If, in the beginning or during its subsequent operation, a
pipeline is devoted by its owner to the use of the public in
transporting oil for hire, and if the right thus extended to the
public has not been withdrawn, the pipeline is a public utility and
its owner a common carrier whose rates and practices may be
subjected to state regulation consistently with the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. P.
251 U. S.
230.
The following grounds, relied on by the state court, have
adequate support in the evidence and sustain its conclusion that
the plaintiff in error had devoted its pipeline to public use,
viz: (1) authority in articles of incorporation to
establish and carry on a general transportation business for
transporting any oils produced by the pipeline company or others;
(2) acquisition of part of its right of way through eminent domain
proceedings, admissible only, under the state law, if the
condemnation was for a public use and was by an "agent of the
state," and averments in such proceedings by the condemnor that it
was a common carrier seeking the right of way for a public use; (3)
transportation in substance for all producers seeking
Page 251 U. S. 229
the service, though done in form through an intermediate agency
and a system of contract, it appearing that membership in such
agency was readily obtained and had not been refused. P.
251 U. S.
231.
A common carrier cannot, by making contract for future
transportation, prevent or postpone the exertion by a state of the
power to regulate the carrier's rate and practice. P.
251 U. S.
232.
Nor does the contract clause of the Constitution interpose any
obstacle to the exertion of that power.
Id.
176 Cal. 499 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
We here are concerned with a statute of California and an order
made thereunder by the State Railroad Commission, both of which are
said to be repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, and
therefore invalid.
The statute declares that every private corporation or
individual operating
"any pipeline or any part of any pipeline . . . for the
transportation of crude oil, . . . directly or indirectly, to or
for the public, for hire, . . . and which said pipeline . . . is
constructed or maintained upon, along, over or under any public
highway, and in favor of whom the right of eminent domain
exists,"
shall be deemed a common carrier and subject to the provisions
of a prior act investing the Railroad Commission with extensive
powers over the rates and practices of those who operate public
utilities. Stats.1913, c. 327; Stats.1911, Ex.Sess. c. 14.
The order of the Commission was made after notice and
Page 251 U. S. 230
a full hearing, is based upon a finding that the Producers'
Transportation Company, the plaintiff in error, has a pipeline from
the San Joaquin oil fields to Port Harford, on the Pacific Coast
whereby it transports crude oil for pay in such circumstances that
the statute requires that it be regarded and dealt with as a common
carrier, and directs the filing with the Commission of the
company's schedule of rates or charges and the rules and
regulations under which the transportation is conducted.
In the state court, the company contended that the evidence
before the Commission, all of which was before the court,
conclusively established that the pipeline was constructed solely
to carry crude oil for particular producers from their wells to the
seacoast under strictly private contracts, and that there had been
no carrying for others, nor any devotion of the pipeline to public
use, and the company further contended that the statute, as applied
to this pipeline, was repugnant to the due process of law clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment and the contract clause of § 10 of
Article I of the Constitution, and that the order of the Commission
was void as offending against these clauses. The state court
sustained both the statute and the order, 176 Cal. 499, and the
company sued out this writ of error.
The company was organized under the laws of California in 1909,
and its pipeline was put in operation in 1910. The statute in
question took effect August 10, 1913, and the order was made
December 31, 1914.
It is, of course, true that, if the pipeline was constructed
solely to carry oil for particular producers under strictly private
contracts and never was devoted by its owner to public use, that
is, to carrying for the public, the state could not, by mere
legislative fiat or by any regulating order of a Commission,
convert it into a public utility or make its owner a common
carrier, for that would be taking private property for public use
without just compensation,
Page 251 U. S. 231
which no state can do consistently with the due process of law
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy Ry. Co. v. Drainage Commissioners, 200 U.
S. 561,
200 U. S. 593;
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. North Dakota, 236 U.
S. 585,
236 U. S. 595;
Associated Oil Co. v. Railroad Commission, 176 Cal. 518,
523, 526.
And see Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S.
113,
94 U. S. 126;
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. West Coast Naval Stores
Co., 198 U. S. 483,
198 U. S. 495;
Weems Steamboat Co. v. People's Steamboat Co.,
214 U. S. 345,
214 U. S. 357;
Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co. v. Ochs, 249 U.
S. 416,
249 U. S.
419-420. On the other hand, if, in the beginning or
during its subsequent operation, the pipeline was devoted by its
owner to public use, and if the right thus extended to the public
has not been withdrawn, there can be no doubt that the pipeline is
a public utility and its owner a common carrier whose rates and
practices are subject to public regulation.
Munn v. Illinois,
supra.
The state court, upon examining the evidence, concluded that the
company voluntarily had devoted the pipeline to the use of the
public in transporting oil, and it rested this conclusion upon the
grounds, first, that one of the things which the company was
authorized to do, if it so elected, as shown in its articles of
incorporation, was
"to establish and carry on . . . a general transportation
business for the purpose of transporting . . . any of the oils . .
. produced . . . by this corporation or any other person, firm,
partnership, association or corporation;"
second, that, in acquiring its right of way, it resorted to an
exercise of the power of eminent domain -- admissible only if the
condemnation was for a "public use," Code Civ.Proc. §§
1237, 1238, and was by "an agent of the state," Civ.Code, §
1001 -- and in that proceeding asserted, and obtained a judgment
reciting, that it was engaged in transporting oil by pipeline "as a
common carrier for hire," and that the right of way was sought for
"a public use;" and, third, that, looking
Page 251 U. S. 232
through the maze of contracts, agency agreements, and the like
under which the transportation was effected, subordinating form to
substance, and having due regard to the agency's ready admission of
new members and its exclusion of none, it was apparent that the
company did in truth carry oil for all producers seeking its
service -- in other words, for the public.
See Pipe Line
Cases, 234 U. S. 548.
While some criticism is made of this conclusion and the grounds
upon which it is rested, we are of opinion that the grounds have
adequate support in the evidence, and that they sustain the
conclusion. True, one witness stated that "the pipeline was not
laid upon the right of way which was obtained in the condemnation
suit," but, as his further testimony disclosed that he meant only
that a part of the right of way so obtained was not used when the
pipeline was laid, we think the state court rightly regarded the
company as having acquired some of its actual right of way by
exercising the power of eminent domain as a common carrier. If it
was a common carrier at the time of the condemnation suit, it is
such now, for nothing has occurred in the meantime to change its
status.
That some of the contracts before mentioned were entered into
before the statute was adopted or the order made is not material. A
common carrier cannot, by making contracts for future
transportation or by mortgaging its property or pledging its
income, prevent or postpone the exertion by the state of the power
to regulate the carrier's rates and practices. Nor does the
contract clause of the Constitution interpose any obstacle to the
exertion of that power.
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. Co.
v. Iowa, 94 U. S. 155,
94 U. S. 162;
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Mottley, 219 U.
S. 467,
219 U. S. 482;
Union Dry Goods Co. v. Georgia Public Service Commission,
248 U. S. 372.
Judgment affirmed.