1. Under Jud.Code § 238, as amended, this Court has
jurisdiction to review directly the final decree of a district
court of three judges in a suit to annul an order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission directing a railway company to place in a
reserve fund one-half of its excess net income, as determined under
§ 15a of the Interstate Commerce Act, and to pay the other
one-half to the Commission. P.
279 U. S.
481.
2. This Court accepts the conclusion of the Interstate Commerce
Commission and the district court that the two carrier plaintiffs
in this suit -- one operating a switching railroad in St. Louis,
Missouri, and the other a coal-carrying railroad in Illinois, the
two being separated by 12 miles and communicating only over the
tracks and bridge of a terminal company -- were not proved to be
under common control and management and operated as a single system
within the meaning of par.(6), § 15a of the Interstate
Commerce Act. P.
279 U. S.
483.
3. Where a carrier resists by suit a recapture order made by the
Commission under § 15a, denying, unsuccessfully but
bona
fide and
Page 279 U. S. 462
under circumstances justifying the contest, that there was any
excess income, no interest should be imposed for any time prior to
the final order of the district court. P.
279 U. S.
483.
4. Recapture of excess earnings of a carrier, under pars.(5) and
(6) of § 15a of the Act, does not depend upon a prior fixing
of a general level of rates intended to yield fair return upon the
aggregate value of carrier property, either as a whole or in some
prescribed rate or territorial group, under pars. (5) and (6).
Id.
5. Under par.(4) of § 15a, which directs that, in
determining values of railway property for purposes of recapture,
the Commission
"shall give due consideration to all the elements of value
recognized by the law of the land for ratemaking purposes, and
shall give to the property investment account of the carriers only
that consideration which under such law it is entitled to in
establishing values for ratemaking purposes,"
it is the duty of the Commission to give consideration to
present or reproduction costs in estimating the value of a
carrier's property. P.
279 U. S.
484.
6. It appearing from the report of the Commission in this case,
and from opinions delivered by some of its members, that
reproduction costs were not considered, the order is invalid
because of failure to obey this mandate of the statute. P.
279 U. S.
485.
7. The weight to be accorded to reproduction costs in valuing
railroad property for recaption purposes is not a matter before the
Court in this case. P.
279 U. S.
487.
8. As the making of a recaption order without consideration of
reproduction costs in valuing the property is beyond the power
conferred on the Commission by the statute, an order so made cannot
be sustained upon the ground that the income it permits the
railroad to retain is sufficient to negative any suggestion of
confiscation.
Id.
22 F.2d 980
reversed.
Cross-appeals from a decree of the district court, three judges
sitting, in a suit brought by the two railway companies to set
aside a recaption order of the Interstate Commerce Commission. The
decree annulled so much of the order as provided for payment of
interest, but, in other respects, denied relief.
Page 279 U. S. 478
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are cross-appeals from the final decree of the District
Court, Eastern Missouri, three judges sitting, in a suit to annul
an Interstate Commerce Commission order, dated February 15, 1927,
which directed St. Louis & O'Fallon Railway Company to place in
a reserve fund one-half of its determined excess income for the
years 1920 (ten months), 1921, 1922, and 1923 (that is, half of the
sum by which the net railway operating income for each of those
years exceeded 6 percent of the ascertained value of property
devoted to public service), and to pay to the Commission the
remaining one-half, with 6 percent interest, beginning four months
after termination of the year --
i.e., May 1, 1921, 1922,
1923, and 1924.
Section 15a, added to the Interstate Commerce Act by
Transportation Act 1920, contains nineteen paragraphs. Of those
specially important here, 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, and 8 are copied in the
margin;
* 4 and 6
follow:
"(4). . . For the purposes of this §, such aggregate value
of the property of the carriers shall be determined
Page 279 U. S. 479
by the Commission from time to time and as often as may be
necessary. The Commission may utilize the results of its
investigation under § 19a of this Act, insofar as deemed by it
available, and shall give due consideration to all the elements of
value recognized by the law of the
Page 279 U. S. 480
land for ratemaking purposes, and shall give to the property
investment account of the carriers only that consideration which
under such law it is entitled to in establishing values for
ratemaking purposes. Whenever, pursuant to § 19a of this Act,
the value of the railway property of any carrier held for and used
in the service of transportation has been finally ascertained, the
value so ascertained shall be deemed by the Commission to be the
value thereof for the purpose of determining such aggregate
value."
"(6) . . . If, under the provisions of this section, any carrier
receives for any year a net railway operating income in excess of 6
percentum of the value of the railway property held for and used by
it in the service of transportation, one-half of such excess shall
be placed in a reserve fund established and maintained by such
carrier, and the remaining one-half thereof shall, within the first
four months following the close of the period for which such
computation is made, be recoverable by and paid to the Commission
for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a general railroad
contingent fund as hereinafter described.
Page 279 U. S. 481
For the purposes of this paragraph, the value of the railroad
property and the net railway operating income of a group of
carriers which the Commission finds are under common control and
management and are operated as a single system shall be computed
for the system as a whole, irrespective of the separate ownership
and accounting returns of the various parts of such system. In the
case of any carrier which has accepted the provisions of § 209
of this amendatory Act the provisions of this paragraph shall not
be applicable to the income for any period prior to September 1,
1920. The value of such railway property shall be determined by the
Commission in the manner provided in paragraph (4)."
After an investigation instituted under § 15a, May 14,
1924, for the purpose of determining incomes received by St. Louis
& O'Fallon Railway Company (the O'Fallon) and Manufacturers'
Railway Company (the Manufacturers'), asserted to be parts of one
system, for the years 1920-1923, the Commission found: (1) Although
the stock of both corporations was mostly owned by the Adolph Busch
estate, and their principal officers were the same, they were not
carriers operated under common control and management as a single
system within paragraph 6. (2) The Manufacturers' had received no
excess operating income. (3) The value of the O'Fallon's property
devoted to public service in 1920 (ten months) was $856,065; in
1921, $875,360; in 1922, $978,874; in 1923, $997,236, and during
each of those years, it received net operative income exceeding 6
percent upon the stated valuation.
The above-described recapture order followed.
The cause is properly here under the Judicial Code, as amended
by Act of February 13, 1925 (U.S.C., Title 28, § 345):
"Sec. 238. A direct review by the Supreme Court of an
interlocutory or final judgment or decree of a district
Page 279 U. S. 482
court may be had where it is so provided in the following Acts
or parts of Acts, and not otherwise:"
"
* * * *"
"(4) So much of 'An Act making appropriations to supply urgent
deficiencies in appropriations for the fiscal year 1913, and for
other purposes,' approved October 22, 1913, as relates to review of
interlocutory and final judgments and decrees in suits to enforce,
suspend, or set aside orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission
other than for the payment of money. . . ."
The Act of October 22, 1913 (38 Stat. 219, 220), transferred to
district courts the jurisdiction granted to the Commerce Court by
Act of June 18, 1920 (36 Stat. 539), and provided for review by
this Court of causes embraced therein. The jurisdiction for the
Commerce Court included:
"First. All cases for the enforcement, otherwise than by
adjudication and collection of a forfeiture or penalty or by
infliction of criminal punishment, of any order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission other than for the payment of money."
"Second. Cases brought to enjoin, set aside, annul, or suspend
in whole or in part any order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission. . . ."
Paragraph (4), § 238, applies to all those causes formerly
cognizable by the Commerce Court and reviewable here. The words
"other than for the payment of money" were taken from clause first,
Act of 1910, above quoted, and, as there, they delimit the trial
court's jurisdiction. They do not inhibit review here of any cause
formerly cognizable by the Commerce Court. Moreover, the order
under consideration was not merely for payment of money, and the
proceeding below was to set aside, not to enforce it.
Wisconsin Railroad Commission v. Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy R. Co., 257 U. S. 563, and
Dayton-Goose
Page 279 U. S. 483
Creek Railway Co. v. United States, 263 U.
S. 456, point out the general purpose of the
Transportation Act 1920, and uphold the validity of § 15a.
The Manufacturers' is a switching road with 30 miles of track
within St. Louis, Missouri. The O'Fallon -- a coal-carrying road --
has 9 miles of main line, all in Illinois, and this connects with
the Terminal Railroad at East St. Louis. Through the latter,
deliveries are made to sundry points in St. Louis, some of which
are on the Manufacturers' line.
"The distance between the railroad of the O'Fallon and the
railroad of the Manufacturers' is about 12 miles, and all
communication by rail between the two properties is effected over
the tracks of the Terminal, including a bridge over the Mississippi
River."
Both the Commission and the district court held that the record
failed to show these two roads were under common control and
management and operated as a single system within the meaning of
paragraph 6. We accept their conclusion.
The Commission directed the O'Fallon to pay 6 percent interest
on the recaptured one-half of its ascertained excess net railway
operating income beginning four months from the end of the year
during which the excess accrued (paragraph 6). The district court
rightly ruled that, as the carrier made
bona fide denial
of any excess under circumstances sufficient to justify a contest,
no interest should have been imposed for any time prior to the
final order. Not until then could the carrier know what, if
anything, it should pay.
Also, we think the district court rightly rejected the claim
that excess earnings were not recapturable unless and until the
Commission had fixed a general level of rates intended to yield
fair return upon the aggregate value of carrier property, either as
a whole or in some prescribed rate or territorial group. Congress,
of course,
Page 279 U. S. 484
realized that final valuations would require prodigious
expenditure of time and effort, but the language concerning
recapture indicates that prompt action was expected. Practical
application of paragraphs 5 and 6 does not necessarily depend upon
prior compliance with paragraphs 2 and 3. The Act should be
construed so as to carry out the legislative purpose. The proviso
of paragraph 3 prescribing action to be taken during two years
beginning March 1, 1920, and the clause of paragraph 6 excepting
the income of certain roads prior to September 1, 1920, are hardly
compatible with this claim by the carrier.
Paragraph 4, § 15a, directs that, in determining values of
railway property for purposes of recapture, the Commission
"shall give due consideration to all the elements of value
recognized by the law of the land for ratemaking purposes, and
shall give to the property investment account of the carriers only
that consideration which under such law it is entitled to in
establishing values for ratemaking purposes."
This is an express command, and the carrier has clear right to
demand compliance therewith.
United States ex rel. Kansas City
Southern Railway Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
252 U. S. 178.
"The elements of value recognized by the law of the land for
ratemaking purposes" have been pointed out many times by this
Court.
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466;
Willcox v. Consolidated Gas Co., 212 U. S.
19;
Minnesota Rate Case, 230 U.
S. 352;
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Public
Service Commission, 262 U. S. 276;
Bluefield Water Works & Improvement Co. v. Public Service
Commission, 262 U. S. 679;
McCardle v. Indianapolis Water Co., 272 U.
S. 400. Among them is the present cost of construction
of reproduction.
Thirty years ago,
Smyth v. Ames announced (p.
169 U. S.
546):
"We hold, however, that the basis of all calculations as to the
reasonableness of rates to be charged by a corporation
Page 279 U. S. 485
maintaining a highway under legislative sanction must be the
fair value of the property being used by it for the convenience of
the public. And in order to ascertain that value, the original cost
of construction, the amount expended in permanent improvements, the
amount and market value of its bonds and stock, the present as
compared with the original cost of construction, the probable
earning capacity of the property under particular rates prescribed
by statute, and the sum required to meet operating expenses are all
matters for consideration, and are to be given such weight as may
be just and right in each case. We do not say that there may not be
other matters to be regarded in estimating the value of the
property. What the company is entitled to ask is a fair return upon
the value of that which it employs for the public convenience. On
the other hand, what the public is entitled to demand is that no
more be exacted from it for the use of a public highway than the
services rendered by it are reasonably worth."
In
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Public Service
Commission (p.
262 U. S.
287), we said:
"It is impossible to ascertain what will amount to a fair return
upon properties devoted to public service without giving
consideration to the cost of labor, supplies, etc. at the time the
investigation is made. An honest and intelligent forecast of
probable future values, made upon a view of all the relevant
circumstances, is essential. If the highly important element of
present costs is wholly disregarded, such a forecast becomes
impossible. Estimates for tomorrow cannot ignore prices of
today."
The doctrine above stated has been consistently adhered to by
this Court.
The report of the Commission is long and argumentative. Much of
it is devoted to general observations relative to the method and
purpose of making valuations; many objections are urged to doctrine
approved by us, and the superiority of another view is stoutly
asserted.
Page 279 U. S. 486
It carefully refrains from stating that any consideration
whatever was given to present or reproduction costs in estimating
the value of the carrier's property. Four dissenting Commissioners
declare that reproduction costs were not considered, and the report
itself confirms their view. Two of the majority avow a like
understanding of the course pursued.
The following from the dissenting opinion of Commissioner Hall,
concurred in by three others, accurately describes the action of
the Commission:
"In order to determine the value of the O'Fallon property
devoted to carrier service during the recapture periods, 10 months
in the year 1920 and the years 1921, 1922, and 1923, we start with
a valuation or inventory date of June 30, 1919. The units in
existence on that date are known. Original cost of the entire
property cannot be ascertained. As to the man-made units, we
estimate the cost of reproducing them in their condition on that
date, and, in so doing, apply to the units installed prior to June
30, 1914, the unit prices of 1914, representing a fairly consistent
price level for the preceding 5 or 10 years. To like units,
installed after June 30, 1914, and prior to June 30, 1919, we apply
the same prices, but add a sum representing price increases on
those units during that period. For the third period, from June 30,
1919, down to each recapture date, we abandon estimate and turn to
recorded net cost of additions less retirements. On this composite,
made up of estimated value for two periods and ascertained net cost
for the third period, the majority base a conclusion as to value at
recapture date of the man-made items. Land goes in at its current
value as measured by that of neighboring lands."
"Without summarizing the other processes, all clearly stated in
the majority report, it will be observed that the ratemaking value
arrived at for the successive recapture periods, as, for example,
the year 1923, rests upon 1923
Page 279 U. S. 487
market value of lands; costs of other property installed since
June 30, 1919; unit prices of 1914, enhanced by allowance for
increased cost of units installed during June 30, 1914-1919; and,
for the units installed prior to June 30, 1914, constituting by far
the major part of the property, unit prices of 1914 without any
enhancement whatever. As to this major part of the carrier's
property devoted to carrier purposes in 1923, no consideration is
given to costs and prices then obtaining or to increase therein
since 1914."
In the exercise of its proper function, this Court has declared
the law of the land concerning valuations for ratemaking purposes.
The Commission disregarded the approved rule, and has thereby
failed to discharge the definite duty imposed by Congress.
Unfortunately, proper heed was denied the timely admonition of the
minority:
"The function in this Commission is not to act as an arbiter in
economics, but as an agency of Congress, to apply the law of the
land to facts developed of record in matters committed by Congress
to our jurisdiction."
The question on which the Commission divided is this: when
seeking to ascertain the value of railroad property for recapture
purposes, must it give consideration to current, or reproduction,
costs? The weight to be accorded thereto is not the matter before
us. No doubt there are some, perhaps many, railroads the ultimate
value of which should be placed far below the sum necessary for
reproduction. But Congress has directed that values shall be fixed
upon a consideration of present costs along with all other
pertinent facts, and this mandate must be obeyed.
It was deemed unnecessary by the court below to determine
whether the Commission obeyed the statutory direction touching
valuations, since the order permitted the O'Fallon to retain an
income great enough to negative any suggestion of actual
confiscation. With this we
Page 279 U. S. 488
cannot agree. Whether the Commission acted as directed by
Congress was the fundamental question presented. If it did not, the
action taken, being beyond the authority granted, was invalid. The
only power to make any recapture order arose from the statute.
The judgment of the court below must be reversed. A decree will
be entered here annulling the challenged order.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER took no part in the consideration or
determination of this cause.
*
"Section 15a. (1) [this defines the terms employed]."
"(2) In the exercise of its power to prescribe just and
reasonable rates, the Commission shall initiate, modify, establish
or adjust such rates so that carriers as a whole (or as a whole in
each of such rate groups or territories as the Commission may from
time to time designate) will, under honest, efficient and
economical management and reasonable expenditures for maintenance
of way, structures and equipment, earn an aggregate annual net
railway operating income equal, as nearly as may be, to a fair
return upon the aggregate value of the railway property of such
carriers held for and used in the service of transportation:
Provided, That the Commission shall have reasonable
latitude to modify or adjust any particular rate which it may find
to be unjust or unreasonable, and to prescribe different rates for
different sections of the county."
"(3) The Commission shall from time to time determine and make
public what percentage of such aggregate property value constitutes
a fair return thereon, and such percentage shall be uniform for all
rate groups or territories which may be designated by the
Commission. In making such determination, it shall give due
consideration, among other things, to the transportation needs of
the country and the necessity (under honest, efficient and
economical management of existing transportation facilities) of
enlarging such facilities in order to provide the people of the
United States with adequate transportation:
Provided, That
during the two years beginning March 1, 1920, the Commission shall
takes as such fair return a sum equal to 5 1/2 percentum of such
aggregate value, but may, in its discretion, add thereto a sum not
exceeding one-half of one percentum of such aggregate value to make
provision in whole or in part for improvements, betterments, or
equipment, which, according to the accounting system prescribed by
the Commission, are chargeable to capital account."
"(5) Inasmuch as it is impossible (without regulation and
control in the interest of the commerce of the United States
considered as a whole) to establish uniform rates upon competitive
traffic which will adequately sustain all the carriers which are
engaged in such traffic and which are indispensable to the
communities to which they render the service of transportation
without enabling some of such carriers to receive a net railway
operating income substantially and unreasonably in excess of a fair
return upon the value of their railway property held for and used
in the service of transportation, it is hereby declared that any
carrier which receives such an income so in excess of a fair return
shall hold such part of the excess, as hereinafter prescribed, as
trustee for, and shall pay it to, the United States."
"(7) For the purpose of paying dividends or interest on its
stocks, bonds or other securities, or rent for leased roads, a
carrier may draw from the reserve fund established and maintained
by it under the provisions of this section to the extent that its
net railway operating income for any year is less than a sum equal
to 6 percentum of the value of the railway property held for and
used by it in the service of transportation, determined as provided
in paragraph (6), but such fund shall not be drawn upon for any
other purpose."
"(8) Such reserve fund need not be accumulated and maintained by
any carrier beyond a sum equal to 5 percentum of the value of its
railway property determined as herein provided, and when such fund
is so accumulated and maintained the portion of its excess income
which the carrier is permitted to retain under paragraph (6) may be
used by it for any lawful purpose."
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS, dissenting.
The main question for consideration is that of statutory
construction. By Transportation Act 1920, February 28, 1920, c. 91,
§ 15a, 41 Stat. 456, 488, Congress delegated to the Interstate
Commerce Commission the duty to establish and maintain rates which
will yield "a fair return upon the aggregate value of the railway
property" of the United States. By paragraph 4 thereof, it directs
that, in ascertaining value, the Commission shall "give due
consideration to all the elements of value recognized by the law of
the land for ratemaking purposes," and shall
"give to the property investment account . . . only that
consideration which, under such law, it is entitled to in
establishing values for ratemaking purposes."
The report of the Commission, which accompanies the order
challenged, declares:
"In the methods of valuation which we have followed in this
proceeding, we have endeavored to give heed to this direction [that
contained in paragraph 4]. . . ."
Excess Income of St. Louis & O'Fallon Ry. Co., 124 I.C.C. 3,
19. Speaking for the dissenting members, Mr. Commissioner Hall
said: "If the law needs change, let those who made it change it.
Our duty is to
Page 279 U. S. 489
apply the law as it stands." (Pp. 63-64.) And Mr. Commissioner
Aitchison added:
"If we anticipate grave results will follow, our responsibility
will be fully met if we suggest to the Congress, under our
statutory powers to recommend new legislation to that body, the
enactment of a rule for ratemaking under the commerce clause which
will have no such unfavorable effects."
(P. 64.)
Section 15a makes no specific reference either to the original
cost of the property, or to prudent investment, or to current
reproduction cost, or to the then existing price level. Section 19a
-- the valuation provisions of the Act of 1913 -- to which §
15a refers, directs the Commission to report, among other things,
"in detail as to each piece of property, . . . the original cost to
date, the cost of reproduction new, the cost of reproduction less
depreciation," and also "other values, and elements of value."
After the enactment of § 15a and before entry of the order
challenged, it was held in
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v.
Public Service Commission, 262 U. S. 276, a
case arising under a state law, that the rate base on which a
public utility is constitutionally entitled to earn a fair return
is the then actual value of the property used and useful in the
business, not the original cost or the amount prudently invested in
the enterprise. The government concedes that current reproduction
cost is admissible as evidence to show present value under §
15a. The carrier concedes now that neither Congress nor the common
law made current reproduction cost the measure of value. The
question on which the Commission divided is this: did Congress
require the Commission, when acting under § 15a, to give, in
all cases and in respect to all property, some, if not controlling,
effect to evidence establishing the estimated current cost of
reproduction? Or did Congress intend to leave to the Commission the
authority to determine, as in passing upon other controverted
Page 279 U. S. 490
issued of fact, what weight, if any, it should give to that
evidence?
The O'Fallon contends, among other things, that the order is
confiscatory. The claim is that the order left to the company a
return of only 4.35 percent upon the value ascertained in
accordance with the rule declared in the
Southwestern Bell
case and
McCardle v. Indianapolis Water Co., 272 U.
S. 400. If this were true, it would be immaterial
whether Congress purported to authorize the course pursued by the
Commission. But the fact is that, in each of the recapture periods,
the earnings were so large as to leave, after making the required
payments to the Commission, about 8 percent on what the carrier
alleged was the fair value of the property. The O'Fallon argues
that, since the statute and the order required it to hold as a
reserve one-half of the excess over 6 percent, it is deprived of
that property. This is not true. The requirement that one-half of
the earnings in excess of 6 percent shall be retained by the
carrier until the reserve equals 5 percent of the value of the
railroad does not deprive the carrier of any property. It merely
regulates the use thereof.
Compare Kansas City Southern R. Co.
v. United States, 231 U. S. 423,
231 U. S. 453.
The provision is one designed to secure financial stability, and is
similar to those prescribing sinking funds, depreciation, and other
appropriate accounts. [
Footnote
1] Congress may regulate the use of railroad property so as to
insure financial as well as physical stability. Both are essential
to the safety and the service of the public. In
Dayton-Goose Creek R. Co. v.
United
Page 279 U. S. 491
States, 263 U. S. 456,
263 U. S. 486,
where the facts were in this respect identical with those in the
case at bar, the constitutional validity of the order was
sustained. If the failure to give to the evidence of current
reproduction costs the effect claimed for it by the O'Fallon was
error, it is not because the carrier's constitutional rights have
been invaded, but because the Commission failed to observe a rule
prescribed by Congress for determining the amounts to be recaptured
and reserved.
The claim of the O'Fallon is, in substance, that, since
construction costs were higher during the recapture periods than in
1914, the order should be set aside, because the Commission failed
to find that the existing structural property and equipment which
had been acquired before June 30, 1914, was worth more than it had
been then. [
Footnote 2] The
Commission undertook, as will be shown, to find present actual
value, and, in so doing, both to follow the direction of Congress
and to apply the rule declared in the
Southwestern Bell
case. It is true that this Court there declared that current
reconstruction cost is an element of actual value, and that
Congress directed the Commission "to give due consideration to all
the elements of value recognized by the law of the land for
ratemaking purposes." But, while the Act required the Commission to
consider all such evidence, neither Congress nor this Court
required it to give to evidence of reconstruction cost a mechanical
effect or artificial weight. They left untrammeled its duty to give
to all relevant evidence such probative force as, in its judgment,
the evidence inherently possesses. The Commission concluded that,
in respect to the evidence of reproduction costs, the differences
between the
Southwestern Bell case and that at bar
were
Page 279 U. S. 492
such as to lead to different results in the two cases. It did so
mainly because, "in the administration of the valuation and
recapture provisions," ascertainment of value
"is affected by a vast variety of considerations that either do
not enter into, or are less easily perceived in, problems incident
to the regulation of local public utilities."
P. 27. In my opinion, the conclusions of the Commission are well
founded. To make clear the reasons requires consideration of the
function of the Commission in applying § 15a and of the
problems with which it is confronted.
First. The Commission is a factfinding body. The
question whether it must give to confessedly relevant facts
evidential effect is solely one of adjective law. Statutes have
sometimes limited the weight or effect of evidence. They have often
created rebuttable presumptions, and have shifted the burden of
proof. But no instance has been found where under our law, a
factfinding body has been required to give to evidence an effect
which it does not inherently possess. Proof implies persuasion. To
compel the human mind to infer in any respect that which
observation and logic tells us is not true interferes with the
process of reasoning of the factfinding body. It would be a
departure from the unbroken practice to require an artificial legal
conviction where no real conviction exists. [
Footnote 3]
An arbitrary disregard by the Commission of the probative effect
of evidence would, of course, be ground for setting aside an order,
as this would be an abuse of discretion. Orders have been set aside
because entered without evidence, [
Footnote 4] or because matters of fact had been
considered
Page 279 U. S. 493
which were not in the record; [
Footnote 5] or because the Commission excluded from
consideration facts and circumstances which ought to have been
considered; [
Footnote 6] or
because it took into consideration facts which could not legally
influence its judgment. [
Footnote
7] But no case has been found in which this Court has set aside
an order on the ground that the Commission failed to give effect to
evidence which seemed to the Court to be of probative force, or on
the ground that the Commission had drawn from the evidence an
inference or conclusion deemed by the Court to be erroneous.
[
Footnote 8] On
Page 279 U. S. 494
the contrary, findings of the Commission involving the
appreciation or effect of evidence have been treated with the
deference due to those of a tribunal "informed by experience" and
"appointed by law" to deal with an intricate subject.
Illinois
Central R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 206 U.
S. 441,
206 U. S. 454.
Unless, therefore, Congress required the Commission not only to
consider evidence of reconstruction cost in ascertaining values for
ratemaking purposes under § 15a, but also to give, in all
cases and in respect to all property, some weight to evidence of
enhanced reconstruction cost, even if that evidence was not
inherently persuasive, the Commission was clearly authorized to
determine for itself to what extent, if any, weight should be given
to the evidence, and its findings should not be disturbed by the
court, unless it appears that there was an abuse of discretion.
Second. While current reproduction cost may be said to
be an element in the present value of property, in the sense that
it is "evidence properly to be considered in the ascertainment of
value,"
Standard Oil Co. v. Southern Pacific Co.,
268 U. S. 146,
268 U. S. 156,
it is clear that current cost of reproduction higher than the
original cost does not necessarily tend to prove a present higher
value. Often the fact of higher reconstruction cost is without any
influence on present values. It is common knowledge that the
current market value of many office buildings and residences
constructed prior to the World War have failed to reflect the
greatly increased building costs of recent years, although the need
of new buildings of like character was being demonstrated by the
large volume of construction
Page 279 U. S. 495
at the higher price level. Many railroads built before the World
War have never been worth as much as their original cost, because
high construction cost, combined with adverse operating conditions
and limited traffic, have at all times prevented their earning,
despite reasonable rates, a fair return on the original cost. The
Puget Sound extension of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul is a
notable example. [
Footnote 9]
Many branches, and indeed whole lines of railroad, have been
scrapped since 1920. Abandonment of 2,439 miles of railroad was
authorized under paragraph 18 of § 1 of the Interstate
Commerce Act, between 1920 and 1925, and in the three following
Page 279 U. S. 496
years 2,010 miles more. [
Footnote 10] These properties had, in the main, become
valueless for transportation, either because traffic ceased to be
available or because competitive means of transportation precluded
the establishment of remunerative rail rates. [
Footnote 11] Obviously no one would contend that
their actual value just before abandonment was what it originally
cost to construct them or what it would then have cost to
reconstruct them.
Third. The terms of § 15a and its legislative
history preclude the assumption that Congress intended by paragraph
4 to deny to the Commission in respect to evidence of
reconstruction cost the discretion commonly exercised in
determining what weight, if any, shall be given to an evidential
fact. In 1920, no fact was more prominent in the mind of the public
and of Congress than that the cost of living was far greater than
that prevailing when the existing railroads were built. [
Footnote 12] But neither in
Transportation Act 1920 nor in any committee report is there even a
suggestion that the Commission would be required
Page 279 U. S. 497
to give to that fact any effect in ascertaining values for
ratemaking purposes under § 15a. If it had been the intention
of Congress to compel the Commission to increase values for
ratemaking purposes because the price level had risen, it would
naturally have incorporated such a direction in the paragraph. On
the other hand, the committee reports and the debates show that the
opinion was quite commonly held that the actual values were less
than the property investment account appearing on the books of the
carriers, [
Footnote 13] and
the proposal made by the railroads that the investment account be
accepted as the measure of value was resisted as being excessive.
[
Footnote 14] The
property
Page 279 U. S. 498
investment account in 1920 was about 19 billions of dollars.
[
Footnote 15] The then
reproduction cost of the railroads, applying index figures to
estimated actual cost, was over 40 billions. [
Footnote 16] It is inconceivable that Congress,
after rejecting property investment account as excessive, intended
by § 15a to make mandatory on the Commission the consideration
of elements which would give a valuation double that which had been
rejected. The insertion in § 15a of the provision that the
Commission
"shall give to the property investment account of the carriers
only that consideration which under such law it is entitled to in
establishing values for ratemaking purposes,"
and the rejection of other proposed measures of value, show that
Congress intended not to impose restrictions upon the discretion of
the Commission. [
Footnote
17]
Congress did intend to provide a return on the existing railroad
property which should be only slightly more than that which had
been enjoyed during the six preceding years. To have required that
the then price level be reflected in the values to be fixed under
§ 15a would have resulted in a rate base of double the
property investment account of the carriers, for the cost of living
was then about double prewar prices. The prescribed fair return
Page 279 U. S. 499
applied to such a rate base would have produced more than double
the average net earnings from operation of the several properties
during the three years preceding federal control; more than double
and amount which the carriers agreed to accept under the Federal
Control Act, March 21, 1918, c. 25, § 1, 40 Stat. 451, as fair
compensation for the use of their property; more than double the
guaranty provided by Transportation Act 1920, § 209, for the
six-month period after the surrender of control. The sum which the
railroads had thus earned net in those six years equalled 5.2
percent on the property investment account, as carried on their
books.
In making provision for a fair return, the main purpose was not
to increase the earnings of capital already invested in railroads,
but to attract the new capital needed for improvement or extension
of facilities. [
Footnote 18]
This was to be accomplished by raising the rate or return from 5.2
percent to 5.5 percent (Senate Reports, Vol. 1, No. 304, 66th Cong.
1st Sess.):
"The basis adopted by the Committee is three tenths of 1 percent
higher than the basis of the test period [the three years preceding
June 30, 1917], and assuming, though not conceding, that the value
of the property is equal to the property investment accounts, it
will yield for all the railways a net operating income of
$54,000,000 in excess of the income of the test period. There were
two considerations which led the majority of the committee
Page 279 U. S. 500
to believe that this increase is not only warranted, but
necessary:"
"First. The railways are being returned to their owners when
everything is unsettled and abnormal, when there is suspicion and
distrust everywhere. Just what rate of return will enable the
carriers to finance themselves under such conditions cannot with
certainty be determined. It was felt, therefore, that some increase
over the prewar period was justifiable."
"Second. As compared with all kinds of commodities, money is
must less valuable than it was a few years ago, and it would seem
to be only fair that the returns from railway investments should be
reasonably advanced."
The means by which the bill was to accomplish the desired end
are thus stated in the report:
"First: By prescribing a basis of return upon the value of the
railway property to give such assurance to investors as will
incline them to look with favor upon railway securities -- that is
to say, be making a moderate return reasonably certain to establish
credit for the carriers."
"Second: In making the return fairly certain to secure for the
public a lower capital charge than would otherwise be
necessary."
"Third: In requiring some carriers, which under any given body
of rates will earn more than a fair return, to pay the excess to
the government and in so using this excess that transportation
facilities or credit can be furnished to the weaker carriers, and
thus help to maintain the general system of transportation."
Either increase in the rate of return or increase of the base on
which that return is measured would have served to adjust
compensation to higher price levels. The adoption by Congress of
the increase in the return, as the means of compensating for the
decreased purchasing power of the dollar, precludes the assumption
that it intended that the valuation should reflect that lessened
purchasing
Page 279 U. S. 501
power. By explicitly choosing the former, Congress implicitly
rejected the latter. [
Footnote
19] For to have allowed an increase in both would have gone
beyond adjusting earnings to increased costs, and have made this
increase a mere pretext for allowing unwarranted profits to the
railroads. The proceedings which led to the passage of the Act make
it clear that Congress intended no such result.
Fourth. The declared purpose of Congress in enacting
§ 15a was the maintenance of an adequate national system of
railway transportation, capable of providing the best possible
service to the public at the lowest cost consistent with full
justice to the private owners. Following the course consistently
pursued by this Court in applying other provisions of the
Interstate Commerce Act,
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v.
Interstate Commerce Commission, 162 U.
S. 197,
162 U. S. 211,
162 U. S. 219;
New England Divisions Case, 261 U.
S. 184,
261 U. S.
189-190;
Dayton-Goose Creek Ry. Co. v. United
States, 263 U. S. 456,
263 U. S. 478,
the Commission construed § 15a in the light of the declared
purpose of Congress and of the economic factors involved. From its
wide knowledge of actual conditions and its practical experience in
ratemaking, it concluded that to give effect to enhanced
reproduction costs would defeat that purpose. (P. 27.)
It knew that the value for ratemaking purposes could not be more
than that sum on which a fair return could be earned by legal
rates, and that the earnings were
Page 279 U. S. 502
limited both by the commercial prohibition of rates higher than
the traffic would bear and the legal prohibition of rates higher
than are just and reasonable. It knew that a rate base fluctuating
with changes in the level of general prices would imperil industry
and commerce. It knew that the adoption of a fluctuating rate base
would not, as is claimed, do justice to those prewar investors in
railroad securities who were suffering from the lessened value of
the dollar, since the great majority of the railroad securities are
represented by long-term bonds or the guaranteed stocks of leased
lines which bear a fixed return, and that only the stockholders
could gain through the greater earnings required to satisfy the
higher rate base. It recognized that an adequate national system of
railways, so long as it is privately owned, cannot be provided and
maintained without a continuous inflow of capital; that
"obviously also, such an inflow of capital can only be assured
by treatment of capital already invested which will invite and
encourage further investment,"
(p. 30), and that, as was said in
Dayton-Goose Creek Ry. Co.
v. United States, 263 U. S. 456,
263 U. S.
481:
"By investment in a business dedicated to the public service,
the owner must recognize that, as compared with investment in
private business, he cannot expect either high or speculative
dividends, but that his obligation limits him to only fair or
reasonable profit. [
Footnote
20] "
Page 279 U. S. 503
The conviction that there would in time be a fall in the price
level was generally held. As a fluctuating rate base would thus
directly imperil industry and commerce and investments made at
relatively high price levels during and since the World War
[
Footnote 21] would tend to
increase the cost of new money required to supply adequate service
to the public, and would discourage such investment, the Commission
concluded that Congress could and have intended to require it to
measure the value or rate base by reproduction cost, since this
would produce a result contrary to its declared purpose. And, as
confirming its construction of § 15a, the Commission showed
that, with the stable rate base which it had accepted as the basis
for administering the Act, the aim of Congress to establish an
adequate national system had been attained. It pointed out
that:
"During the period 1920-1926, inclusive, the investment in
railroad property increased by 4 billions of dollars. A substantial
part of this money was derived from income, but much of it was
obtained by the sale of new securities. The market for railroad
securities since the passage of the transportation act, 1920, has
steadily improved, and the general trend of interest rates has been
downward. The credit of the railroads in general is now excellent.
. . ."
(P. 33.)
Fifth. Other considerations confirm the construction
given by the Commission to the phrase "value for ratemaking
purposes," as used in § 15a. In condemnation proceedings, the
owner recovers what he has lost by the
Page 279 U. S. 504
taking of the property,
Boston Chamber of Commerce v.
Boston, 217 U. S. 189,
217 U. S. 195,
and such loss must be determined "not merely with reference to the
uses to which it is at the time applied, but with reference to the
uses to which it is plainly adapted."
Mississippi & R. Boom
Co. v. Patterson, 98 U. S. 403,
98 U. S. 408.
Compare Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Barber Asphalt
Co., 197 U. S. 430,
197 U. S. 435.
But the actual value of a railroad -- its value for ratemaking
purposes under § 15a -- may be less than its condemnation
value. As was said in
Southern Ry. Co. v. Kentucky,
274 U. S. 76,
274 U. S. 81-82,
a case involving state taxation:
"The value of the physical elements of a railroad -- whether
that value be deemed actual cost, cost of reproduction new, cost of
reproduction less depreciation, or some other figure -- is not the
sole measure of or guide to its value in operation.
Smyth v.
Ames, 169 U. S. 466,
169 U. S.
547. Much weight is to be given to present and
prospective earning capacity at rates that are reasonable, having
regard to traffic available and competitive and other conditions
prevailing in the territory served."
Value has been defined as the ability to command the price.
[
Footnote 22] Railroad
property is valuable as such only if, and so far as, used. If rates
are too high, the traffic will not move. Hence, the value or rate
base is necessarily dependent, in the first place, upon the
commercial ability of the property to command the rates which will
yield a return in excess of operating expenses and taxes, and such
value cannot be higher than the sum on which, with the
Page 279 U. S. 505
available traffic, the fair return fixed under § 15a can be
earned. Persistent depression of rates or lessening volume of
traffic, from whatever cause arising, ordinarily tends to lower
actual values of railroad properties. It follows that, since the
Commission is required by the rule of
Smyth v. Ames,
reaffirmed in the
Southwestern Bell case, to determine the
rate base under § 15a by actual value, as distinguished from
prudent investment, it must, in making the finding, consider the
effect upon value of both the commercial and the legal limitations
upon rates and, among other things, the effect of competition upon
the volume of traffic.
Recent experience affords striking examples of commercial
limitations upon rates. In Ex parte 74, Increased Rates, 1920, 58
I.C.C. 220, the Commission sought to establish rates which would
yield 6 percent upon the aggregate values of the railroads in the
several groups. The carriers claimed as the aggregate value
$20,040,572,611, that amount being carried on their books as the
cost of road and equipment. The Commission fixed the value about 5
percent lower -- at $18,900,000,000. In order to produce on that
sum net earnings equal to 6 percent, it increased freight rates, in
the eastern group, 40 percent over the then existing rates, in the
southern group, 25 percent, in the western group 35 percent, and,
in the mountain-Pacific group, 25 percent. [
Footnote 23] As a result of these increases, the
average gross revenue per ton mile in 1921 was in the eastern
district 96.1 percent greater than for the fiscal year ended June
30, 1914, in the southern, 61.4, in the western, 59.3, and in the
United States as a whole, 76.2. Reduced Rates, 1922, 68, I.C.C.
676, 702.
Page 279 U. S. 506
Passenger rates were subjected by the order in Ex parte 74 to a
flat increase of 20 percent, and surcharges were added. (P. 242.)
[
Footnote 24]
On a large number of basic commodities, which were among the
most important articles of commerce, the rates proved to be higher
than the traffic would bear. Reductions became imperative. Within a
year after the entry of that order, many applications for
reductions were made to the Commission, not only by shippers, but
also by the carriers themselves. It was estimated that the
reductions in freight rates made by the carriers prior to March 15,
1922, would aggregate for that year $186,700,000, and would lower
the general rate level nearly 5 percent. On some important articles
of traffic, the entire increase made by Ex parte 74 was cancelled.
[
Footnote 25] Further
reductions were then ordered by Reduced Rates 1922, 68 I.C.C. 676,
pp. 732-733, the Commission saying:
"High rates do not necessarily mean high revenues, for, if the
public cannot or will not ship in normal volume, less revenue may
result than from lower rates. Shippers almost unanimously contend,
and many representatives of the carriers agree, that 'freight rates
are too high, and must come down.'
Page 279 U. S. 507
This indicates that transportation charges have mounted to a
point where they are impeding the free flow of commerce, and thus
tending to defeat the purpose for which they were established --
that of producing revenues which would enable the carriers 'to
provide the people of the United States with adequate
transportation.' Further reductions made in the year 1923 are said
to have again lowered freight rates 5 percent. [
Footnote 26] The effect of the several
reductions made in the rates authorized by Ex parte 74 is said to
have lowered by $800,000,000 the freight charges otherwise payable
on the traffic carried during the eighteen months ending December
31, 1923. [
Footnote 27] Each
year since has witnessed a further lowering in the revenue per ton
mile and per passenger mile. [
Footnote 28]"
This constant lowering of the weighted average of rates since
1920 must have been due to causes other than desire on the part of
the Commission. Its aim was to adjust rates so that they would
yield the prescribed return. But, for the period from 1920 to 1927,
inclusive, there was only one year in which the railroads of the
United States as a whole, despite general prosperity and greater
efficiency, earned on the value found in Ex parte 74 brought down
to date, the full average return prescribed as fair under
Page 279 U. S. 508
section 15a. [
Footnote
29] The Commission repeatedly refused to permit carriers to
make reductions, because the reduction would lower the revenues
sought to be provided under § 15a. [
Footnote 30] On the other hand, carriers, although
earning less than the fair return prescribed under § 15a, have
often voluntarily reduced rates. [
Footnote 31] The lowering of rates was probably due
Page 279 U. S. 509
in large measure to the influence of competing means of
transportation. [
Footnote
32]
Sixth. Since 1914, the railroads have been obliged, to
an ever-increasing extent, to compete with water lines and with
motors. This competition has been fostered by the government
[
Footnote 33] through the
Panama Canal Act, [
Footnote
34] through
Page 279 U. S. 510
the intracoastal waterways acts, [
Footnote 35] through the inland waterways acts, [
Footnote 36] through the development
of coastwise
Page 279 U. S. 511
shipping by means of harbor improvements, [
Footnote 37] and through federal aid in the
construction of highways. [
Footnote 38] There has also been increased competition by
pipelines. Competition from other means of transportation has
tended to arrest the normal increase in the volume of rail traffic,
and, as to some traffic, it has actually produced a reduction in
both the volume and the rates. It has resulted in a general
shrinkage in the passenger business, [
Footnote 39] in some regions, in a lessening of the
carload freight; [
Footnote
40] and, in
Page 279 U. S. 512
many, in a reduction of the volume of the less than carload
freight. [
Footnote 41]
The influence of water competition on rates is strikingly
illustrated by the effect of the Panama Canal on transcontinental
freight rates. [
Footnote 42]
In order to meet this water competition, carriers have repeatedly
asked leave to make sweeping reductions. [
Footnote 43] Rates voluntarily established by the rail
carriers are lower now, on some articles of traffic, than they were
in 1914. On others, they are only a little higher. [
Footnote 44] The influence of competition
by
Page 279 U. S. 513
the inland waterways on the volume of rail traffic is
illustrated in the effect which improvement of the Ohio river and
its tributaries has had in the Pittsburgh district. The rail
tonnage in 1927 was materially less than in 1914, while the water
tonnage more than doubled. [
Footnote 45] The influence of barge lines in reducing or
holding down rail rates is illustrated by the rail rates in
competition with those of the barge lines on the Ohio, the
Mississippi, and
Page 279 U. S. 514
the Warrior Rivers. [
Footnote
46] The widespread effect of competition by motor truck in
lowering both the rates and volume of rail traffic is obvious.
[
Footnote 47] Not obvious,
but indisputable, has been the effect of the potential competition
of pipelines
Page 279 U. S. 515
shown by reductions in oil rates caused by the threat of
competing pipelines. [
Footnote
48]
Moreover, rates which are not so high as to prevent commercially
the movement of traffic are often required to be lowered because
they conflict with some statutory provision. Thus, Congress compels
reduction of rates which discriminate unjustly against individuals,
localities, articles of traffic, or other carriers. Perhaps the
most striking instance of the limitation by law of rates which the
traffic would bear commercially is furnished by cases under the
long and short haul clause. By that clause, a rail carrier is often
obliged (unless relieved by order of the Commission) to elect
between suffering practically a total loss of existing traffic
between competitive points or suffering a loss in existing revenues
by reducing rates at both the competitive points and intermediate
noncompetitive points. The effect of this limitation upon rates,
and hence upon the actual value of railroads, has become very
great. Its influence has grown steadily with the growth
Page 279 U. S. 516
of competition by water and motor, with the growth in the size
of the individual railroad system, with the growth in the
dependence of railroads for their revenues upon long haul freight
traffic and with the growing length of the average haul. [
Footnote 49] It has become so
important for rail carriers to hold a share of the long haul
freight traffic at competitive points, that the long and short haul
clause, if not relieved from, results in the carriers' giving, in
large measure, to the intermediate noncompetitive points which
otherwise would be subject to monopoly exactions, the full benefit
of that lowering of rates required to meet the competition. The
many applications for reductions made in petitions for relief from
the operation of the long and short haul clause illustrate the
influence of rail, as well as of water and motor, competition in
thus depressing rates. [
Footnote
50] Congress has by that clause limited values for ratemaking
purposes under § 15a almost as effectively as by its promotion
of competitive means of transportation.
Seventh. In requiring that the value be ascertained for
ratemaking purposes, Congress imposed upon the rate base as defined
in
Smyth v. Ames, still another limitation which is
far-reaching in its operation. By declaring in § 15a that the
Commission shall, "in the exercise of its
Page 279 U. S. 517
power to prescribe just and reasonable rates," so adjust them
that, upon the value, a fair return may be earned "under honest,
efficient and economical management," Congress made efficiency of
the plant an element or test of value. [
Footnote 51] Efficiency and economy imply employment
of the right instrument and material as well as their use in the
right manner. To use a machine after a much better and more
economical one has become available is as inefficient as to use two
men to operate an efficient machine when the work could be
performed equally well by one at half the labor cost. Such an
instrument of transportation, although originally well conceived
and remunerative, should, like machines used in manufacturing, be
scrapped when it becomes wasteful.
Independently of any statute, it is now recognized that when, in
confiscation cases, it is sought to prove actual value by evidence
of reproduction cost, the evidence must be directed to the present
cost of installing such a plant as would be required to supply the
same service. For valuation of public utilities by reproduction
cost implies that
"the rates permitted should be high enough to allow a reasonable
percent of return on the money that would now be required to
construct a plant capable of rendering the desired service,"
and does not mean "that the plant should be valued at what would
now be needed to
Page 279 U. S. 518
duplicate the plant precisely." [
Footnote 52] Proof of value by evidence of reproduction
cost presupposes that a plant like that being valued would then be
constructed. To the extent that a railroad employs instruments
which are inconsistent with efficiency, the plant would not be
constructed, and, because of the inefficient part, the railroad is
obviously not then worth the cost of reconstructing the identical
plant. While a part often has some service value, although not
efficient according to the existing standard, its use may involve
such heavy, unnecessary operating expense as to render it valueless
for ratemaking purposes under § 15a. The Commission, when
requested to consider evidence of reproduction cost, must therefore
examine the value of every part of the plant, and that of the whole
plant, as compared with the value of a modern, efficient plant.
Upon such consideration, the Commission may conclude that the
railroad is so largely obsolete in construction and equipment as to
render evidence of the reproduction cost of the identical plant of
no probative force whatsoever. The duty so to deal with the
evidence seems to flow necessarily from the rejection by the court
of prudent investment as the measure of value, and the adoption,
instead, of the actual value of the property at the time of the
rate hearing as the governing rule of substantive law.
Page 279 U. S. 519
The physical deterioration of a railroad plant through wear and
tear may be very small as compared with a plant new, while its
functional deterioration may be very large as compared with a
modern efficient plant. This lessening of service value may be due
to any one of several causes. It may, in the first place, be due to
causes wholly external. Freight terminals, originally well
conceived and wisely located in the heart of a city, may have
become valueless for ratemaking purposes under § 15a because,
through growth of the city, the expense of operating therein has
become so high, or the inescapable cost of eliminating grade
crossings so large, that efficient management requires immediate
abandonment of the terminals. [
Footnote 53] And, even if the cost of continuing
operation there is not so high as to require abandonment, the
property may have, for ratemaking purposes, a value far below its
market value. [
Footnote 54]
Compare 186 U. S.
Louis
Page 279 U. S. 520
R. Co. v. Minnesota, 186 U. S. 257,
186 U. S. 268;
Willcox v. Consolidated Gas Co., 212 U. S.
19,
212 U. S.
52.
The lessening of the service value of a part of the railroad
plant may flow from changes in the volume or character of its
traffic. For economy and efficiency are obviously to be determined
with reference to the business of the carrier then being done and
about to be done. [
Footnote
55] A station warehouse for less-than-carload freight may have
become valueless for ratemaking purposes because, through motor
competition, the railroad had lost substantially all its
less-than-carload business at that point. Large reductions in the
value of passenger stations and equipment may have resulted from
decline in the passenger traffic. Branch lines may lose all their
service value, so that they should be abandoned because motor
transportation has become more efficient. On the other hand, the
traffic may have grown so much as to render inefficient a part of
a
Page 279 U. S. 521
line originally wisely constructed with heavy grades [
Footnote 56] or curves. [
Footnote 57] In that event, economy
and efficiency will demand elimination of the grades and curves,
and may even
Page 279 U. S. 522
require the building of tunnels or a cut-off. [
Footnote 58] Insofar as such a condition
exists, the railroad would obviously not be reconstructed with the
heavy grades and curves, [
Footnote 59] and, when considering the reconstruction
cost of the whole
Page 279 U. S. 523
property, that part of the line must be given merely scrap
value.
Compare Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. United
States, 231 U. S. 423.
Perhaps the most common cause of the lessening of service value
of parts of railroad plants originally well conceived and still in
good physical condition is the progress in the art of rail
transportation. Science and invention have wrought since June 30,
1914, such extraordinary improvements in the types of automobiles
and aeroplanes that no one would contend that the present service
value of such machines should be ascertained by inquiring what
their original cost was or what their reproduction cost would be.
The progress since June 30, 1914, in the art of transportation by
railroad has been less spectacular, but the art has been far from
stagnant. [
Footnote 60] In
railroading, as in other
Page 279 U. S. 524
fields of business, the great rise in the cost of labor and of
supplies, and the need of better service, have stimulated not only
inventions, but also their utilization. Through technological
advances, instruments of transportation with largely increased
efficiency and economy have been developed. The price of lower
operating costs is the scrapping of those parts of the plant which
progress in the art render obsolete. [
Footnote 61] The present greatly increased efficiency of
the railroads as compared with 1920, their greatly improved credit,
and their present prosperity, are, in large measure, due to the
advances made toward introducing the improved instruments of rail
transportation which have become available. [
Footnote 62] Obviously much remains to be
done.
Page 279 U. S. 525
The extent of this technological progress may be illustrated by
the modern locomotive. The development of the superheater, the
mechanical stoker, the booster, and other devises, the increase in
the size of the boiler, and other radical changes in size, weight,
and design have resulted in the production of engines which are
recognized by railway experts as having set such an entirely new
standard of efficiency in fuel consumption, [
Footnote 63] in tractive power, [
Footnote 64] and in speed [
Footnote 65] as to render wasteful, under
many conditions,
Page 279 U. S. 526
the use of older locomotives, no matter how good their
condition. Statistics as to actual performances of the locomotive
of today, as compared with that built but a few days ago,
graphically illustrate this great advance in efficiency. [
Footnote 66]
Its economics are compelling. But important changes in roadway
and equipment are conditions of its effective use. Heavier
locomotives make greater demands on the road structure which carry
them. To obviate large maintenance expenses attendant upon frequent
repair and replacement, the roadway must be made more durable.
[
Footnote 67] To
Page 279 U. S. 527
this end, rails of heavier section [
Footnote 68] and of increased length are adopted.
[
Footnote 69] Anti-creepers
are freely used to prevent rail movement. [
Footnote 70] Larger ties are selected, and they
are treated to prevent deterioration. [
Footnote 71] Ballast is made deeper and heavier, and
of gravel or stone, rather than of cinders. [
Footnote 72] Bridges are of stronger
construction. [
Footnote 73]
And, to
Page 279 U. S. 528
facilitate the movement of traffic, watering stations [
Footnote 74] and automatic signals
[
Footnote 75] of improved
design are introduced. Moreover, the effective employment of the
modern locomotive involves ordinarily the use of larger cars of
steel construction, displacing the wooden car of small capacity
with which so many of the railroads were equipped in 1914.
[
Footnote 76] Engine
terminals and carshops built prior to 1914 are, in many cases,
inadequate [
Footnote 77] for
the efficient and
Page 279 U. S. 529
economical handling, housing, and repairing of the modern
locomotives and cars, and must be replaced to prevent curtailment
of the productive capacity of the rolling stock by needless idle
hours while awaiting service or repair. [
Footnote 78] And the waste incident to the use of shop
tools and machinery long since rendered obsolete by progress in the
art must be stopped. [
Footnote
79]
Thus, the efficient post-war railroad plant differs widely even
from the efficient one of 1914. That during the recapture period
here in question the plants of most of
Page 279 U. S. 530
the railroads of the United States built before the war were
lacking in improved instruments of transportation made available by
recent progress in the art is of common knowledge. [
Footnote 80] That this is true even today
of many of the railroads will not be denied. [
Footnote 81] To the extent that there is
inefficiency in plant, there was and is functional depreciation,
lessening actual value. That this functional depreciation, arising
through external changes, through
Page 279 U. S. 531
competitive means of transportation, and through progress in the
art of transportation, may, in respect to a particular railroad,
have become so large as to more than counterbalance that increase
in its actual value which would otherwise flow from the rise in the
price level since 1914, seems clear.
It may be urged that the continued use of the inefficient plant,
[
Footnote 82] and the
repairing, rather than replacement of its antiquated parts,
[
Footnote 83] has been due
to lack of capital and
Page 279 U. S. 532
insufficient revenues. [
Footnote 84] Such an excuse for failing to install the
improved plant might have been conclusive if prudent investment had
been accepted as the measure of value. But the fact that the
management may have been wholly free from blame in continuing to
use the inefficient parts obviously does not add to their actual
value. The actual value of an existing plant, and the difference
between its value and the present cost of constructing a modern
efficient plant which will render the service, is precisely the
same whether the continued use of the obsolete part was due to lack
of capital, or to lack of good judgment, or to somnolence on the
part of the management. As was said in
Board of Commissioners
v. New York Telephone Co., 271 U. S. 23,
271 U. S. 32:
"Customers pay for service, not for the property used to render
it." Only the then service value of the property is of legal
significance under the rule of
Smyth v. Ames.
It may also be urged that such functional depreciation of the
railroad plant since 1914 is allowed for in the depreciation
customarily estimated by the Commission. But this is not true.
Functional depreciation prior to June 30, 1914, was included when
valuing as of that date
Page 279 U. S. 533
the then property of the railroads. But the instructions of the
Commission provided that functional depreciation arising after that
date should not be considered unless "imminent. " And the
Commission made clear that it did not intend by the term to include
functional depreciation of the character described above arising
from external causes, from the competition of new methods of
transportation, from the extraordinary urban growth, from the need
of new economics arising from the largely increased labor and fuel
costs, and from other incidents of the war and post-war
developments in industry and transportation. Texas Midland R. Co.,
75 I.C.C. 1, 47-52, 124-130.
Compare Depreciation Charges
on Steam Railroads, 118 I.C.C. 295. [
Footnote 85]
If weight is to be given to reproduction cost in making the
valuation of any railroad for ratemaking purposes under § 19a
and § 15a, there must be a determination of the functional
depreciation of the individual plant as compared with a modern,
efficient plant adequate to perform the same service. To make such
a determination for any railroad involves a detailed inquiry into
the character and condition of all those parts of the plant which
may have reduced functional value because of the post-war changes
affecting transportation above referred to, and also into the
character and the volume of the carrier's business. For the
efficient plant means that plant which is economical and efficient
for the particular carrier in view of the peculiar requirements and
possibilities of its own business. To make such a determination
justly, the Commission must have the data on which a competent and
vigilant management would insist when required to pass upon the
advisability of making capital
Page 279 U. S. 534
expenditures. And the Commission would be obliged to give them
the same careful consideration. The determination of the extent of
functional depreciation is thus a very serious task -- a task far
more serious than that of determining merely physical
depreciation.
To make such a determination of functional depreciation annually
for each of the railroads of the United States would be a
stupendous task, involving perhaps prohibitive expense. To make the
necessary decisions promptly would seem impossible, among other
reasons, because railroad valuation is but a small part of the many
duties of the Commission. On the other hand, to adjust rates so as
to render a fair return, and to provide through the recapture
provision funds in aid of the weaker railroad, are tasks which
Congress deemed urgent, and which must be promptly performed if its
purpose is to be achieved. Obviously Congress intended that, in
making the necessary valuations under § 15a, a method should
be pursued by which the task which it imposed upon the Commission
could be performed.
Compare New England Divisions Case,
261 U. S. 184,
261 U. S. 197.
Recognizing this, the Commission construed § 15a as it had
paragraph (f) of § 19a -- that is, as permitting the
Commission to make a basic valuation as of some general date (June
30, 1914, was selected), and, unless good reason to the contrary
appeared, to find the value for any year thereafter by adding to or
subtracting from the 1914 value the net increases or decreases in
the investment in property devoted to transportation service as
determined from the carrier's annual returns with due regard to the
element of depreciation. [
Footnote 86]
Page 279 U. S. 535
Eighth. The significance, in connection with current
reproduction costs, of the requirement in § 15a that value be
ascertained "for ratemaking purposes" as there defined becomes
apparent when the position of railroads in this respect is compared
with that of most local utilities enjoying a monopoly of a
necessary of life. The fundamental question in the
Southwestern
Bell case was one of substantive constitutional law, namely:
is the rate base on which the Constitution guarantees to a public
utility the right to earn a fair return the actual value of the
property at the time of the rate hearing, or is it the cost or
capital prudently invested in the enterprise? The court decided
that the rate base is the actual value at the time of the rate
hearing. That proposition of substantive law the Commission
undertook to apply to the facts presented in the case at bar.
Recognizing that evidence of increased reconstruction costs is
admissible for the purpose of showing an actual value greater than
the original cost or the prudent investment, it found in respect to
some of the carrier's property that the evidence of enhanced
reconstruction cost was persuasive of higher present value. As to
the rest of the property, it held that the evidence was neither
adequate nor persuasive.
Of both railroads and the local utility it is true, under the
rule of substantive law adopted in the
Southwestern Bell
case, that value is the sum on which a fair return can be earned
consistently with the laws of trade and legal enactments. But the
operative scope upon railroads of the limitations so imposed upon
the rates, and
Page 279 U. S. 536
hence upon values, is much greater than in the case of local
utilities. [
Footnote 87]
Rail rates are being constantly curbed by the competition of
markets and of rival means of transportation. Rail rates are curbed
also by the influence of high rates upon the desires of
individuals. The public can, to a considerable extent, do without
rail service. If the rates are excessive, traffic falls off. Thus,
when passenger rates are too high, travel is either curtailed or
people employ other means of transportation. But the service
rendered by a local water company in a populous city is practically
indispensable to every inhabitant. There can be no substitute for
water, and to escape taking the service is practically impossible,
for an alternative means of supply is rarely available. Even the
common business incentive of establishing low prices in order to
induce an enlarged volume of sales is absent, since the volume of
the business done by a water company will not be appreciably
affected by a raising or lowering of the rates, except insofar as
water in quantity is used for manufacturing purposes. In other
words, the commercial limitation upon rates -- what the traffic
will bear -- is to a large extent absent in the case of such a
local monopoly. The city water user must submit to such rates as
the utility chooses to impose, unless they are curbed by
legislative enactment.
The legal limitations upon rates (so potent in the case of
railroads) are, in the main, inoperative in the case of such a
water company. Rail rates are sometimes held illegal because the
exaction is greater than the value of the service to the shipper.
There is in fact no corresponding limitation upon water rates. The
charge is so small, as compared with the inconvenience which would
be
Page 279 U. S. 537
suffered in doing without the service, that the worth to the
water taker could rarely be doubted. The prohibition of
discrimination against persons, places, or articles of commerce
which so frequently interferes to prevent railroads from charging
higher rates, although the traffic would easily bear them, affords
no protection to city water users, and seldom causes a loss of
revenue to the water company. There is in respect to the water
rates no prohibition comparable to that embodied in the long and
short haul clause, which has an important effect in limiting rail
rates. Hence, under the rule of substantive law declared in the
Southwestern Bell case, practically the only limitation
imposed upon water rates is the denial to the utility of rates
which will yield an excessive return upon the actual value of the
property. In applying that rule of substantive law, the then actual
cost of reproducing the plant would (assuming it to be efficient)
commonly be persuasive evidence of its actual value, as the current
cost of reproducing the vessel was held to be in
Standard Oil
Co. v. Southern Pacific Co., 268 U. S. 146,
268 U. S.
156.
It is true that, in the
Southwestern Bell case, the
court passed also upon a subsidiary question -- the weight and
effect of the evidence of reconstruction cost. But the question of
adjective law arose upon a record very different from that in the
case at bar, and the action of the Commission here is entirely
consistent with that decision. In the
Southwestern Bell
case, direct testimony as to the then value of the property was
introduced. The efficiency of the plant was unquestioned. Witnesses
had testified both to the actual cost of constructing identical
property at that time and that the specific property under
consideration was worth at least 25 percent more than the estimate
of the state commission. The Court believed those witnesses.
Concluding that this direct and uncontradicted evidence had been
ignored by the state commission because
Page 279 U. S. 538
of error as to the governing rule of substantive law, this Court
set aside the rate order as confiscatory, saying: "We think the
proof shows that, for the purposes of the present case, the
valuation should be at least $25,000,000." (
262 U. S. 262 U.S.
276,
262 U. S.
288).
The action of the Commission in the case at bar was consistent
also with
McCardle v. Indianapolis Water Co., 272 U.
S. 400, and
Bluefield Water Works Co. v. Public
Service Commission, 262 U. S. 679.
Each of these water companies enjoyed a local monopoly of an
indispensable service. In order to provide a substitute, the
community would have either to take the utility's property by
eminent domain or, if it was free to do so, build a competing
plant. There was practically no commercial limitation upon the
earning power of these water companies except the extent of the
local market, and practically no legal limitation except the
requirement that the rates charged should not be so high as to
yield an excessive return upon the actual value of the utility's
property. The current cost of constructing, then, a plant
substantially like the utility's (assuming it to be efficient)
would be persuasive evidence of its actual value. For, upon that
issue, concerning a local water monopoly, the inquiry would
naturally be: how much would it cost the community to substitute
for the private monopoly a publicly owned plant? But evidence of
the cost of reconstructing a railroad built before 1914 might, for
the reasons stated above, be no indication whatever of its postwar
value for ratemaking purposes under § 15a. And where, as in
the case at bar, the probative force of the evidence may be
considered free from any question of confiscation, the rule
declared in
Ohio Valley Water Co. v. Ben Avon,
253 U. S. 287,
which requires in confiscation cases a judicial determination on
the weight of the evidence, does not apply.
Ninth. A further question of construction requires
consideration. It is suggested that, even if the Commission
Page 279 U. S. 539
is not required to give effect to the higher price level when
finding values for ratemaking purposes under § 15a, it must do
so when fixing the amount of the excess income to be recaptured
from a particular railroad under paragraphs 6 to 18. The language
of the section affords a short answer to that contention. The
valuation prescribed in paragraph 4 is declared to be "for the
purposes of this section" -- that is, for recapture purposes as
well as for ratemaking. And paragraph 6, which provides for the
recapture, declares: "The value of such railway property shall be
determined by the Commission in the manner provided in paragraph
(4)."
The recapture of excess earnings and the establishment of
reserves are a part of the process of establishing such rates
"that carriers as a whole (or as a whole in each of such rate
groups or territories as the Commission may from time to time
designate) will, under honest, efficient and economical management,
. . . earn an aggregate annual net railway operating income equal,
as nearly as may be, to a fair return upon the aggregate value of
the railway property of such carriers held for and used in the
service of transportation."
Paragraph 2.
The recapture and reserve are the readjustment made
necessary:
"Inasmuch as it is impossible (without regulation and control in
the interest of the commerce of the United States considered as a
whole) to establish uniform rates upon competitive traffic which
will adequately sustain all the carriers which are engaged in such
traffic and which are indispensable to the communities to which
they render the service of transportation, without enabling some of
such carriers to receive a net railway operating income
substantially and unreasonably in excess of a fair return upon the
value of their railway property held for and used in the service of
transportation, it is hereby declared
Page 279 U. S. 540
that any carrier which receives such an income so in excess of a
fair return shall hold such part of the excess, as hereinafter
prescribed, as trustee for, and shall pay it to, the United
States."
(Par. 5.)
Thus, the direction in the order here challenged to pay or
reserve the excess over 6 percent of the amounts earned from 1920
to 1923 by rates established pursuant to Ex parte 74, Increased
Rates, 1920, 58 I.C.C. 220, is merely a readjustment of those
rates.
Tenth. The question remains whether the Commission, in
valuing the structural property acquired before June 30, 1914,
abused its discretion by declining to give effect to the evidence
of enhanced reconstruction cost. [
Footnote 88] The O'Fallon insists that the Commission in
fact adopted a mathematical formula; that it declined to determine
the present value of the carrier's property in accordance with
"the flexible and rational rule of
Smyth v. Ames, under
which value is a matter of judgment to be determined by a
consideration of all relevant facts and circumstances;"
that it erected "an arbitrary standard of its own based on no
relevant facts;" that, if it had given consideration to all
relevant facts and circumstances, including as one its cost of
reproduction at current prices, "the value found must have been
substantially higher;" and that its primary purpose was to
determine the amount of the investment in the carriers' property.
In short, the O'Fallon asserts that the Commission refused to find
actual value, and, instead, found the prudent investment.
Page 279 U. S. 541
In support of this assertion, the O'Fallon points to the
statement in the report that
"the value of the property of railroads for ratemaking purposes
. . . approaches more nearly the reasonable and necessary
investment in the property than the cost of reproducing it at a
particular time."
(Page. 41.) The statement just quoted does not mean that the
Commission accepted prudent investment as a measure of value. It
means merely that the Commission deemed the estimated original cost
a better indication of actual value than the estimated
reconstruction cost. While this Court declared in the
Southwestern Bell case that prudent investment is not to
be taken as the measure of value, it has never held that prudent
investment may not be accepted as evidence of value, or that a
finding of value is necessarily erroneous if it happens to be more
nearly coincident with what may be supposed to have been the cost
of the property than with its estimated reproduction cost. The
single-sum values found by the Commission do not coincide either
with the estimated prudent investment or with the estimated
reconstruction cost. They are much nearer the estimated original
cost of the property than they are to its estimated reproduction
cost. But the values found do not conform to any formula. [
Footnote 89]
Page 279 U. S. 542
The general method pursued by the Commission in reaching its
conclusion closely resembles that approved by the Court in
Georgia Ry. & Power Co. v. Railroad Commission,
262 U. S. 625,
262 U. S.
629-630. It appeared that the O'Fallon Railroad had been
constructed long prior to June 30, 1914. The Commission had before
it
"the cost of reproduction new of the structural portion of this
property estimated on the basis of our 1914 unit prices, coupled
with the knowledge that costs of reproduction so arrived at were
not greatly different from the original costs."
As bearing upon the value of those parts of the railroad's
property which were added or replaced later, the Commission had the
actual cost. As bearing on the then value of the railroad land, it
had current values of adjacent lands. It had evidence concerning
the railroad and the character and volume of its traffic, the
working capital, revenues, and expenses. It had evidence of
increased price levels after 1914 and estimates of current
reproduction costs during the recapture periods.
The carrier insisted that physically the property had
appreciated more than it had depreciated, and urged the Commission
to take as the basic measure of value the "cost of reproduction new
at current prices to the exclusion of everything else, or at least
of everything that might tend to a lower value." 124 I.C.C. 28.
This the Commission declined to do. It gave full effect to
increased current market values in determining the value of the
land. It gave to the additions and betterments made after June 30,
1914, a value approximating their cost less physical depreciation.
[
Footnote 90] But, in
respect to structural
Page 279 U. S. 543
property and equipment acquired before June 30, 1914, it
declined to give weight to the evidence introduced to show current
reproduction costs greater than those of 1914. It concluded,
despite the estimates of higher reconstruction costs, that, except
for the additions, the actual value of this part of the O'Fallon
Railroad had not increased, and it found the single sum value for
ratemaking purposes in 1920 to be $856,065; in 1921, $875,360; in
1922, $978,874; in 1923, $978,246.
The Commission recognized, as stated in
Minnesota Rate
Cases, 230 U. S. 352,
230 U. S. 434,
that the determination of value is "not a matter of formulas, but
there must be a reasonable judgment having its basis in a proper
consideration of all relevant facts."
Georgia Ry. & Power
Co. v. Railroad Commission, 262 U. S. 625,
262 U. S. 630.
It states that
"it considered and weighed carefully, in the light of its own
knowledge and experience, each fact, circumstance, and condition
called to its attention on behalf of the carrier,"
as well as the evidence otherwise introduced, and that,
"from this accumulation of information, we have formed our
judgments as to the fair basic single-sum values, not by the use of
any formula, but after consideration of all relevant facts."
The report makes clear that its finding was the result of an
exercise of judgment upon all the evidence; that the Commission
accorded to the evidence of reconstruction cost all the probative
force to which it deemed that evidence entitled on the issue of
actual value, and that it considered, as bearing upon value, not
only the probable cost and the estimated reproduction cost, but
also "descriptions of the carrier, of its traffic, of the territory
in which it operates, its history, and summaries of the results of
its operation." (P. 25.)
The difficulties by which the Commission was confronted when
requested to apply the evidence of reproduction cost can hardly be
exaggerated. In the first place, the evidence was of such a
character that it did
Page 279 U. S. 544
not satisfactorily establish what would have been the current
cost of reproduction during the recapture periods. [
Footnote 91] During the years here in
question, there was practically no construction of new lines.
[
Footnote 92] Thus, the
current cost of reproduction for those years had to be obtained by
using index figures as the basis for a guess as to what it would
cost to build then the identical railroad. To give
Page 279 U. S. 545
to such figures effect as proving what it would then have cost
to reproduce the O'Fallon Railroad, it must be assumed that there
had not been introduced since June 30, 1914, new cost-saving
methods of construction which would overcome, in whole or in part,
the effect of the higher price level upon the cost of reproducing
the identical property. This, in view of its experience, the
Commission properly declined to do. [
Footnote 93] In the second place, there was a lack of
evidence to show to what extent, if any, higher reconstruction
cost, in the several recapture periods, implied a value higher than
that theretofore prevailing. [
Footnote 94] The Commission believed that it could act
only on proof, that it was not required or permitted to base
findings on conjecture, and that to assign, under the
circumstances, any weight to the evidence of reconstruction cost
would be mere conjecture.
Moreover, the Commission had, through its valuation department,
special knowledge of the property of this carrier. It had acquired
necessarily in the performance of its many duties the general
knowledge, already referred to,
Page 279 U. S. 546
concerning changes in transportation conditions and of the
advances in the art, and it knew how great was their effect upon
the actual values of railroad property. The value of the O'Fallon
Railway not having been finally ascertained under § 19a, it
was obliged by paragraph 4 to utilize "the results of its
investigation under § 19a of this Act insofar as deemed by it
available." The evidence introduced in the recapture proceedings
showed, among other things, that of the five locomotives in the
O'Fallon's service December 31, 1920, one had been built as early
as 1874, and that their average age was 20.8 years; also that the
aggregate outlays for additions and betterments in the railroad,
less small retirements, had in eleven years been only $98,148.25.
The O'Fallon did not introduce any evidence bearing upon functional
depreciation of the property. The Commission may reasonably have
concluded that, even if there had been introduced persuasive
evidence that the cost, during the recapture periods, of
reproducing new the identical plant approximated the rise in the
general price level, still the actual value of the O'Fallon
Railway, as it existed June 30, 1914, had not increased, because
the functional depreciation plus the physical depreciation since
that date counterbalanced fully what otherwise might have been the
higher value of the plant.
The O'Fallon urged that its large net earnings during the
recapture periods and earlier fully established a higher value,
independently of the evidence of reproduction cost. This contention
ignores the peculiar character of the property. The railroad, which
is owned by the Adolphus Busch estate and family and lies wholly in
Illinois, operates about 9 miles of main line from two coal mines,
also owned by the Busch estate and family, to the tracks of the
Terminal Company in East St. Louis. There are 12 miles of yardage
tracks, located largely at the Busch mines. While the railroad is
legally a common carrier, it is actually
Page 279 U. S. 547
an industrial railroad. Ninety-nine percent of its revenues are
derived directly from the carriage of coal, and, of the remaining 1
percent, about half appears to come from a payment of $300 a month
made by the Busch Coal Company for carrying its miners to and from
its mines. Besides the coal from the Busch mines, there is a
substantial but diminishing amount carried under a long-time
contract from two mines located on an electric road, the East St.
Louis & Suburban Railway, which crosses the O'Fallon. This coal
it carries from the junction to East St. Louis.
See St.
Louis & O'Fallon Ry. Co. v. East St. Louis & Suburban Ry.
Co., 81 I.C.C. 538. Obviously the value of this railroad property
is wholly dependent upon the operation of the mines.
How long the four mines will continue to be operated was and
still is entirely uncertain. Their product is subject to the
competition of 221 other bituminous coal mines in Illinois. These,
which are all located on other railroads, enjoy low rates to St.
Louis.
See Perry Coal Co. v. Alton & Southern R. Co.,
5 Illinois Commerce Commission 461. The vicissitudes of coal
mining, the diminishing use of coal since the war because of
increased fuel efficiency, the competition of oil as fuel, and the
growing use of hydroelectric power are matters of common knowledge,
as are the diminishing operations during recent years of the
Illinois coal mines as compared with the mines in nonunion
territory. [
Footnote 95]
Moreover, the decline in the volume of traffic, the reduction in
coal rates made by Reduced Rates, 1922, 68 I.C.C. 676, and the
growing expenses of the carrier due to increased payroll were put
in evidence by it. In view of these facts, the Commission was
clearly justified in refusing to find that the railroad had a
higher value than in 1914, although the net earning
Page 279 U. S. 548
as reported showed a return for the earlier period averaging 7
1/2 percent upon the amount claimed as reproduction cost.
This Court has no concern with the correctness of the
Commission's reasoning on the evidence in making its findings of
fact, since it applied the rules of substantive law prescribed by
Congress and reached its findings of actual value by the exercise
of its judgment upon all the evidence, including enhanced
construction costs.
Virginian Ry. Co. v. United States,
272 U. S. 658,
272 U. S.
665-666;
Assigned Car Cases, 274 U.
S. 564,
274 U. S. 580.
We must bear in mind that here we are not dealing with a question
of confiscation; that we are dealing, as was pointed out in
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466,
169 U. S. 527,
with a legislative question which can
"be more easily determined by a Commission composed of persons
whose special skill, observation, and experience qualifies them to
so handle great problems of transportation as to do justice both to
the public and to those whose money has been used to construct and
maintain highways for the convenience and benefit of the
people."
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES and MR. JUSTICE STONE join in this
opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
See Report of Senate Committee reporting S. 3288,
Report No. 307, p. 19, 66th Congress, 1st Session:
"The Company reserve fund may be drawn upon by the carrier
whenever its annual railway operating income falls below 6 percent
of the values of the property. The reserve fund is, of course, the
absolute property of the carrier, and the purpose in requiring it
to be established and maintained is to give stability to the credit
of the carrier and enable it to render more efficiently the public
service in which it is engaged."
[
Footnote 2]
The complaint concerns all the structural property and equipment
acquired before June 30, 1919. But, as nearly all of this had been
installed before July 1, 1914, the discussion is limited to the
property acquired before that date.
[
Footnote 3]
Compare Best on Evidence (7th Eng. ed.) §§
69, 70;
Manley v. Georgia, 279 U. S.
1.
[
Footnote 4]
See Interstate Commerce Commission v. Union Pacific R.
Co., 222 U. S. 541,
222 U. S. 547;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville & Nashville R.
Co., 227 U. S. 88,
227 U. S. 92;
Florida East Coast R. Co. v. United States, 234 U.
S. 167;
New England Divisions Case,
261 U. S. 184,
261 U. S.
203.
[
Footnote 5]
See Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville &
Nashville R. Co., 227 U. S. 88,
227 U. S. 93;
Chicago Junction Case, 264 U. S. 258,
264 U. S.
263.
[
Footnote 6]
See Texas & P. R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 162 U. S. 197;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Alabama Midland R. Co.,
168 U. S. 144;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Northern Pacific R. Co.,
216 U. S. 538.
[
Footnote 7]
See Florida East Coast R. Co. v. United States,
234 U. S. 167,
234 U. S. 187;
Central R. Co. v. United States, 257 U.
S. 247.
[
Footnote 8]
Alleged errors of the Interstate Commerce Commission in weighing
evidence or drawing inferences therefrom have been urged as grounds
for reversal in many cases. This Court has consistently held that
the Commission's decisions as to such matters are not the proper
subject for judicial review.
See, e.g., Cincinnati, etc., R.
Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 206 U.
S. 142,
206 U. S. 154;
Illinois Central R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
206 U. S. 441;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
215 U. S. 452,
215 U. S. 470;
Los Angeles Switching Case, 234 U.
S. 294;
United States v. New River Co.,
265 U. S. 533;
Western Paper Makers' Chemical Co. v. United States,
271 U. S. 268;
Virginian R. Co. v. United States, 272 U.
S. 658;
Chicago P. I. & P. R. Co. v. United
States, 274 U. S. 29;
Assigned Car Cases, 274 U. S. 564. The
following excerpts from recent opinions succinctly express the
Court's position in the matter:
"The courts will not review determinations of the Commission
made within the scope of its powers or substitute their judgment
for its findings and conclusions."
United States v. New River Co., 265 U.
S. 533,
265 U. S. 542.
"To consider the weight of the evidence is beyond our province."
Western Paper Makers' Chemical Co. v. United States,
271 U. S. 268,
271 U. S.
271
"This Court has no concern with the correctness of the
Commission's reasoning, with the soundness of its conclusions, or
with the alleged inconsistency with findings made in other
proceedings before it."
Virginian R. Co. v. United States, 272 U.
S. 658,
272 U. S.
665-666.
"But 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."
Chicago, R.I. & P. R. Co. v. United States,
274 U. S. 29,
274 U. S.
33-34.
[
Footnote 9]
The Puget Sound extension of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St.
Paul Railway was completed in 1909 at a cost of about $257,000,000.
It earned, during fifteen years, little more than operating
expenses. As late as 1925, its net operating income was "only about
one-half of 1 percent on this investment." Investigation of
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R. Co., 313 I.C.C. 615, 617, 619,
621. The upset cash price fixed by the court in the foreclosure
proceeding was $42,500,000.
Guaranty Trust Co. v. Chicago, M.
& St.P. R. Co., 15 F.2d
434, 443.
Another striking example of the discrepancy often existing
between market price or actual value and reproduction cost is to be
found in the case of the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton Railroad,
which Mr. Ford purchased in 1920 for $6,800,000. It was said to
have a physical value of between $16,000,000 and $20,000,000.
Railway Age, Vol. 69.1, p. 132.
In an order granting, on March 8, 1929, the application of the
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway to abandon its
Middle Tennessee & Alabama branch, which had been in operation
more than thirty years, the Interstate Commerce Commission said:
"The applicant contends that the project was poorly conceived and
doomed to failure from the outset." Abandonment of Middle Tenn.
& Ala. Branch by Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry.,
150 I.C.C. 539, 540.
"But cost of reproduction obviously does not measure value in
the sense of what a purchaser would pay for a property. Let the
owners of the old Wabash Pittsburgh Terminal put their road upon
the market to prove the truth of this assertion."
Homer D. Vanderblue in Railway Age, 1920, Vol. 68.2, p.
1105.
[
Footnote 10]
Motor Bus and Motor Truck Operation, 140 I.C.C. 685, 727.
See Annual Reports of the Commission 1921, p. 19; 1922, p.
219; 1923, p. 237; 1924, p. 253; 1925, p. 263; 1926, p. 286; 1927,
p. 294; 1928, p. 298.
[
Footnote 11]
Motor competition had to some extent been a factor in such
abandonments. For instances arising since October 31, 1927,
see Abandonment of Potato Creek R. Co., 131 I.C.C. 481,
482; Pennsylvania R. Co., 131 I.C.C. 547, 548; Grand Rapids &
Indiana Ry. Co., 138 I.C.C. 345; Spokane, Coeur d'Alene &
Palouse Ry. Co., 138 I.C.C. 722, 723; Illinois Traction, Inc., 145
I.C.C. 20; Western Maryland Ry. Co., 145 I.C.C. 232; Southern Ry.
Co., 145 I.C.C. 355; St. Louis-San Francisco Ry., 145 I.C.C. 379,
383; Pere Marquette Ry. Co., 145 I.C.C. 560, 561; Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific Ry. Co., 145 I.C.C. 698, 699; Southern Pacific
Co., 145 I.C.C. 705, 707.
Compare Hill City Ry. Co., 150
I.C.C. 159.
[
Footnote 12]
Senator Cummins stated that the cost of living was then from 80
to 100 percent above prewar prices. 59 Cong.Rec. pt. I, p. 129.
See also Senate Committee Hearings, vol. 148, pt. II, p.
277; House Committee Hearings, Vol. 232, pt. I, pp. 376, 377.
[
Footnote 13]
Senator Cummins said:
"I think there are a great many instances in which the
investment accounts are larger than any possible value that could
be attributed to the property."
59 Cong.Rec. pt. 1, p. 126. "My own judgment is, however, that
the value of the properties is less than the aggregate investment
accounts. . . ." Pp 135-136. For other expressions of opinion to
the same effect,
see pp. 224, 228, 905. Senator Cummins
stated that the aggregate of the investment accounts was about
$19,000,000,000. P. 127.
See also p. 130.
Compare
Mr. Esch, 59 Cong.Rec. pt. 4, p. 3269.
[
Footnote 14]
The Commission says (Excess Income of St. Louis & O'Fallon
Ry. Co., 124 I.C.C. 39):
"In this connection, it is significant that, when the
legislation of 1920, of which § 15a is a part, was under
congressional consideration, there was offered in behalf of the
carriers a proposed bill in which their recorded investment in road
and equipment was made the sole element in the determination of the
rate base. It is also worthy of note that, when the legislation of
1920 was under such consideration, a representative of this
Commission, on September 26, 1919, in response to a question,
publicly informed the congressional committee that he knew of no
warrant for an assumption 'that the Commission will base the value
of the property wholly or in part on present prices.'"
The investment in road and equipment as stated on the books of
the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railroad Company (of Kansas)
as of June 30, 1919, was $22,190,935. The final valuation by the
Commission as of that date was $6,453,528. After that date,
$1,064,782 was expended for additions and betterments, making a
total value of $7,518,310. The Kansas City, Mexico & Orient of
Texas (with expenditures for additions) was valued at $6,854,522.
Kansas City, Mexico & Orient R. Co., 135 I.C.C. 217; Kansas
City, Mexico & Orient Reorganization, 145 I.C.C. 339, 334.
These properties, with an aggregate book value of $9,045,457 were
valued by the Commission at $14,372,832 and, with 320 miles of road
in Mexico added, were purchased by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa
Fe Railroad for $14,507,500.
See Control of Kansas City,
Mexico & Orient Ry. Co., 145 I.C.C. 350.
[
Footnote 15]
See note 14
[
Footnote 16]
Excess Income of St. Louis & O'Fallon Ry. Co., 124 I.C.C. 3,
32.
[
Footnote 17]
Contemporary opinion of the railroads to this effect was
expressed in their behalf in the hearings held before the
Interstate Commerce Commission on March 22-24, 1920 (Hearings, In
re: § 422 of the Transportation Act, Ex parte 71, p. 134).
[
Footnote 18]
"The writer of this report is firmly convinced that, when the
government assumed the operation of the railways, they were, taken
as a whole, earning all that they should be permitted to earn; but,
in the inevitable distribution of these earnings among the various
railway companies, the railways which carried 30 percent of the
traffic were earning so little that they could not, by any economy
or good management, sustain themselves."
Senate Reports, No. 304, vol. 1, 66th Cong. 1st Sess. A rate
base which reflected the then increase in price levels over 1914
would have yielded about $700,000,000 more than the income of the
test period.
[
Footnote 19]
Senator Kellogg, in the debate on the bill, justified the 5 1/2
percent return by the same argument as used by the Committee in
reporting the bill:
"Again, it must be remembered that 5 1/2 percent today is not
equal to 5 1/2 percent five years age. The great inflation of
currency and the general rise in all commodities have made a dollar
very much less in purchasing power."
59 Cong.Rec. pt. 1, p. 224. The same recognition of increased
costs had been given as a justification for the liberal return
authorized by the Federal Control Act. 1916 and 1917, two of the
three years taken as a basis for measuring the return, were the
most prosperous in the history of the railroads.
See 56
Cong.Rec. pt. II, p. 2021.
[
Footnote 20]
Mr. Esch, in submitting the conference report to the House,
said:
"Investors want something definite and fixed upon which they can
reckon. The provisions of § 422 give that stability, that
standard which, I trust, will encourage investment. . . ."
59 Cong.Rec. pt. 4, p. 3269. The Commission points out (p.
32):
"In other words, assuming a static property [valued at
$18,000,000,000], there would have been a gain of 23.4 billions in
1920, a loss of 6.3 billions in 1921, a further loss of 6.8
billions in 1922, and a gain again of 3 billions in 1923. These
huge 'profits' and 'losses' would have occurred without change in
the railroad property used in the public service other than the
theoretical and speculative change derived from a shifting of
general price levels."
[
Footnote 21]
"During the seven years 1920 to 1926, inclusive, there was an
approximate net investment in additions and betterments and new
construction of 4 billions. These were paid for at then current
prices, all above, in many cases far above, present prices.
Assuming that there has since been an average decline in unit price
level of 25 percent, a valuation under the current reproduction
cost doctrine would wipe out one billion of that additional
investment. The effect upon any railroad entirely or largely
constructed during the period 1920 to 1926 may be imagined."
(Page 32.)
[
Footnote 22]
The value of the plant is
"a result of the rates, rather than a basis for rates. . . . If
rates are established upon a basis of reproduction cost, value will
tend to approximate such cost, but this will be through the
operation of economic law, and not because a certain figure has
been decreed as value."
F. G. Dorety, "The Function of Reproduction Cost," 37 Harvard
Law Rev. 173, 189.
Compare Monongahela Navigation Co. v. United
States, 148 U. S. 312,
148 U. S. 328;
Cleveland, C.C. & St.L. Ry. Co. v. Backus,
154 U. S. 439,
154 U. S. 445;
1 Taussig, Principles of Economics, 115; Laughlin, Elements of
Political Economy, pp. 75-77.
[
Footnote 23]
Large increases had been made theretofore. A general rate
increase of 5 percent in 1914, Five Per Cent Case, 31 I.C.C. 351;
32 I.C.C. 325; 15 percent in 1917, Fifteen Per Cent Case, 45 I.C.C.
303, and 25 percent in 1918, General Order of Director General, No.
28.
[
Footnote 24]
They had been raised 40 percent before.
[
Footnote 25]
See Rate Reductions, House Doc. No. 115, 67th Congress,
1st Session,
e.g., p. 7:
"Reductions in all rates on iron ore throughout the so-called
eastern territory, including generally points east of the
Mississippi and north of the Potomac and Ohio Rivers, including, of
course, ex-Lake ore moving from Lake Erie ports. These reductions
will eliminate all increases effected under Ex parte 74, and it is
conservatively estimated the amount will reach in round figures
$5,000,000 per year."
For instances of important reductions made by the carriers
voluntarily,
see Smelter Products from Nevada & Utah,
61 I.C.C. 374; Grain from Illinois Points to New Orleans, 69 I.C.C.
38; Copper -- Duquesne Reduction Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 96
I.C.C. 351, 354-355.
[
Footnote 26]
Railway Age 1924, vol. 76.1, p. 726.
[
Footnote 27]
Letter of Chairman Hall to Senator E.D. Smith, May 28, 1924, 68
Cong.Rec. pt. 10, p. 10275.
[
Footnote 28]
Revenue per 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927
Ton mile (cents) 1.291 1.194 1.132 1.132 1.114 1.096 1.095
Passenger mile (cents) 3.093 3.037 3.026 2.985 2.944 2.941
2.901
Annual Report of the Interstate Commerce Commission for 1928, p.
115.
It is impossible to say to what extent this persistent shrinkage
has been the result of miscellaneous rate adjustments and to what
extent to fluctuations in character of traffic. Statistics of
Railways in the United States, I.C.C.1927, p. X.
[
Footnote 29]
The fair return for the first two years was fixed by Congress at
5 1/2 percent, and the Commission was authorized to add one-half of
1 percent for improvements, betterments, and equipment. This
additional allowance was granted in Ex parte 74, 58 I.C.C. 220. For
the rest of the period, it was prescribed by the Commission at 5
3/4 percent Reduced Rates 1922, 68 I.C.C. 676, 683. The rate of
return calculated on Ex parte 74 value of the railroads as a whole
brought down to date, was:
1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928
Percent 3.2 4.0 5.1 4.9 5.5 5.8 5.1 5.5
The return on that basis in the Southern group has in most years
exceeded that prescribed as fair. In the Eastern group, the return
has, since 1924, exceeded that prescribed. In the Western groups,
the prescribed return appears never to have been reached.
Compare Bonbright, "Economic Merits of Original Cost and
Reproduction Cost," 41 Harvard Law Review, 593, 618.
[
Footnote 30]
Trunk-Line & Ex-Lake Iron Ore Rates, 69 I.C.C. 589, 610-611;
Import and Domestic Rates on Vegetable Oils, 78 I.C.C. 421; Grain
& Grain Products from Kansas and Missouri to Gulf Ports, 115
I.C.C. 153, 164; Grain & Grain Products to Eastern Points, 122
I.C.C. 551, 563-564; Lake Cargo Coal, 139 I.C.C. 367, 392-395.
See Rates from Atlantic Seaboard, 61 I.C.C. 740; Salt from
Louisiana Mines, 66 I.C.C. 81; Coal to Kansas City, 66 I.C.C. 457;
Coal from Wyoming Mines, 68 I.C.C. 254; Coal from Southwest, 73
I.C.C. 536; Transcontinental cases of 1922, 74 I.C.C. 48; Canned
Goods from Pacific Coast, 132 I.C.C. 520; Cement in Carloads, etc.,
140 I.C.C. 579, 582.
Compare Henry Wolf Bikle, "Power of
the Interstate Commerce Commission to Prescribe Minimum Rates," 36
Harvard Law Rev. 5, 30.
[
Footnote 31]
See Smelter Products from Nevada and Utah, 61 I.C.C.
374; Coal from Illinois to Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas, 68
I.C.C. 1; Coal from Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia, 68
I.C.C. 29; Rates from Chicago via Panama Canal, 68 I.C.C. 74; Grain
from Illinois Points to New Orleans, 69 I.C.C. 38; Trunk-Line and
Ex-Lake Iron Ore Rates, 69 I.C.C. 589; Sugar cases of 1922, 81
I.C.C. 448; Grain to Texas, 96 I.C.C. 727; Pig Iron from Southern
Points, 104 I.C.C. 27; Grain and Grain Products from Western
states, 104 I.C.C. 272; Coal to Cincinnati, 123 I.C.C. 561. The
suspension docket for the calendar year, 1928, shows that, of the
cases in which rates proposed by the carrier were permitted to
become effective without suspension, after protest, 81 were
reductions of existing rates and 93 were increases.
[
Footnote 32]
Compare F. G. Dorety, "The Function of Reproduction
Cost," 37 Harvard Law Review, 173, 194.
[
Footnote 33]
Transportation Act Feb. 28, 1920, c. 91, § 500, 41 Stat.
456, 499:
"It is hereby declared 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."
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry. Co. v. United
States, 274 U. S. 29,
274 U. S. 36.
Compare Transcontinental Cases of 1922, 74 I.C.C. 48;
United States War Department v. Abilene, etc., Ry. Co., 77 I.C.C.
317; 92 I.C.C. 528; Houston Cotton Exchange & Board of Trade v.
Arcade, etc., Corp., 87 I.C.C. 392; 93 I.C.C. 268; Reduced
Commodity Rates to Pacific Coast, 89 I.C.C. 512; Southern Class
Rate Investigation, 100 I.C.C. 513; Commodity Rates to Pacific
Coast Terminals, 107 I.C.C. 421; Consolidated Southwestern cases,
123 I.C.C. 203; Canned Goods from Pacific Coast, 132 I.C.C. 520;
Tin Plate to Sacramento, 140 I.C.C. 643; American Hawaiian S.S. Co.
v. Erie R. Co. C.o., 152 I.C.C. 703.
[
Footnote 34]
The Panama Canal Act, Aug. 24, 1912, c. 390, § 11, 37 Stat.
566, now incorporated in the Interstate Commerce Act as paragraph
10 of § 5 (
see Transportation Act Feb. 28, 1920, c.
91, § 408, 41 Stat. 482), prohibits any railroad from having
any interest "in any common carrier by water operated through the
Panama Canal or elsewhere with which said railroad . . . does or
may compete for traffic."
Compare Application of United
States Steel Products Co., 57 I.C.C. 513; 77 I.C.C. 685; 151 I.C.C.
577.
[
Footnote 35]
The Cape Cod Canal purchased pursuant to Act of Jan 21, 1927, c.
47, § 2, 44 Stat. 1015, resulted in the elimination of tolls
and an immediate large increase in vessel traffic. "The use of the
canal under present conditions will undoubtedly operate to reduce
freight rates." Report of Chief of Engineers to the Secretary of
War, Oct. 2, 1928, p. 76. The Chesapeake and Delaware Canal was
acquired and improved pursuant to Act of March 2, 1919, c. 95,
§ 1, 40 Stat. 1277, and Act of Jan. 21, 1927, c. 47, § 3,
44 Stat. 1016.
"The opening of the canal at sea level to navigation within the
limits of the dimensions authorized under the project has resulted
in increasing the number and size of vessels passing through. New
vessels to take advantage of the increased facilities are being
constructed. Freight rates have been lowered as a result of the
increased competition between carriers. Its effect on rail rates is
to hold them at a minimum."
Annual Report of Chief of Engineers to the Secretary of War,
Oct. 2, 1928, pp. 408, 410.
See Proposed Intracoastal
Waterway from Boston, Massachusetts to the Rio Grande, Act of March
3, 1909, c. 264, § 13, 35 Stat. 822; Letters of Secretary of
War transmitting to Congress letters from the Chief of Engineers on
Surveys, House Doc. 391, January 5, 1912, 62 Cong.2d Sess.; House
Doc. 229, September 11, 1913, 63 Cong. 1 st Sess.; House Doc. 233,
September 11, 1913, 63 Cong. 1st Sess.; House Doc. 610, January 17,
1914, 63 Cong.2d Sess.; House Doc. 1147, June 3, 1918, 65 Cong.2d
Sess.; House Doc. 238, April 12, 1924, 68 Cong. 1st Sess.; Senate
Doc. 179, December 8, 1924, 68 Cong.2d Sess.; House Doc. 586,
December 14, 1926, 69 Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 36]
The river improvements on the Ohio, the Mississippi, and the
Warrior Rivers, and the creation of the government owned Inland
Waterways Corporation to operate barge lines, has been followed by
legislation requiring the railroads to join in through routes and
joint rates and providing for differentials. Act of May 29, 1928,
c. 891, § 3(e), 45 Stat. 980. Although barge lines are still
limited in their sphere of operation, the through routes with
differentials applied for by the Inland Waterways Corporation and
ordered by the Commission pursuant to the direction of Congress
cover a large part of the United States. Ex parte 96, 153 I.C.C.
129, 132.
Compare Annual Report Inland Waterways
Corporation, 1928.
[
Footnote 37]
For an instance of the effect of harbor improvement in
increasing coastwise shipping and thereby reducing rail rates,
see Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers (1928) upon
Miami, p. 722: "The completion of the 20-foot project has had a
pronounced effect on railroad and water transportation rates." The
domestic water-borne commerce on the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific
Coasts rose from 114,557,241 tons in 1920 to 231,530,937 tons in
1927. The tonnage on the rivers, canals, and connecting channels
rose from 125,400,000 in 1920 to 219,000,000 in 1927. Annual Report
of the Chief of Engineers for 1928, Commercial Statistics, p. 3. On
the New York State canals, the tonnage increased steadily from
1,159,270 in 1918 to 2,581,892 in 1927. Commerce Year Book 1928,
vol. 1, p. 617. The tonnage of the shipping occupied in the
coastwise and internal trade increased from 6,852,000 tons in 1914
to 9,743,000 tons in 1928. P. 619.
[
Footnote 38]
The competition by motor has, in large measure, been stimulated
and made possible by the grants by Congress since 1914 of federal
aid to highway construction. The highways completed with federal
aid to June 30, 1928, aggregate 72,394 miles. The aggregate mileage
comprised in what is designated as federal aid highway systems is
187,753 miles. Report of Chief of Bureau of Public Roads, Sept. 1,
1928, pp. 3, 7.
[
Footnote 39]
The passenger miles per mile of road dropped gradually from
199,708 in 1920 to 141,800 in 1927; the passenger revenues from
$1,286,613,000 in 1920 to $974,950,000 in 1927. 42 Annual Report
I.C.C. Dec. 1, 1928, pp. 115, 117. This shrinkage continued
throughout 1928.
[
Footnote 40]
For an example of reduction in carload traffic,
see
note 45
[
Footnote 41]
The less-than-carload freight on all the railroads of the United
States shrank from 44,338,000 tons in 1923 to 38,440,000 tons in
1927. In the eastern District (including the Pocahontas region) it
shrank from 23,321,000 tons in 1923 to 19,363,000 tons in 1927.
Statistics of Railways in the United States, 1927 [I.C.C.] p. XVII.
This reduction has continued in 1928.
[
Footnote 42]
"The volume general cargo carried in United States vessels,
particularly in United States intercoastal traffic, has been
increasing from year to year."
Annual Report of Governor of Panama Canal for 1928, p. 12.
"Like all other western lines, we feel rather severely the
effect of Panama Canal competition." J. S. Pyeatt, President,
Denver & Rio Grande Western Ry., Railway Age, 1926, vol 80.1,
p. 10.
[
Footnote 43]
Class and Commodity Rates for Transshipment via Panama Canal, 68
I.C.C. 74; Reduced Rates from New York Piers, 81 I.C.C. 312, 315;
Reduced Commodity Rates to Pacific Coast, 89 I.C.C. 512; Reduced
Rates to Pacific Coast Terminals, 107 I.C.C. 421.
Compare
American Hawaiian S.S. Co. v. Erie R. Co., 152 I.C.C. 703, 705,
707.
[
Footnote 44]
"Shortly after the opening of the Panama Canal, a rate of $10.90
per ton was established on copper, lead, and zinc smelter products
from certain far west mines to the eastern refineries for movement
by rail to the Pacific Coast and thence by water through the canal.
This forced a reduction in the all-rail rate from the same points
to New York, first from $22.50 per ton to $16.50 per ton, and then
to $12.50 per ton, which is the present rate."
Brass, Bronze and Copper Ingots, 109 I.C.C. 351, 355.
Compare Eastbound Tariffs, San Francisco and Los Angeles
to Kansas City and Chicago, Agent Countiss, I.C.C. 978, July 1,
1914,
with Agent Toll, March 25, 1929, I.C.C. 1209;
West-bound, Kansas City and Chicago to Portland and Seattle, Agent
Countiss, I.C.C. 984,
with Agent Toll, March 25, 1929,
I.C.C. 1211; Agent Toll, I.C.C. 1209,
with Agent Countiss,
I.C.C. 1065; Agent Toll, I.C.C. 1206
with Agent Countiss,
I.C.C. 1084; Agent Toll, I.C.C. 1210,
with Agent Countiss,
I.C.C. 1077; Agent Toll, I.C.C. 1211
with Agent Countiss,
I.C.C. 1068.
See Applications of the Southern
Pacific-Atlantic S.S. Lines for fourth section relief, Nos. 13638,
13639.
A striking illustration of the effect of Panama Canal
competition is furnished by the reduction in proportional rates
made by the Illinois Central Railroad Company to New Orleans, May
31, 1928, on shipments via the Redwood (steamship line) to
California in order to place manufacturers in the Chicago district
on a parity with those in the Pittsburgh district shipping via the
Atlantic seaboard. The domestic rate on iron and steel from Chicago
to New Orleans was 55 cents, and the proportional rail and water
rate to California had been 39 1/2 cents. It was reduced to 31
cents, leaving the domestic rate unchanged. Tariff I.C.C. No.
A-10314.
[
Footnote 45]
In 1914, 158,327,451 tons were transported by rail and
17,601,661 by water; in 1927, 152,872,882 by rail and 39,998,562 by
water.
"The advantages of the utilization of the Ohio and its
connecting waterways have been amply demonstrated, and the rail
carriers should realize that they cannot continue to handle by
all-rail routes much traffic which can be more economically
transported by all-water or rail-and-water routes. The interveners
express fear that lower rates over a rail-and-water route will
jeopardize the present rate structure, but, assuming such fear to
be well founded, that fact would not justify us in withholding
approval of any plan which promises to reduce substantially the
cost of necessary transportation."
Construction of Branches by P., L & W. Co., 150 I.C.C. 43,
52, 55.
[
Footnote 46]
The establishment of barge lines, especially when followed by
the establishment of through rail and barge line routes, tends both
to reduce rail rates and the volume of rail tonnage.
See
Inland Waterways Corp. v. Alabama G.S. R. Co., 151 I.C.C. 126; Coal
and Coke from Western Kentucky, 151 I.C.C. 543, 549; Rates on
Fertilizer, etc., Within Florida, 151 I.C.C. 602, 608.
Compare Vanderblue, "The Long and Short Haul Clause Since
1910," 36 Harvard Law Review, 426, 437. As to the development of
the barge lines,
see Annual Report of the Inland Waterways
Corporation for 1928.
[
Footnote 47]
For instances on Boston & Maine R. Co.,
compare
authority I.C.C. Nos. A-2535, 2540, 2565, 2597, 2600
with
issue I.C.C. Nos. A-2556, 2657, 2600, 2654; M.D.P.U. 1706, 1717,
1719, 1728, 1729, 1730; N.H.P.S.C. 1166. Many illustrations of this
are afforded by applications made under § 6 of the Interstate
Commerce Act for permission, because of motor, competition, to
change rates on less than 30 days' notice. In the period from
November 23, 1928, to March 19, 1929, six such applications were
made by the Boston & Maine Railroad, five by the New York, New
Haven & Hartford, and two by the Boston & Albany. In one
instance, the rate was reduced to less than one-half, in another to
just one-half, and in the others by varying percentages. The
reductions related, among others, to articles as bulky as crushed
stone and lumber, and as heavy as scrap iron and wire rods. Among
such applications made by western lines in 1928 are those of the
Southern Pacific and Atchison for carload rates on sugar (Nos.
87,723, 87,724) and on dried fruits (86,227), and that of the
Southern Pacific for carload rates on iron or steel pipe (No.
90,219).
In a paper delivered before the Mid-West Transportation
Conference, R. C. Morse, general superintendent, Pennsylvania
Railroad, said:
"The truck has proved more economical than the box car for the
transportation of less than carload freight for short hauls and,
under special circumstances, for comparatively long hauls."
Railway Review 1925, vol. 76, p. 1116.
In an address before the Western Railway Club, T.C. Powell,
president, Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway, said:
"The great change, therefore, that has taken place since 1920
has been this growth of automobile traffic, and by this I mean not
simply the ownership of automobiles, but the diversion to the
passenger automobile and freight motor truck of a large number of
passengers and a large tonnage of freight, respectively, of the
character heretofore handled by the steam carriers, and this loss
of gross revenue-producing traffic has brought about a reduction in
train service on main lines as well as on branch lines, which has a
very marked effect upon the number of employees engaged in train
service."
Railway Review 1925, Vol. 77, p. 768.
For further comment on the motorbus and motortruck as
competitive and auxiliary instruments of transportation,
see Railway Age, Vol. 71.1, p. 432; Vol. 75.2, p. 995;
Vol. 76.1, p. 319; Vol. 77.1, p. 275; Vol. 78.2 P. 1513; Vol. 79.2,
p. 1017; Vol. 80.1, pp. 12, 547, 918; Vol. 80.2, pp. 1401, 1981;
Vol. 81.1, pp. 153, 381; Vol. 81.2, p. 801; Vol. 82.2, p. 1651;
Vol. 83.1 P. 601; Vol. 83.2, p. 753; Vol. 84.2, pp. 1025, 1315;
Vol. 85.1, p. 399; Railway and Locomotive Engineering, Feb.1928, p.
37; Engineering News-Record, vol. 96.1, p. 305; Railway Review,
vol. 77, p. 604.
[
Footnote 48]
Petroleum and Petroleum Products from Oklahoma (I. & S.
3144, April 6, 1929) 153 I.C.C. 483, 486.
[
Footnote 49]
In the period from 1914 to 1927, the average freight haul for
the individual railroad increased from 144.17 to 172.11 miles, and
the average haul, treating all the railroads as a single system,
increased from 255.43 to 314.75 miles. Annual Report of the
Interstate Commerce Commission for 1928, p. 114.
[
Footnote 50]
See, e.g., Trunk-Line & Ex-Lake Iron Ore Rates, 69
I.C.C. 589; Reduced Rates from New York Piers, 81 I.C.C. 312, 317;
Sugar cases of 1922, 81 I.C.C. 448; Vinegar Rates from Pacific
Coast, 81 I.C.C. 666; Iron from Southern Points, 104 I.C.C. 27;
Reduced Rates on Commodities to Pacific Coast Terminals, 107 I.C.C.
421, 436; Pacific Coast Fourth Section Applications, 129 I.C.C. 3,
23.
Compare Vanderblue, "The Long and Short Haul Clause
Since 1910," 36 Harvard Law Rev. 426, 437.
[
Footnote 51]
In confiscation cases, the term "used and useful" had been
commonly employed in making the valuations. The specific provision,
requiring efficiency and economy, was doubtless inserted in §
15a because the Commission had theretofore expressed a doubt as to
the extent to which it could, in determining the reasonableness of
rates, consider the efficiency and economy of the management.
Compare Advances in Rates -- Eastern case, 20 I.C.C. 243,
278-280. This provision must be read in the light of paragraph (5)
of § 20, also added to the Interstate Commerce Act by
Transportation Act 1920, which directed the Commission to prescribe
what depreciation charges should be allowed as a part of the
operating expenses.
[
Footnote 52]
Harry Gunnison Brown, "Present Costs," p. 6 (reprinted from
Public Utilities Fortnightly, March 7, 1929); F. G. Dorety, "The
Function of Reproduction Cost," 37 Harvard Law Rev. 173,
passim; James C. Bonbright, XL Quarterly Journal of
Economics, pp. 295, 317.
Compare 42 Proceedings, Am.Soc.
of Civil Engineers, 1916, pp. 1719, 1772.
Compare City of
Spokane v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 15 I.C.C. 376, 393, 394;
Goddard, "The Evolution of the Cost of Reproduction as the Rate
Base," 41 Harvard Law Rev. 564, 572; Robinson, "Duty of a Public
Utility to Serve at Reasonable Rates: The Valuation War," 6
No.Car.Law Rev. 243, 256; "Railroad Valuation," by Leslie Craven,
Railway Age 1923, vol. 75.2, pp. 807, 808.
[
Footnote 53]
In a paper delivered before the Western Society of Engineers, F.
J. Scarr, supervisor motor service, Pennsylvania Railroad,
said:
"We are conducting inefficient terminal operations through
inadequate facilities, and by means of antiquated methods. . . .
Before the general acceptance of the motor vehicle as a dependable
means of transportation, we had only the horse-drawn vehicle
available for the movement of freight over the highways. The
limited effective radius of action, slow speed, and low capacity,
of this instrument forced the railroads to place on track freight
stations as near the centers of production and consumption as
possible, almost regardless of cost or future expansion,
requirements. This factor, with reckless competition between
carriers, influenced the railroads to engage in what approaches
retail transportation, by the establishing of innumerable small
stations and private sidings. It is my firm conviction that, had
the motor truck, with its greater radius of action, greater
capacity, greater flexibility, and greater endurance, been
available, the carriers would have developed terminals better
adapted to take advantage of these characteristics."
Railway Review 1926, vol. 78, p. 790.
[
Footnote 54]
"'The time is fast approaching when railroads will stop buying
expensive downtown city property for freight houses and will, by
the use of trucks, handle freight from outside and less costly
freight houses direct to consignees' door.' . . . Where is the
economy in hauling freight into terminals situated on the most
valuable land in Chicago, and why should this same freight be
hauled through Chicago's most congested district for delivery? . .
. The delays in switching, due to congestion are so costly that
their elimination, if only in part, would pay very handsome
dividends on a very large capital investment."
Railway Review 1926, vol. 78, p. 403.
See also Railway
Age, Vol. 71.1, p. 21; Vol. 81.2, p 968; Engineering News-Record,
Vol. 96.1, p. 354
[
Footnote 55]
See Advances in Rates -- Eastern Case, 20 I.C.C. 243,
271:
"Assume that a railroad is originally constructed over a
mountain, it being more economical to haul the traffic up and down
the steep grades than to incur the great outlay which would be
required by constructing a tunnel. With the development of traffic,
the time comes when this mountain must be pierced, and a tunnel is
accordingly constructed at a large expenditure. When the tunnel is
put into service and the line over the mountain abandoned, the cost
of the tunnel is added and the cost of the abandoned railroad
subtracted from construction cost, so that, as shown by the books,
the cost of construction is the same as though the tunnel had been
built at the outset."
[
Footnote 56]
C.A. Morse, chief engineer, Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific
Railway, in an address before the Western Society of Engineers in
1926, said:
"Comparatively little has been done in the reduction of grades,
and today a great majority of the trunk line railroads in this
country are operating over grade lines that were considered
economical 50 or 75 years ago. These railroads were built in the
days before steam shovels and other mechanical grading devices had
been developed, and when rock was handled with hand drills, black
powder, and carts. The result was that grading was very expensive,
and they sought to minimize it. . . . The reduction in the ruling
grade and in the rate of curvature will result in both cheaper
transportation and a saving in time. . . . During the last
twenty-five years, it has been the practice of most railroads to
reduce their grades in connection with the construction of a second
track, but, unfortunately, additional main track has been
constructed on many of the older roads before the value of the
lighter ruling grade was appreciated. The reduction of grade means
practically the rebuilding of such lines and the expense of this,
together with the interruption to traffic while it is being done,
has prevented much of this from being carried out, for, unless the
subject is thoroughly investigated, we are apt to consider it as
impracticable. . . . Simply maintaining in first class condition a
roadway that, as far as grades and alignment are concerned, is of a
type such as was constructed a half century ago, is not maintaining
a modern railroad. . . . With the great majority of the railroads
operating over lines that have the grade line and curvature of a
half century ago, the big job is to modernize the roadway."
Railway Age, vol. 80.1, p. 279.
See also Engineering
News-Record, Vol. 96.1, p. 309; Vol. 96.2, p. 803; Railway Review,
Vol. 72, p. 937; Vol. 73, p. 124; Vol. 78, p. 187; Railway Age, Vol
81.1, p. 181.
[
Footnote 57]
"Curves, it is a matter of long record, have an important
relation to speed of trains and cost of transportation as well as
to track maintenance, while very sharp curves have a relation to
safety of traffic. It has been found that, in a 10-year period,
with no rail renewals on 1 deg. curves, the rails were renewed once
on 2 deg. curves, once or twice on 3 deg., and twice on 4 degree
curves. Furthermore, track displacement by traffic has necessitated
double or triple the amount of surfacing on the sharper curves, and
there is a correspondingly greater wear on driving wheels, so that
an engine working regularly over numerous sharp curves has a
shorter period of service before it has to be sent to the shop for
returning the tires. . . ."
Engineering News-Record 1926, Vol. 96.1, p. 306. For further
comment on improvements in grades and curves,
see Railway
Age, Vol. 73.1, p. 94; Vol. 75.2, p. 1191; Vol. 78.1, pp. 502, 519;
Vol. 79.1, p. 75; Vol. 81.1, p. 551; Vol. 85.1, p. 403; Railway
Review, Vol. 77, p. 507; Engineering News-Record, Vol. 94.1, p.
392.
[
Footnote 58]
"Tracks, though, are just as important as cars and locomotives
in the railroads' program of reducing costs by moving heavier
trains faster. The New York Central has just finished appending
more than $20,000,000 to get freight trains around Albany and
across the Hudson river without having to lower them to the river
level and pull them up again. The Illinois Central is spending
$16,000,000 for a straighter, flatter, and more economical line
through Illinois and Kentucky, crossing the Ohio River. The
Southern Pacific is spending a similar sum to build its Natron
cut-off in Oregon and California to get a better grade over the
Siskiyous. The Central of Georgia is spending $5,000,000 to
relocate and rebuild its line between Columbus, Georgia, and
Birmingham. The Central of New Jersey is putting a four-track steel
trestle three miles across Newark Bay, a $10,000,000 job. The
Louisville & Nashville is spending $5,000,000 or more to raise
and move its Gulf Coast line out of the reach of storms. The
Southern Ry. is spending a couple of millions to shorten the haul
and cut the grades for coal trains moving out of the Appalachian
fields to the South Atlantic. These projects represent the kind of
improvement that will make it possible in the future to carry on
the same line of development that American railroads have followed
whenever and wherever they could. Each will pay for itself in
reduced transportation costs and, along with hundreds of other
improvements will make possible lower rates."
Railway Review 1925, Vol. 77, p. 522.
[
Footnote 59]
"If it is reasonable to expect that large amounts of heavy
freight will be offered, the question of grades to be adopted is of
paramount importance, and should be given most careful
consideration, and the lightest grades possible should be adopted,
even if some increase in distance and considerable increase in cost
is caused thereby, because grade and curve resistance govern the
tonnage that any locomotive will haul, and, as the limit in the
size of the locomotive that can be built within clearances of 10
feet wide and 15 feet high has been nearly reached, we must improve
our grades to secure lower costs of handling."
"As an illustration of the importance of light grades to
increase train loads and thereby reduce cost of movement, we may
cite the fact that about three times as much tonnage can be hauled
on a grade of two tenths, or 10.6 feet per mile, as on a grade of
one percent, or 52.8 feet per mile, with the same expenditure of
energy. On a grade of four-tenth, only half as much tonnage can be
hauled as on a level with the same power."
F. S. Stevens, engineer maintenance of way, Phila. & Reading
Railway, Railway Review 1923, Vol. 72, p. 937.
[
Footnote 60]
Alba B. Johnson, president of the Railway Business Association,
testifying before the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce in
1924, said:
"The heavier locomotives and cars and the longer trains brought
about a new standard of rails, roadbed, bridges and other
structures. If it were possible to show on a chart the rise in cost
of replacing the railroad as a whole, we would still not be telling
the whole story, because the increase would represent not only a
higher level of wages and prices but a change in the character of
the plant. Rails and ballast are heavier, frogs and switches more
powerful, bridges stronger. Capacity of track was increased by
installation of signal systems. Repairs have been expedited and
cheapened by new shop machinery. . . . The 90-pound rail . . .
replaces a 60 pound rail. . . . Instead of replacing worn out
locomotives with new ones of the same design . . . , the railroad
orders a type which costs more in original outlay but is expected
to earn the difference by the economy with which it does the work.
The same principle runs through all the schedules of the
maintenance of road and equipment and additions and
betterments."
Railway Age, Vol. 76.2, p. 1039.
See also Railway Age,
Vol. 71.2, p. 1295; Railway Engineering and Maintenance, Vol. 21,
p. 274; Railway Review, Vol. 78, p. 601.
[
Footnote 61]
"A glance at the operating returns of the railways of this
country will show that those roads which have added most liberally
to their facilities in recent years are today making the best
showings."
Railway Age 1921, Vol. 71.2, p. 1295.
[
Footnote 62]
The investment account of the railroads of the United States
increased between December 31, 1919 and December 31, 1927,
$5,152,751,000 -- that is, about 25 percent. Nearly all of that sum
was expended in improving the road, terminals, and shop facilities
and in replacing outworn and obsolete equipment. During that
period, the operating ratio improved greatly. The percentage of
operating revenues consumed in the several years by operating
expenses was: 1920, 94.38 percent; 1921, 82.71 percent; 1922, 79.41
percent; 1923, 77.83 percent; 1924, 76.13 percent; 1925, 74.10
percent; 1926, 73.15 percent; 1927, 74.54 percent. The improvement
in the operating ratio (after the 1920 rate increase) was due in
large measure to the improvement of the railroad plant. This made
possible, among other things, a reduction in the number of
employees from 2,022,832 in 1920 to 1,735,105 in 1927. The
reduction in the operating ratio and in the number of employees has
continued in 1928 and 1929.
See Monthly Labor Review, Vol.
28, No. 5, p. 215. The number of locomotives on December 31, 1927,
was 3,629 less than on December 31, 1919; the number of freight
cars 48,089 less. Annual Report of Interstate Commerce Commission
for 1928, pp. 111-114.
[
Footnote 63]
There are numerous cases where the unit fuel consumption of
locomotives that represented good practice five or six years ago
has been reduced almost one-half by locomotives of thoroughly
modern design. This saving alone goes far toward paying a return on
the additional investment required to produce a thoroughly modern
traveling power plant.
Railway Age, Vol. 82.1, p. 171.
"As a result of intensive development and improvement, it is not
unheard of for a modern locomotive to handle 80 percent more
ton-miles per hour on 50 percent of the unit fuel consumption
formerly considered good locomotive performance."
Railway Age, Vol. 84.1, p. 659.
See also Railway Age,
Vol. 72.2, pp. 1295, 1686; Vol. 79.1, p. 256; Vol. 83.1, p. 45.
[
Footnote 64]
Ralph Budd, president of the Great Northern Railway, in an
address delivered in 1927, said:
"It is just beginning to be realized that, while in principle
the steam locomotive is the same as it was a few years ago, the
efficiency of the locomotive, as exemplified by the modern type,
has been practically doubled, measured in ton-miles of
transportation per unit of fuel consumed."
Railway Age, Vol. 83.1, p. 250.
See also Railway &
Locomotive Engineering, Nov.1927, p. 326; Railway Age, Vol. 78.1,
p. 26.
[
Footnote 65]
"By producing more ton miles of transportation per hour, it
reduces the total number of locomotives required; it postpones the
time when increased investment in tracks and most other fixed
properties to increase capacity will be necessary; it reduces the
number of employees required, or that would be required in train
service; it reduces the number of employees required in signaling
and dispatching trains -- in fact, there is hardly any form of
fixed charges of transportation expenses that is not made less than
it otherwise would be by locomotives that produce an increased
output of ton miles per locomotive hour."
Railway Age, Vol. 81.1, p. 493.
See also Engineering
News-Record, Vol. 98.1, p. 58; Railway Review, Vol. 74, p. 203;
Vol. 78, p. 601; Railway Age, Vol. 83.1, p. 240.
[
Footnote 66]
See Transactions of American Society of Mechanical
Engineers 1921, Vol. 43, p. 334; Railway Age, Vol. 78.1, p. 26;
Vol. 81.1, p. 487; Vol. 82.1, p. 928; Vol. 83.1, p. 322; Vol. 84.1,
p. 659; Vol. 84.2, p. 1153; Railway and Locomotive Engineering,
Feb.1927, p. 42; Nov.1927, p. 326; Feb.1928, p. 41; Railway
Mechanical Engineer, July, 1927, p. 405; Railway Review, Vol. 77,
p. 521.
Compare 15 The Commonwealther, No. 2 (April, 1929)
pp. 14, 19.
[
Footnote 67]
"There has been a steady development in the track structure in
recent years. Rail of 75-1b. and 85-1b. sections have given way to
that of 110-1b., 115-1b. and 130-1b. on many divisions; cinder
ballast has been replaced by gravel, and gravel by stone; stronger
joints have been installed, and more tie plates, rail anchors and
other accessories used. At the same time and in spite of these
improvements, the impression remains among those most directly in
touch with maintenance work that the roads can still afford to go
much further in this direction with economy."
Railway Engineering and Maintenance 1926, Vol. 22, p. 174.
See also id., p. 190.
[
Footnote 68]
Rail of 85-pound section or lighter was the type most commonly
used prior to 1914. Railway Age 1921, Vol. 70.2, p. 998. 68.8
percent of the 2,806,930 tons of rail rolled in the United States
in 1927 was of 100 lb. section or heavier. Railway Age 1928, Vol.
84.2, p. 900.
See also Railway Age, Vol. 71.1, p. 413;
Vol. 78.1, p. 181; Vol. 79.1, p. 393; Railway Review, Vol. 74, p.
101.
[
Footnote 69]
"The American Railway Association has announced that new
specifications increasing the length of standard rails from 33 to
39 ft. have been approved by that organization. This change will
result in a 16 percent reduction in the number of rail joints and a
saving of about one-sixth of the total of bolts, nuts, angle bars
and spring washers now required."
Engineering News-Record 1925, Vol. 95.2, p. 816.
[
Footnote 70]
"The rail anti-creepers thus saved 26,400 hours of labor on this
thirty-mile stretch in one year entirely aside from the saving
arising from the lessening of damage to rail, fastenings, and
equipment caused by wide expansion and uneven line and surface
where the rail was permitted to creep. As a result of the test, the
entire track was securely anchored, and the practice inaugurated of
anchoring all double track and whatever single track showed a
tendency to creep."
Railway Engineering and Maintenance 1923, Vol.19, p. 114.
[
Footnote 71]
See Engineering News-Record 1925, Vol. 94.2, p. 844;
Railway Engineering and Maintenance 1926, Vol. 22, p. 15.
[
Footnote 72]
See Engineering News-Record 1925, Vol. 94.2, p. 674;
Vol., 95.2, p. 958; Railway Age 1928, Vol. 84.1, p. 3.
[
Footnote 73]
In noting that the Chicago & Northwestern Railway is
replacing a bridge which, "while still as good as the day it was
built," is too light for the heavier loads now being carried, the
Railway Age observes,
"This is characteristic of many units of railway construction
which, if properly maintained, show little or no evidences of wear,
but must give way just as truly as though they wore out."
1924, Vol. 77.2, p. 918.
[
Footnote 74]
"More efficient pumping equipment is rapidly replacing
antiquated machinery." Railway Engineering and Maintenance 1926,
Vol. 22, p. 132.
See also Railway Age 1928, Vol. 84.2, p.
1329.
[
Footnote 75]
"The improvement in equipment and in methods of locating signals
to meet the requirements of modern train operation have to a great
extent rendered obsolete much of the automatic signaling placed in
service 20 years or more ago."
Railway Age 1927, Vol. 83.2, p. 1144.
[
Footnote 76]
"An investigation made by one railroad a few years ago disclosed
the fact that the retirement of a large number of cars of all-wood
construction, and their replacement with new cars of steel or steel
underframe construction, would effect a saving in maintenance alone
which, in five years, it was estimated would amount to about 68
percent of the entire cost of the new equipment. . . . A thorough
study of the economics of freight car maintenance and operation
today would lead to equally startling conclusions with respect to
the 300,000 or 400,000 weak and unsuitable freight cars which are
still in service."
Railway Age 1921, Vol. 71.1, pp. 52, 53.
See also
Railway Age, Vol. 70.1, p. 490; Vol. 72.2, p. 1515; Vol. 73.2, p.
645; Vol. 74.2, p. 989; Vol. 75.2, p. 1023; Vol. 78.2, p. 1443;
Vol. 79.1, p. 186; Vol. 80.1, p. 462; Vol. 80.2, p. 1301; Vol.
82.2, p. 1556; Vol. 85.2, p. 916; Railway Review, Vol. 72, p. 1073;
Vol. 77, p. 522; Vol. 78, p. 767.
[
Footnote 77]
"The advent of the overhead electric traveling crane, as well as
the modern smoke exhausting devices and other such improvements,
have thrown many of the older type buildings into the obsolete
class. . . . It is very difficult to add modern facilities to an
existing plant which is designed and constructed without the
contemplation of such added facilities. . . . It is impossible to
install crane runways and other labor saving devices in existing
buildings, due to lack of clearance and insufficient strength in
the existing structures."
Railway Review 1921, Vol. 68, pp. 449, 450.
"The enlargement of locomotive terminal facilities and the
modernization of locomotive terminal equipment is admittedly the
most needed physical improvement in the railway structure of today.
. . . There are many railways on which the locomotive terminals
have received practically no improvements for more than fifteen
years."
Railway Review 1924, Vol. 74, p. 151.
"These are days of rapid improvement in methods, in which many
facilities become obsolete long before their normal service life
has been reached. This is particularly true of terminal
facilities."
Railway Age 1927, Vol. 83.2, p. 966.
See also Railway
Age, Vol. 66.2, p. 994; Vol. 68.2, p. 1702; Vol. 69.2, p. 729; Vol.
71.2, p. 890; Vol. 76.1, pp. 269, 314; Vol. 76.2, p. 1494; Vol.
78.2, p. 1071; Vol. 83.1, p. 249; Railway Review, Vol. 72, pp. 112,
495; Vol. 77, p. 522.
[
Footnote 78]
"The real terminal problem therefore is that of providing
facilities that will enable the railways to effect some reduction
in the enormous investment in idle locomotives now held at
terminals."
Railway Review 1923, Vol. 72, p. 176.
See also Railway
Review, Vol. 70, p. 344; Railway Age, Vol. 68.2, p. 1745; Vol.
74.2, p. 1354; Vol. 75.2, p. 1141.
[
Footnote 79]
"It is said that 'any machine that will run' is good enough for
railroad shop, and, while most railroad men realize the falsity of
this statement, it is seemingly borne out by the large number of
obsolete, worn-out machines now in use."
Railway Age 1921, Vol. 71.1, p. 1.
"Without doubt, railroad net earnings are appreciably reduced by
the many obsolete and inefficient machines now used in railroad
shops and enginehouses."
Railway Age 1923, Vol. 74.1, p. 211.
"The tools to be seen on any trip of inspection through your own
shops or those of other roads, are in many cases a generation
outgrown." Railway Review 1924, Vol. 74, p. 733. To the same
effect,
see Railway Age, Vol. 67.2, p. 1101; Vol. 69.1, p.
90; Vol. 70.1, p. 222; Vol. 72.2, p. 1205; Vol. 74.2, pp. 1082,
1351; Vol. 81.2, p. 629; Vol. 83.2, p. 706; Vol. 85.1, p. 599.
[
Footnote 80]
"Little attention is ordinarily given to obsolescence or the
economy of replacement with more modern equipment solely because of
the reduced cost of operation with the newer units. In their
failure to appreciate this principle, the railways trail far behind
many of the utilities, with the result that they are paying the
penalty in high operating costs. . . . The engineering and
maintenance of way department is cluttered with equipment that it
cannot afford to operate."
Railway Engineering and Maintenance 1926, Vol. 22, p. 2. To the
same effect,
see Railway Age, Vol. 81.2, pp. 621, 1091;
Railway Review, Vol. 68, p. 784.
"Our railroads were built for the locomotive of the past. They
were and are operated in accordance with the locomotive of the
past. . . . It remains to do on railroads the things manufacturers
have done -- to build better locomotives, improve old ones, and to
operate them according to the new conditions these improvements
themselves have created."
Railway Age 1922, Vol. 72.1, p. 178.
See also
Transactions, American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1919, p.
999; Railway Review, Vol. 70, p. 43; Engineering News-Record, Vol.
98.1, p. 58; Railway Age, Vol. 69.2, p. 729; Vol. 76.1, p. 269;
Vol. 79.1, pp. 256, 505; Vol. 81.1, pp. 45, 123, 492; Mechanical
Engineering, Vol. 43.1, p. 311; Railway Engineering &
Maintenance, Vol. 22, p. 2.
[
Footnote 81]
In 1920, there were 68,942 locomotives in use on American
Railways. 41st Annual Report of the Interstate Commerce Commission,
p. 107. Of these 12,000 were reported to be obsolete by the Railway
Age (Vol. 68.1, p. 33). Of the 2,648 locomotives in service on the
B. & O., on December 31, 1920, 633 were more than twenty years
old. On the Southern, 501 locomotives out of a total of 1,865; on
the Erie, 474 out of 1540; on the Seaboard Air Line, 142 out of
581; on the Lackawanna, 57 out of 757, and on the Pennsylvania, 624
out of a total of 7,599, exceeded that age. In 1926, it was
estimated by the editor of the Railway Age that 68 percent of the
locomotives then in use were over ten years old. Railway Age, Vol.
81.1, p. 493. In 1928, there were about 65,000 locomotives in use.
Of these, according to the Railway Age (Vol. 84.2, p. 950):
"There are probably between 15,000 and 20,000 locomotives in
this country, 20 years old or older, which have practically none of
those features of locomotive equipment that are now regarded as the
earmarks of modern motive power."
[
Footnote 82]
82.
"
E.g., Locomotives no longer capable of pulling heavy
loads, instead of being scrapped or rebuilt, have frequently been
continued in use for branch line or suburban service, or in
switchyards. It is said that their use in such passenger service
has been rendered wasteful by the comparative economics of the
modern motor rail car.
See Railway Age, Vol. 72.1, p. 315;
Vol. 72.2 P. 1372; Vol. 76.2 P. 975; Vol. 82.1, p. 563; Vol. 83.1,
p. 601; Vol. 84.1, p. 753; Railway and Locomotive Engineering,
Feb.1928, p. 37. And"
"just what measure of economy is effected by retaining
locomotives in yard and work train service after their condition
has become such that they are no longer capable of performing their
assigned duties in road service is not apparent, to say the
least."
Railway Review 1924, Vol. 74, p. 771. The replacement of
antiquated power with modern locomotives in its switchyards by the
Seaboard Air Line Railway is estimated to have effected a savings
in operating costs which will pay an annual return of 50 percent on
the investment in the new engines. Railway Age 1927, Vol. 83.1, p.
45.
See also Railway Age, Vol. 79.1, p. 209; Railway
Review, Vol. 75, p. 396.
[
Footnote 83]
"There is too much tendency to patch up and perpetuate an
obsolete, inadequate, and uneconomical unit of equipment, rather
than to retire it and purchase new equipment to derive the benefit
of the advanced state of the art in building."
F. H. Hardin, assistant to the president, New York Central
Railway. Railway Age 1926, Vol. 81.2, pp. 670, 671. To the same
effect,
see Transactions, American Society of Mechanical
Engineers 1925, Vol. 47, p. 179; Railway Review, Vol. 78, pp. 195,
271.
[
Footnote 84]
Samuel Rea, president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, in an
address before the eastern division of the United States Chamber of
Commerce delivered in 1923, said:
"From an engineering viewpoint, there are many improvements
which could be adopted, or the present use of which could be
greatly extended, and which would very materially increase the
efficiency and reduce the cost of railroad operation. The initial
installations, however, would require the investment of very large
sums of money, and it is difficult to see how these sums can be
raised. . . ."
Railway Review, Vol. 74, pp. 262, 263. To the same effect,
see statement of R. H. Aishton, president, American
Railway Association. Railway Review 1921, Vol. 68, pp. 783,
784.
[
Footnote 85]
E.g.,
"With respect to account No. 3, 'Grading,' it appears that the
retirement of grading is a contingency sufficiently remote in most
cases so that it is not practicable to treat it as depreciable
property."
(118 I.C.C. 295, 362.)
[
Footnote 86]
"Upon the completion of the valuation herein provided for, the
Commission shall thereafter in like manner keep itself informed of
all extensions and improvements or other changes in the condition
and value of the property of all common carriers, and shall
ascertain the value thereof and shall from time to time revise and
correct its valuations, showing such revision and correction
classified and as a whole and separately in each of the several
states and Territories and the District of Columbia, which
valuations, both original and corrected, shall be tentative
valuations and shall be reported to Congress at the beginning of
each regular session."
Compare Frederick K. Beutel, "Due Process in Valuation
of Public Utilities," 13 Minnesota Law Review, 409, 426, 427.
[
Footnote 87]
Compare "Railroad Valuation" by Leslie Craven, counsel,
Western Group (Railroad) Presidents' Conference Committee on
Federal Valuation of Railroads, 9 Amer.Bar Assn. Journal, 681, 683,
684.
[
Footnote 88]
The nature of the order here challenged is described in the
report which accompanied it:
"At the outset, it is to be borne in mind that in no sense can
these proceedings properly be treated as lawsuits. No issue is
raised between parties. There is no controversy between disputants,
each contending for protection of its rights. They are purely
administrative proceedings wherein we are following the direction
of Congress to create a contingent fund to be used in furtherance
of the public interest in railway transportation."
Excess Income of St. Louis and O'Fallon Ry. Co., 124 I.C.C. 3,
7.
[
Footnote 89]
The O'Fallon has calculated that the single-sum values found by
the Commission for the several recapture periods exceed by
$32,660.88 the sums of the following amounts: (1) the cost of
reproduction less depreciation, as of June 30, 1919, of all
property exclusive of lands and working capital at 1914 or pre-war
prices; (2) the amount by which the actual cost of the property
installed between July 1, 1914, and June 30, 1919, exceeded its
cost of reproduction at 1914 prices; (3) the present value of the
land; (4) the allowance for working capital; (5) the actual
investment in additions and betterments, less retirements,
subsequent to June 30, 1919. The calculation is correct, but the
assertion that the $32,660.88 (which is about 5 percent of the
aggregate of the other amounts) must have been allowed as overhead
is without foundation in the record, and is inconsistent with
statements in the Commission's report.
[
Footnote 90]
"The method which we therefore find logical and proper for
determining the value in the subsequent recapture periods is to add
to or subtract from the 1919 value the net increases or decreases
in the investment in property devoted to transportation service as
determined from the carrier's returns to valuation order No. 3,
with due regard to the element of depreciation."
124 I.C.C. 3,
passim, particularly pp. 37, 42.
[
Footnote 91]
As to the evidence the Commission said:
"The use of cost of reproduction is by no means free from
practical difficulties. For example, the record here shows that
there was a dearth of reliable data from which an accurate estimate
of such cost could be made for the period 1920 to 1923. In proof of
this assertion, reference need only be made to the sources of the
data relied upon by the witnesses both for the bureau and for the
carriers. Their estimates for those years were founded in large
part upon manufacturers' records and price statistics appearing in
various publications, and, to a lesser extent, upon cost of
construction actually incurred by railroads in that period. There
was, in fact very little new railroad construction in those
years."
"Synthetic estimates of cost of reproduction based upon
statistics showing price and wage changes do not make allowance for
improved methods of assembly and construction. As will hereinafter
be more fully indicated, we found in Texas Midland Railroad,
supra, [75 I.C.C. 1] at 140, that the increase in the cost
of labor and materials between 1900 and 1914 was largely offset by
improvement in the art of construction. How far there may have been
a similar offset, so far as costs in the period from 1920-1923 are
concerned, is not disclosed of record."
(P. 29.)
And later (p. 41):
". . . Even if the cost of reproduction new in 1920 were to be
regarded as a controlling element, there is not in the present
record evidence showing what it might have cost to reproduce the
property of the O'Fallon at that time. The only evidence in this
respect is that of the relation of general prices in 1914 and in
1920 and the other recapture years."
[
Footnote 92]
Compare United States v. Boston, Cape Cod & New York
Canal Co., 271 F. 877, 889, where the court said that the
jury
"should not consider the evidence of reconstruction cost upon
the question of value unless they were satisfied that a reasonably
prudent man would purchase or undertake the construction of the
property at such a figure."
[
Footnote 93]
"Costs of railroad building, owing to improvements in methods
and economics thereby effected, did not vary greatly during the
period of 20 years preceding 1914, although the prices of labor and
material fluctuated. There is no testimony here as to how much it
cost to build any railroad or any substantial part of one in any of
the recapture periods, and, for that reason, it is impossible to
make a comparison of such costs in the two periods. It is not safe
to assume, as the O'Fallon has assumed, that costs of building
railroads have varied in recent years in direct ratio to the
variation in costs of commodities in general use, or in the costs
of materials or labor generally. The fallacy of basing reproduction
cost upon price curves or ratios is clearly indicated by the
tabulations introduced by the carrier."
(P. 41.)
[
Footnote 94]
The Commission says (p. 40):
"Weighing the figures previously mentioned in the light of these
considerations and the entire record, and viewing the carrier as a
common carrier in successful operation and with an established
business, we conclude that the value for ratemaking purposes of the
entire common carrier property of the O'Fallon on June 30, 1919,
was $850,500."
[
Footnote 95]
See Geological Survey: "Coal in 1923," pp. 528-535.
Bureau of Mines: "Coal in 1924," p. 460; "Coal in 1925" pp.
394-398; "Coal in 1926," pp. 420-431, 443-461.
MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting.
I agree with what MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS has said, and add a word
only by way of emphasis of those aspects of the case which appear
to me sufficient, apart from all other considerations, to sustain
the finding of the Commission.
The report of the Interstate Commerce Commission is rejected and
its order set aside on the sole ground that, in a recapture
proceeding under § 15a of the Interstate Commerce Act, it has
failed to consider present reproduction cost or value of
appellant's property, and so to "give
Page 279 U. S. 549
due consideration to all the elements of value recognized by the
law of the land for ratemaking purposes." No constitutional
question is involved.
The Commission was called upon to value a railroad, with less
than 9 miles of main line track, which had been constructed prior
to 1900. Much of its equipment was purchased before 1908; a
considerable part being second-hand. Its traffic was very largely
dependent on the output of a few coal mines which it served.
In performing its task, the Commission had before it the cost of
reproduction new of appellant's structural property, estimated on
the basis of 1914 unit prices, "with the knowledge that the costs
of reproduction so arrived at were not greatly different from the
original costs." It had evidence of the actual cost of later
additions and replacements, of the physical condition of the
railroad and equipment, of the character, volume, and sources of
its traffic, of its working capital and revenues and expenses. It
possessed, through its valuation department, special knowledge of
the property of this carrier. Through its own experience, it had
the benefit of an expert knowledge of all the factors affecting
value of railway property growing out of changes in methods of
transportation, of improvement in transportation appliances, and
the consequent obsolescence of existing equipment, of improvement
in methods of railroad construction, and consequent reductions in
cost. Although it had estimates of present construction costs in
the form of index figures based on the comparative general price
levels of labor and materials for 1914 and each of the recapture
years, which it considered and discussed in its report, there was
no evidence before it of the actual present cost of construction of
this or any other railroad, or any affirmative showing that, if
appellant's road was to be built and equipped anew, competent
railroad engineers would deem the present structure and equipment
suitable for or adaptable
Page 279 U. S. 550
to the economical and efficient management contemplated by the
statute.
After stating that it had before it the evidence above outlined,
including that of reproduction cost, and such other matters as the
carrier desired to bring to its attention, the Commission
added,
"From this accumulated information, we have formed our judgment
as to the fair basic single sum values not by the use of any
formula, but after consideration of all relevant facts."
That the Commission gave consideration to present reproduction
costs appears not only from its own statement, but from the fact
that it gave full effect to increased current market values in
determining the value of land and to additions and betterments
since June 30, 1914, taken at their cost less depreciation. In the
light of those considerations which affect the present value of
appellant's structural property which MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS has
mentioned, I cannot say that the Commission did not have before it
the requisite data for forming a trustworthy judgment of the value
of appellant's road, or that it failed to give to proof of
reproduction cost all the weight to which it was entitled on its
merits. Had the Commission not turned aside to point out in its
report the economic fallacies of the use of reproduction cost as a
standard of value for ratemaking purposes, which it nevertheless
considered and to some extent applied, I suppose it would not have
occurred to any one to question the validity of its order.
I cannot avoid the conclusion that, in substance, the objection,
now upheld, to the order of the Commission, is not that it failed
to consider or give appropriate weight to evidence of present
reproduction cost of appellant's road, but that it attached less
weight to present construction costs than to other factors before
it affecting adversely the present value of the structural
property. That this was the real nature of the objection voiced by
the dissenting Commissioners seems to me apparent from their
opinion.
Page 279 U. S. 551
They seem to assume that, as a result of
Southwestern Tel.
Co. v. Public Service Comm'n, 262 U.
S. 276, and other cases in this Court, the Commission as
a matter of law may never, under any circumstances, find that the
value of the structural part of a railroad does not exceed its fair
value of an earlier date if the Commission has before it evidence
of later increased construction costs. They say, "under the law of
the land," in valuing a railroad under § 15a "we must accord
weight in the legal sense to the greatly enhanced cost of material,
labor and supplies" during the recapture periods. Weight in the
legal sense is evidently taken to be not that accorded by an
informed judgment, but imposed by some positive rule of law.
Without discussion of the evidence and other data which received
the consideration of the Commission, the opinion of this Court
seems to proceed on the broad assumption that the evidence relied
on, mere synthetic estimates of costs of reproduction, must so
certainly and necessarily outweigh all other considerations
affecting values as to require the order of the Commission to be
set aside. In effect, the Commission is required to give to such
index figures an evidential value to which it points out they are
not entitled when applied to railroad properties in general, or to
this one in particular, and this, so far as appears, without
investigation of the soundness of the reasons of the Commission for
rejecting them.
This Court has said that present reproduction costs must be
considered in ascertaining value for ratemaking purposes. But it
has not said that such evidence, when fairly considered, may not be
outweighed by other considerations affecting value, or that any
evidence of present reproduction costs, when compared with all the
other factors affecting value, must be given a weight to which it
is not entitled in the judgment of the tribunal "informed by
experience" and "appointed by law" to deal with the
Page 279 U. S. 552
very problem now presented.
Illinois Central R. Co. v.
Interstate Commerce Commission, 206 U.
S. 441,
206 U. S. 454.
But, if "weight in the legal sense" must be given to evidence of
present construction costs, by the judgment now given, we do not
lay down any legal rule which will inform the Commission how much
weight, short of its full effect, to the exclusion of all other
considerations, is to be given to the evidence of synthetic costs
of construction in valuing a railroad property. If full effect were
to be given to it in all cases, then, as the Commission points out
in its report, the railroads of the country, valued by the
Commission in 1920 at nineteen billion dollars, would have had, in
that year, a reproduction value of forty billion dollars, and we
would arrive at the economic paradox that the value of the
railroads may be far in excess of any amount on which they could
earn a return. If less than full effect may be given, it is
difficult for me to see how, without departure from established
principles, the Commission could be asked to do more than it has
already done -- to weigh the evidence guided by all the proper
considerations -- or how, if there is evidence upon which its
findings may rest, we can substitute our judgment for that of the
Commission. Such, I believe, is the "due consideration" which the
statute requires of "all the elements of value recognized by the
law of the land for ratemaking purposes."
As I cannot say
a priori that increased construction
costs may not be more than offset by other elements affecting
adversely the present value of appellant's property, and as there
was evidence before the Commission to support its findings, I can
only conclude that the judgment below should be affirmed. In any
case, in view of the statement of the Commission that it considered
all relevant facts, including the elements of value brought to its
attention by the carrier, I should not have supposed that we could
rightly set aside the present order without some
Page 279 U. S. 553
consideration of the probative value of the evidence of present
reproduction costs which the Commission discussed at length in its
report.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES and MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS concur in this
opinion.