1. Under the Act of August 18, 1922, amending § 22 of the
Interstate Commerce Act, the rates for interchangeable mileage
coupon tickets must be just and reasonable. P.
263 U. S.
609.
2. Where the Commission's conclusion that a reduced rate fixed
by it for such tickets was just and reasonable was contradicted by
its findings of fact and was obviously based on a misconception of
the amendment as requiring a reduction,
held that the
conclusion was one of law, and not binding on the court.
Id.
288 F. 951 affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court which enjoined
enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission
requiring the appellee railroads to issue scrip coupon tickets at
reduced rates.
Page 263 U. S. 608
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity brought by railroad companies to
prevent the enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission dated March 6, 1923, following reports of January 26 and
March 6, 1923. 77 I.C.C. 200, 647. The order purports to be made in
pursuance of the Act of August 18, 1922, c. 280; 42 Stat. 827. This
Act amended § 22 of the Interstate Commerce Act by adding to
what became (1) two paragraphs,
viz.: (2) directing the
Commission to require the railroads subject to the Act, with such
exemptions as the Commission holds justified, to issue
interchangeable mileage scrip coupon tickets at just and reasonable
rates, in such denominations as the Commission may prescribe, with
regulations as to use and prescribing whether the tickets are
transferable or not transferable and, if the latter, what
identification may be required, and what baggage privileges go with
such tickets; (3) making it a misdemeanor for any carrier to refuse
to issue or accept such tickets
Page 263 U. S. 609
as required or to conform to the Commission's rules, or for any
person willfully to offer for sale or carriage any such tickets
contrary to such rules. After a hearing, the Commission ordered the
railroads specified, being all the railroads having annual
operating revenues in excess of $1,000,000 and known as Class 1, to
issue at designated offices a nontransferable interchangeable scrip
coupon ticket in the denomination of $90, which shall be sold at a
reduction of 20 percent from the face value of the ticket.
The bill alleges that the amendment of 1922, as construed by the
Commission, is contrary to the Fifth Amendment and to the Commerce
clause, Article I, § 8, of the Constitution, but that,
properly construed, it does not authorize the order made. The order
is alleged to apply to intrastate carriage, and also to be
inconsistent with § 2 of the Interstate Commerce Act, which
requires like charges for like service in similar circumstances;
with § 3, forbidding unreasonable preferences; with §
15a, providing for the establishing of rates for rate groups that
will earn a fair return upon the aggregate value of the property
used in transportation (
see Increased Rates, 1920, cited
as Ex parte 74, 58 I.C.C. 250; Reduced Rates, 1922, 68 I.C.C. 676),
and with §§ 1 and 22, requiring the Commission to
establish just and reasonable fares. These averments are developed
in detail, but we do not dwell upon them because the decision below
and our own turn upon a different point. It is further alleged in
the bill that the conclusion stated by the Commission that the
reduced rates established by it for scrip coupon tickets will be
just and reasonable for that class of travel is contrary to the
specific facts found by the Commission, and is not to be taken as
an independent finding of fact, but only as a conclusion or ruling
reached by it upon a misinterpretation of the law. This was the
view taken by the three judges who sat in the district court.
They
Page 263 U. S. 610
held that the Commission considered that the amendment of 1922
either required it to make a reduction or at least showed a spirit
and purpose that should be deferred to, and, on that ground, came
to a result that otherwise would not have been reached. They held
that therefore the order could not stand, considering that the
amendment of 1922, like the rest of the Interstate Commerce Act,
called for an unbiased opinion upon the merits of the case. They
issued a perpetual injunction and the defendants appealed. 288 F.
951.
We are of opinion that the interpretation of the statute in the
court below was right. There is no doubt that the bill owed its
origin to a movement on the part of traveling salesmen and others
to obtain interchangeable mileage or scrip coupon books at reduced
rates. The bill that was passed originally fixed reduced rates, but
it was amended to its present form undoubtedly because the
prevailing opinion was that the rates should be determined in the
usual way by the usual body. The object of the traveling salesmen
was defeated insofar as Congress declined to take any step beyond
authorizing the issue of scrip tickets. Coming as it did from the
agitation for this form of reduced fares, the statute naturally
enough carried with it more or less mirage of fulfilling the hope
that gave it rise, but in fact it required a determination of what
was just and reasonable exactly as in any other case arising under
the Interstate Commerce Act. The original purpose of the amendment,
as introduced, retained headway enough to require the issue of
scrip, but there the purpose was stopped, and, as not infrequently
happens in legislation, the matter was left otherwise where it was
before. Apart from constitutional difficulties,
Lake Shore
& Michigan Southern Ry. Co. v. Smith, 173 U.
S. 684, the whole tendency of the law has been adverse
to the enactment as proposed, at least unless a clear case should
be made out.
Page 263 U. S. 611
The Commission, in its report, pointed out that the net railway
operating income for the seven months ending July 31, 1922, was
below the return fixed as reasonable, discarded the supposed
analogy between the carload rate and the interchangeable scrip or
mileage ticket, intimated that the supposed benefit that the
carrier might get from the advance use of the money would be more
than offset by the increased expenses, and said that the question
whether the scrip ticket would stimulate travel sufficiently to
meet any loss that might result must remain a matter of speculation
until an experiment was made. After thus excluding the grounds upon
which the order could be justified, the Commission held that the
obvious spirit and apparent purpose of the law required that the
experiment should be tried, and on these premises declared that the
rates resulting from the reduction of 20 percent would be "just and
reasonable for this class of travel." It seems to us plain that the
Commission was not prepared to make its order on independent
grounds apart from the deference naturally paid to the supposed
wishes of Congress. But we think that it erred in reading the
wishes that originated the statute as an effective term of the
statute that was passed, and therefore that the present order
cannot stand.
Decree affirmed.