1. An order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, in a
proceeding to fix reasonable maximum rail-and-water rates, and
purporting to do this by adopting the existing all-rail rates with
a fixed differential (alleged by complainant to represent the cost
of water transportation insurance), should not be construed as an
attempt to equalize the two classes of rates merely because of its
form or by laying undue stress upon recitals in the report. P.
274 U. S.
32.
2. If the determination of the Commission finds substantial
support in the evidence, the courts will not weigh the evidence nor
consider the wisdom of the Commission's action. P.
274 U. S.
33.
3. Under the Panama Canal Act, August 24, 1912, par. 13 of
§ 6, read with par. 4 of § 15 of the Interstate Commerce
Act, and the Transportation Act, the Commission has power to
require a rail carrier to embrace in a through rail-and-water route
less than the entire length of its railroad lying between the
termini of the through route proposed, irrespective of whether both
rail and water "are used under a common control, management, or
arrangement for a continuous carriage or shipment," Interstate Com.
Act § 1. P.
274 U. S.
34.
4. The right of the Commission to consider a case under a
particular provision of the statute depends on the facts alleged,
and not on such provision's being formally referred to in the
complaint. P.
274 U. S.
36.
5. To plead the law relied on is no more necessary in a
proceeding before the Commission than it is in a judicial
proceeding. P.
274 U. S.
36.
5 F.2d 888 affirmed.
Page 274 U. S. 30
Appeal from a decree of the district court dismissing the bill
in a suit by the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific and St.
Louis-San Francisco Railway Companies to enjoin enforcement of an
order of the Interstate Commerce Commission establishing joint rail
and water and rail and water and rail rates on cotton.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to annul, and enjoin the enforcement of, an order
of the Interstate Commerce Commission prescribing joint rail and
water and rail water and rail rates (both hereinafter designated as
rail and water rates) on cotton from points in Oklahoma, via
Galveston and certain steamship lines, to New England destinations.
The complaint before the Commission was brought by the Houston
Cotton Exchange and Board of Trade and other similar organizations
against appellants and a number of other carriers, to have
prescribed and established just and reasonable joint through rates
on cotton from Oklahoma points through Texas ports to various
points of destination in the northeastern part of the United States
and Canada, including New England territory. The
Page 274 U. S. 31
modified final order of the Commission required appellants to
establish and maintain for the transportation of cotton from
Oklahoma points, via Galveston and the lines of the Mallory
Steamship Company and the Southern Pacific Company-Atlantic
Steamship Lines, to destinations in New England territory, joint
rail and water rates not exceeding "rates 4 cents per 100 pounds
lower than the present all-rail rates from and to the same points,"
not, however, lower than $1.50 per 100 pounds. Prior to the
Commission's order, no joint rail and water rates on cotton were in
effect between the points mentioned. The rate to New York consisted
of the local rail rate to Galveston, plus the water rate therefrom
and a loading charge. To New England points, the rate was made by
adding the rail rate beyond New York. The all-rail routes from
Oklahoma to the New England territory points are through St. Louis,
Memphis, and other Mississippi crossing, and the joint all-rail
rates were lower to New England destinations than the combination
of local rail and water rates. On commodities other than cotton,
joint rail and water rates were in effect, and these were lower
than the all-rail rates. The Commission found that the
establishment of joint rail and water rates on cotton between the
points in question was desirable in the public interest, and that
the existing rates for such transportation were unreasonable to the
extent that they exceeded or may exceed rates constructed by the
deduction of 4 cents from the present all-rail rates. 87 I.C.C.
392; 93 I.C.C. 268. The court below, consisting of three judges,
after a hearing, entered a decree dismissing the bill for want of
equity. 6 F.2d 888.
Appellants assign 21 specifications of error, but the objections
to the Commission's order, so far as necessary to be considered
here, may be summarized as follows: (1) the Commission undertook to
equalize rail and water rates with the all-rail rates, a power
which it does not
Page 274 U. S. 32
possess; (2) if the order be treated as made under the power to
fix reasonable rates, it is arbitrary and without supporting
evidence; (3) the result of the order is to short-haul appellants'
lines, contrary to paragraph 4, § 15, of the Interstate
Commerce Act, as amended by § 418 of the Transportation Act
1920, c. 91, 41 Stat. 456, 485, and (4) the order is based upon
paragraph 13 of § 6, added to the Interstate Commerce Act by
the Panama Canal Act of August 24, 1912, c. 390, 37 Stat. 560, 568,
and is therefore void because the authority of the Commission was
not invoked under that paragraph.
First. Appellants' argument under this head seems to be
predicated upon the contention that the order of the Commission
established an exact relationship between the rail and water rates
and the present all-rail rates, the differential of 4 cents being,
it is said, the amount charged by insurance companies as a premium
for insurance to cover the risk of water transportation, and that
an analysis of the Commission's order and report shows that the
Commission itself recognized that it was undertaking to make such
an equalization. The complaint before the Commission plainly sought
the establishment of reasonable rates, and the order of the
Commission directed the carriers to discontinue the then-existing
rates made up of combinations of local rates, and substitute the
maximum joint rates which were prescribed in the words already
stated. The Commission found that rates were and would be
unreasonable to the extent they exceeded or might exceed those
prescribed. In form, the action of the Commission was responsive to
the case made by the complaint, and to hold that, in fact, its
order was not one fixing reasonable rates, but an order equalizing
rates, would be to put undue stress upon certain recitals contained
in the report, to which our attention is called but which need not
be detailed. If these recitals stood alone, they might give
plausibility to the contention;
Page 274 U. S. 33
but, from a consideration of the entire record, we think it
quite unfair to conclude that the Commission undertook to exercise
an authority entirely different and distinct from that which the
complaint specifically invoked.
There is nothing in
Southern Pacific Co. v. Interstate
Commerce Commission, 219 U. S. 433,
that requires a different conclusion. In that case, it appeared
upon the face of the record that the Commission had not exerted its
power to correct an unjust and unreasonable rate, but had made the
order complained of upon the theory that it possessed the power to
set aside a just and reasonable rate whenever the Commission deemed
that it would be equitable to shippers in a particular district to
put in force a reduced rate. In reaching that conclusion, the court
thought that the complaint and answer presented the latter issue;
that, while the opinion of the Commission might contain some
sentences indicating the contrary, when considered as a whole, in
the light of the record, it clearly appeared that the order was
based upon that theory, and that this was borne out by the
dissenting opinion, which proceeded upon the express ground that
the order was an exertion of a power not possessed, with no
language in the prevailing opinion to indicate the contrary. Here,
it is true, the order fixes the rail and water rate by relating it
in terms to the all-rail rate; but, since we accept the view that
the former was in fact established as a just and reasonable rate,
there can be no objection to the form of words adopted as a method
of short and convenient description of that rate. The power of the
Commission to equalize rates, if its authority to that end should
be invoked, is not involved.
Second. If the order of the Commission be unsupported
by the evidence, it is, of course, void.
New England Divisions
Case, 261 U. S. 184,
261 U. S. 203.
But, if the determination of the Commission finds substantial
support in the evidence, the courts will not weigh the evidence,
nor consider
Page 274 U. S. 34
the wisdom of the Commission's action.
261 U. S. 261 U.S.
204;
Virginian Ry. Co. v. United States, 272 U.
S. 658. The order here does not rest alone upon
comparisons with the all-rail rates, as seems to be contended, but
is supported by other established facts and circumstances as well.
See Western Chem. Co. v. United States, 271 U.
S. 268,
271 U. S. 271.
Nothing is to be gained by a review of the evidence. It is enough
to say that both the Commission and the lower court thought it was
ample to justify the order, and, upon a consideration of the entire
record, we find no reason to differ with them in that
conclusion.
Third. Does the order of the Commission result in
short-hauling appellants' lines contrary to the provisions of
paragraph 4 of § 15 of the Interstate Commerce Act, as amended
by the Transportation Act 1920? The pertinent provision of that
paragraph is that the Commission, in establishing a through route,
shall not, "except where one of the carriers is a water line,"
require any railroad carrier to embrace in such route substantially
less than the entire length of its railroad lying between the
termini of the proposed through route. That the through routes here
established by the Commission's order do embrace substantially less
than the entire length of appellants' railroads, etc., is not
denied. And appellants' contention is that the exception, "where
one of the carriers is a water line," has reference only to such a
carrier as comes within the description of § 1 of the
Interstate Commerce Act, which provides, among other things, that
the provisions of the act shall apply to common carriers engaged
in
"(a) The transportation of passengers or property wholly by
railroad, or partly by railroad and partly by water when both are
used under a common control, management, or arrangement for a
continuous carriage or shipment. . . ."
C. 91, 41 Stat. 456, 474.
Appellees insist that the rail and water lines here involved
come within the italicized portion of this provision.
Page 274 U. S. 35
But it is unnecessary to pass upon that question, since clearly
the order in this respect can be sustained under the later and
broader provisions of paragraph 13 of § 6, added to the
Interstate Commerce Act by the Panama Canal Act,
supra.
That paragraph provides:
"When property may be or is transported from point to point in
the United States by rail and water through the Panama Canal or
otherwise, the transportation being by a common carrier or
carriers, and not entirely within the limits of a single state, the
Interstate Commerce Commission shall have jurisdiction of such
transportation and of the carriers, both by rail and by water,
which may or do engage in the same, in the following particulars,
in addition to the jurisdiction given by the act to regulate
commerce as amended June eighteenth, nineteen hundred and ten:"
"(b) To establish through routes and maximum joint rates between
and over such rail and water lines, and to determine all the terms
and conditions under which such lines shall be operated in the
handling of the traffic embraced."
This addition to the Interstate Commerce Act materially extends
the jurisdiction of the Commission in respect of land and water
transportation and the carriers engaged in it whenever property may
be or is transported in interstate commerce by rail and water by a
common carrier or carriers, and the obvious intention of Congress
would be substantially limited in effect if the quoted provisions
were held to be subject to the restriction that both rail and water
must be used under a common control, etc. The phrase "except where
one of the carriers is a water line" was introduced in an amendment
made to the Interstate Commerce Act by the Transportation Act,
1920, and it is not unreasonable to include within the scope of its
reference the then-existing paragraph 13
Page 274 U. S. 36
of § 6. And this view is strengthened by the consideration
that the Transportation Act 1920, as a part of the new policy which
it introduced in respect of the regulation of interstate
transportation,
Wisconsin R. Co. Comm'n v. C., B. & Q. R.
Co., 257 U. S. 563,
257 U. S. 585;
New England Divisions Case, supra, p. 189 [argument of
counsel -- omitted], directed the Commission to establish through
routes, joint classifications, etc., both in respect of railroad
and water carriers, "whenever deemed by it to be necessary or
desirable in the public interest," etc. 41 Stat. 485. And the same
act declares it to be
"the policy of Congress to promote, encourage, and develop water
transportation, service, and facilities in connection with the
commerce of the United States, and to foster and preserve in full
vigor both rail and water transportation."
Section 500, 41 Stat. 499.
These and other provisions emphasize the intention of Congress
to broaden the control of the Interstate Commerce Commission over
rail and water transportation, and generally to extend the
regulatory power of that body over all such transportation in the
public interest. It would be quite inconsistent with that broad
purpose to adopt the narrow construction of the statutory
provisions under review which is advanced by appellants. On the
whole, and especially in the light of the definite congressional
policy which the legislation reflects,
Richardson v.
Harmon, 222 U. S. 96,
222 U. S. 104;
Holden v. Stratton, 198 U. S. 202,
198 U. S.
213-214;
Minnesota v. Hitchcock, 185 U.
S. 373,
185 U. S. 385,
185 U. S. 395,
we find no difficulty in rejecting the construction thus advanced
and adopting that which we have indicated, without at the same time
doing violence to the fair meaning of the language actually
employed.
Fourth. In disposing of the final objection, little
need be said. The contention is that the Commission was without
power to predicate its order on paragraph 13 of § 6 of the
act, because there is no formal reference in the complaint to that
paragraph, nor an order for an investigation
Page 274 U. S. 37
under it on the Commission's own motion. But the allegations of
the complaint in matters of fact were sufficient to authorize the
Commission to consider the case under that provision, as well as
others, and this is enough. To plead the law relied on is no more
necessary in a proceeding before the Commission than it is in a
judicial proceeding.
Decree affirmed.