1. Legislative approval of a construction placed by this Court
upon an Act of Congress is evidenced by failure to amend. P.
298 U. S.
500.
2. The mere fact that all the shares of a railroad corporation
and all the shares of a manufacturing corporation are owned by a
holding company does not make transportation by the one of the
products of the other unlawful under the commodities clause of the
Interstate Commerce Act. P.
298 U. S.
499.
United States v. Reading Co., 253 U. S.
26, distinguished. Existence of power in the holding
company to control the railway company, not exercised in the
present case, did not make the railway company the
alter
ego of the holding company.
11 F. Supp. 435 affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court of three judges which
dismissed a bill brought by the United States to enjoin the Railway
Company from hauling the products of certain manufacturing
companies in alleged violation of the commodities clause of the
Interstate Commerce Act.
Page 298 U. S. 497
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellee, incorporated under the laws of Illinois and Indiana,
has been an interstate common carrier by railroad since 1884. It
operates the "Chicago Outer Belt Line," 195 miles long, which runs
from a point on Lake Michigan, north of Chicago, around that city
to South Chicago, Gary, and Porter, south and east. This line
connects and interchanges freight with every railroad entering
Chicago, and serves many industrial plants. Among them are certain
large producers of steel and steel products, operated by
corporations, sometimes called "subsidiaries," all of whose shares
belong to the United States Steel Corporation: Illinois Steel
Company, American Bridge Company, American Sheet & Tin Plate
Company, National Tube Company, American Steel & Wire Company,
and Cyclone Fence Company. Transportation of products -- raw,
semi-finished, and finished -- to and from and amongst the plants
of the six constitutes 60 percent of appellee's business. It files
tariffs and complies generally with the Interstate Commerce Act and
Commission regulations. During the years 1926-1930, its annual
operating revenue exceeded $20,000,000.
The United States Steel Corporation, a holding nonoperating
corporation organized in 1901, then acquired, and has ever since
held, all shares of appellee, also all those of the producing
companies.
By an original bill filed 1930 (amended 1932), the United States
instituted this proceeding against appellee, sole defendant, in the
District Court, Northern District
Page 298 U. S. 498
of Illinois. They alleged that, by transporting articles
manufactured, mined, produced, or owned by subsidiaries of the
United States Steel Corporation, appellee violated the commodities
clause of the Interstate Commerce Act, Act June 29, 1906, c. 3591,
34 Stat. 584, 585, U.S.C. Title 49, § 1(8), copied in the
margin,
298 U. S.
After answer, voluminous evidence, and trial, the court below
made findings of fact and announced an opinion. It concluded:
Mere ownership by the United States Steel Corporation of all
shares of both appellee and a producing subsidiary was not enough
to show that products made or owned by the latter were articles or
commodities produced by the former, or under its authority, or
which it owned in whole or in part, or in which it had an interest,
direct or indirect, and was forbidden to transport by the
commodities clause.
Also,
"no single piece of evidence taken alone, nor all taken together
and considered as a whole warrant the inference that the defendant
and the producing and manufacturing subsidiaries are under the
domination, control, direction, and management of the Steel
Corporation in the sense that the defendant and the other
subsidiaries are mere departments, branches, adjuncts, and
instrumentalities of the Steel Corporation. The evidence fails to
show that the defendant has any interest, direct or indirect,
Page 298 U. S. 499
legal or equitable, in the articles or commodities which it
transports for the subsidiaries of the Steel Corporation."
A final decree dismissed the bill for want of equity, and the
cause is here by direct appeal (U.S.C. Title 49, § 45). Both
conclusions are challenged, and we are asked to reverse the decree
and grant relief as originally prayed.
-----
The commodities clause became part of the Interstate Commerce
Act in 1906, U.S.C. Title 49, § 1(8), and has remained without
material change. It was first interpreted here in
United States
v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U.
S. 366,
213 U. S. 415,
where, by Mr. Justice White, the Court said:
"We then construe the statute as prohibiting a railroad company
engaged in interstate commerce from transporting in such commerce
articles or commodities under the following circumstances and
conditions: (a) when the article or commodity has been
manufactured, mined, or produced by a carrier or under its
authority, and at the time of transportation, the carrier has not,
in good faith, before the act of transportation, dissociated itself
from such article or commodity; (b) when the carrier owns the
article or commodity to be transported, in whole or in part; (c)
when the carrier at the time of transportation, has an interest,
direct or indirect, in a legal or equitable sense, in the article
or commodity, not including therefore articles or commodities
manufactured, mined, produced, or owned, etc., by a
bona
fide corporation in which the railroad company is a
stockholder."
This construction has been accepted and followed in the later
cases.
United States v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 220 U.
S. 257,
220 U. S. 266;
United States v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co.,
238 U. S. 516,
238 U. S. 526;
United States v. Reading Co., 253 U. S.
26,
253 U. S. 62;
United States v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 254 U.
S. 255,
254 U. S.
266.
Page 298 U. S. 500
Through Mr. Justice Lamar, the Court said, in
United States
v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co.:
"But mere stock ownership by a railroad, or by its stockholders,
in a producing company cannot be used as a test by which to
determine the legality of the transportation of such company's coal
by the interstate carrier. For, when the commodity clause was under
discussion, attention was called to the fact that there were a
number of the anthracite roads which at that time owned stock in
coal companies. An amendment was then offered which, if adopted,
would have made it unlawful for any such road to transport coal
belonging to such company. The amendment, however, was voted down,
and, in the light of that indication of congressional intent, the
commodity clause was construed to mean that it was not necessarily
unlawful for a railroad company to transport coal belonging to a
corporation in which the road held stock.
United States v.
Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U. S. 366,
213 U. S.
414. For a stronger reason, it would not necessarily be
illegal for the road to transport coal belonging to a corporation
whose stock was held by those who owned the stock of the railroad
company."
Notwithstanding the intent imputed to Congress by this opinion,
announced in 1915, no amendment has been made to the commodities
clause. We must therefore conclude that the interpretation of the
Act then accepted has legislative approval.
It is now insisted that, although a railroad company may own the
shares of a producing company and yet transport the latter's
products without violating the commodities clause, if a holding
company acquires the shares of both carrier and producer, then such
transportation becomes illegal. The theory is that the subsidiaries
of holding companies are necessarily no more than parts of it.
Evidently, this is entirely out of harmony with the reasoning
advanced to support the construction of the
Page 298 U. S. 501
act adopted in
United States v. Delaware & H. Co.,
supra; also in direct conflict with the above-quoted language
from
United States v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co.
Considering former rulings, it is impossible for us now to
declare as matter of law that every company all of whose shares are
owned by a holding company necessarily becomes an agent,
instrumentality, or department of the latter. Whether such intimate
relation exists is a question of fact to be determined upon
evidence.
Counsel for appellants submit that the record compels the
inference of fact that appellee and the subsidiary producing
companies are but departments of the United States Steel
Corporation, and that, as in
United States v. Reading Co.,
supra, we should find the carrier is violating the commodities
clause. It is not claimed that this inference derives from any
single fact, but out of the mass. The following portion of the
opinion in
United States v. Reading Company is heavily
relied upon:
"But the question which we have presented by this branch of the
case [alleged violation of the Commodities Clause] is not the
technical one of whether ownership by a railroad company of stock
in a coal company renders it unlawful for the former to carry the
product of the latter, for here the railroad company did not own
any of the stock of the coal company. The real question is whether
combining in a single corporation the ownership of all of the stock
of a carrier and of all of the stock of a coal company results in
such community of interest or title in the product of the latter as
to bring the case within the scope of the provisions of the
act."
And, having regard to this, they say: "The affirmative answer
given in the
Reading case is controlling here."
Obviously, what was there stated cannot be taken as declaration
of an abstract principle; it had application
Page 298 U. S. 502
to the relevant circumstances. Later (pp.
253 U. S. 61-62)
in the same opinion, the essential ones are revealed:
"All three of the Reading Companies had the same officers and
directors, and it was under their authority that the mines were
worked and the railroad operated, and they exercised that authority
in the one case in precisely the same character as in the other --
as officials of the Holding Company. The manner in which the stock
of the three was held resulted, and was intended to result, in the
abdication of all independent corporate action by both the Railway
Company and the Coal Company, involving as it did the surrender to
the Holding Company of the entire conduct of their affairs. It
would be to subordinate reality to legal form to hold that the coal
mined by the Coal Company, under direction of the Holding Company's
officials, was not produced by the same 'authority' that operated
the Reading Railway lines."
If the evidence here showed the relationship between the holding
company, the carrier, and the producing companies to be
substantially as in the
Reading case, that opinion well
might be regarded as controlling. But there is material difference,
and we must look elsewhere for guidance.
Properly to appraise the situation now presented, particular
attention must be given to the following facts: all shares of
appellee and the subsidiary producing companies have been owned by
the United States Steel Corporation since 1901. The railroad has
been under constant supervision by the Interstate Commerce
Commission. In the Matter of Alleged Rebates to the United States
Steel Corporation, 36 I.C.C. 557. It functions as a separate
corporate carrier under immediate
Page 298 U. S. 503
control of its own directors, no one of whom is on the board of
the holding company; it owns all necessary equipment, makes its own
contracts, manages its own finances, serves its patrons without
discrimination, and apparently to their satisfaction. The
lawfulness of the relationship between the holding company and
subsidiaries was challenged in
United States v. United States
Steel Corp., 251 U. S. 417,
decided here in 1920. After long and thorough investigation and
consideration, this Court held the Anti-Trust Act was not being
violated. The present proceeding is one to prevent probable future
unlawful conduct, and not to punish acts long since completed,
however reprehensible. "Our consideration should be of not what the
corporation had power to do or did, but what it has now power to do
and is doing."
United States v. United States Steel
Corporation, supra, p.
251 U. S.
444.
The court below made definite findings of fact, and upon them
reached the conclusions stated above. Although criticized, and
notwithstanding certain isolated acts may indicate undue control
over the carrier at their dates, we think that the findings are
essentially correct, and support the decree. Instances of
participation in the affairs of the appellee by the officers of the
United States Steel Corporation, stressed by counsel, are
relatively few; a material part of them occurred years ago -- some
of the more important in 1909. They are not adequate to support the
claim that appellee must be regarded as the
alter ego of
its sole stockholder. The mere power to control, the possibility of
initiating unlawful conditions, is not enough, as clearly pointed
out in
United States v. Delaware & Hudson Co., supra.
That a stockholder should show concern about the company's affairs,
ask for reports, sometimes consult with its officers, give advice,
and even
Page 298 U. S. 504
object to proposed action is but the natural outcome of a
relationship not inhibited by the commodities clause.
We find no adequate reason for disapproving the challenged
decree, and it must be
Affirmed.
|
298
U.S. 492|
*
"From and after May first, nineteen hundred and eight, it shall
be unlawful for any railroad company to transport from any State,
Territory, or the District of Columbia, to any other State,
Territory, or the District of Columbia, or to any foreign country,
any article or commodity, other than timber and the manufactured
products thereof, manufactured, mined, or produced by it, or under
its authority, or which it may own in whole or in part, or in which
it may have any interest, direct or indirect, except such articles
or commodities as may be necessary and intended for its use in the
conduct of its business as a common carrier."
MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting.
I think the judgment should be reversed.
The language of the commodities clause, read in the light of its
legislative history, can leave no doubt that its purpose was to
withhold from every interstate rail carrier the inducement and
facility for favoritism and abuse of its powers as a common
carrier, which experience had shown are likely to occur when a
single business interest occupies the inconsistent position of
carrier and shipper.
See United States v. Reading Co.,
253 U. S. 26,
253 U. S. 60-61.
Before the enactment of the commodities clause, Congress, by
sweeping prohibitions, had made unlawful every form of rebate to
shippers and every form of discrimination in carrier rates,
service, and facilities, injurious to shippers or the public. By
the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, it had forbidden combinations in
restraint of interstate commerce. But it did not stop there. The
commodities clause was aimed not at the practices of railroads
already penalized, but at the suppression of the power and the
favorable opportunity, inseparable from actual control of both
shipper and carrier by the same interest, to engage in practices
already forbidden and others inimical to the performance of carrier
duties to the public.
See Delaware, L. & W. R. Co. v.
United States, 231 U. S. 363,
231 U. S. 370;
United States v. Reading Co., supra.
It is not denied that the "indirect" interest of the carrier in
the commodity transported at which the statute strikes may be
effected through the instrumentality of a
Page 298 U. S. 505
holding company which owns the stock both of the carrier and the
company which manufactures and ships the commodity. This was
definitely established by the decision in
United States v.
Reading Co., supra, where it was held that the power of
control through holding company ownership of all the capital stock
both of an interstate rail carrier and a shipper producing the
commodity carried, plus an active exercise of that control, are
enough to make the transportation unlawful.
While it was recognized, as had been held in
United States
v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U.
S. 366, that mere ownership by a carrier or a shipper of
the stock of the other does not call the statute into operation,
the Court was careful to point out, pp.
253 U. S. 62,
63, that,
"where such ownership of stock is resorted to not for the
purpose of participating in the affairs of the corporation in which
it is held in a manner normal and usual with stockholders, but for
the purpose of making it a mere agent, or instrumentality, or
department of another company, the courts will look through the
forms to the realities of the relation between the companies as if
the corporate agency did not exist, and will deal with them as the
justice of the case may require."
Domination in fact by a holding company both of the rail carrier
and the producing shipper of commodities, in addition to its legal
power to dominate them, is enough to bring the carrier within the
prohibition of the commodities clause.
The only question for our decision is whether the complete power
of the United States Steel Corporation, through stock ownership, to
dominate both appellee and certain shippers over its lines has been
exercise sufficiently to exemplify the evil which the commodities
clause was intended to prevent, and so to bring appellee within its
condemnation. It is of no consequence that complaints of rebates by
appellee to United States Steel
Page 298 U. S. 506
Corporation subsidiaries have not been sustained, In the Matter
of Alleged Rebates to the United States Steel Corporation, 36
I.C.C. 557, or that the Steel Corporation and its subsidiaries have
been held not to infringe the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
United
States v. United States Steel Corp., 251 U.
S. 417. The commodities clause does not forbid rebating
or attempts to monopolize interstate commerce, which are dealt with
by other statutes. It is concerned with transportation of
commodities by a rail carrier where the carrier and the producer
and shipper are so dominated by the same interest, through the
exercise of power secured by stock ownership, as to make rebates,
discriminations, attempts to monopolize, and other abuses of
carrier power easy, and their detection and punishment
difficult.
It is not important, as the court below thought, that, in the
relations between the Steel Corporation and its subsidiaries,
"there was a scrupulous recognition of the separate entities," or
that all transactions between them were "in the form of
transactions and communications between two separate and distinct
corporations," or that the business and accounts of each subsidiary
"were kept separate and distinct" from those of others. Nor is it
of any moment, as this Court seems to imply, that the affiliates do
not have the same officers and directors, and that, some years ago,
they abandoned the practice of maintaining interlocking
directorates.
Those familiar with present-day methods of corporate control
will not be so naive as to suppose that the complete domination in
fact of its subsidiaries by a holding company owning all their
stock is in any way inconsistent with scrupulous recognition of
their separate corporate entities, or with the maintenance of
separate accounts and distinct personnels of officers and
directors. Every holding company presupposes a relationship between
it and a distinct corporate entity and its power to control the
Page 298 U. S. 507
latter. Where the issue is whether that power has been
exercised, "courts will look through the forms to the realities of
the relation between the companies as if the corporate agencies did
not exist." Hence, we are presently concerned with what is in fact
done in the Steel Corporation's exercise of its power to control,
not with the particular legal forms or methods under cover of which
control may in fact be effected. And, since we must look to its
acts of control, in addition to its power acquired by stock
ownership, as the decisive test, we must scrutinize what has
occurred in the past as the best indication of the manner and
extent of the use which may be made of the power in the future.
In appraising the Steel Corporation's acts of control over the
appellee, it is of significance that the dominant interest in the
intercompany relationship, unlike that in the earlier case brought
before the Court, is that of production, and not transportation.
Appellee, although a common carrier subject to public duties and
responsibilities, is, in its relation to the Steel Corporation and
its subsidiaries, but an appendage to their vast steel-producing
business. While the commodities clause makes no distinction between
the one type of domination and the other, such control of a
railroad is far more menacing to the public and to rival producers
than is domination of producer interests by a carrier. When the
carrier interest predominates, extension of its transportation
facilities beyond the demands of its producing affiliates, and even
to their competitors, with resulting benefit to the public, may
well ensue. But where the producing interest is dominant, and the
carrier is chiefly engaged in transporting the commodities of
producing affiliates, restricted or indifferent service to
competing producers and to the public, tardy, or inadequate
extension of facilities, discrimination in furnishing service and
facilities are dangers especially to be anticipated.
Page 298 U. S. 508
In such a relationship, control of carrier capital accumulation,
expansion, and expenditure is a peculiarly convenient and effective
means of subordinating carrier public service to the interests of
production by restriction of carrier expansion which would benefit
the public and competing producers, or by allowing it only under
discriminatory conditions. It is with these general considerations
in mind, especially pertinent to the present case, that its facts
should be a examined.
Since its formation in 1901, the Steel Corporation has owned all
the capital stock of the appellee railroad and of the Illinois
Steel Company, a manufacturing company which appellee serves.
Through lease, in 1909, of the Chicago, Lake Shore & Eastern
Railway line, and the acquisition of appurtenant trackage rights
over another line, appellee secured and maintains direct
transportation facilities between the Illinois Steel Company and
mines and quarries, all subsidiaries of the Steel Corporation.
Sixty percent of appellee's tonnage is furnished by Steel
Corporation subsidiaries.
Although the Steel Corporation is exclusively a holding, and not
an operating, company, its bylaw defining the president's duties
provide that he "shall have general charge of the business of the
corporation relating to manufacturing, mining and transportation."
The record shows that this authority is exercised by close and
constant supervision over the business and affairs of Steel
Corporation subsidiaries, not through the formal proceedings of
stockholders and directors meetings, but through conferences and
correspondence taking place directly between the officers of the
Steel Corporation and those of its subsidiaries.
From 1901 to 1920, there were on appellee's board of directors
never less than four officers or directors of the Steel
Corporation, selected from its most important officers. Since 1920,
the appellee's board of directors has
Page 298 U. S. 509
been selected by appellee's president and elected by him acting
as proxy for the Steel Corporation. He has likewise selected the
officers, who have been elected by the Board at his suggestion. The
record is replete with evidence, chiefly correspondence, showing
the complete subservience of appellee's president to the officers
of the Steel Corporation in matters of corporate policy. The
subservience of appellee's board of directors to its president, and
through him, in turn, to the Steel Corporation, is exemplified by
appellee's settled practice from 1910 until the time of suit of
entering into contracts without any previous approval by its board
of directors. At its annual meeting of directors, the contracts
which have been previously entered into, and often have already
been performed, are ratified and confirmed. This procedure was
followed with respect to all contracts, some 2,313 in number,
executed on behalf of appellee between 1910 and 1933.
Appellee's fiscal policy has for many years been dominated and
rigidly controlled by the Steel Corporation. Dividends have been
habitually declared and the amount of them fixed only after
securing, by correspondence, the consent and approval of the
officers of the Steel Corporation. The Steel Corporation draws to
itself the surplus funds of its subsidiaries, including appellee,
which are deposited with it, for its own use, often upon its
specific request or demand, and at a rate of interest which it
fixes. These funds are withdrawn by draft of the subsidiary,
payable only upon acceptance by the Steel Corporation, and
customarily upon notice given in advance. From 1920 to 1933,
appellee's aggregate deposits with the Steel Corporation were
$79,000,000, of which $32,000,000 were made at the request or
demand of the Steel Corporation.
Since its formation, the Steel Corporation has maintained under
its direction and control a clearance account by which monthly
settlement is made of intercompany
Page 298 U. S. 510
accounts among its various subsidiaries. All of appellee's
settlements of such accounts, except freight charges and traffic
claims, are cleared through this account. The account is managed by
the controller of the Steel Corporation. Interest is charged or
allowed on balances due in the account at a rate of interest fixed
by the treasurer of the Steel Corporation. Terms of settlement are
controlled by it, and not by free bargaining of debtor and
creditor.
By direction of the finance committee of the Steel Corporation,
its subsidiaries, including appellee, are required to obtain in
advance the approval of the committee of all expenditures for
capital account and improvements in excess of a specified amount.
From 1920 to 1932, the limit was $10,000, since which it has been
$5,000. Since 1908, the officers of the Steel Corporation have
issued from time to time, to all its subsidiaries, instructions
outlining in detail the rules and procedure governing their
application to the Steel Corporation for its approval of their
expenditures for improvements. This requirement was not
perfunctory. Failure to secure from the officers of the Steel
Corporation, in advance, the approval of capital expenditures
brought from them by letter or telegram swift reminder of the
neglect. Requests for approval of proposed expenditures have been
the occasion for careful inquiry by the officers of the Steel
Corporation as to their necessity and propriety. In recent years,
approximately 70 percent of appellee's total capital expenditures
have been of the class requiring consent by the Steel Corporation.
* Included were
items directly
Page 298 U. S. 511
affecting appellee's transportation service, such as the cost of
rolling stock, procuring an adequate water supply for its engines,
improvement of its right of way, and additional yard
facilities.
With such minute and continuous control of capital outlays of
appellee by an organization primarily interested in production,
rather than common carrier service, it is not surprising that the
only expansion of appellee during the period of control has been
its lease of the line of the Chicago, Lake Shore & Eastern
Railway, a subsidiary of a Steel Corporation producing affiliate,
the Illinois Steel Company, which it served almost exclusively, and
the acquisition through this lease of a trackage privilege over the
Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad, restricted to the hauling
of products of producing subsidiaries of the Steel Corporation-an
arrangement by which appellee raised its tonnage from subsidiaries
of the Steel Corporation from 25 percent to 60 percent
It was the chairman of the board of the Steel Corporation, not
the officers of appellee, who had the deciding voice in determining
whether the lease should be taken and who assumed active control of
the negotiations for its acquisition. Again, in 1920, when the
trackage agreement was subject to cancellation by reason of the
receivership of the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, it was the
chairman of the board of the Steel Corporation who actively
controlled the successful negotiation for a continuance of the
agreement.
The record discloses many other forms of actual control of the
business and affairs of appellee by the Steel Corporation which it
is unnecessary to detail. It is enough that those mentioned, when
examined in their setting, show with convincing force that the
appellee railroad is in fact obedient to the dominating control of
producer of commodities which it transports. In every instance when
the Steel Corporation has conceived that it had any
Page 298 U. S. 512
interest to subserve, appellee has willingly done its bidding.
In none has there been any indication of a disposition to pursue
any policy not at least tacitly approved by the Steel Corporation.
The active and continuous control over appellee's finances and
expenditures is alone sufficient to create a continuing danger of
neglect and abuse of appellee's carrier duties in favor of the
dominating production and shipping interest, a temptation and an
opportunity which it was the purpose of the commodities clause to
forestall. In addition, the Steel Corporation has exerted that
power, in the acquisition of the Lake Shore lease and its
appurtenant trackage rights, to secure special advantages for its
producing subsidiaries. The trackage rights extend only to hauling
their own product, not that of their rivals.
This relationship passes far beyond that which is normal between
a railroad and its stockholders, and establishes a control over
appellee's policy as complete as though it were but a department of
the Steel Corporation. If the commodities clause permits control
such as is exhibited here, one is at a loss to say what scope
remains for the operation of the statute. Whatever views may be
entertained of the soundness and wisdom of the decision in
United States v. Delaware & Hudson Co., supra, it
neither requires nor excuses our reduction of the commodities
clause to a cipher in the calculations of those who control the
railroads of the country.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO concur in this
opinion.
* Out of an annual average capital expenditure by appellee of
approximately $900,000, during each of the years from 1926 to 1930,
inclusive, an average of over $600,000 annually required the prior
approval of the Steel Corporation. In 1930, appellee made capital
expenditures of $1,910,755, of which $1,315,773 required the
approval of the Steel Corporation. Appellee's total capital
expenditures from 1926 to 1930 amounted to $4,597,925, of which
$3,153,817 required such approval.