1. The Interstate Commerce Act applies to so much only of the
transportation of a through shipment from a foreign country as take
place in this country. P.
283 U. S.
660.
Page 283 U. S. 655
2. Where it is alleged that the joint through rate exacted for
such a shipment was unreasonable and was charged in violation of
the Act, the Commission has jurisdiction to entertain the
complaint, and, if it finds that the through charge was
unreasonable, and if no other and reasonable rate for the service
performed by the American carrier was available to the shipper, it
may award reparation for the resulting damage.
News Syndicate
Co. v. New York Central R. Co., 275 U.
S. 179. Pp.
283 U. S. 659,
283 U. S.
662.
3. The collection by a common carrier of exorbitant charges is a
tort, and the general rule as to liability of joint tortfeasors
applies where two or more connecting carriers combine to impose
excessive charges over their connecting lines. P.
283 U. S.
660.
4. Where a carrier in this country joins with a foreign carrier
in exacting an excessive through rate for an international
shipment, while offering no reasonable rate for the domestic part
of the service, it is liable for the damage to a shipper without
regard to the proportion of the charges attributable to the foreign
transportation or paid to the foreign carrier. P.
283 U. S.
660.
5. A prior finding by the Commission that the rate charged was
unreasonable and of the amount overcharged is a condition precedent
to an action for reparation, but the action is not based on the
Commission's award, as such. P.
283 U. S.
660.
6. In the case of an unreasonable joint international rate, the
demand for reparation is grounded upon the claim that the
maintenance of that rate, participated in by the American carrier,
and its violation of the Act in failing to maintain a just and
reasonable rate for the transportation from the boundary to
destination, operated to compel payment of the charges based on the
excessive joint rate. P.
283 U. S.
661.
7. To a claim based on an unreasonable charge for a through
international carload shipment, it is not a defense that the
American carrier offered a separate reasonable rate from the
international boundary if the separate rate was not applicable to
the through carload as brought by the foreign carrier, but only to
shipments originating at the boundary and involving extra terminal
service there. P.
283 U. S.
663.
106 Cal. App. 437, 289 P. 643, reversed.
Certiorari, 282 U.S. 833, to review a judgment which affirmed
the dismissal of an action for damages caused by the exaction of
excessive freight charges.
Page 283 U. S. 656
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner sued respondent in the superior court of the city and
county of San Francisco, California, to recover damages alleged to
have been caused by the exaction of freight charges which had been
found excessive by the Interstate Commerce Commission in a
reparation case. 102 I.C.C. 245. A jury being waived, the court
made findings of fact, stated its conclusions of law, and dismissed
the case on the ground that the Commission's findings and order
were void for lack of jurisdiction. The district court of appeal
affirmed, 106 Cal. App. 595, 289 P. 643, the state supreme court
declined to hear the case, and this Court granted a writ of
certiorari.
Defendant is an interstate carrier by railroad. Its lines
connect with a line of a Mexican common carrier by rail extending
from Navojoa, Sonora, to the international boundary at Nogales,
Arizona. In 1923, defendant, in conjunction with the foreign line,
transported three carloads of cow peas from Navojoa to San
Francisco. The shipments moved at different times on through bills
of lading issued by the foreign line. The rate charged was $1.33
per hundred pounds, stated in a tariff joined in by the carriers
and filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission and the
Department of Communications and
Page 283 U. S. 657
Public Works of Mexico. The carriers agreed to divide the rate,
63.175 cents to the foreign line and 69.825 cents to the
defendant.
The cow peas were transported by the foreign line 377 miles to
the boundary, thence by defendant 1,036 miles to destination. The
defendant collected from plaintiff $3,828.74 as freight charges,
and that amount was divided in accordance with the divisions
agreement. The average yield on these shipments was 90 cents per
car mile and 18.8 mils per ton mile for the entire distance, 1,413
miles. The average yield to the foreign line was $1.60 per car mile
and to defendant 64.6 cents.
The trial court found that defendant, by tariff filed with the
Interstate Commerce Commission, maintained a rate of $1.14 1/2
applicable to carload shipments of cow peas destined to San
Francisco "originating at Nogales," "originating at the point where
the lines" of the foreign carrier and of defendant touch the
boundary or "loaded into cars at any point upon or adjacent to said
international boundary line, within the limits of defendant's
railroad yards at Nogales." The court found that the cow peas were
in sacks, and readily could have been transported, by means other
than a railroad, to Nogales, there to be loaded into cars for
transportation over defendant's lines to San Francisco at the rate
of $1.14 1/2, that the Commission had made no finding in respect of
such rate, and that it was
"reasonable and lawful for application upon carload shipments of
cow peas from Nogales, Arizona, including such shipments as might
be loaded at any and all places within the railroad yard limits at
that point, destined to San Francisco, California."
It was not found, and it does not appear from the record, that
the defendant established or made available to shippers any rate
applicable to the transportation over its lines from the boundary
to San Francisco of cow peas in car loads originating at Navojoa or
elsewhere in Mexico
Page 283 U. S. 658
and delivered to defendant at such boundary point by a
connecting railroad for transportation to San Francisco. The record
does not disclose what, if any, rate was available for the
transportation of the cow peas as a local shipment from Navojoa to
Nogales. And it may not reasonably be assumed that the charges of
the foreign carrier for such transportation would be less than the
amount it was entitled to have out of the joint through rate under
its agreement with defendant. Indeed, under the principles
ordinarily applied in making divisions agreements, in the absence
of a special allowance or arbitrary differential, the foreign
carrier's share of the through rate would be less than its local
rate.
If defendant's local rate of $1.14 1/2 be deemed to be
applicable to the American part of the through transportation and
the foreign carrier's proportion, 63.175 cents, of the joint rate
be taken as the local rate from Navojoa to the boundary, the sum of
the locals would amount to slightly more than $1.77 1/2, as against
the joint through rate of $1.33. There is nothing in the record to
indicate that there was available for the transportation of such
cow peas any rate or combination of rates less than the rate of
$1.33.
The Commission found that, at the time the cow peas were being
transported, defendant concurred in a rate of 94 cents per hundred
pounds on garbanzo (a kind of pea) from Navojoa to San Francisco;
that the rate of $1.33 for the transportation of the cow peas was
unreasonable to the extent that it exceeded the 94-cent rate; that
the shipments moved as described; that plaintiff paid and bore the
freight charges; that, so far as defendant participated in such
transportation and rates, it was a tortfeasor, and that it should
make reparation for the damage to complainant in the sum of
$1,122.72, with interest. And, by its order, the Commission
authorized and directed defendant to pay complainant that sum.
Page 283 U. S. 659
Defendant having refused to make reparation, plaintiff brought
this action, and in its complaint alleged the transportation, the
unreasonableness of the rate as found by the Commission, showed the
charges paid by it to defendant, made the Commission's report and
order a part of the complaint, and prayed judgment for the amount
of damages found by the Commission.
Defendant's answer admitted the transportation, the rate
exacted, and the charges collected. It alleged that defendant
maintained a rate applicable on cow peas in carloads from the
international boundary at Nogales to San Francisco, but it did not
specify that rate or state that it was reasonable. It averred that
the Commission had not found such rate unjust, unreasonable, or
otherwise in violation of law, and that the Commission had no
jurisdiction to order the defendant to pay any reparation or
damages.
The opinion of the district court of appeal differentiates this
case from
News Syndicate Co. v. New York Central R. Co.,
275 U. S. 179, on
the ground that it there appeared that the carrier violated the Act
by failing to maintain a rate to cover the transportation from the
international boundary to destination, thereby compelling the
shipper to pay the excessive joint through rate, and that, for the
determination of damages, it was necessary for the Commission to
determine the reasonableness of such rate. But the court said that,
in this case, defendant published and maintained a rate on
shipments from the boundary to destination which was not found
unreasonable by the Commission, and plaintiff was not compelled to
pay the joint through rate by reason of any violation of the Act on
the part of the defendant.
We are of opinion that the record shows that the Commission had
jurisdiction to determine the reasonableness of the joint through
international rate.
Page 283 U. S. 660
The Act does not empower the Commission to prescribe or regulate
such rates. It applies to international commerce only insofar as
the transportation takes place within the United States.
* The Act applied
to the transportation of the cow peas from the boundary to
destination, and required defendant to establish just and
reasonable rates for that service. And defendant was liable to
shippers for damages resulting from its failure so to do.
Interstate Commerce Act § 1(1)(c), (2) and (5), § 6(1),
(7), and § 8.
The Act prohibits every excessive charge, whether exacted
directly or obtained by indirection, and its provisions are
designed to prevent evasion of the rule that every charge for
transportation shall be just and reasonable. The collection by a
common carrier of exorbitant charges is a tort (
Smith v.
Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co., 49 Wis. 443, 448, 5 N.W.
240), and the general rule as to liability of joint tortfeasors
applies where two or more connecting carriers combine to impose
excessive charges for transportation over their connecting lines.
Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Sloss-Sheffield Co.,
269 U. S. 217,
269 U. S.
232-233. Defendant is liable for any violation of the
Act by it that caused or contributed to cause damage to plaintiff
without regard to the proportion of the charges attributable to the
foreign transportation or paid to the foreign carrier.
News
Syndicate Co. v. N.Y.C.R. Co., supra, pp.
275 U. S.
187-188.
The Act does not create a cause of action based on the
Commission's findings and reparation order for the recovery
Page 283 U. S. 661
of money collected as freight charges based on rates alleged to
be unjust and unreasonable. It makes a determination by the
Commission of the unreasonableness of the rate attacked and the
extent that it is, if at all excessive, a condition precedent to
suit.
Section 16(2) provides that, if the carrier shall not comply
with an order for the payment of money within the time specified,
the person for whose benefit is was made may file in the district
court of the United States "or in any state court of general
jurisdiction" a petition setting forth briefly "the causes for
which he claims damages, and the order of the commission," and that
the suit in the United States court shall proceed in all respects
"like other civil suits for damages," except that the findings and
order of the Commission shall be
prima facie evidence of
the facts therein stated. The section contains nothing relating to
evidence or procedure in state courts. It is clear that the action
is not on the award as such.
Meeker & Co. v. Lehigh Valley
R. Co., 236 U. S. 412,
236 U. S. 430.
But no action for damages alleged to have been caused by the
exaction of excessive rates for interstate transportation can be
maintained in any court, state or federal, in the absence of a
prior finding by the Commission that the rate charged was
unreasonable. The reasons upon which this rule rests have been
fully stated in our decisions.
Texas & P. Ry. v. Abilene
Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S. 426,
204 U. S. 444;
Robinson v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 222 U.
S. 506,
222 U. S. 510;
cf. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Pitcairn Coal Co.,
215 U. S. 481,
215 U. S. 498;
Great Northern Ry. v. Merchants' Elev. Co., 259 U.
S. 285,
259 U. S.
291-292.
There is no essential difference in this respect between a claim
arising out of interstate transportation and the one under
consideration. The Act applies to the interstate rate, and an
excessive charge for the transportation covered by it is a direct
and immediate violation. While
Page 283 U. S. 662
the Act does not govern the joint through international rate,
the demand for reparation is grounded upon the claim that the
maintenance of that rate participated in by the American carrier
and its violation of the Act, in failing to maintain a just and
reasonable rate for the transportation from the boundary to
destination, operated to compel payment of the charges based on the
excessive joint rate.
The complaint before the Commission alleged that the joint
through rate was unreasonable, and was charged in violation of the
Act. It was undoubtedly sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of
the Commission. The only requirement (§ 13) is that it "shall
briefly state the facts." Reparation proceedings before the
Commission properly may be, and frequently are, quite informal.
Many claims on account of excessive charges are dealt with and
finally disposed of, without formal pleading or proof, by means of
correspondence carried on by the Commission with claimants and
carriers respectively. Rule III(b). Defendant did not apply to the
Commission for authority to make the reparation claimed. It moved
to dismiss the complaint, alleging that the Commission lacked
jurisdiction over rates from points in an adjacent foreign country
to points in the United States. The motion was denied on the
authority of International Nickel Co. v. Director General, 66
I.C.C. 627. The record does not show the contents or substance of
defendant's answer referred to in the order. It does not appear
what, if any, issue was joined as to the facts. It is the duty of
the Commission, if there appears "any reasonable ground for
investigating" the complaint, to investigate the matters complained
of "in such manner and by such means as it shall deem proper."
§ 13. The report shows that the case was presented under
shortened procedure, and, having regard to the rules of practice,
this implies that there was a formal complaint, but no oral
hearing. Rule X-A. The evidence referred to in
Page 283 U. S. 663
the report fully sustains the finding that the joint through
rate of $1.33 was unreasonable to the extent that it exceeded the
94-cent rate contemporaneously applied to like transportation of
garbanzos.
The trial court's findings are not sufficient to show that, at
the time the shipments in question moved, defendant maintained a
just and reasonable rate applicable to the transportation of such
shipment over its lines from the international boundary to
destination.
The tariff, as described in the findings, does not purport to
apply to the American part of such international transportation. A
carload shipment "originating" at Nogales or at the point where the
line of the foreign carrier and that of the defendant touch the
boundary or in defendant's railroad yard adjacent to the boundary
clearly must be distinguished from a through carload shipment
brought to defendant at the boundary by a foreign carrier. The
former covers local transportation only, and involves two terminal
services, one at Nogales, the point where received from the
shipper, and the other at San Francisco, the place where delivered
to the consignee. The latter involves the transportation of a
through car from the point of connection and only the one terminal
service at destination. It is manifest that a tariff limited, as is
that described in the findings, to shipments so originating on
defendant's line does not apply to the American part of the
transportation of an international shipment on a through bill of
lading. It is to be presumed that, if any tariff covering that part
of the through service existed, defendant would have produced it;
and, in view of the facts shown, the burden was upon the carrier to
bring forward evidence that a rate therefor had been established,
as required by the Act. It follows that the lower court erred in
distinguishing this case from the
News Syndicate Co. v. New
York Central R. Co., supra. That case controls this one.
Judgment reversed.
* The Act does not authorize or forbid the making of joint
through international rates. The Commission, recognizing that they
are of great convenience to carriers and shippers, does not object
to their maintenance if shown, together with the agreed divisions,
in tariffs filed in compliance with requirements prescribed by it.
Tariff Circular 18A, Rule 72, adopted November 22, 1909, addition
adopted March 7, 1910. Publication of Rates Between United States
and Canada, 147 I.C.C. 778.