1. In a proceeding brought by a public utility against the
Public Utilities Commission of the District of Columbia, in the
Supreme Court of the District, under par. 64 of § 8 of the Act
of March 4, 1913, c. 150, 37 Stat. 974, the court is empowered not
merely to decide legal questions and questions of fact as incident
thereto, but also to amend, and, if need be, enlarge valuations,
rates, and regulations established by the Commission which the
court finds upon the record and evidence to be inadequate, and to
make such order as, in its judgment, the Commission should have
made. P.
261 U. S.
440.
2. This is legislative, as distinguished from judicial, power.
Id.
3. Under the power "to exercise exclusive legislation in all
cases whatsoever" over the District of Columbia (Const. Art. I,
§ 8, cl. 17), Congress may vest this jurisdiction in the
courts of the District. P.
261 U. S. 442.
4. But such power cannot be conferred upon this Court, and the
provision made by the above act (par. 64) for appeals here from the
Court of Appeals of the District is therefore void. P.
261 U. S.
443.
5. The failure of this provision of the act does not, however,
affect the other provisions of par. 64 of the act giving
jurisdiction to
Page 261 U. S. 429
the courts of the District, in new of the probable intent of
Congress in this regard and the saving clause in par. 92. P.
261 U. S.
444.
6. If the provisions of the above act (pars. 65 and 69) seeking
to limit the time within which recourse may be had to the courts
against orders of the Commission and to put the burden of proof
upon the party attacking them are unconstitutional, the remainder
of the act would not be affected in new of the saving clause of par
92. P.
261 U. S.
445.
Appeal to review 51 App.D.C. 77, 276 F. 327, dismissed.
Appeal, under the law creating the Public Utilities Commission
of the District of Columbia, from an order or decree of the Court
of Appeals of the District reversing a decree of the Supreme Court
of the District which dismissed the bill in a suit against the
Commission and remanding the case for further proceedings.
Page 261 U. S. 436
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia. It is an appeal provided for in paragraph 64 of the law
creating the Public Utilities Commission of the District. The law
is § 8 of an act approved March 4, 1913, making appropriations
for the District for the year ending June 30, 1914 (37 Stat. 938,
974). Paragraph 7 requires the commission created thereby to value
the property of every public utility within the District actually
used and useful for the convenience of the public at the fair value
thereof at the
Page 261 U. S. 437
time of the valuation. The commission, after a public hearing,
fixed the value of the Potomac Electric Power Company at
$11,231,170.43. The company then filed a bill in equity in the
Supreme Court of the District against the commission seeking to
enjoin the order as unlawful, unreasonable, and inadequate under
paragraph 64 of the law. It made a party defendant to the bill the
Washington Railway & Electric Company, because it is the sole
stockholder of the Power Company.
The Supreme Court of the District upheld the findings of the
commission in every particular, and dismissed the bill. From this
decree, the company appealed to the Court of Appeals of the
District on the ground that the Commission and the Supreme Court
had found the value as of July 1, 1914, whereas the time of the
valuation was December 31, 1916, and between the two dates there
had been a sharp rise in values, for which the company was not made
any allowance in the valuation, and also because, under the
circumstances of the case and the challenge by the company that the
valuation was arbitrary, the court should disregard the
prima
facie effect given by the statute to the findings of the
Commission and exercise its own independent judgment as to both law
and facts so far as it was necessary to determine whether the use
of such valuation as a basis of ratemaking would result in
confiscation. The Court of Appeals sustained the appeal on these
grounds and remanded the cause for further proceedings not
inconsistent with its opinion.
When this appeal was opened by counsel at the bar, we declined
to hear the merits and postponed the case to give both sides an
opportunity to prepare to discuss the questions, first, whether
Congress had the constitutional power to vest the district courts
and this Court with jurisdiction to review the proceedings of the
Commission, and, second, whether, if the power existed, the appeal
to this Court was only intended to apply to a final decree,
Page 261 U. S. 438
and finally whether this was such a decree. Briefs have
accordingly been filed, and we have had an oral argument upon these
questions.
The Public Utilities Law is a very comprehensive one. It applies
to all public utilities in the District except steam railways and
steamboat lines. It creates a Commission to supervise and regulate
them in the matter of rates, tolls, charges, service, joint rates,
and other matters of interest to the public. It directs
investigation into the financial history and affairs of each
utility and its valuation at a fair value as of the time of
valuation. It requires a public hearing on this subject. It also
provides that, while the utility may fix a schedule of rates not
exceeding the lawful rates at the passage of the act, which it must
publish, the Commission may, of its own initiative or upon the
complaint of another, or indeed of the utility itself, investigate
the reasonableness, lawfulness, and adequacy of the rate or
service, and may change the same. The utility must then adopt the
change and publish its schedules accordingly. The law further
provides that, in such proceedings, the utility shall have notice
and a hearing, that a stenographic record of the proceedings shall
be kept and produced by the Commission in any court proceeding
thereafter instituted to question the validity, reasonableness, or
adequacy of the action of the Commission.
The relevant part of paragraph 64 is given in full in the
margin.
* In short, it
enables the Commission by action
Page 261 U. S. 439
in equity to invoke the advice of the District Supreme Court
upon the elements in value to be by it considered in arriving at a
true valuation of the property of a utility. It further grants to
any utility or any person or corporate interest dissatisfied with
any valuation, rate, or rates, or regulation, or requirement, act,
service, or other thing fixed by the Commission the right to begin
a proceeding in equity in the Supreme Court to vacate, set aside,
or modify the order on the ground that the valuation, rate,
regulation, or requirement is unlawful, inadequate, or
unreasonable. Paragraph 65 limits the time within which such a
proceeding to vacate, set aside, or amend the order of
Page 261 U. S. 440
the Commission may be begun to 120 days, and thereafter the
right to appeal or of recourse to the courts shall terminate
absolutely. Paragraph 67 provides that, if new evidence is
introduced by the plaintiff different from that offered in the
hearing before the Commission, unless the parties otherwise agree,
the new evidence shall be sent to the Commission to enable it to
change its order if it sees fit, and then the court shall proceed
to consider the appeal either on the original order or the changed
order as the case may be. Paragraph 69 provides that, in such
proceedings, the burden of proof is upon the party adverse to the
Commission to show by clear and satisfactory evidence that the
determination, requirement, direction, or order of the Commission
complained of is inadequate, unreasonable, or unlawful, as the case
may be.
What is the nature of the power thus conferred on the District
Supreme Court. Is it judicial or is it legislative? Is the court to
pass solely on questions of law, and look to the facts only to
decide what are the questions of law really arising, or to consider
whether there was any showing of facts before the Commission upon
which, as a matter of law, its finding can be justified? Or has it
the power, in this equitable proceeding, to review the exercise of
discretion by the Commission and itself raise or lower valuations,
rates, or restrict or expand orders as to service? Has it the power
to make the order the Commission should have made? If it has, then
the court is to exercise legislative power, in that it will be
laying down new rules, to change present conditions and to guide
future action, and is not confined to definition and protection of
existing rights. In
Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line,
211 U. S. 210,
211 U. S. 226,
we said:
"A judicial inquiry investigates, declares, and enforces
liabilities as they stand on present or past facts and under laws
supposed already to exist. That is its purpose and end.
Legislation, on the other hand, looks to the future
Page 261 U. S. 441
and changes existing conditions by making a new rule to be
applied thereafter to all or some part of those subject to its
power. The establishment of a rate is the making of a rule for the
future, and therefore is an act legislative not judicial in kind. .
. ."
Under the law, the proceeding in the District Supreme Court is
of a very special character. The court may by called in to advise
the Commission as to the elements of value to be by it considered
at any stage of the hearing before the Commission. To modify of
amend a valuation, or a rate, or a regulation of the Commission as
inadequate, as the court is authorized to do, seems to us
necessarily to import the power to increase the valuation, or rate,
or to make a regulation more comprehensive, and to consider the
evidence before it for this purpose. In other words, the proceeding
in court is an appeal from the action of the Commission in the
chancery sense. In the briefs of counsel for the Commission, it is
so termed. The form which the bill filed is given by the electric
company is that of a series of exceptions to the rulings of the
court on the evidence and at every stage of the hearing, and
finally to the conclusions of fact as against the weight of the
evidence. Paragraph 69 is significant in its indication that issues
of fact as to inadequacy of the action by the Commission are to be
passed on by the court.
Counsel seek to establish an analogy between the jurisdiction of
the District Supreme Court to review the action of the Commission
and that conferred on, and exercised by, the federal district
courts in respect of the orders of the Interstate Commerce
Commission. We think, however, that the analogy fails. The act for
the creation of the Commerce Court provided (Judicial Code §
207) that is should have the jurisdiction of the then circuit
courts of all cases brought to enjoin, set aside, or annul or
suspend in whole or in part any order of the Commission. When the
Commerce Court was abolished by the
Page 261 U. S. 442
Act of October 22, 1913, 38 Stat. 219, this jurisdiction was
conferred on the several district courts of the United States. This
permits these courts to consider all relevant questions of
constitutional power or right and all pertinent questions whether
the administrative order is within the statutory authority, or is
an attempted exercise or it so unreasonable as not to be within it,
but these are questions of law only.
Interstate Commerce
Commission v. Illinois Central R. Co., 215 U.
S. 452,
215 U. S. 470.
Of course, the consideration and decision of questions of law may
involve a consideration of controverted facts to determine what the
question of law is, but it is settled that any finding of fact by
the Commission, if supported by evidence, is final and conclusive
on the courts.
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Union Pacific
R. Co., 222 U. S. 541,
222 U. S. 547.
A similar distinction exists between the jurisdiction here
conferred and that vested in circuit courts of appeals in reference
to proceedings before the Trade Commission. Act Sept. 26, 1914, c.
311, § 5, 38 Stat. 719. The language of the act under
discussion is much wider than that of the Interstate Commerce Act
or of the Federal Trade Commission provisions. It brings the court
much more intimately into the legislative machinery for fixing
rates than does the Interstate Commerce Act. We cannot escape the
conclusion that Congress intended that the court shall revise the
legislative discretion of the Commission by considering the
evidence and full record of the case and entering the order it
deems the Commission ought to have made.
Can the Congress vest such jurisdiction in the courts of the
District of Columbia? By the Constitution, clause 17, § 8,
Article I, Congress is given power "to exercise exclusive
legislation in all cases whatsoever, over" the District of
Columbia. This means that, as to the District, Congress possesses,
not only the power which belongs to it in respect of territory
within a state, but the power of
Page 261 U. S. 443
the state as well. In other words, it possesses a dual authority
over the District, and may clothe the courts of the District not
only with the jurisdiction and powers of federal courts in the
several states, but with such authority as a state may confer on
her courts.
Kendall v. United
States, 12 Pet. 524,
37 U. S. 619.
Instances in which congressional enactments have been sustained
which conferred powers and placed duties on the courts of the
District of an exceptional and advisory character are found in
Butterworth v. Hoe, 112 U. S. 50,
112 U. S. 60,
United States v. Duell, 172 U. S. 576, and
Baldwin Co. v. R.S. Howard Co., 256 U. S.
35. Subject to the guaranties of personal liberty in the
amendments and in the original Constitution, Congress has as much
power to vest courts of the District with a variety of jurisdiction
and powers as a state legislature has in conferring jurisdiction on
its courts. In
Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line, supra, we
held that, when
"a state constitution sees fit to unite legislative and judicial
powers in a single hand, there is nothing to hinder so far as the
Constitution of the United States is concerned."
211 U.S.
211 U. S. 225;
Dreyer v. Illinois, 187 U. S. 71,
187 U. S.
83-84.
It follows that the provisions in the law for a review of the
Commission's proceedings by the Supreme Court of the District and
for an appeal to the District Court of Appeals are valid. A
different question arises, however, when we come to consider the
validity of the provision for appeal to this Court. It is contained
in the following sentence in paragraph 64:
"Any party, including said Commission, may appeal from the order
or decree of said court to the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia, and therefrom to the Supreme Court of the United States,
which shall thereupon have and take jurisdiction in every such
appeal."
The court proceedings to review the orders of the Commission
authorized by paragraph 64 are expressly required
Page 261 U. S. 444
to conform to equity procedure. In that procedure, an appeal
brings up the whole record, and the appellate court is authorized
to review the evidence and make such order or decree as the court
of first instance ought to have made, giving proper weight to the
findings on disputed issues of fact which should be accorded to a
tribunal which heard the witnesses. This Court is therefore given
jurisdiction to review the entire record, and to make the order or
decree which the Commission and the district courts should have
made.
Such legislative or administrative jurisdiction, it is well
settled, cannot be conferred on this Court either directly or by
appeal. The latest and fullest authority upon this point is to be
found in the opinion of MR. JUSTICE Day, speaking for the court in
Muskrat v. United States, 219 U.
S. 346. The principle there recognized and enforced on
reason and authority is that the jurisdiction of this Court and of
the inferior courts of the United States ordained and established
by Congress under and by virtue of the third article of the
Constitution is limited to cases and controversies in such form
that the judicial power is capable of acting on them, and does not
extend to an issue of constitutional law framed by Congress for the
purpose of invoking the advice of this Court without real parties
or a real case, or to administrative or legislative issues or
controversies.
Hayburn's
Case, 2 Dall. 410, note;
United
States v. Ferreira, 13 How. 40,
54 U. S. 52;
Ex parte Siebold, 100 U. S. 371,
100 U. S. 398;
Gordon v. United States, 117 U.S. 697;
Baltimore &
Ohio R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 215 U.
S. 216.
The fact that the appeal to this Court is invalid does not,
however, render paragraph 64 invalid as a whole. Paragraph 92 of
the law declares each paragraph to be independent, and directs that
the holding of any paragraph or any part of it invalid shall not
affect the validity of the rest. Moreover, we think Congress would
have
Page 261 U. S. 445
given the appeals to the courts of the District, even if it had
known that the appeal to this Court could not stand.
Some question has been made as to the validity of paragraph 65,
which forbids all recourse to courts to set aside, vacate, and
amend the orders of the Commission after 120 days, and of paragraph
69, which puts the burden upon the party adverse to the Commission
to show by clear and satisfactory evidence the inadequacy,
unreasonableness, or unlawfulness of the order complained of. It is
suggested that this deprives the public utility of its
constitutional right to have the independent judgment of a court on
the question of the confiscatory character of an order, and so
brings the whole law within the inhibition of the case of
Ohio
Valley Water Co. v. Ben Avon Borough, 253 U.
S. 287. It is enough to say that, even if paragraphs 65
and 69 were invalid, the whole act would not fail in view of
paragraph 92 already referred to. It will be time enough to
consider the validity of those sections, when it is sought to apply
them to bar or limit an independent judicial proceeding raising the
question whether a rate or other requirement of the Commission is
confiscatory. Our conclusion that the provision for appeal to this
Court in paragraph 64 is invalid makes it unnecessary to decide
whether the appeal must be from a final decree, or whether the
decree of the Court of Appeals was final.
Appeal dismissed.
*
"Par. 64. That if at any time the commission shall be in doubt
of the elements of value to be by them considered in arriving at
the true valuation under the provisions of this section, they are
authorized and empowered to institute a proceeding in equity in the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia petitioning said court to
instruct them as to the element or elements of value to be by them
considered as aforesaid, and the particular utility under valuation
at the time shall be made party defendant in said action."
"That any public utility and any person or corporation
interest[ed] being dissatisfied with any order or decision of the
commission fixing any valuation, rate or rates, tolls, charges,
schedules, joint rate or rates, or regulation, requirement, act,
service or other thing complained of may commence a proceeding in
equity in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia against the
commission, as defendants, to vacate, set aside, or modify any such
decision or order on the ground that the valuation, rate or rates,
tolls, charges, schedules, joint rate or rates, or regulation,
requirement, act, service or other thing complained of fixed in
such order is unlawful, inadequate, or unreasonable. The answer of
the commission on any such action being instituted against it, or
the answer of any public utility on any such action being commenced
by said commission against it, shall be filed within ten days,
whereupon said proceeding shall be at issue and stand ready for
trial."
"All such proceedings shall have precedence over any civil cause
of a different nature pending in such court, and the Supreme Court
of the District of Columbia shall always be deemed open for the
trial thereof, and the same shall be tried and determined as are
equity proceedings in said court. Any party, including said
Commission, may appeal from the order or decree of said court to
the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, and therefrom to
the Supreme Court of the United States, which shall hereupon have
and take jurisdiction in every such appeal. Pending the decision of
said appeal, the Commission may suspend the decision or order
appealed from for such a period as it may deem fair and reasonable
under the circumstances:
Provided, that no appeal, unless
the court or the Commission shall so order, shall operate to stay
any order of the Commission. . . ."