of the Commission, cancelled upon the understanding that new
tariffs fixing a 75-cent rate effective on that day would be filed.
When the 75-cent rate was filed, Skinner & Eddy Corporation
again protested on the same ground, and made, as theretofore, the
same request for a suspension
Page 249 U. S. 562
of the tariffs and a hearing, and again the request was not
granted.
First. The defendants contend that the district court
did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter of this suit
because orders entered in a fourth section proceeding cannot be
assailed in the courts, at least, not until after a remedy has been
sought under §§ 13 and 15 of the Act to Regulate
Commerce. This contention proceeds apparently upon a
misapprehension of plaintiff's position. If plaintiff had sought
relief against a rate or practice alleged to be unjust because
unreasonably high or discriminatory, the remedy must have been
sought primarily by proceedings before the Commission,
Loomis
v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 240 U. S. 43,
240 U. S. 50;
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. American Tie & Timber
Co., 234 U. S. 138,
234 U. S. 146;
The Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U.
S. 352,
230 U. S. 419;
Robinson v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 222 U.
S. 506;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Pitcairn Coal
Co., 245 U. S. 481,
and the finding thereon would have been conclusive unless there was
lack of substantial evidence, some irregularity in the proceedings,
or some error in the application of rules of law;
Manufacturers' Ry. Co. v. United States, 246 U.
S. 457,
246 U. S. 482;
Pennsylvania Co. v. United States, 236 U.
S. 351,
236 U. S. 361;
Los Angeles Switching Case, 234 U.
S. 294,
234 U. S. 311;
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. United States,
231 U. S. 423,
231 U. S. 440;
Procter & Gamble Co. v. United States, 225 U.
S. 282,
225 U. S.
297-298;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Union
Pacific R. Co., 222 U. S. 541. But
plaintiff does not contend that 75 cents is an unreasonably high
rate, or that it is discriminatory, or that there was mere error in
the action of the Commission. The contention is that the Commission
has exceeded its statutory powers, and that hence the order is
void. In such a case, the courts have jurisdiction of suits to
enjoin the enforcement of an order, even if the plaintiff has not
attempted to secure redress in a proceeding before the Commission.
Interstate
Commerce
Page 249 U. S. 563
Commission v. Diffenbaugh, 222 U. S.
42,
222 U. S. 49;
Louisiana & Pacific Ry. Co. v. United States, 209 F.
244, 251;
Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 194 F. 449, 451.
The Sacramento Case,
supra, was a case of this character.
Compare Interstate
Commerce Commission v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co.,
227 U. S. 88,
227 U. S. 92;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
219 U. S. 433. The
district court properly assumed jurisdiction of this suit.
Second. The defendants contend also that, if the
subject matter was within the jurisdiction of a district court of
the United States, it was not within that of Oregon. The objection
is based upon the Act of October 22, 1913, c. 32, 38 Stat. 208,
219, which declares:
"The venue of any suit hereafter brought to enforce, suspend, or
set aside, in whole or in part, any order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission shall be in the judicial district wherein is
the residence of the party or any of the parties upon whose
petition the order was made."
And it is asserted that the parties upon whose petition the
order was made are the Merchants' Association of Spokane, a
resident of the Eastern
District of Washington, and the Railroad Commission of Nevada, a
resident of the District of Nevada. The applications of these
parties, filed in March, 1916, were doubtless instrumental in
securing a reopening of the proceedings which resulted in the order
complained of. But the proceedings in which the order was made were
the original application of carriers for relief under the fourth
section. The report and the order are entitled, "In the Matter of
Reopening Fourth Section Applications." One of the carriers which
had made such application for relief from the provisions of the
fourth section was a resident of Oregon, namely the
Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Company, and, as it was
joined as defendant in the suit, the District Court of Oregon had
jurisdiction over the parties.
Page 249 U. S. 564
Third. The main contention of plaintiff is that, as the
carriers had in 1916 reduced the rate from 80 cents to 65 cents,
neither the carriers nor the Commission had power to increase the
rate without a prior finding by the Commission upon proper hearing
"that such proposed increase rests upon changed conditions other
than the elimination of water competition," and that no such
hearing had been had or finding made.
In construing this provision, it is important to bear in mind
the limits of the Commission's control over rates. Neither the Act
to Regulate Commerce nor any amendment thereof has taken from the
carriers the power which they originally possessed to initiate
rates -- that is, the power in the first instance to fix rates or
to increase or to reduce them. [
Footnote 2] Legislation of Congress confers now upon the
Commission ample powers to prevent by direct action the exaction of
excessively high rates. The original act, proceeding upon the
common law rule which prohibits public carriers from charging more
than reasonable rates, gave the Commission power to declare illegal
one unduly high, but, even after such a determination, the
Commission lacked the power to fix the rate which should be
charged.
Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Ry. Co. v.
Interstate Commerce Commission, 162 U.
S. 184,
162 U. S.
196-197;
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Ry. Co.,
167 U. S. 479;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Alabama Midland Ry. Co.,
168 U. S. 144,
168 U. S. 161.
Effective control was not secured until the Act of 1906 had given
to the Commission the
Page 249 U. S. 565
power to fix, after such hearing, the rate which should be
charged,
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Humbolt Steamship
Co., 224 U. S. 474,
224 U. S. 483,
and the Act of 1910 had given it power to suspend, during
investigation, tariffs for new rates, and placed upon the carrier
the burden of proof to establish the reasonableness of the
increased rates,
M. C. Kiser Co. v. Central of Georgia Ry.
Co., 236 F. 573.
Congress, however, steadfastly withheld from the Commission
power to prevent by direct action the charging of unreasonably low
rates. The common law did not recognize that the rate of a common
carrier might be so low as to constitute a wrong, and Congress has
declined to declare such a rule. Despite the original Act to
Regulate Commerce and all amendments, railroads still have power to
fix rates as low as they choose, and to reduce rates when they
choose. [
Footnote 3] The
Commission's power over them in this respect extends no further
than to discourage the making of unduly low rates by applying
deterrents. One such deterrent is found in the fact that low rates,
because voluntarily established by the carrier, may be accepted by
the Commission as evidence that other rates, actual or proposed,
for comparable service are unreasonably high. Board of Trade of
Carrollton, Ga. v. Central of Georgia Ry. Co., 28 I.C.C. 154, 164;
Sheridan Chamber of Commerce v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R.
Co., 26 I.C.C. 638, 647.
Compare Louisville & Nashville R.
Co. v. United States, 238 U. S. 1,
238 U. S. 11
et seq. The voluntary making of unremuneratively low rates
in important traffic may also tend to induce the Commission to
resist appeals of carriers for general rate increases on the ground
of financial necessities. But the main source of the Commission's
influence to prevent excessively low
Page 249 U. S. 566
rates lies in its power to prevent unjust discrimination.
Compare Houston, East & West Texas Ry. Co. v. United
States, 234 U. S. 342. The
order prohibiting the unjust discrimination, however, leaves the
carrier free to continue the lower rate; the compulsion being that
if the low rate is retained, the rate applicable to the locality or
article discriminated against must be reduced. That is, the carrier
may remove the discrimination either by raising the lower rate to
the relative level of the higher, or by lowering the higher to the
relative level of the lower, or by equalizing conditions through
fixing rates at some intermediate point.
American Express Co.
v. Caldwell, 244 U. S. 617,
244 U. S.
624.
A special group of cases in which the Commission may indirectly
prevent unduly low rates through its power to prevent unjust
discrimination is that provided for by the long and short haul
clause. It was enacted to remedy one large class of discriminations
by creating a legislative presumption that the charge of more for a
short haul under substantially similar circumstances and conditions
than for a longer distance over the same line in the same direction
was unjust. As originally enacted, the provision was construed to
authorize the carrier to determine primarily whether the required
dissimilarity of circumstances and conditions existed, and also to
authorize the acceptance of competitive conditions as a
justification of a lower rate for the longer distance. So
construed, the provisions proved inefficacious, and the act was
amended in 1910 by striking out the "substantially similar
circumstances and conditions" clause and making the prohibition
absolute except to "the extent to which such designated common
carrier may be relieved from the operation of this section" by the
Commission.
Inter-Mountain Rate Cases, supra. But the lack
of power to prevent by direct action excessively low rates remains,
the carrier still having he option, if relief from the operation of
the fourth section is denied,
Page 249 U. S. 567
to keep in effect the low rate to the more distant point by
lowering the rates to intermediate points.
The last paragraph of § 4, here in question, which was
added by the Act of 1910, was designed to prevent the railroads
from killing water competition by making excessively low rates. But
again Congress refrained from prohibiting the carrier to reduce the
rate, and declined to confer upon the Commission power to prevent
by direct action a reduction. The act still leaves the carrier
absolutely free to make as low a rate as it chooses, and merely
provides another deterrent in declaring that, if the rate is once
reduced in competition with a water route or routes, it cannot
thereafter be increased
"unless, after hearing by the Interstate Commerce Commission, it
shall be found that such proposed increase rests upon changed
conditions other than the elimination of water competition. . . .
This provision may become operative in any case where there has
been competition between a railroad and a water line, inland or
coastwise. But we have now to determine merely whether the
prohibition applies where the rates in question were reduced with
the approval of the Commission given after hearing, by order
entered upon application of the carrier for relief from the
operation of the fourth section."
The language of the paragraph is general, and, read alone, might
compel that construction. But it may not be read alone. It must be
construed in the light of the purpose of its enactment, of the
earlier paragraphs of § 4, and of other sections in the Act to
Regulate Commerce designed to prevent unjust discrimination. The
specific purpose of § 4 was to prevent discrimination by
charging less for the longer haul unless, in the opinion of the
Commission, the circumstances make such action just.
Discrimination, just when sanctioned, may become unjust.
Recognizing this fact, Congress provided that the judgment of the
Commission should be exercised
Page 249 U. S. 568
"from time to time" to determine "the extent to which [the] . .
. carrier may be relieved from the operation of this section." In
other words, the leave granted is not for all time. It is revocable
at any time, either because it was improvidently granted or because
new conditions have arisen which make its continuance inequitable.
The specific purpose of the last paragraph of § 4 is to ensure
and preserve water competition -- to prevent competition that
kills. A reduction made under the authority of a fourth section
order after full hearing must have been found by the Commission to
have been reasonably necessary in order to preserve competition
between the rail and the water carrier. A reduction so made is not
within the reason of the prohibition declared by the last
paragraph. Transportation conditions are not static; the oppressor
of today may tomorrow be the oppressed. And, in order to preserve
competition between rail and water carriers, it is necessary that
the Commission's power to approve a modification of rates be as
broad as it is to approve a modification in order to prevent unjust
discrimination. Even a literal reading of § 4 would not
require that prohibition contained in the last paragraph be
extended to reductions made with the approval of the Commission.
The preceding paragraph declares that "the Commission may from time
to time prescribe the extent to which such designated common
carrier may be relieved from the operation of this section." The
last paragraph is a part of the section. Why should not the
Commission's power to relieve be extended to it?
The construction contended for by plaintiff would rather ensure
monopoly than preserve competition. If a rail rate reduced in
competition with a water route for the avowed purpose of preserving
competition by rail should result, contrary to the Commission's
expectations, in eliminating the water competition because so low
as to drive the water carrier out of business, then the
prohibitively
Page 249 U. S. 569
low rate would have to be continued permanently, and other water
competition be thereby prevented from arising, unless perchance
some changed condition should develop which might make removal of
the bar possible. Or, if the reduction if the rail rate, sanctioned
by the Commission under the fourth section as not unjustly
discriminating against intermediate points, because forced upon the
rail carriers by oppressive water competition designed to destroy
its business to the port, should become thereafter unjustly
discriminatory because the water carrier, destroyed by its own rate
cutting, abandoned the route, still the low rail rate and resulting
discrimination would have to continue. Only compelling language
could cause us to impute to Congress the intention to produce
results so absurd, and the language of the last paragraph of §
4 is clearly susceptible of the more reasonable construction
contended for by defendants.
Fourth. The defendants further contend that, even if
the prohibition of the last paragraph of § 4 be construed to
apply also where the reduction was made with the authority of the
Commission, the increase of the Pittsburgh-Seattle rate to 75 cents
is valid, because the finding of the Commission complies with the
prescribed condition that the increased rate must rest "upon
changed conditions other than the elimination of water
competition." It found in terms that "the conditions formerly
existing have materially changed," that
"the withdrawal of boats from this [coast to coast] service has
not been on account of the rates made by the rail carriers with
which the boats compete, but on account of slides in the Panama
Canal and the extraordinary rise in ocean freights,"
that the substantial disappearance of water competition was
merely temporary, that competing water carriers "announced their
intention ultimately to return to this service," and
"that the time of such return depended in
Page 249 U. S. 570
part upon the measure of the rates they would be able to secure
for this service in competition with the rail lines."
It is clear that the changed conditions so found are something
other than the "elimination of water competition" which Congress
intended should not justify raising the reduced rates.
Compare American Insulated Wire & Cable Co. v. Chicago
& Northwestern Ry. Co., 26 I.C.C. 415, 416.
Fifth. The plaintiff attacks, however, the validity of
the order of June 5, 1916 (amended July 13, 1916), also on the
ground that it was not made upon application of the carrier,
insisting that application by the carrier is not only a
prerequisite to the original granting of relief under the fourth
section, but also to the modification from time to time by the
Commission of the relief afforded. This Court expressed in the
Sacramento case,
supra, at p.
242 U. S. 187,
its doubt whether such application was a prerequisite even to the
original granting of relief. It is clear that application by the
carrier is not a prerequisite to modification. As shown above,
orders granting relief under the fourth section are not grants in
perpetuity. Neither a carrier nor a favored community acquires
thereby vested rights. Necessarily implied in each such order is
the term "until otherwise ordered by the Commission," and the
original application is always subject to be reopened, as it was
here.
The district court did not err in dismissing the bill (and
supplemental bill) on the merits, and its decree is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
80 cents was the specific published rate, but the combination of
the Pittsburgh-Chicago rate of 18.9 cents and the Chicago-Seattle
rate of 55 cents was 73.9 cents, and it was at this rate that the
traffic from Pittsburgh actually moved.
[
Footnote 2]
By Act of August 9, 1917, c. 50, § 4, 40 Stat. 270, 272, it
was provided that, until January 1, 1920, no increased rate or fare
shall be filed except after approval thereof has been secured from
the Commission. On the 28th day of December, 1917, the government
took control of the railroads, as a war measure, under Act of
August 29, 1916, c. 418, 39 Stat. 619, 645. Proclamation of
December 26, 1917, Proclamations 1917-1918, pp. 89, 90.
[
Footnote 3]
Subject only to the requirement of notice as provided in §
6 of the Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended.