1. The Interstate Commerce Commission, acting pursuant to its
power to remove discrimination against interstate commerce and to
make intrastate transportation yield its just proportion of carrier
income, ordered carriers to increase their intrastate rates to the
level of rates on interstate traffic previously authorized and
established. The order in terms was to continue in force until
changed by the Commission, and was accompanied by the Commission's
suggestion that individual instances of resulting inequalities be
brought to its attention for correction.
Held: that the carriers were thereby compelled to put
into effect increased intrastate rates and to collect them, and
that an attempt by state authority to make them pay reparation to a
shipper upon the ground that a specific intrastate rate so
increased and collected was excessive and discriminatory was
repugnant to the order and the Interstate Commerce Act and beyond
the state jurisdiction. Pp.
297 U. S. 453,
297 U. S.
459.
2. Where a continuing order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission requires that the level of intrastate rates be the same
as that of interstate rates, and a later order merely requires the
carriers to modify a differential between specific interstate rates
to remove prejudice to a shipper, changes in such specific
interstate rates under the later order must be accompanied by like
changes in the corresponding intrastate rates to preserve the
equality commanded by the earlier order. P.
297 U. S.
460.
3. An order of the Interstate Commerce Commission allowing
carriers a specified time within which to make required changes of
rates implies a finding that such time is necessary to enable them
to make computations and to prepare and post schedules as required
by law. P.
297 U. S.
461.
4. The question whether a state commission infringed
constitutional rights of railroads by ordering reparation to a
shipper who paid rates which the commission, acting within its
powers, had previously authorized
held not properly raised
in the state trial court by
Page 297 U. S. 448
merely putting in evidence the order and the record upon which
it was based and the previous orders. P.
297 U. S.
461.
5. This Court, reviewing a judgment of an intermediate state
court, lacks jurisdiction to consider constitutional questions
which the highest court of the State declined to consider because
not raised in the trial court or presented to it in accordance with
a well established and reasonable practice. P.
297 U. S.
462.
278 Ill.App. 623 reversed.
Certiorari, 296 U.S. 560, to review the affirmance of a judgment
on an order of reparation recovered by the Brick Company against
the Railroad Company.
Page 297 U. S. 452
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER, delivered the opinion of the Court.
December 31, 1924, respondent sued petitioner and the
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company,
called the Panhandle, in the Circuit Court of Cook county,
Illinois, to recover reparation awarded by the Illinois Commerce
Commission on the ground that they collected from respondent
unreasonable and discriminatory charges for intrastate
transportation of brick from Bernice, Illinois, to places within
the Chicago switching district. [
Footnote 1] January 1, 1921, the Pennsylvania Railroad
Company, through lease, obtained control of the Panhandle. The
court gave judgment against the Pennsylvania for $44,428.09.
[
Footnote 2] That amount
includes reparation, interest, and attorney's fee. The reparation
adjudged is in respect of transportation on the Pennsylvania
Page 297 U. S. 453
between October 28, 1920, and February 16, 1922, including that
on the Panhandle after acquisition by the Pennsylvania. Petitioner
appealed directly to the State Supreme Court, and there sought
reversal on the ground that, as later to be specified, the
reparation order is repugnant to the Interstate Commerce Act, an
order of the Commission, and the Constitution of the United States.
After hearing argument, that court, being of opinion that the case
had been erroneously appealed to it, directed transfer to the
Appellate Court. There, the judgment was affirmed; the Supreme
Court denied a writ of certiorari.
First for consideration is a question raised by the answer and
decided by the Appellate Court, the highest court of the State in
which a decision could be had. 28 U.S.C. § 344(b);
Chicago, R.I. & P. R. Co. v. Perry, 259 U.
S. 548,
259 U. S. 551;
Home Ins. Co. v. Dick, 281 U. S. 397,
281 U. S. 407;
Minneapolis, St.P. & S.S.M. Ry. Co. v. Rock,
279 U. S. 410,
279 U. S.
411-412;
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v.
Mihas, 280 U. S. 102,
280 U. S. 104.
That question is whether the Illinois statutes under which the
state commission acted and its order awarding respondent reparation
are repugnant to the Interstate Commerce Act [
Footnote 3] and the order
Page 297 U. S. 454
of the Interstate Commerce Commission [
Footnote 4] providing for the intrastate rates that
became effective February 19, 1921, and continued in force until
February 16, 1922, in respect of which the state commission made
its award.
The Chicago switching district is a large area in and near that
city; it extends into Indiana, but by far the larger part is in
Illinois. [
Footnote 5] A number
of railroads, including the Pennsylvania and the Panhandle, extend
into the district, and conduct within it transportation of brick
and other commodities in intrastate and interstate commerce. There
are many brickyards in the district and elsewhere in Illinois.
Respondent has several in the district and two at Bernice in
Illinois, outside, but close to, the district. One of them is
located on the Pennsylvania, and the other on the Panhandle.
For a long time prior to federal control of railroads which
commenced January 1, 1918, and up to June 25 of that year, the rate
applicable to interstate and intrastate transportation of brick by
the Pennsylvania and Panhandle, respectively, from Bernice into the
district and
Page 297 U. S. 455
between points within the switching district, was 25 cents per
ton.
June 25, 1918, the Federal Railroad Administration, by General
Order No. 28, increased rates on brick by 2 cents per hundred
pounds. November 8, 1918, Freight Rate Authority No. 1887
substituted an increase of 25 percent for transportation within the
district. These changes operated to make the rate from Bernice into
the district 70 cents [
Footnote
6] and that between points within the district 30 cents per
ton.
The Transportation Act (of February 28) 1920, § 208(a),
directed that existing rates should obtain until changed by federal
or state authority or pursuant to authority of law.
March 10, 1920, respondent complained to the Interstate Commerce
Commission that the 70-cent rate was unreasonable and
discriminatory. The Commission made its report and order October
27, 1921, the pertinent substance of which is given below.
July 29, 1920, the Commission authorized increases applicable to
interstate traffic of 40 percent and 35 percent respectively, in
Eastern and Western groups and 33 1/3 percent on intergroup
transportation. Ex parte 74. [
Footnote 7] August 10, the Illinois commission authorized
a general increase of 33 1/3 percent. [
Footnote 8]
August 11, the Interstate Commerce Commission ordered that
Illinois territory be treated as within the Eastern group for the
purpose of applying the authorized increase of 40 percent in the
rates on interstate traffic between points in that territory.
[
Footnote 9]
August 26, rates on intrastate transportation of brick
established by the carriers pursuant to authority of the
Illinois
Page 297 U. S. 456
commission became effective. They were 93 1/2 cents per ton from
Bernice into the switching district in Illinois, and 40 cents
between Illinois points within the district. October 18, having
regard to the above-mentioned order of August 11, the Illinois
commission modified its order of August 10 so as to allow increases
of 35 percent to be made effective November 15, instead of the 33
1/3 percent it earlier permitted. [
Footnote 10] Accordingly, the intrastate rate from
Bernice into the switching district became 94 1/2 cents, and the
rate between points within the district became 40 1/2 cents.
January 11, 1921, the Interstate Commerce Commission, dealing
with intrastate rates within Illinois, notified and required
carriers to cease and desist from practicing the undue prejudice,
undue preference and advantage, and unjust discrimination which, as
specified in the Commission's report, it found to exist. The order
also notified and required the carriers to
"establish, put in force, and maintain rates and charges for
freight services . . . in intrastate commerce within the State of
Illinois which shall exceed the rates and charges of the carriers
now in force and applicable to such transportation in amounts
corresponding to the increases heretofore made by the carriers, now
in effect, under Ex Parte 74 . . . in said carriers' rates and
charges for freight services . . . in interstate commerce within
the State of Illinois and between points in the State of Illinois
and points in other states in the eastern group, including the
Illinois district. It is further ordered that this order shall
become effective on or before the 7th day of March, 1921, upon
notice . . . by not less than five days' filing and posting in the
manner prescribed in section 6 of the Interstate Commerce Act, and
remain in force until the further order of this Commission in the
premises. "
Page 297 U. S. 457
And the report, which was made a part of the order, stated:
"Some readjustments may be appropriate in individual instances
where substantial injury results. . . . Such inequalities as call
for readjustment may be brought to our attention in the appropriate
way and dealt with as occasion Requires. . . . The record
establishes that the present intrastate charges for freight
services . . . lower than the just and reasonable corresponding
interstate rates and charges authorized in and established in the
eastern group, including the Illinois district, pursuant to Ex
Parte 74, afford intrastate traffic and shippers and localities
within the State undue preference and subject interstate traffic
and shippers and localities outside the State to undue prejudice,
and unduly, unjustly, and unreasonably discriminate against
interstate commerce. [
Footnote
11]"
February 19, 1921, the carriers, in accordance with the
Commission's order, put in effect and until February 16, 1922,
maintained for intrastate transportation a rate of 98 cents on
brick from Bernice into the switching district and a rate of 42
cents between points within the district.
October 27, 1921, the Interstate Commerce Commission, dealing
with plaintiff's complaint filed March 10, 1920, found the 70-cent
rate on brick in interstate commerce from Bernice into the district
was not unreasonable, but that it was, and for the future would be,
unduly prejudicial to the extent that it exceeded the rates from
points within the district to interstate destinations therein by
more than 10 cents per ton. It further found that respondent failed
to show itself entitled to damages as the result of the undue
prejudice. [
Footnote 12] The
Commission ordered that the carriers
"cease and desist, on or before February 16, 1922, . . . from .
. . collecting for the transportation of common brick in carloads,
from Bernice . . . [and
Page 297 U. S. 458
other named points in Illinois and Indiana] to interstate
destinations within the Chicago switching district rates which
exceed the rates contemporaneously maintained by them on like
traffic from points within said district to interstate destinations
within said district by more than 10 cents per net ton."
And it ordered the carriers to
"establish, on or before February 16, 1922, upon notice . . . by
not less than 30 days' filing and posting . . . and thereafter to
maintain and apply to the transportation of common brick, in
carloads, from Bernice . . . [and other named points] to interstate
destinations within the Chicago switching district rates which
shall not exceed the rates contemporaneously maintained by them on
like traffic from points within said switching district to
interstate destinations within said district by more than 10 cents
per net ton."
Then the carriers established and put in force effective
February 16, 1922, a rate of 50 cents per ton for intrastate and
interstate transportation from Bernice into the switching district
and between points within it.
October 28, 1922, respondent applied to the Illinois commission
for reparation as to intrastate transportation from Bernice into
the switching district. November 7, 1923, the commission dismissed
the claim as to shipments prior to October 28, 1920, as barred by a
statute of limitations. The commission found that, at the time the
service in question was rendered (October 28, 1920, to February 16,
1922), 50 cents per ton provided adequate revenue for
transportation of brick from Bernice to points within the switching
district, that, to the extent the rates for that transportation
exceeded by more than 10 cents per ton, the rates contemporaneously
applied between points within the district, they were unjustly
discriminatory, and that respondent had been damaged to the extent
that the charges collected by the carrier exceeded
Page 297 U. S. 459
those that would have been assessed on a rate of 50 cents per
ton. And. on that basis. the commission fixed the amount of its
award. [
Footnote 13]
1. To the extent, if at all, that there is conflict between
state and federal regulation, the latter must prevail.
Unquestionably the Interstate Commerce Commission was authorized
directly to prescribe, or to require the carriers to establish and
maintain, intrastate rates to prevent or remove discrimination
against interstate commerce or to make intrastate transportation
yield its just proportion of the carriers' earnings.
Florida v.
United States, 282 U. S. 194,
282 U. S. 210;
Louisiana Public Service Comm'n v. Texas & N.O. R.
Co., 284 U. S. 125,
284 U. S. 131;
Florida v. United States, 292 U. S.
1,
292 U. S. 4.
During the period between February 19, 1921, and February 16, 1922,
the intrastate rates in force for transportation of brick by
petitioner's railroad from Bernice into the switching district were
maintained by petitioner pursuant to and in accordance with the
Interstate Commerce Commission's order of January 11, 1921. By that
order, the Commission "notified and required" carriers to cease the
prejudice and discrimination against interstate commerce resulting
from the application of their intrastate rates in force, and also
"notified and required" them to increase their intrastate rates and
to make them correspond with the interstate rates theretofore
increased in pursuance of its order in Ex parte 74. The
Commission's direction to the carriers that they collect charges
based on the intrastate rates required by its order was not less
mandatory than was its direction to cease prejudice and
discrimination. In order that the prescribed equality between
intrastate and corresponding interstate rates should not be
disturbed by state authority or by action of the carriers, the
Commission declared that the order -- and, necessarily, the rates
directed -- should continue in force until changed by it.
Page 297 U. S. 460
And, anticipating possible need for further action, the
Commission expressly suggested that individual instances of
inequalities be brought to its attention for correction . Although
respondent's complaint against the 70-cent rate established by
Freight Rate Authority No. 1887 was still pending, the record
discloses no application by respondent to amend or enlarge the
scope of the complaint or any effort to have reduced the 98-cent
rate directed by the Interstate Commerce Commission or to have
corrected the inequality resulting from its order of January 11,
1921. There is no suggestion that the intrastate rates in respect
of which the Illinois commission awarded reparation were not made
in obedience to and in strict accordance with the order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission. Save as the rate so prescribed
might be dealt with under federal law, the carriers were bound to
collect the charges based upon them. By the Interstate Commerce Act
and that order, the State was divested of jurisdiction, by specific
order, award of reparation, or otherwise, to reduce the charges
based on the intrastate rates so established. The order of the
Illinois commission, insofar as it awards reparation in respect of
transportation covered by rates that petitioner was required to put
in force and maintain by the Interstate Commerce Commission's order
of January 11, 1921, is plainly repugnant to the Interstate
Commerce Act and to that order. To the extent, therefore, that the
judgment depends on that part of the award, it is without
foundation and cannot be sustained.
2. Under the Interstate Commerce Commission's order of October
27, 1921, petitioner was free, upon the prescribed notice of 30
days, though not required before February 16, 1922, to reduce to
not to exceed 10 cents the differential between the interstate rate
from Bernice into the switching district and that for interstate
transportation between points within the district. That order
Page 297 U. S. 461
dealt only with interstate rates. But the order of January 11,
1921, established the rule of equality between rates for interstate
and intrastate transportation from Bernice into the district and
also for transportation between points within the district. On the
facts found by the Interstate Commerce Commission and the law as
applied by it, petitioner was required to maintain equality between
these intrastate and interstate rates. There is nothing in the
later report or order of October, 1921, to indicate intention on
the part of the Commission to authorize or permit a change of the
one without a like change in the other. The purpose, by exertion of
federal authority to control both, persisted. The state commission
was not at any time after the intrastate rates were established
under federal authority, authorized to condemn them or to award
reparation in respect of transportation to which they applied. By
the order of October 27, 1921, requiring adjustment of the
interstate rates upon 30 days' notice on or before February 16,
1922, the Commission impliedly found that the time allowed was
necessary to enable the carriers to compute the rates, prepare the
schedules, and post them as required by law. There is no support
for a claim that, as to transportation in the part of the period
between the order October 77, 1921, and February 16, 1922, the
Illinois commission had jurisdiction to grant reparation.
3. There remains for consideration the part of the judgment that
is based on the award made in respect of transportation between the
earliest date within the period fixed by the statute of
limitations, October 28, 1920, and the effective date of the
Commission's order, February 19, 1921. The intrastate rates in
effect during that time were made under authority of the State
acting through its commission and pursuant to the above-mentioned
orders of the latter August 10, 1920, authorizing 33 1/3 percent
increase and October 18, 1920, making the
Page 297 U. S. 462
increase 35 percent The rates so increased superseded the
70-cent rate made by the carrier while under federal control. The
state's jurisdiction as to them was untrammeled by any order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission or other exertion of federal power.
The reparation order, so far as it relates to that service, must be
sustained unless found repugnant to the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment to, or the commerce clause of, the Federal
Constitution.
No such question was, by answer, motion, or otherwise, expressly
raised in the trial court. Petitioner makes no claim that the
reparation order was specifically challenged in the trial court as
repugnant to either of these clauses, asserts that it was not
necessary so to do, and maintains that, at the trial, there was by
petitioner sufficiently drawn in question the validity of the order
on the ground of its being repugnant to these provisions. The sole
support for that claim is this: respondent put in evidence the
state commission's reparation order and the record on which it was
based. In defense, petitioner introduced the same record and the
state commission's rate orders authorizing, respectively, 93 1/2
cents and 94 1/2 cents per ton for transportation from Bernice into
the switching district.
Plainly that was not enough. The Illinois statute requires that,
in cases involving construction of the Federal Constitution,
appeals from circuit courts shall be taken directly to the Supreme
Court. [
Footnote 14] And, as
definitely shown by its decisions, that court will not take
jurisdiction unless it appears from the record that the
constitutional question
Page 297 U. S. 463
was urged in the lower court, the ruling on it preserved in the
record, and the error assigned on appeal. [
Footnote 15] While the order of that court
transferring the case does not specify the grounds on which it was
based, the petitioner states that the Supreme Court necessarily
held the constitutional questions had not been properly raised, and
that, on the oral argument, the Chief Justice stated that the
transfer would be made because of petitioner's failure properly to
raise and preserve the constitutional questions. The Appellate
Court so understood the grounds and effect of the order, and held
that, by transferring the case, the Supreme Court eliminated the
constitutional questions. As the highest court of the State
declined to consider them because not raised in the circuit court
or presented to it in accordance with practice that unquestionably
was well established and reasonable, this Court is without
jurisdiction to consider either of them.
Chicago, Indianapolis,
& L. Ry. Co. v. McGuire, 196 U. S. 128,
196 U. S. 131;
Hulbert v. Chicago, 202 U. S. 275;
Cox v. Texas, 202 U. S. 446,
202 U. S. 452;
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Woodford,
234 U. S. 46,
234 U. S.
51.
4. Petitioner's application for this writ suggests that, by a
construction contrary to that theretofore put upon § 68 of the
Illinois Public Utilities Act, it was denied an opportunity to be
heard on the question whether the evidence before the Illinois
commission was sufficient to sustain the reparation award. And,
upon that basis, petitioner claims that there is here presented the
question whether, by denial of hearing, it was deprived of property
without due process of law. But, as is shown by the opinion of the
Appellate Court, it did hear petitioner and respondent on that
question, and decided it in favor of the latter.
Page 297 U. S. 464
There is no foundation for petitioner's claim that it was denied
hearing.
The judgment below will be reversed, and the case remanded, with
directions for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Illinois Public Utilities Act, § 72, Laws Illinois 1921, p.
745.
[
Footnote 2]
The case was dismissed as to the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago
& St. Louis Railroad.
[
Footnote 3]
The Interstate Commerce Act (Title 49, U.S.Code) provides:
"Section 13(3). Whenever . . . there shall be brought in issue
any rate . . . made or imposed by authority of any State, or
initiated by the President during the period of Federal control,
the Commission, before proceeding to hear and dispose of such
issue, shall cause the State or States interested to be notified of
the proceeding."
The paragraph provides for conference and cooperation between
the Interstate Commerce Commission and the State authorities.
"Section 13(4). Whenever . . . the Commission . . . finds that
any such rate . . . causes any undue or unreasonable advantage,
preference, or prejudice as between persons or localities in
intrastate commerce, on the one hand, and interstate or foreign
commerce, on the other hand, or any undue, unreasonable, or unjust
discrimination against interstate or foreign commerce which is
forbidden and declared to be unlawful, it shall prescribe the rate
. . . or the maximum or minimum, or maximum and minimum, thereafter
to be charged. . . . Such rates . . . shall be observed while in
effect by the carriers parties to such proceeding affected thereby,
the law of any State or the decision or order of any state
authority to the contrary notwithstanding."
As it then stood, § 15a(2) provided:
"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 . . . will . . . 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 portions of the country."
[
Footnote 4]
Intrastate Rates Within Illinois, 60 I.C.C. 92.
[
Footnote 5]
For full description,
see Switching Rates in Chicago
District, 177 I.C.C. 669, 712.
[
Footnote 6]
General Order 28, § 6, provides that 5 cents or more shall
be increased to 10 cents. And so, here, 65 cents became 70
cents.
[
Footnote 7]
Increased Rates, 1920, 58 I.C.C. 220.
[
Footnote 8]
Docket No. 10620, 7 Ill.P.U.C. 1047.
[
Footnote 9]
Authority to Increase Rates, 58 I.C.C. 302.
[
Footnote 10]
Docket No. 10,620, 8 Ill.P.U.C. 31.
[
Footnote 11]
Intrastate Rates Within Illinois, 60 I.C.C. 92, 103, 104.
[
Footnote 12]
Illinois Brick Co. v. Director General, 64 I.C.C. 273.
[
Footnote 13]
Docket No. 12765, 3 Ill.C.C. 165, 300.
[
Footnote 14]
Practice Act of 1907, § 118, Laws 1907, p. 443, repealed
and replaced by Civil Practice Act of June 23, 1933, §§
75, 94, effective January 1, 1934, Laws 1933, pp. 805, 811.
Smith-Hurd Rev.Stats. 1935, c. 110, §§ 199, 218.
Van
Dyke v. Illinois Com. Men's Assn., 358 Ill. 458, 464, 193 N.E.
490;
Central Union Co. v. Edwardsville, 269 U.
S. 190,
269 U. S.
194.
[
Footnote 15]
Foreman-State Nat. Bank v. Sistek, 358 Ill. 525,
529-530, 193 N.E. 513;
Hoffman v. Sears Community Bank,
356 Ill. 598, 601, 191 N.E. 280;
Albrecht v. Omphgent
Township, 324 Ill. 200, 202, 154 N.E. 898.