1. In a suit in the federal courts to enjoin enforcement of a
city ordinance, its validity under the federal Constitution is not
properly to be considered if it be found void under the state law,
and questions involving the application of that law should be
discussed and determined by the two courts below preliminary to
their consideration here. P.
275 U. S.
169.
2. Before novel and important questions of constitutional law in
a suit in the lower federal courts are passed upon by this Court,
the facts essential to their decision should be found by those
courts upon adequate evidence; this Court will not attempt to find
the facts from an inadequate record consisting of pleadings and
affidavits used on an application for a temporary injunction. P.
275 U. S.
171.
3. When a suit to enjoin enforcement of a city ordinance has
gone no farther in the district court than an order overruling an
application for a preliminary injunction based on pleadings and
affidavits, and reaches the circuit court of appeals by appeal from
that order, it is not ripe for final disposition by a decree of the
latter court directing a permanent injunction. P.
275 U. S.
172.
4. Under the circumstances, without costs to either party, the
decree of the circuit court of appeals directing a permanent
injunction is modified by directing an injunction pending the suit,
and by remanding the cause to the district court for proceedings on
final hearing with liberty to allow amendment of pleadings. P.
275 U. S.
172.
11 F.2d 940 modified.
Certiorari, 273 U.S. 675, to a decree of the Circuit Court of
Appeal rendered on appeal from an order of the
Page 275 U. S. 165
district court overruling an application for an interlocutory
injunction in a suit to restrain the city from enforcing against
the petitioner an ordinance concerning the operation of motor
busses. The circuit court of appeals reverse the district court and
directed a decree granting the injunction, without specifying its
scope.
Compare City of Hammond v. Farina Bus Line, post,
p.
275 U. S. 173.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit which was commenced in the federal court for Indiana
in July, 1925, is here on certiorari to the circuit court of
appeals. 273 U.S. 675. Schappi Bus Line, Incorporated, an Illinois
corporation, seeks to enjoin the City of Hammond, Indiana, from
enforcing its Ordinance No.1945 concerning the operation of motor
busses, adopted May 23, 1925. [
Footnote 1] Section 1 prohibits the operation
Page 275 U. S. 166
of any busses (with an exception to be noted) on certain streets
which lead into and through the business district. Section 2
prohibits any busses (with the same exception) from stopping
anywhere on any street in the city, either
Page 275 U. S. 167
to load or to discharge passengers, but reserves to the board of
public works authority to grant, from time to time, permission, for
periods not exceeding six months, to stop on portions of a few
designated streets.
For some time prior to the adoption of the ordinance, Schappi,
Incorporated, had owned and operated a line of motor busses between
Chicago and Hammond, another between Calumet City, Ill., and
Hammond, and one from Calumet City through Hammond to East Chicago,
Indiana. The business is chiefly interstate, and on at least one of
the lines is wholly interstate. The bill charges that for reasons
there set forth the ordinance is void, and alleges that, if
enforced, it will compel abandonment of all existing bus lines
operated by the plaintiff. The case was heard upon an application
for an interlocutory injunction. The district court denied it
without making any finding of fact and without an opinion or other
statement of the reasons for its action. The decree was reversed by
the circuit court of appeals, which remanded the case "with
directions to enter a decree granting the injunction," without
specifying its scope. 11 F.2d 940. That court also made no finding
on any controverted fact, save that it stated in its opinion
"that the record does not show any valid reason for the passage
of such an ordinance because of congestion in the streets. The
record shows that there was a parking privilege on both sides of
the streets in question of not less than an hour's limit, very
generally availed of."
The City of Hammond has an area of about 35 square miles; much
of it sparsely settled. It has 250 miles of streets. Its population
is 60,000. The terminal of the three Schappi lines is on private
property in the heart of the business district. Schappi claims that
the ordinance not only denies access to its existing terminal, but
practically prevents its busses from coming within miles of the
business section. The city concedes that the ordinance
Page 275 U. S. 168
prohibits the continued operation of Schappi busses over their
existing routes. It urges that, despite the prohibition of § 1
of the ordinance, Schappi busses might use other streets which
would bring them within a short distance of the business district,
and that it might, under § 2, secure permits to stop for
loading and unloading which would adequately serve its
purposes.
The city asserts that the purpose of the ordinance is to prevent
congestion of traffic and to promote safety. Schappi insists that
there is no congestion, even in the business district, except such
as results at times from the passing of railroad trains at grade
and from the allowance of unreasonable parking privileges; that the
prohibition by § 2 of stopping to load or unload passengers is
obviously arbitrary, and that the real purpose of the ordinance is
disclosed by § 3, which provides that it shall not "be
construed to impair the obligation of any contract to which the
city is a party under which motor vehicles are now operated for
hire within the city." It appears that, under a contract made by
the city in 1924, the Calumet Motor Coach Company is authorized,
for a period of 25 years, to run its coaches on any street of the
city and to stop on any street in order to load or discharge
passengers. Schappi asserts that the only purpose of the city in
adopting the ordinance was to protect the Calumet Company from the
competition of other bus lines. That company has, among other
lines, one between Chicago and the business district of
Hammond.
The issues of law are as serious and as numerous as those of
fact. Schappi contends that the city lacked power to adopt any
ordinance dealing with the subject, because by Act of March 4,
1925, Indiana General Assembly, pp. 138-142, and Act of March 14,
1925, Indiana General Assembly, pp. 570-607, the power to authorize
use of the highways by motor busses was vested in the
Page 275 U. S. 169
Public Service Commission, and Schappi had obtained from it
certificates of public convenience and necessity specifically
authorizing the use of the existing routes. Schappi contends
further that, even if the city possessed the power to deal with the
general subject, this ordinance is void under other state statutes
and under the Constitution of the state because it is unreasonable,
arbitrary, and grossly discriminatory. And Schappi claims that,
regardless of any power which state statutes may have purported to
confer upon the city, the ordinance is void under the commerce
clause, because all of its busses are operated in interstate
commerce and the business is chiefly interstate, although some of
the busses carry some intrastate passengers. Rights under the
Fourteenth Amendment also were asserted.
The opinion of the circuit court of appeals states that the
ordinance must be sustained, if at all, as a police regulation;
that, as such, it was clearly discriminatory, and that it must be
held void on that ground. Whether the invalidity results from the
provisions of a state statute, or from the constitution of the
state, or from the Fourteenth Amendment is not stated. The court
did not discuss the statutory powers of the city, declined to
consider the effect of the recent state legislation particularly
relied upon by the plaintiff, and did not even mention claims urged
under the commerce clause. If, as Schappi contends, the ordinance
is void under the state law, there is no occasion to consider
whether it violates the federal Constitution, and there could be no
propriety in doing so. Whether it is void under the law of Indiana
involves questions upon which this Court should not be called upon
to pass without the aid which discussion by members of the lower
courts familiar with the local law would afford.
On the other hand, if it should become necessary to consider
Schappi's rights under the commerce clause, it is
Page 275 U. S. 170
not fitting that these should be passed upon by this Court upon
the present record and at this stage of the proceedings. The
general principles governing the rights of motor vehicles to use
the highways in interstate commerce,
Michigan Public Utilities
Commission v. Duke, 266 U. S. 570;
Buck v. Kuykendall, 267 U. S. 307;
George W. Bush & Sons Co. v. Maloy, 267 U.
S. 317; the power of the state to regulate their use,
Kane v. New Jersey, 242 U. S. 160;
Interstate Busses Corp. v. Holyoke Street Ry. Co.,
273 U. S. 45;
Morris v. Duby, 274 U. S. 135,
274 U. S. 143,
and its power to require users to contribute to the cost and
upkeep,
Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U.
S. 610;
Clark v. Poor, 274 U.
S. 554, have been settled by these recent decisions.
[
Footnote 2] But the facts here
alleged may, if established, require the application of those
principles to conditions differing materially from any heretofore
passed upon by this Court.
The contentions made in the briefs and arguments suggest, among
other questions, the following: where there is congestion of city
streets sufficient to justify some limitation of the number of
motor vehicles to be operated thereon as common carriers, or some
prohibition of stops to load or unload passengers, may the
limitation or prohibition be applied to some vehicles used wholly
or partly in interstate commerce while at the same time, vehicles
of like character, including many that are engaged solely in local,
or intrastate, commerce are not subjected thereto? Is the right in
the premises to which interstate carriers would otherwise be
entitled affected by the fact that, prior to the establishment of
the interstate lines,
Page 275 U. S. 171
the city had granted to a local carrier, by contract or
franchise, the unlimited right to use all the streets of the city,
and that elimination of the interstate vehicles would put an end to
the congestion experienced? May the city's right to limit the
number of vehicles, and to prohibit stops to load or unload
passengers, be exercised in such a way as to allocate streets on
which motor traffic is more profitable exclusively to the local
lines and to allocate streets on which the traffic is less
profitable to the lines engaged wholly, or partly, in interstate
commerce? Is limitation of the number of vehicles, or prohibition
of stops to load or unload passengers, of carriers engaged wholly,
or partly, in interstate commerce, justifiable, where the
congestion could be obviated by denying to private carriers
existing parking privileges or by curtailing those so enjoyed? Are
the rights of the interstate carrier in the premises dependent in
any respect upon the dates of the establishment of its lines, as
compared with the dates of the establishment of the lines of the
local carrier?
These questions have not, so far as appears, been considered by
either of the lower courts. The facts essential to their
determination have not been found by either court. And the evidence
in the record is not of such a character that findings could now be
made with confidence. The answer denied many of the material
allegations of the bill. The evidence consists of the pleadings and
affidavits. The pleadings are confusing. The affidavits are silent
as to some facts of legal significance, lack definiteness as to
some matters, and present serious conflicts on issues of facts that
may be decisive. For aught that appears, the lower courts may have
differed in their decisions solely because they differed as to
conclusions of fact. Before any of the questions suggested, which
are both novel and of far-reaching importance, are passed
Page 275 U. S. 172
upon by this Court, the facts essential to their decision should
be definitely found by the lower courts upon adequate evidence.
There is an added reason why this Court should not now make the
findings of fact or rulings of law involved in these contentions.
The circuit court of appeals erred in assuming, as its opinion
discloses, that the case had been submitted below as upon final
hearing, and that the appeal before it was from a final decree
dismissing the bill. The appeal was from the interlocutory decree
denying the preliminary injunction, and the record discloses no
later proceedings in the district court. The case was not yet ripe
for final disposition by the circuit court of appeals.
Compare
Eagle Glass & Mfg. Co. v. Rowe, 245 U.
S. 275,
245 U. S. 283.
Findings and rulings, if now made on the basis of the evidence
presented at the hearing on the application for the temporary
injunction, might be rendered of no avail by the presentation of
other or additional evidence when the case comes on for final
hearing.
Under these circumstances, we deem it proper that, without costs
in this Court to either party, the decree of the circuit court of
appeals be modified by recognizing that the decree in the district
court was only interlocutory, by directing an injunction pending
the suit, and by remanding the cause to the district court for
proceedings on final hearing, with liberty to that court, among
other things, to allow amendment of the pleadings. [
Footnote 3]
Decree modified and cause remanded to district
court.
[
Footnote 1]
"
No. 1945"
"An ordinance regulating and routing certain vehicles for hire
and prohibiting their use of certain streets within the city of
Hammond."
"Section 1. Be it ordained by the common council of the City of
Hammond, Indiana, that in order to promote public safety and order
and to diminish the congestion of vehicular travel within said
city, from and after the taking effect of this ordinance, it shall
be unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation owning or
operating any motor vehicle engaged in transporting passengers for
hire, to move or run such vehicle on, upon, or over any of the
following parts of streets within said City of Hammond,
to-wit:"
"On Hohman Street from Russell Street to Michigan Avenue;"
"On state Street from Morton court to Calumet Avenue;"
"On Sibley Street from the easterly line of the right of way of
the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railway Company where
the same crosses Sibley Street westerly to Morton Court;"
"On Fayette Street from Hohman Street to Oakley Avenue."
"Section 2. From and after the taking effect of this ordinance,
it shall be unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation, owning
or operating any motor vehicle carrying passengers for hire to stop
such vehicle for the purpose of receiving or discharging passengers
upon any street, alley, or other public place within said city:
Provided, that the board of public works may, for any period not
exceeding six months or successions thereof, permit such operation
on any or all of the following designated parts of streets:
Columbia Avenue between the south city limits and the right of way
of the Michigan Central Railroad where the same crosses said
Columbia Avenue; Sibley Street from Columbia Avenue to the easterly
line of the right of way of the Chicago, Indianapolis &
Louisville Railway Company; State Line Street from its southerly
terminus to its northerly terminus at or near the right of way of
said Michigan Central Railroad aforesaid; Rimbach Avenue from State
Line Street to Ann Street; Ann Street from Rimbach Avenue to
Russell Street; Russell Street from Ann Street to State Line
Street, and for vehicles engaged strictly in interstate commerce
any street or other public place north of 122d Street and east of
Calumet Avenue."
"Section 3. Whoever violates any of the provisions of Sections 1
and 2 of this ordinance shall, upon conviction, be fined in any sum
not exceeding fifty ($50.00) dollars for each and every offense,
but nothing in this ordinance shall be construed to impair the
obligation of any contract to which the city is a party under which
such motor vehicles are now operated for hire within said city.
Nothing herein shall apply to taxicabs."
"Section 4. This ordinance shall supplement such ordinances as
are now in force, and repeal only so much of them or any part
thereof as may be in direct conflict herewith."
GEO. J. WOLF
President
Attest:
ARNOLD H. KUNERT
City Clerk
[
Footnote 2]
The protection afforded by the Fourteenth Amendment to motor
carriers for hire using the highways exclusively in intrastate
commerce was considered in
Packard v. Banton, 264 U.
S. 140, and in
Frost & Frost Trucking Co. v.
Railroad Commission, 271 U. S. 583.
See also Hess v. Pawloski, 274 U.
S. 352.
[
Footnote 3]
Compare 32 U. S. Lear,
7 Pet. 130;
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. v.
Thompkins, 176 U. S. 167,
176 U. S. 179;
United States v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co.,
184 U. S. 416,
184 U. S. 423;
Lincoln Gas & Electric Light Co. v. Lincoln,
223 U. S. 349,
223 U. S.
364.