1. Orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission may be set aside
when based upon mistake of law. P.
257 U. S.
256.
2. The Commission has power under § 1 of the Act to
Regulate Commerce, as amended, to determine in particular cases
whether the granting or withholding of a transit privilege is
unreasonable and unjust, and to require its allowance or its
withdrawal accordingly. So
held of the privilege of
"creosoting in transit," whereby forest products may be unloaded at
an intermediate point, subjected to
Page 257 U. S. 248
the process of creosoting and forwarded on the original bill of
lading to the destination therein named, without depriving the
shipper of the benefit of through rates. P.
257 U. S.
257.
3. What Congress sought to prevent by § 3 of the Act to
Regulate Commerce was not differences between localities in
transportation rates, facilities, and privileges, but unjust
discrimination between them by the same carrier or carriers. P.
257 U. S.
259.
4. Participation in joint rates does not make connecting
carriers partners, and they can be held jointly and severally
responsible for unjust discrimination only if each has participated
in some way in that which causes it. P.
257 U. S.
259.
5. Neither the Transportation Act of 1920 nor any earlier
amendatory legislation has changed in this respect the purpose or
scope of § 3. P.
257 U. S. 260.
6. Where the Commission found that denial of the creosoting
privilege to a plant located at a point on the lines of certain
carriers was not, in itself, unjust or unreasonable, but concluded
that the plant suffered undue prejudice and disadvantage because
they and other carriers before the Commission maintained joint
rates over routes passing through the point in common with still
other carriers, not parties, who had allowed the privilege to
plants on their own lines as an item in their local tariffs and
without the concurrence of the carriers before the Commission or
participation by them in the revenues from the privilege,
held that the case was not remediable under § 3 of
the Act to Regulate Commerce, and that an order requiring the
carriers proceeded against to remove the discrimination should be
set aside. P.
257 U. S.
257.
Reversed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court denying a preliminary
injunction in a suit brought by the Central Railroad Company of New
Jersey, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and twenty-one other
railroad corporations to set aside an order made by the Interstate
Commerce Commission.
Page 257 U. S. 253
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the Federal District Court for New
Jersey to enjoin the enforcement of an order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission on the ground that it exceeds the powers of the
Commission, was arbitrary, and is void. The plaintiffs were the
Central Railroad of New Jersey, the Pennsylvania, and twenty-one
other railroads located in Trunk Line territory and New England.
The defendants were the United States and the Interstate Commerce
Commission. The former filed a motion to dismiss, the latter an
answer which admitted the material allegations of the bill of
complaint. On these pleadings,
Page 257 U. S. 254
the case was heard before three judges on an application for a
preliminary injunction. This was denied without written opinion,
and the case is here on appeal under the Act of October 22, 1913,
c. 32, 38 Stat. 208, 220.
The order of the Commission was entered upon a petition of the
American Creosoting Company to which these twenty-three carriers --
and no others [
Footnote 1] --
were made respondents. American Creosoting Co. v. Director General,
61 I.C.C. 145. It alleged that the petitioner had a creosoting
plant at Newark, New Jersey, which was connected by switch tracks
with the Central and the Pennsylvania; that these carriers had
failed to establish there the privilege known as creosoting in
transit; that this failure was unjust and unreasonable in violation
of § 1 of the Act to Regulate Commerce of February 4, 1887 as
amended, and that it was also unjustly discriminatory in violation
of § 3. The Commission found that failure to establish this
transit privilege was not unjust or unreasonable, and denied relief
under § 1. But it found on the facts hereinafter stated that
this failure subjected the company to unjust discrimination; and,
granting relief under § 3, the Commission directed that the
discrimination be removed by the respondents, who are the
appellants here.
By the privilege called creosoting in transit, forest products
received for shipment may be stopped and unloaded at an
intermediate point, there subjected to the process of creosoting,
and later forwarded on the original bill of lading to the
destination therein named. Where the privilege is granted and
availed of, delivery is made of the commodity to the creosoting
plant as if that were the final destination. It is there unloaded
and treated,
Page 257 U. S. 255
and at some time thereafter, it is redelivered to the carrier as
if there were an initial shipment of the creosoting product. Then
it is forwarded to the final destination. Although some charge is
made for the transit service, the shipper secures thereby a lower
freight rate. For through rates are generally much less than the
rate on the untreated forest product from point of origin to the
transit point plus that on the treated product from there to
destination.
The plant of the American Creosoting Company is not reached by
lines of any of the twenty-three appellants except the Central and
the Pennsylvania. Neither of these two carriers accords the
creosoting in transit privilege at any point on its lines, and no
competitor of the company has a plant on those of either. Nor is
the privilege granted in Trunk Line territory by any carrier, with
a single exception not here material. Some competitors of the
American Creosoting Company have plants in Mississippi, Indiana,
Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, and the several railroads on
which these plants are located have, each acting independently,
established the privilege at the places where those plants are
situated. Under the rules of the Commission governing the making,
filing and publishing of tariffs, privileges like creosoting in
transit are treated as a matter local to the railroad on which the
transit point is situated. Whether the privilege shall be granted
or withheld is determined by the local carrier. If granted, the
local carrier determines the conditions, and these are set forth in
the local tariff. Although a joint through route with joint rates
is established by concurrent action of several carriers, the
transit privilege may thus be granted by a carrier without the
consent of, and without consulting, connecting carriers. And the
whole revenue received for use of the privilege is retained by the
local carrier. The appellants did not participate in any way in
establishing the transit privileges enjoyed by
Page 257 U. S. 256
competitors of the Newark concern on lines of the southern and
midwestern carriers, and none of those carriers is controlled by
any of the appellants. But appellants did join with those Southern
and Midwest railroads in establishing joint rates on forest
products over routes which pass through the points at which this
privilege prevails, and also through Newark. [
Footnote 2]
The order entered by the Commission declares that the
twenty-three carriers, "insofar as they participate in tariffs
carrying joint rates" on these forest products "through Newark from
points in Southern classification territory to points in Northern
New Jersey, Eastern New York and New England," subject the American
Creosoting Company to undue prejudice and disadvantage, and it
directs these twenty-three carriers to avoid this undue prejudice.
How the discrimination shall be removed is not prescribed. In
effect, the order directs that, unless the Central and the
Pennsylvania establish the privilege at Newark, the twenty-three
carriers must withdraw from all tariffs establishing the joint
rates. As to administrative orders operating
in futuro,
the Commission's findings of fact are conclusive, subject to
qualifications here not pertinent, and a finding that the
discrimination is unjust is ordinarily a finding of fact.
Manufacturers' Ry. Co. v. United States, 246 U.
S. 457,
246 U. S.
481-482. But the question presented here is whether the
discrimination found can be held in law to be attributable to the
appellants, and whether they can be required to cancel existing
joint rates, unless it is removed. No finding made by the
Commission can prevent
Page 257 U. S. 257
the review of such questions.
Interstate Commerce Commission
v. Diffenbaugh, 222 U. S. 42;
Philadelphia & Reading Ry. v. United States,
240 U. S. 334.
Creosoting in transit, like other transit privileges, rests upon
the fiction that the incoming and the outgoing transportation
services, which are in fact distinct, constitute a continuous
shipment of the identical article from point of origin to final
destination. The practice has its origin partly in local needs,
partly in the competition of carriers for business. The practice is
sometimes beneficial in its results, but it is open to grave
abuses. [
Footnote 3] To police
it adequately is difficult and expensive. Unless adequately
policed, it is an avenue to illegal rebates, and seriously depletes
the carriers' revenues. Railroad managers differ widely as to the
policy of granting such privileges. The Commission clearly has
power under § 1 of the Act to Regulate Commerce as amended to
determine whether, in a particular case, a transit privilege should
be granted or should be withdrawn. For that section requires, among
other things, that carriers establish, in connection with through
routes and joint rates, reasonable rules and regulations. The
Commission might, therefore, acting under § 1, have directed
the Central and the Pennsylvania to establish the creosoting in
transit practice at Newark if it deemed failure to do so
unreasonable or unjust, or it might, in an appropriate proceeding,
have directed the southern and midwestern carriers to discontinue
the practice on their lines if it deemed the granting of the
privilege to be unreasonable or unjust. But it did neither.
Instead, it sought to accomplish by indirection either one result
or the other, and ordered under § 3 that the discrimination
found to exist be removed. Twenty-one of the appellants are
powerless either to cause the Central
Page 257 U. S. 258
and the Pennsylvania to install the privilege at Newark or to
cause the southern and midwestern carriers to discontinue the
practice on their lines. The Central and the Pennsylvania are
likewise powerless to cause these connecting carriers to withdraw
the privilege. They can, it is true, equalize conditions by
establishing the privilege at Newark. But to do so would involve
departure from a policy to which they have steadfastly adhered and
adhesion to which was held by the Commission not to be
unreasonable. If they should establish the privilege at Newark,
they would act contrary to their judgment, and would adopt a
practice which some connecting carriers had introduced without
their concurrence or consent, and which may hereafter, upon
appropriate inquiry, be held by the Commission to be unjust and
unreasonable. Congress could not have intended that, under such
circumstances, relief should be afforded under § 3 when a
direct remedy is available under § 1.
It is insisted that the order leaves appellants the alternative
of withdrawing from the tariffs which establish joint rates with
the southern and midwestern carriers through Newark. The order does
not so provide in terms, and in fact the alleged alternative is
illusory. The undue prejudice found arises not from the existence
of joint rates, but from conditions local to other railroads.
Cancellation of the joint rates would not change those conditions.
Although the joint rates were withdrawn, the established through
routes would remain. The duty to provide such routes is
specifically enjoined by paragraph 4 of § 1, and, under the
provisions of paragraph 1 of § 6, the separately established
rates of the several connecting carriers would, in the absence of
joint rates, apply to through transportation. So far as appears,
the Newark concern would be under the same disadvantage as compared
with its competitors whether the traffic moved on the combination
of the rates local to the several lines or
Page 257 U. S. 259
on joint rates. Even the abolition of the through routes (which
is not suggested) would leave the relative positions of the several
creosoting concerns unchanged. Cancellation of the joint rates
would, at most, relieve appellants from the charge that they are
violating the provisions of § 3.
It is urged that, while the undue prejudice found results
directly from the individual acts of southern and midwestern
carriers in granting the privilege locally, the appellants, as
their partners, make the prejudice possible by becoming the
instruments through which it is applied. Discrimination may, of
course, be practiced by a combination of connecting carriers, as
well as by an individual railroad, and the Commission has ample
power under § 3 to remove discrimination so practiced.
See
St. Louis & Southwestern Ry. Co. v. United States,
245 U. S. 136,
245 U. S. 144.
But participation merely in joint rates does not make connecting
carriers partners. They can be held jointly and severally
responsible for unjust discrimination only if each carrier has
participated in some way in that which causes the unjust
discrimination, as where a lower joint rate is given to one
locality than to another similarly situated.
Penn Refining Co.
v. Western N.Y. & P. R. Co., 208 U.
S. 208,
208 U. S.
221-222,
208 U. S. 225.
Compare East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Ry. Co. v.
Interstate Commerce Commission, 181 U. S.
1,
181 U. S. 18. If
this were not so, the legality or illegality of a carrier's
practice would depend not on its own act, but on the acts of its
connecting carriers. If that rule should prevail, only uniformity
in local privileges and practices or the cancellation of all joint
rates could afford to carriers the assurance that they were not in
some way violating the provisions of § 3. What Congress sought
to prevent by that section as originally enacted was not
differences between localities in transportation rates, facilities,
and privileges, but unjust discrimination between them by the
Page 257 U. S. 260
same carrier or carriers. Neither the Transportation Act 1920,
February 28, 1920, c. 91, 41 Stat. 456, nor any earlier amendatory
legislation has changed, in this respect, the purpose or scope of
§ 3.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Except the New York, Ontario & Western Railway Company,
another carrier in the Trunk Line territory, whose interests were
presumably not affected by the order. The number of carriers is
therefore referred to herein as being twenty-three.
[
Footnote 2]
The transit privilege so granted includes cutting of paving
blocks into shape at creosoting plant. On some of the railroads,
the joint rates do not apply through the transit point. On them,
the privilege includes and out of line movement, and, on some
lines, also a backhaul to reach final destination. This broadened
privilege was sought for Newark.
[
Footnote 3]
See In Matter of Alleged Unlawful Rates and Practices,
7 I.C.C. 240; In Matter of Substitution of Tonnage at Transit
Points, 18 I.C.C. 280; Transit Case, 24 I.C.C. 340.