1. An order of the Interstate Commerce Commission permitting one
carrier to acquire control of another, made under par. 2 of §
5 of the amended Act to Regulate Commerce, which allows this
whenever the Commission is of opinion, after hearing, that the
acquisition will be in the public interest, is subject to judicial
review. P.
264 U. S.
263.
2. Such an order is void if the finding that the acquisition
will be in the public interest is made without supporting evidence.
P.
264 U. S.
265.
3. Facts conceivably known to the Commission but not put in
evidence will not support an order. P.
264 U. S.
263.
4. In a bill to set aside such an order, an allegation that such
finding was wholly unsupported by evidence charges a fact which
must be taken as admitted on appeal from a decree dismissing the
bill on motion equivalent to a demurrer. P.
264 U. S.
262.
5. Carriers which suffer serious disadvantage, prejudice, and
loss of traffic from the transfer of neutral terminal railroads to
the control of a competitor, and which intervened unsuccessfully
before the Commission in opposition to such transfer, have a
standing to attack the order permitting it upon the ground that
there was no evidence to support the finding of public interest on
which the order was based. P.
264 U. S.
266.
6. Section 212 Jud.Code, which declares that any party to a
proceeding before the Interstate Commerce Commission may, as of
Page 264 U. S. 259
right, become a party to any suit wherein is involved the
validity of its order, impliedly authorizes one who was permitted
to oppose an order before the Commission by intervention to
institute a suit to challenge it. P.
264 U.S. 267.
7. Under the Act of October 22, 1913, a suit may be brought to
set aside an order of the Commission and also to restore the
status quo ante by joining with the United States private
parties who appeared before the Commission and have acquired rights
under the order. P.
264 U.S.
269.
Reversed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court denying an
interlocutory injunction and dismissing the bill, on motion, in a
suit to set aside an order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Chicago Junction Railway and the Chicago River & Indiana
Railroad are terminal railroads located
Page 264 U. S. 260
within the Chicago switching district. Prior to May 16, 1922,
they were operated as independent belt lines, uncontrolled by any
trunk line carrier, and they were used by the twenty-three
railroads entering Chicago, impartially and without discrimination.
Among these were the New York Central Lines and their chief
competitors, the six carriers who are plaintiffs in this suit.
[
Footnote 1] The New York
Central sought to obtain control of these terminal railroads. To
this end, it made an application to the Interstate Commerce
Commission, on December 28, 1920, under paragraph 18 of § 1
and paragraph 12 of § 5 of the Act to Regulate Commerce, as
amended by Transportation Act 1920, c. 91, 41 Stat. 456, 477, 481.
[
Footnote 2] The authorization
requested was to make an agreement with stockholders then owning
these properties by which, among other things, the New York Central
would purchase all the capital stock of the Chicago River &
Indiana Railroad for $750,000, and the latter company would lease
for 99 years (and thereafter) the Chicago Junction Railway at an
annual rental of $2,000,000. Upon this application, hearings were
had. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, and its co-plaintiffs
herein, intervened, and opposed granting the application. On May
16, 1922, an order was entered which authorized the New York
Central to acquire the Chicago River & Indiana Railroad
stock,
Page 264 U. S. 261
and authorized the latter company to lease the Chicago Junction
Railway. [
Footnote 3] Chicago
Junction case, 71 I.C.C. 631. The order did not fix the date when
it should become effective. [
Footnote 4] Immediately after its entry, the purchase of
the stock was completed and the lease was executed.
On April 10, 1923, this suit was brought in the Federal Court
for the Eastern District of Illinois against the United States, the
Commission, the New York Central, the terminal railroads, and the
stockholders thereof. [
Footnote
5] The relief sought is to have the order declared void, to
have
Page 264 U. S. 262
set aside the sale of the stock and the lease, to restore the
status quo ante the order, and for an injunction. The case
was heard before three judges on plaintiffs' motion for an
interlocutory injunction and on defendants' motions to dismiss the
bill. [
Footnote 6] The district
court, without opinion, denied the injunction and dismissed the
bill. The case is here on direct appeal under the Act of October
22, 1913, c. 32, 38 Stat. 208, 220.
The order did not provide for the issue of a certificate of
public convenience and necessity. It did not disclose whether it
was issued under paragraph 18 of § 1 or under paragraph 2 of
§ 5. An application by the carriers who are plaintiffs herein
that this be specified was denied by the Commission without
opinion. In this Court, counsel for all the defendants stated that
the order was entered solely under paragraph 2 of § 5. We have
therefore no occasion to consider the incidents of applications
under paragraph 18 of § 1, or rights thereunder. Several
reasons are urged why the order should be held void. The
defendants, besides asserting its validity, insist that the
plaintiffs have no interest which entitles them to assail the
order, and that there are also other obstacles to the maintenance
of this suit.
First. Plaintiffs contend that the order is void
because there was no evidence to support the finding that the
acquisition of control of the terminal railroads by the New York
Central "will be in the public interest." The bill charges in clear
and definite terms that this finding was wholly unsupported by
evidence. We must take that fact as admitted for the purposes of
this appeal. The allegation
Page 264 U. S. 263
is made as one of fact. There is no suggestion in the motions to
dismiss (which are both general and special) that this fact is not
well pleaded or that a copy of the evidence introduced at the
hearing should have been annexed to the bill.
Compare Louisiana
& Pine Bluff Ry. Co. v. United States, 257 U.
S. 114. Facts conceivably known to the Commission, but
not put in evidence, will not support an order.
Interstate
Commerce Commission v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co.,
227 U. S. 88,
227 U. S. 93.
The defendants concede that the New York Central could not legally
acquire control of these terminal railroads unless authorized so to
do by the Commission, pursuant to paragraph 2 of § 5, and that
the Commission cannot legally grant such authority unless it finds,
after hearing, that the acquisition "will be in the public
interest." They contend that this order is not one of those subject
to judicial review, and that, if subject to review, it cannot be
held void merely because unsupported by evidence. These objections
are based on the nature of the order, not on the class of persons
by whom the judicial review is invoked.
Whether this order can be described properly as legislative may
be doubted. It is clear that legislative character alone would not
preclude judicial review. Rate orders are clearly legislative.
Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line, 211 U.
S. 210,
211 U. S. 226.
Nor would the further fact that the order is permissive preclude
review, if by that term is meant an order which, in
contradistinction to one compelling performance, authorizes a
carrier to do some act otherwise prohibited. Orders entered under
the Act of June 18, 1910, c. 309, § 8, 36 Stat. 539, 547,
amending § 4 of the Interstate Commerce Act, are of this
character. That section prohibits carriers from charging more "for
a shorter than for a longer distance over the same line or route in
the same direction" without obtaining authority from the
Commission. A suit will lie to set aside an order granting such
authority, and to enjoin action by the carried thereunder.
Page 264 U. S. 264
Skinner & Eddy Corp. v. United States, 249 U.
S. 557,
249 U. S. 562.
Compare United States v. Merchants' & Manufacturers'
Traffic Association, 242 U. S. 178. The
order here challenged is wholly unlike those which have been held
not subject to judicial review. In
United States v. Illinois
Central R. Co., 244 U. S. 82,
244 U. S. 89,
the action of the Commission, with which the Court refused to
interfere, was the assignment of a complaint for hearing. As this
Court said: "The notice . . . had no characteristic of an order,
affirmative or negative." In
Proctor & Gamble v. United
States, 225 U. S. 282,
Hooker v. Knapp, 225 U. S. 302, and
Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. United States, 243 U.
S. 412, judicial review was refused not because the
order was permissive or because it was negative in character, but
because it was a denial of the affirmative relief sought. [
Footnote 7] This Court declined to
interfere because to do so would have involved exercise by it of
the administrative function of granting the relief which the
Commission, in the exercise of its jurisdiction, had denied. Here,
the order complained of is an affirmative one -- that is, it grants
the relief sought.
Compare Manufacturers' Ry. Co. v. United
States, 246 U. S. 457,
246 U. S.
483.
It is further contended that paragraph 2 of § 5 confers a
power purely discretionary, and that, for this reason, the order
entered cannot be set aside by a court merely on the ground that
the action taken was based on facts erroneously assumed, or of
which there was no evidence. [
Footnote 8] The power here challenged is not of that
character. Congress,
Page 264 U. S. 265
by using the phrase "whenever the Commission is of opinion,
after hearing," prescribed
quasi-judicial action.
[
Footnote 9] Upon application
of a carrier, the Commission must form a judgment whether the
acquisition proposed will be in the public interest. It may form
this judgment only after hearing. [
Footnote 10] The provision for a hearing implies both the
privilege of introducing evidence and the duty of deciding in
accordance with it. To refuse to consider evidence introduced or to
make an essential finding without supporting evidence is arbitrary
action. As it was admitted by the motion that the order was
unsupported by evidence, and since such an order is void, there is
no occasion
Page 264 U. S. 266
to consider the other grounds of invalidity asserted by
plaintiffs.
Second. The defendants contend that the plaintiffs have
not the legal interest necessary to entitle them to challenge the
order. That they have in fact a vital interest is admitted. They
are the competitors of the New York Central. Practically all the
tonnage originated at or destined to points on these terminal
railroads is competitive in that the same can be hauled either over
the lines of the New York Central or over those of the plaintiffs.
Prior to the date of the order, and while the terminal railroads
were uncontrolled by any trunk line carrier, they were all served
impartially and without discrimination, and they competed for the
traffic on equal terms. The order substitutes for neutral control
of the terminal railroads, monopoly of control in the New York
Central, and, in so doing, necessarily gives to it substantial
advantage over all its competitors and subjects the latter to
serious disadvantage and prejudice. The main purpose of the
acquisition by the New York Central was to secure a larger share of
the Chicago business. By means of the preferential position
incident to the control of these terminal railroads, it planned to
obtain traffic theretofore enjoyed by its competitors. Because such
was the purpose of the New York Central control, and would
necessarily be its effect, these plaintiffs intervened before the
Commission. That their apprehensions were well founded is shown by
the results. The plaintiffs are no longer permitted to compete with
the New York Central on equal terms. A large volume of traffic has
been diverted from their lines to those of the New York Central.
The diversion of traffic has already subjected the plaintiffs to
irreparable injury. The loss sustained exceeds $10,000,000.
Continued control by the New York Central will subject them to an
annual loss in net earnings of approximately that amount. If, as
suggested in
Interstate Commerce Commission
v.
Page 264 U. S. 267
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry. Co.,
218 U. S. 88,
218 U. S. 109,
a legal interest exists where carriers' revenues may be affected,
there is clearly such an interest here.
This loss is not the incident of more effective competition.
Compare Edward Hines Trustees v. United States,
263 U. S. 143,
263 U. S. 148.
It is injury inflicted by denying to the plaintiffs equality of
treatment. To such treatment carriers are, under the Interstate
Commerce Act, as fully entitled as any shipper.
Pennsylvania
Co. v. United States, 236 U. S. 351. It
is true that, before Transportation Act 1920, the Interstate
Commerce Act would not have prohibited the owners of the terminal
railroads from selling them to the New York Central. Nor would it
have prohibited the latter company from making the purchase. And,
by reason of a provision then contained in § 3 of the
Interstate Commerce Act, the purchase might have enabled the New
York Central to exclude all other carriers from use of the
terminals.
Compare Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. United
States, 242 U. S. 60;
Manufacturers' Ry. Co. v. United States, 246 U.
S. 457,
246 U. S. 482.
But Transportation Act 1920 repealed that provision in § 3, it
made provision for securing joint use of terminals, and it
prohibited any acquisition of a railroad by a carrier unless
authorized by the Commission. By reason of this legislation, the
plaintiffs, being competitors of the New York Central and users of
the terminal railroads theretofore neutral, have a special interest
in the proposal to transfer the control to that company.
The plaintiffs may challenge the order because they are parties
to it. Judicial Code § 212 (originally Commerce Court Act June
18, 1910, c. 309, 36 Stat. 543) declares that any party to a
proceeding before the Commission may, as of right, become a party
to "any suit wherein is involved the validity of such order." The
section does not in terms provide that such party may institute
Page 264 U. S. 268
a suit to challenge the order. But this is implied. For
otherwise there would in some cases be no redress for the injury
inflicted by an illegal order. Moreover, the fact of intervention,
allowed as it was, implies a finding by the Commission that the
plaintiffs have an interest. In the proceeding before the
Commission, they opposed by evidence and argument the granting of
the application. This they did as of right. For, under the rules of
practice adopted by the Commission pursuant to paragraph 1 of
§ 17 of the Interstate Commerce Act, the intervener becomes a
party to the proceeding, entitled, like any other party, to appear
at the taking of testimony, to produce and cross-examine witnesses,
and to be heard in person or by counsel. [
Footnote 11] The intervention must be preceded by an
order of the Commission granting leave, and leave can be granted
only to one showing interest. No case has been found in which
either this Court or any lower court has denied to one who was a
party to the proceedings before the Commission the right to
challenge the order entered therein. On the other hand, persons who
were entitled to become parties before the Commission, but did not
do so, have been allowed to maintain such suits where the requisite
interest was shown.
Interstate Commerce
Commission
Page 264 U. S. 269
v. Diffenbaugh, 222 U. S. 42,
222 U. S. 49;
Skinner & Eddy Corp. v. United States, 249 U.
S. 557,
249 U. S. 562.
[
Footnote 12]
Third. It is contended that this bill was properly
dismissed for want of jurisdiction. at least as to the terminal
companies and their stockholders other than the New York Central,
because the plaintiffs have joined with the suit to set aside the
order a suit to restore the
status quo. The objection is
not that the bill is multifarious, or that it is otherwise in
conflict with established equity practice. The argument is that the
United States is a necessary party; that, against it, suit can be
brought only when Congress gives consent; that the suit was brought
necessarily and solely under the Act of October 22, 1913, c. 32, 38
Stat. 219, 220, and that the consent so given does not extend to a
suit in which it is sought to set aside both the order and rights
acquired by private persons thereunder. There is nothing in the
legislation to indicate that Congress intended such a limitation of
the scope of the relief
Page 264 U. S. 270
to be afforded. The sale of the stock and the lease, which it is
sought to set aside, were made immediately after entry of the order
-- that is, before expiration of the 30 days provided by paragraph
2 of § 15 and before the plaintiffs' petition to set aside or
modify the order had been disposed of. To permit the joinder
objected to could not prejudice the United States. To prohibit the
joinder would, in large measure, defeat the very purpose of the
bill, and would clearly prevent that expedition in affording relief
which it was the purpose of Congress to ensure. Act Feb. 11, 1903,
c. 544, 32 Stat. 823. Moreover, the terminal companies, and the
stockholders affected, were entitled to intervene as parties in the
proceedings before the Commission, and they appeared by counsel. If
they became parties to the proceeding before the Commission, they
were entitled, under § 212 of the Judicial Code, to become
parties also to any suit brought to set aside the order. It was the
policy of Congress to allow persons so situated to be joined in
suits to enforce provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act.
See Act Feb.19, 1903, c. 708, § 2, 32 Stat. 847, 848.
If this suit had been brought by the United States, the court could
have given the complete relief prayed for.
United States v.
Union Pacific Ry. Co., 160 U. S. 1,
160 U. S. 50;
United States v. Union Pacific R. Co., 226 U. S.
61,
226 U. S. 96.
The same rule should apply where the suit to set aside the order is
brought by a private party. [
Footnote 13]
The contention that the suit is barred by laches is clearly
unfounded. The situation of none of the defendants appears to have
been affected by the brief lapse of time.
Compare United States
v. Southern Pacific Co., 259 U. S. 214,
259 U. S. 240;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Bogert, 250 U.
S. 483,
250 U. S.
488.
Reversed.
Page 264 U. S. 271
* The docket title of this case is Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Company
et al. v. United States, Interstate Commerce
Commission, New York Central Railroad Company,
et al.
[
Footnote 1]
The Baltimore & Ohio, the Pennsylvania, the Chicago &
Erie, the Grand Trunk Western, the Chicago, Indianapolis &
Louisville, and the Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis.
The Wabash, originally joined as plaintiff, was dismissed on its
motion.
[
Footnote 2]
Neither of the operating companies affected joined in the
application of the New York Central, and no separate application to
the Commission was filed by either of them; but they were
represented before the Commission, and the petition of the New York
Central prayed that the several corporations involved be authorized
to sell and to buy such stock, and to execute such lease, and that
the Commission "issue in respect thereof its certificate of public
convenience and necessity."
[
Footnote 3]
The report, entitled "By the Commission," states that the
authority is granted subject only to the observance of seventeen
conditions which it enumerates. Applications under paragraph 18 of
§ 1 and paragraph 2 of § 5 are customarily heard by
Division 4, consisting of four commissioners.
See
Interstate Commerce Act, § 17; Annual Report of the Commission
for 1920, pp. 3-6. But this case was heard by the full Commission.
The Commission consists of eleven members, only four concurred
entirely in what is called the report of the Commission. Four
others dissented wholly. One "concurred in part," declaring that
the "facts warrant grant of authority without elaboration of
conditions," which (with two exceptions) seemed to him "vain,
perhaps harmful." The two other members concurred "in the result
reached in the report," but declared that the opinion
"should recognize explicitly that the application should have
been entertained under § 1, paragraph 18, of the act, and
that, in accordance therewith, a certificate of public convenience
and necessity should be incorporated in the order entered."
[
Footnote 4]
On May 29, 1922, the intervening carriers filed a petition
praying that the order be set aside or modified. The petition was
denied June 12, 1922.
[
Footnote 5]
The agreement of the New York Central was with the Chicago
Junction Railways and Union Stockyards Company, a holding company,
which owned all the stock in the Chicago River & Indiana
Railroad and half of the stock in the Chicago Junction Railway; the
other half being owned by Richard Fitzgerald, who wished to join in
making the sale transferring control. The property to be leased
included the railroad of the Union Stockyards & Transit Company
of Chicago, which had theretofore been leased to the Chicago
Junction Railway.
[
Footnote 6]
When the cause was heard on the original bill, the hearing was
upon motions to dismiss filed by the United States, the New York
Central, the Chicago River & Indiana Railroad, the Chicago
Junction Railways and Union Stockyards Company, the Chicago
Junction Railway, and Richard Fitzgerald, and upon the answer of
the Interstate Commerce Commission. The bill was then amended.
Thereupon the case was heard solely on the motions to dismiss.
[
Footnote 7]
Compare Interstate Commerce Commission v. Waste Merchants
Assn., 260 U. S. 32. The
mandamus was granted in
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Humboldt Steamship Co., 224 U. S. 474, and
Louisville Cement Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
246 U. S. 638,
because the Commission erroneously refused to assume jurisdiction.
See also Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 252 U. S. 178.
[
Footnote 8]
Compare 25 U. S. Mott,
12 Wheat.19;
Philadelphia & Trenton R.
Co. v. Stimpson, 14 Pet. 448,
39 U. S.
458.
[
Footnote 9]
The same phrase is used in the Interstate Commerce Act in
respect to many other classes of orders. These orders, so far as
considered by this Court, have uniformly been held to be subject to
judicial review, and, where an essential finding was unsupported by
evidence, the order was declared to be void. (1) Unreasonable
rates, § 15, par. 1,
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 227 U. S.
88,
227 U. S. 91;
Florida East Coast Line v. United States, 234 U.
S. 167,
234 U. S. 185.
(2) Discriminatory rates, § 15, par. 1,
compare New York
v. United States, 257 U. S. 591,
257 U. S. 600.
(3) Switching connections, § 1, par. 9,
United States v.
Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Ry. Co., 226 U. S.
14. (4) Division of joint rates, § 15, par. 6,
compare The New England Divisions Case, 261 U.
S. 184,
261 U. S. 203.
(5) Pooling, § 5, par. 1. (6) Railroad control of water
carriers, § 5, par. 10. (7) Valuation, § 19
a,
par. Fifth
i.
[
Footnote 10]
Transportation Act 1920, like the original Act to Regulate
Commerce and earlier amendments, distinguished, by the language
used and also in other respects, between those orders which can be
made only after hearing and those as to which no hearing is
required. Thus, orders on applications for extension of line, for
new construction, or for abandonment under § 1, pars. 18-20,
can be made only after hearing. But, in the case of applications
concerning the issue of securities under § 20a, par. 6, the
Commission may hold hearings "if it sees fit."
See Miller v.
United States, 277 F. 95. And, under the emergency provisions,
§ 1, pars. 15 and 16, and § 15, par. 4, the order may be
issued without a hearing, but "terms" are fixed after "subsequent
hearings."
Peoria & Pekin Union Ry. Co. v. United
States, 263 U. S. 528.
[
Footnote 11]
Rules of Practice (1923) pp. 2, 27, 28. The Commission, like
courts, distinguishes between those who are permitted to intervene,
and thus become parties, and persons who are merely permitted to be
heard.
See Hurlburt v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern
Ry. Co., 2 I.C.C. 122, 125.
Compare Ex parte Leaf Tobacco Board
of Trade, 222 U. S. 578.
Leave to intervene can be granted only to one entitled under the
act to complain to the Commission. The right to complain was
broadly bestowed by Congress. Act Feb. 4, 1887, c. 104, § 13,
24 Stat. 379, 383, as amended by Act June 18, 1910, c. 309, §
11, 36 Stat. 539, 550, 557. From its inception, the Commission has
construed liberally this right to complain.
See Boston
& Albany R. Co. v. Boston & Lowell R. Co., 1 I.C.C. 158,
173, 174; In re Chicago, St. Paul & Kansas City Ry. Co., 2
I.C.C. 231, 235.
[
Footnote 12]
The order involved in the latter case -- relief from the
operation of the fourth section -- resembles in character that here
in question.
See also Nashville Grain Exchange v. United States, 191
F. 37;
Atlantic Coast Line v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 194 F. 449.
Merchants' & Manufacturers'
Traffic Association v. United States, 231 F. 292;
McLean
Lumber Co. v. United States, 237 F. 460;
City of New York
v. United States, 272 F. 768, 769;
Village of Hubbard v.
United States, 278 F. 754, 759;
Tennessee v. United
States, 284 F. 371;
Nashville, etc., Ry. v.
Tennessee, 262 U. S. 318;
Detroit & M. Ry. Co. v. Boyne City, G. & A. R.
Co., 286 F. 540, 548.
In
Edward Hines Trustees v. United States, 263 U.
S. 143,
263 U. S.
147-148, the bill was dismissed because it failed to
disclose any interest in the plaintiff. Cases like
Railroad Co.
v. Ellerman, 105 U. S. 166,
which are not brought under the Interstate Commerce Act, have no
bearing on the question here presented. The contention that, under
the principle applied in
Muskrat v. United States,
219 U. S. 346,
Congress was without power to confer upon persons situated like the
plaintiffs the right to challenge in the courts the validity of the
order, is unsound.
[
Footnote 13]
There is nothing to the contrary in
Illinois Central R. Co.
v. Public Utilities Commission, 245 U.
S. 493,
Oregon v. Hitchcock, 202 U. S.
60, or
Minnesota v. Hitchcock, 185 U.
S. 373.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND, dissenting.
I think the injuries alleged to have been sustained by
complainants are not such as to afford the basis for a legal
remedy. Complainants are interested only in the sense that the
acquisition of the rights here in question by their competitor will
enable the latter to absorb a larger share of the business. That is
not enough to constitute a remediable interest.
Before Transportation Act 1920, the New York Central would have
been free to acquire these terminals without the consent of the
Commission. If it had done so, its gain of business, with the
resulting loss to complainants, would have been the same; but it
would be inadmissible to assert that complainants might have
maintained a suit to annul or enjoin the acquisition on the ground
of that injury. "The effort of a carrier to obtain more business .
. . proceeds from the motive of self-interest, which is recognized
as legitimate."
United States v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
263 U. S. 515.
See Johnson v. Hitchcock, 15 Johns. 185.
It is claimed, however, that Transportation Act 1920 so alters
the rule as to give a right of action to complainants where none
existed before. I am unable to perceive any sound basis for the
conclusion. That act, so far as this question is concerned,
requires the carrier, as a prerequisite to an acquisition of the
character here under consideration, to secure the authorization of
the Commission, which that body may grant if "it will be in the
public interest." The mere effect of such acquisition upon the
business of competing lines is no more to be considered since the
Act of 1920 than it was prior to the passage thereof. It is the
public, not private, interest which is to be considered.
The complainants have no standing to vindicate the rights of the
public, but only to protect and enforce their
Page 264 U. S. 272
own rights. Redress for public grievances must be sought by
public agents, not by private intervention.
Telephone Co. v.
Railroad Commission, 174 Mich. 219. The right of the
complainants to sue therefore cannot rest upon the alleged
violation of a public interest, but must rest upon some distinct
grievance of their own. Loss of business, or of opportunities to
get business attributable to the activity or increase of facilities
on the part of a competitor, is not enough. Transportation Act 1920
lays down no new or additional rule by which the question. What
constitutes a legal or equitable right interference with which may
give rise to an action may be tested, and the determination of that
question must still rest upon general principles of jurisprudence.
See Peavey & Co. v. Union Pacific R. Co., 176 F. 409,
417. In
Railroad v. Ellerman, 105 U.
S. 166,
105 U. S. 174,
this Court held that a private complainant may not be heard by a
court except for an
"invasion of some legal or equitable right. If he asserts that
the competition of the railroad company damages him, the answer is
that it does not abridge or impair any such right. If he alleges
that the railroad company is acting beyond the warrant of the law,
the answer is that a violation of its charter does not of itself
injuriously affect any of his rights. The company is not shown to
owe him any duty which it has not performed."
If it were conceded that the acquisition of the terminals by the
New York Central was in the public interest, I suppose it would not
be contended that complainants had any standing to interfere on the
ground that their opportunities for obtaining business had been
impaired. And, since they are without legal right to intervene to
redress a public grievance, the contrary fact that the acquisition
will not be in the public interest cannot avail them. Their
complaint must stand or fall upon the nature of their own
grievance. A private injury, for which the law
Page 264 U. S. 273
affords no remedy, cannot be converted into a remediable injury,
merely because it results from an act of which the public might
complain. In other words, the law will afford redress to a litigant
only for injuries which invade his own legal rights, and since the
injuries here complained of are not of that character, and do not
result from the violation of any obligation owing to the
complainants, it follows that they are without legal standing to
sue.
The decision of the Court here proceeds upon the theory that the
injury complained of is a denial of equality of treatment in the
use of the terminals, but I do not understand this to be the
gravamen of the bill. The complaint is of inequality of opportunity
to get business, not of opportunity to use the terminals.
Complainants' access to the use and enjoyment of the terminal
facilities acquired by the New York Central remains the same in
respect of any business they may obtain. Interstate Commerce Act
§ 3(3), (4), as amended by Transportation Act 1920, c. 91, 41
Stat. 479. The Commission granted the authorization only upon
condition that the neutrality of the terminals in their handling of
traffic should be preserved.* If their use be lessened, therefore,
it will not be because access to the terminals has been, or is in
danger of being, restricted, but because, with less business, there
will be less occasion to use them. An illustration may be helpful:
suppose, instead of these terminal facilities, the acquisition had
been of a line of railroad running west from Chicago which, prior
thereto, had been neutral and
Page 264 U. S. 274
whose business had been distributed without favor among the
several eastern lines terminating at that city. It is manifest that
the effect of such an acquisition would be, as it is here, to
enable the New York Central to absorb more of the traffic of the
railroad so acquired than theretofore, and consequently to lessen
that received by other parallel lines running east from Chicago. In
that situation, could any of such lines maintain a suit to annul
the authorization of the Commission? It seems to me not, and I can
see no difference in principle between the case supposed and that
with which we are dealing.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS and MR.
JUSTICE SANFORD concur in this dissent.
* Among other conditions is the following:
"2. The present neutrality of handling traffic inbound and
outbound by the Junction and River Road organization shall be
continued so as to permit equal opportunity for service to and from
all trunk lines reaching junction rails without discrimination as
to routing or movement of traffic which is competitive with the
traffic of the Central, and without discrimination against such
competitive traffic in the arrangement of schedules."