1. Transportation by railroad of livestock in carload lots to
public stockyards includes unloading into suitable pens. § 15,
Interstate Commerce Act. P.
316 U. S.
223.
2. Whether the use of stockyard facilities for egress of
livestock to the public street after unloading is a part of the
transportation service for which charges may reasonably be made, is
a question to be decided by the Interstate Commerce Commission in
the exercise of its judgment upon the facts of each particular
case, and not for decision according to any fixed rule of law. P.
316 U. S.
225.
3. Pursuant to long and uniform practice, direct shipments of
livestock made by Chicago meat packers to themselves at the Chicago
stockyards are there unloaded in pens furnished by the stockyards
company -- a service for which the carrier pays the stockyards,
absorbing the charge in its transportation rates, and further
"yardage" charges are collected by the stockyards company from the
packers for subsequent stockyards services, including the use of
the stockyards property for egress of the livestock to the public
street. The packing companies asked the Interstate Commerce
Commission to establish rules and practices under which they might
obtain delivery of the livestock in the pens, with egress for its
immediate removal to the nearest public street by a way to be
designated by the carriers, without payment of yardage charges to
the stockyards company or of any charges other than the line-haul
rates.
Held:
(1) In determining the reasonableness of the practice, the
Commission properly considered its evolution, including the history
of dealings between the packers and the stockyards company, and
considered the effect of the existing and proposed practices on the
interests of the carriers, the public and other shippers. P.
316 U. S.
225.
(2) A finding by the Commission that the practice is reasonable
is supported by evidence, and is therefore conclusive on this
Court. P.
316 U. S.
231.
(3) The Commission, having decided that transportation ended
with the unloading of the livestock into the unloading pens,
rightly concluded that it had no jurisdiction to inquire into the
reasonableness
Page 316 U. S. 217
of practices or charges of the stockyards company beyond that
point. P.
316 U. S.
231.
(4) Insofar as the stockyards company is an agency in
transportation, it is subject to the Interstate Commerce Act and to
the control of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Insofar as it
performs stockyards services, it is subject to the Packers and
Stockyards Act and to regulation by the Secretary of Agriculture.
P.
316 U. S.
232.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court, three judges
sitting, which dismissed a bill to set aside an order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Swift & Company and Omaha Packing Company, its wholly owned
subsidiary, filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission a
complaint against the common carriers by railroad which served the
Chicago Union Stock Yards, operated by the Union Stock Yard &
Transit Company. [
Footnote 1]
They were later joined by Armour & Company
Page 316 U. S. 218
as intervenor to constitute the interest referred to herein as
the packers. Although Armour sought no relief, it was allowed to
intervene because it was at the time litigating in the courts a
similar complaint, which was later passed on by this Court in
Armour & Co. v. Alton R. Co., 312 U.
S. 195. The complaint in this case concerned practices
of the Union Stock Yard & Transit Company and charges collected
by it from the packers, but the Yard Company was not a party to the
proceedings. The packers sought a revision of the Yard Company's
practices, which they said were part of the carrier-shipper
relation, through the exercise of the Interstate Commerce
Commission's jurisdiction over the railroads and over
transportation.
The complaint charged that the packers shipped over lines of
defendant carriers from various points of origin throughout the
United States to Chicago, Illinois, what are known as "direct
shipments" of livestock. "Direct shipments" refers to livestock
consigned directly to a packer at the Union Stock Yards, as
distinguished from a shipment consigned to a commission merchant at
the Stock Yards for sale. [
Footnote
2] Direct shipments are generally of livestock which has been
purchased by the packer or its buyers at country points or at
markets other than
Page 316 U. S. 219
Chicago. On arrival, the cars containing the livestock are
placed at unloading or chute pens of the Yard Company by the
railroad employees, and the stock is then unloaded and placed in
the pens by employees of the Yard Company. For this unloading
service, the Yard Company is paid at published tariff rates
[
Footnote 3] by the railroads,
which absorb the charge out of their line-haul rates.
The packers desire immediately to take their consignments from
these unloading pens, and insist that they desire no further
services and, of course, desire to incur no further charges.
The Yard Company, however, under tariffs filed with the
Secretary of Agriculture pursuant to the Packers and Stockyards
Act, [
Footnote 4] imposes upon
the packers a schedule of charges known as yardage charges, which
vary from ten cents to forty-five cents per head of stock. The
packers say that they desire none of the services, such as
weighing, watering, feeding, or holding, which yardage charges
compensate, and desire only to move their stock immediately from
the unloading pens to the public streets without payment of the
yardage charges. Contending that it is their legal right so to
obtain delivery, the packers made sufficient demand upon the Yard
Company and upon the railroad companies for immediate and free
delivery of their stock from the unloading pens. This was refused,
and yardage charges have been paid to the Yard Company under
protest. The packers demanded from the Commission relief by way of
reparation and asked the Commission to establish rules and
practices under which they may obtain delivery to themselves by the
railroads of
Page 316 U. S. 220
direct shipments at the Union Stock Yards in convenient, safe,
and suitable pens, with egress for the immediate removal of the
livestock to the nearest public street, by a way to be designated
by the railroads, without the payment of any yardage charges to the
Union Stock Yards & Transit Company, and without the payment of
any charges other than the line-haul transportation charges of the
railroads.
The Commission, after hearings, denied the packers relief for
reasons later to be considered. It found that the delivery of stock
consigned by the packers to themselves at the Stock Yards into the
Yard Company's pens without affording free egress for the shipments
is not an unreasonable practice on the part of the carriers, and
that the yardage charges thereafter assessed by the Union Stock
Yard & Transit Company are not subject to the Commission's
jurisdiction. 238 I.C.C. 179.
Appellants Swift and Omaha then brought suit in a district Court
of three judges for a decree permanently suspending and annulling
the order of the Commission and for a remand of the complaint for
decision in accordance with principles of law to be determined by
the court. Appellant Armour intervened and participated in the
trial. The railroads which had been named as defendants before the
Commission also intervened, as defendants, in the District Court.
After hearing, the District Court held without opinion that the
Commission's findings were properly supported by evidence; that the
findings made by the Commission were adequate to support its
conclusion; that the practices complained of were not unreasonable,
and that the Commission did not have jurisdiction of the yardage
charges. It dismissed the packers' complaint, and appeal was taken
to this Court. [
Footnote 5]
Page 316 U. S. 221
The many assignments of error may be grouped under three
inquiries: (1) Do the packers have an absolute right as a matter of
law to take their direct shipments of livestock from the unloading
pens free from yardage charges? (2) If there is no such absolute
right, was the Commission in error in considering the history of
dealings between packers and the Yard Company together with other
facts bearing on the reasonableness of the carriers' method of
delivery at the Stock Yards? (3) If the practice as to delivery was
correctly held a reasonable method of terminating the carriers'
obligation to furnish transportation, did the Commission have
jurisdiction in a proceeding against the railroad companies to
inquire into or prescribe the yardage charges complained of?
I
The packers' contention that they are entitled as a matter of
absolute right to delivery of their livestock from the unloading
pens without payment of yardage charges is based upon the decision
of this Court in
Covington Stockyards Co. v. Keith,
139 U. S. 128, and
the subsequently enacted § 1(3) of the Interstate Commerce
Act.
In the
Covington case, decided on facts antedating the
Interstate Commerce Act, this Court said that
"A carrier of livestock has no more right to make a special
charge for merely receiving or merely delivering such stock, in and
through stockyards provided by itself, in order that it may
properly receive and load, or unload and deliver, such stock, than
a carrier of passengers may make a special charge for the use of
its passenger depot by passengers when proceeding to or coming from
its trains, or than a carrier may charge the shipper for the use of
its general freight depot in merely delivering his goods for
shipment, or the consignee of such goods for its use in merely
receiving them there within a reasonable time after they are
unloaded from the cars. If the carrier may not make
Page 316 U. S. 222
such special charges in respect to stockyards which itself owns,
maintains, or controls, it cannot invest another corporation or
company with authority to impose burdens of that kind upon shippers
and consignees. The transportation of livestock begins with their
delivery to the carrier to be loaded upon its cars, and ends only
after the stock is unloaded and delivered, or offered to be
delivered, to the consignee, if to be found at such place as admits
of their being safely taken into possession."
139 U.S. at
139 U. S.
135-136.
After the decision in this case, there was enacted § 1(3)
of the Interstate Commerce Act, providing that
"The term 'transportation' as used in this chapter shall include
. . . all instrumentalities and facilities of shipment or carriage,
irrespective of ownership or of any contract, express or implied,
for the use thereof, and all services in connection with the
receipt, delivery, elevation, and transfer in transit, . . .
storage, and handling of property transported. . . ."
36 Stat. 539, 545, 49 U.S.C. § 1(3)(a).
After the enactment of § 1(3), this Court decided
Adams
v. Mills, 286 U. S. 397,
which arose before the enactment of § 15(5), set forth below.
The propriety of an additional charge for the unloading of
livestock at the Chicago Union Stock Yards was in issue, and it was
said:
"That the yards are, in effect, terminals of the railroads is
clear. They are in fact used as terminals, and necessarily so.
Whether the unloading in the yards was a part of transportation was
not a pure question of law to be determined by merely reading the
tariffs.
Compare Great Northern R. Co. v. Merchants Elevator
Co., 259 U. S. 285,
259 U. S.
294. The decision of the question was dependent upon the
determination of certain facts, including the history of the Stock
Yards and their relation to the line-haul carriers; the history of
the unloading charge at these yards, and
Page 316 U. S. 223
the action of the parties in relation thereto. If there was
evidence to sustain the Commission's findings on these matters, its
conclusion that the collection of the extra charge from the
shippers was an unreasonable and unlawful practice must be
sustained.
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United
States, 232 U. S. 199,
232 U. S.
221;
Los Angeles Switching Case, 234 U. S.
294,
234 U. S. 310-311."
Id. at
286 U. S.
409-410.
On February 28, 1920, prior to this decision and during the
pendency of the controversy which led to it, there was enacted
§ 15(5) of the Interstate Commerce Act, which provided
that:
"Transportation wholly by railroad of ordinary livestock in
carload lots destined to or received at public stockyards shall
include all necessary service of unloading and reloading en route,
delivery at public stockyards of inbound shipments into suitable
pens, and receipt and loading at such yards of outbound shipments,
without extra charge therefor to the shipper, consignee or owner,
except in cases where the unloading or reloading en route is at the
request of the shipper, consignee or owner, or to try an
intermediate market, or to comply with quarantine regulations. The
commission may prescribe or approve just and reasonable rules
governing each of such excepted services. Nothing in this paragraph
shall be construed to affect the duties and liabilities of the
carriers existing on February 28, 1920, by virtue of law respecting
the transportation of other than ordinary livestock, or the duty of
performing service as to shipments other than those to or from
public stockyards."
41 Stat. 456, 486, 49 U.S.C. § 15(5).
In the subsequent case of
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v.
United States, 295 U. S. 193, it
was pointed out that, in appropriate circumstances, the Commission
might properly find that the carriers' duty to deliver livestock
ended with delivery into suitable pens at the Chicago Union
Page 316 U. S. 224
Stock Yards, and it was recognized that the question of where
the carrier's obligation ends is for the administrative judgment of
the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Our most recent decision bearing on the Commission's power to
determine when transportation ends with reference to shipments of
livestock to the Chicago Union Stock Yards is
Armour & Co.
v. Alton R. Co., 312 U. S. 195,
rendered in the controversy over the propriety of yardage charges
made in circumstances precisely similar to those of the present
case, by virtue of which Armour & Co. intervened in the present
litigation. There, it was held by a unanimous Court that Armour's
complaint in the federal District Court should be dismissed, since
primary jurisdiction was lodged in the Interstate Commerce
Commission, and it was said that the facts alleged in the complaint
revealed that
"there are many questions relating to complex transportation
problems that must be solved as a prerequisite to a determination
of whether the railroads, in violation of contracts or governing
laws, have failed properly to deliver petitioner's livestock."
312 U.S. at
312 U. S. 200.
By way of illustration, the opinion detailed several questions
which would arise, and among them was the following:
"At what point did the common carriers' duty to transport come
to an end? Neither the statute nor any applicable principle of
governing law can be said to mark this boundary under all
circumstances and conditions and in all cases."
Ibid. The decision agreed with the view of the
railroads and courts below that
"adjudication of the issues presented relates to such complex
transportation problems that determination of the legal questions
must necessarily be preceded by the consideration of extensive
evidence in a specialized field, and that decision of such
questions is by statute vested exclusively in the Interstate
Commerce Commission."
312 U.S. at
312 U. S. 197.
Finally, it was said that,
"If use of the terminal facilities for egress to the street
after unloading of livestock is a
Page 316 U. S. 225
part of transportation, as petitioner alleges, and if this use
is a service for which reasonable compensation is justified, it
cannot be doubted that this charge, like the unloading charge, is a
part of that reasonable transportation rate determination of which
is committed to the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce
Commission. And before such longstanding transportation customs can
be held illegal, it is, of course, necessary that evidence be
heard."
312 U.S. at
312 U. S. 200,
201.
Thus, it is seen that, before the enactment of § 15(5),
whether transportation included unloading was a question of fact
for the determination of the Commission.
Adams v. Mills,
supra. Section 15(5) changed this, but it did not alter the
situation with respect to yardage services,
Atchison, T. &
S.F. Ry. Co. v. United States, supra, and whether they are
included in transportation is therefore a question to be decided by
the Commission upon the facts of each particular case, and not by
mechanical application of a fixed rule of law, as contended by the
appellants.
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United States,
supra; Armour & Co. v. Alton R. Co., supra. Otherwise, we
erred in requiring "primary resort" to the Commission in the
Armour case with respect to the question where
transportation ended.
Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Merchants
Elevator Co., 259 U. S. 285. The
propriety of the yardage charges in the present case was a question
for decision by the Commission in the exercise of its judgment, and
not for decision according to any fixed rule of law.
II
In determining whether the Yard Company's unloading pens were
suitable points at which to terminate the duties of carriers to
consignees and points where the consignees entered into a
relationship with someone other than the carriers, the Commission
was justified in considering, as it did, all that would account for
the evolution
Page 316 U. S. 226
of the practice complained of, as well as the effect of existing
and proposed practices on the interest of the carriers, the public,
and other shippers.
Adams v. Mills, supra, at
286 U. S. 409
et seq.; Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United States,
supra, at
295 U. S. 198
et seq.; Armour & Co. v. Alton R. Co., supra, at
312 U. S. 201.
Neither the railroads nor the Stock Yards exist for the benefit of
the packers alone. Their patronage is large and important, but
neither in the regulation of the carriers nor in the regulation of
the Stock Yards are they entitled to facilities or treatment that
will ignore the existence of other interests. The Stock Yards are
not only a facility for the transportation of direct shipments from
points of country origin to the packers; they also are an important
factor in the entire animal industry of the United States. The
Commission found that the direct shipments of livestock transported
by rail to the packers at Chicago have exceeded 30,000 carloads
annually for several years, but that the total annual average rail
movement to the Stock Yards was 94,629 carloads.
The bulk of the movement of stock is received in the Yards
during the first days of the week, and approximately three-fourths
of the daily movement is unloaded between three and eight in the
morning. In some instances, immediate removal of the animals from
the unloading pens is necessary to preserve an even flow of
livestock from the cars into the Yards. Apart from the direct
shipments, much of this stock must be watered, fed, and weighed in
the Yards. It is removed to holding pens, and one of the important
functions of the Stock Yards is to furnish the facilities for
marketing. Commission brokers or market agencies receive
consignments of livestock and sell them for the account of the
producer, sometimes to the packers and sometimes to purchasers who
require reshipment.
Shipments must be moved with great rapidity and order, and it
may be that this can best be done by employees
Page 316 U. S. 227
under a single management and discipline. The customary handling
over many years led to the building up of a physical plant which
the Commission finds makes it physically impossible to remove this
stock from the unloading pens except by use of the property of the
Yard Company.
The interests of the public and of the community are entitled to
consideration. This transportation is of a special kind of property
on the hoof which calls for special handling in the interests of
economy, safety, sanitation, and health. The Commission has found
that
"the evidence fails to disclose how, as a practical matter, an
annual volume of 30,000 carloads of livestock could be discharged
into and handled through the public streets of Chicago. [
Footnote 6]"
The existence and suitability of alternative facilities for
delivery of livestock were considered by the Commission. Some stock
is and can be delivered at team tracks, and some at industrial
sidings. These facilities are inadequate for handling the entire
volume of direct shipments. It does not appear, however, that the
existence or adequacy of alternative facilities for delivery at
other points is particularly important in the case, because the
shipments involved are consigned to the packers at the Union Stock
Yards by their own choice. It does not appear that they are
demanding an increase of other facilities, and the case has not
been considered in that light.
The packers object to consideration of their own part in
evolving the situation of which they complain. The Commission,
however, considered it and made findings as to the history of the
relation between the Yard Company and the packers.
The Commission found that, since the Yard Company began
operation in 1865, there has been a line of demarcation between the
services which shippers were
Page 316 U. S. 228
entitled to receive for the transportation charges and the
services received from the Yard Company. The line-haul carriers
have paid the Yard Company for the unloading service and absorbed
the charge made for such service out of their line-haul rates. From
the beginning, however, all shippers were required to pay to the
Yard Company a yardage charge on every animal unloaded. Dealings
with respect to those charges were between the Yard Company and the
shippers, with no intervention by the carriers. After these
practices had been in effect for about twenty-five years, the Yard
Company entered into certain arrangements under which these packers
participated in the profits from its operations. Sometime before
1890, the packers threatened to move their plants from Chicago and
to establish facilities of their own for the receipt of their
livestock. The packers had acquired a large tract of land in
Indiana as a site for their proposed plants. They had also
purchased property known as the "Central Stock Yards" near the
Union Stock Yards, and had erected thereon platforms, pens, sheds,
and sidings for the purpose of receiving all cattle and livestock
consigned to them. They had also filed a complaint in an Illinois
court demanding that the Yard Company be required to permit the
line-haul carriers to use its tracks in making deliveries to the
packers' Central Stock Yards.
Having put themselves in this independent position and
threatened to reduce the revenues of the Yard Company, the packers
negotiated a contract which, in substance, involved the abandonment
by the packing companies of this threatened move to Indiana and
surrender of their own facilities for receiving direct shipments in
return for a participation in the profits and capital of the Yard
Company. In 1892, the packers conveyed to Stock Yard interests the
Indiana site and the Central Stock Yards, and agreed by contract to
dismiss the suit filed
Page 316 U. S. 229
in the Illinois court and to refrain from filing any similar
suit for a period of fifteen years; to continue their business at
Packingtown adjacent to the Union Stock Yards for fifteen years
from July 1, 1891; to have all livestock slaughtered by them on
their premises or within two hundred miles of the City of Chicago
during such period pass through and use the Union Stock Yards, and
to pay the usual yardage charge therefor, and they guaranteed that
the Yard Company would receive and collect from its yardage charges
on packers' livestock the aggregate sum of $2,000,000 within six
years, and agreed to make up any deficiency in that amount. The
packers also agreed that, as long as the Yard Company conducted its
business in Chicago, they would not interest themselves in any
other stockyards in Chicago for the receipt and use of their own
livestock.
The packers received income bonds of a new corporation, the
security of which was the revenues of the Stock Yards, in the
amount of $3,000,000. Swift received approximately one-third. These
bonds were subsequently redeemed by the issuing corporation.
The railroad companies were not parties to this agreement, and
the Commission found that the packers, at the time the agreement
was entered into, did not consider the assessment of the yardage
charges to be a matter of any concern to the railroads. During the
existence of the agreement described, the packers paid the yardage
charges and participated in the receipts from such charges. This
agreement expired in 1907, except for the covenant by the packers
not to establish or become interested in any other stockyards for
the receipt of their livestock so long as the Yard Company
maintained its business in Chicago. It appears, however, that,
after the expiration of the contract, the Yard interests were
informed that the packers were still threatening to move their
plant from Chicago, and it appears that Swift expected to receive a
share of
Page 316 U. S. 230
the Yard's earnings as late as 1918, but there is no proof that
it did receive anything in addition to the bonds received under the
contract of 1892. J. O. Armour, of Armour & Company, however,
received substantial benefits after 1907.
Thus, for more than seventy years the responsibility of the
railroads in respect of direct shipments consigned to the packers
has ended with the unloading service. The packers, from that point
on, have negotiated their own arrangement with the Yard Company.
More recently, of course, the Stock Yards have passed under public
regulation, and discrimination or rebating of the kind once
practiced is no longer possible. The Commission finds that it was
the attitude of the packers that their patronage was a thing of
value to the Stock Yards, and they proposed to sell that patronage
to the Yard Company. The Packers and Stockyards Act having made
private arrangements of this kind unlawful, [
Footnote 7] the packers now contend that the
carriers must protect them against yardage charges on their direct
shipments.
It was the packers themselves who suppressed the competitive
yards and alternative facilities for unloading their stock. The
Commission, however, has not held the packers to be estopped by
their conduct. It has only considered the practice and usage of the
packers as bearing on the suitability of the Yard Company's
unloading pens as a point of termination of the carriers'
responsibility. The Commission has held it to be a reasonable
practice that the railroads' responsibility for transportation of
such direct shipment consigned by the packers to themselves at the
Union Stock Yards ends with unloading into the unloading pens,
which it found to be suitable, and that the carriers' failure to
negotiate or purchase free egress for such shipments from the
unloading pens has
Page 316 U. S. 231
not resulted, and does not result, in an unreasonable practice.
There is evidence to support the determination, and the decision of
the administrative body charged with making it is therefore
conclusive on this Court. [
Footnote
8]
III
Having properly decided that transportation ended when the
livestock reached the unloading pens, was the Commission in error
in concluding that it had no jurisdiction to inquire into the
reasonableness of practices or charges of the Yard Company beyond
that point?
The appellants contend that the fact that property of the Yard
Company was involved in furnishing egress to the appellants'
shipments did not prevent the Commission from exercising such
jurisdiction. The Yard Company, they say, was the agent of the
railroads, and acted in a dual capacity as public stockyards
subject to the Packers and Stockyards Act and also as a common
carrier by railroad subject to the Interstate Commerce Act. In the
latter capacity, it is said, the Yard Company as the railroads'
agent, provides terminal facilities for livestock delivery which is
a part of the railroads' obligation.
The Stock Yards are named in the railroads' tariffs as a
specific station to which the railroad rates to Chicago are
applicable. The line-haul railroads publish an allowance to the
Yard Company of $1.25 per single-deck car and $1.50 per double-deck
car for unloading livestock. The Yard Company also files with the
Interstate Commerce Commission its tariff, which publishes the same
amounts as charges for unloading the livestock "as carrier's
agent." Since unloading is required by statute as a part of the
transportation service, the filing of the
Page 316 U. S. 232
terms on which it is performed is manifestly proper, although
shippers are not concerned with the charge because the railroads
absorb it in the line-haul rate. Because the Yard Company, in this
specific and limited matter, acts as agent for the railroads and,
in the performance of that transportation service, is subject to
the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission, it does not
follow that the Commission may regulate, either directly or somehow
through the railroads, the other practices and charges of the Yard
Company.
If the Yard Company is in the dual position of being at once the
agent of the carriers for the unloading of the stock and the
principal in rendering any subsequent services, so is it under dual
regulatory schemes and authorities. Insofar as it is an agency in
transportation, it is subject to the Interstate Commerce Act and to
the control of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Insofar as it
performs stockyard services, it is subject to the Packers and
Stockyards Act, and to the regulation of the Secretary of
Agriculture. The statutes clearly disclose an intention that
jurisdiction of the Secretary of Agriculture over stockyard
services shall not overlap that of the Commission over
transportation. [
Footnote 9]
The boundary between the two is the place where transportation
ends, and, in this case, that is established to be the unloading
pens.
The Union Stock Yards are a public utility. The decision of the
Commission that the transportation ends with unloading leaves the
stock in the hands of a public utility -- the Union Stock Yards --
for delivery to the consignee. Neither the Interstate Commerce
Commission nor this Court can assume that the charges or
practices
Page 316 U. S. 233
of that utility are unfair or unreasonable, that it is charging
for services that are not performed or facilities not used, or that
it is imposing on consignees unnecessary services. Nor can the
Commission or this Court assume that, if unreasonable practices or
charges are imposed by this utility, the Secretary of Agriculture
would fail to correct them upon an appropriate complaint in a
proceeding to which the Yard Company is a party and may defend its
practices for itself. In any event, Congress has provided that the
Secretary of Agriculture is the forum in which such charges and
practices may be questioned and may be weighed in the interest not
only of the packers, but of others who use the Yards and markets
and who might be affected competitively by granting the packers'
present demands. Congress has established an appropriate forum in
which any complaint of the packers against the real party in
interest may be heard and any lawful grievances adjusted, and the
Commission was quite right in refusing to trespass upon its
jurisdiction.
It follows that the decree below should be, and hereby is,
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Other phrases of the general problem of the present case have
been considered in
Adams v. Mills, 286 U.
S. 397;
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United
States, 295 U. S. 193;
Union Stock Yard & Transit Co. v. United States,
308 U. S. 213;
Armour & Co. v. Alton R. Co., 312 U.
S. 195.
[
Footnote 2]
The Commission found from an analysis of the billing of 3,061
cars unloaded at the Union Stock Yards from January, 1935, to
March, 1938, that 84.4% were consigned to the Stock Yards, and the
remaining 15.6% were delivered to the Stock Yards, although
delivery at that point was not specified in the livestock
contracts.
"Under the terms of the contract, complainant could have
required delivery of the 15.6 percent of shipments either at the
stockyards or on defendants' team tracks, but complainant never
requested delivery of those shipments to any point other than the
Union Stock Yards."
238 I.C.C. 179, 189. They were therefore included in "direct
shipments."
[
Footnote 3]
Under tariffs filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission by
the Yard Company, the railroads pay to the Yard Company $1.25 per
single-deck car and $1.50 per double deck car for services rendered
as their agent in unloading the stock.
[
Footnote 4]
Act of August 15, 1921, 42 Stat. 159, 7 U.S.C. § 181
et
seq.
[
Footnote 5]
§§ 210 and 238(4) of the Judicial Code as amended by
the Act of February 13, 1925, 43 Stat. 936, 938, 28 U.S.C.
§§ 47a, 345(4).
[
Footnote 6]
238 I.C.C. 179, 194.
[
Footnote 7]
42 Stat. 161, 7 U.S.C. § 192.
[
Footnote 8]
Adams v. Mills, supra; Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v.
United States, supra; Armour & Co. v. Alton R. Co.,
supra.
[
Footnote 9]
Section 406 of the Packers and Stockyards Act provides in
part:
"Nothing in the Act shall affect the power or jurisdiction of
the Interstate Commerce Commission, nor confer upon the Secretary
concurrent power or jurisdiction over any matter within the power
or jurisdiction of such commission."
42 Stat. 169, 7 U.S.C. § 226.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
The question in this case is not where the transportation ends,
but what the particular transportation service includes. I do not
suppose that it would be contended that a railroad could lawfully
exact from a passenger who had alighted on the station platform an
extra charge for passing through the station to the street. The
reason why it could not make that exaction is that, although the
transportation ended at the platform, the transportation service
included free egress from the station. I think that that principle
is applicable and controlling here.
Covington Stockyards Co. v. Keith, 139 U.
S. 128, which arose prior to the Interstate Commerce
Act, applied that
Page 316 U. S. 234
principle to the delivery of livestock at stockyards. This Court
after stating that a carrier of livestock has no right "to make a
special charge for merely receiving or merely delivering such
stock, in and through stockyards provided by itself," added (pp.
139 U. S.
135-136):
"If the carrier may not make such special charges in respect to
stockyards which itself owns, maintains, or controls, it cannot
invest another corporation or company with authority to impose
burdens of that kind upon shippers and consignees. The
transportation of livestock begins with their delivery to the
carrier to be loaded upon its cars, and ends only after the stock
is unloaded and delivered, or offered to be delivered, to the
consignee, if to be found at such place as admits of their being
safely taken into possession."
So far as I am aware, the
Covington case has never been
overruled. As recently as 1939, we approved it. For we stated in
Union Stock Yard & Transit Co. v. United States,
308 U. S. 213,
308 U. S. 219,
after reviewing §§ 1(3) and 15(5) of the Interstate
Commerce Act:
"Without the aid of these statutes, the transportation of
livestock by rail was held to begin with its delivery to the
carrier for loading onto its cars, and to end only after unloading
for delivery or tender to the consignee at the place of
destination.
Covington Stockyards Co. v. Keith,
139 U. S.
128,
139 U. S. 136. The same rule
has been repeatedly applied since the statute was adopted.
Erie
R. Co. v. Shuart, 250 U. S. 465,
250 U. S.
468;
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United
States, 295 U. S. 193,
295 U. S.
198, and cases cited;
Denver Union Stock Yard Co. v.
United States, 304 U. S. 470; 2 Hutchison,
Carriers, 3d ed. § 510."
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United States,
295 U. S. 193, did
not alter that rule. As stated by the majority in that case (295
U.S. p.
295 U. S.
200):
"The Hygrade Company did not seek, and the Commission did not
grant, relief upon the ground that the carriers failed to provide
egress from the unloading pens in the public stockyards to the city
streets by means of which consignee's animals might be
Page 316 U. S. 235
removed to its plant. Consignee sought free delivery in cars
switched into its plant, but the Commission found the switching
charge not unreasonable. Consignee also sought free use of the
Yards Company's properties, including the overhead runway to take
its animals from holding pens as well as from unloading pens to its
plant."
And the majority added (p.
201 U. S.
201):
"Plainly there is an essential difference between the route from
unloading pens to consignee's plant and a mere way out to the
public highways. Transportation does not include delivery within
the Hygrade plant or the furnishing of the properties, overhead
runway and all, that are used for that purpose."
Although certain general statements in the opinion are not
consistent with the rule of the
Covington case, a
unanimous Court recently explained
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry.
Co. v. United States as follows:
"There, the Commission's order directing the discontinuance of
appellant's yardage charge to consignees was set aside on the sole
ground that the Commission's findings failed to show that the
service for which the charge was made was any part of the loading
or unloading services, or otherwise a service which the rail
carrier was bound to furnish."
Union Stock Yard & Transit Co. v. United States,
supra, p.
308 U. S. 219.
That is amply supported by the reasons given by the majority itself
for setting aside the Commission's order in the
Atchison
case:
"But the Commission, in respect of the shipments covered by its
order, made no definite finding as to what constitutes complete
delivery or where transportation ends. Its report does not disclose
the basic facts on which it made the challenged order. This court
will not search the record to ascertain whether, by use of what
there may be found, general and ambiguous statements in the report
intended to serve as findings may by construction be given a
meaning sufficiently definite and certain to constitute a valid
basis for the order."
295 U.S. pp.
295 U. S.
201-202. And
Armour & Co. v. Alton R. Co.,
312 U. S. 195, did
not weaken the rule
Page 316 U. S. 236
of the
Covington case. We merely held in that case that
the complaint of a packer who sought to be rid of "yardage charges"
raised certain administrative problems necessitating primary resort
to the Interstate Commerce Commission. We did not reach in that
case the merits of that controversy, nor the questions of law
involved here.
*
Hence, I think we reach the question of the application of the
rule of the
Covington case to this situation unembarrassed
by a prior holding.
I do not agree that Congress has left to the Commission the
power to eliminate free egress from this particular transportation
service. Whatever may have been the scope of the authority of the
Commission prior to the Transportation Act of 1920 (
Adams v.
Mills, 286 U. S. 397), it
should be noted that Mr. Justice Brandeis, the author of
Adams
v. Mills, joined in the dissenting opinion in the
Atchison case which repudiated the notion that the
transportation service in this type of shipment was completed at
the unloading pens. Furthermore, as stated in the dissenting
opinion in the
Atchison case, it is clear that Congress
itself provided a rule in § 15(5) of that Act which placed on
the Commission the duty and the authority
Page 316 U. S. 237
to see to it that tribute was not exacted from a shipper by
exaction of a separate charge for egress from the station to the
street or other public place. 41 Stat. 456, 486, 49 U.S.C. §
15(5). That section, so far as material here, provides that
transportation wholly by railroad of ordinary livestock in carload
lots received at public stockyards
"shall include all necessary service of unloading and . . .
delivery at public stockyards of inbound shipments into suitable
pens . . . without extra charge therefor to the shipper, consignee
or owner. . . ."
To say that carriers need not furnish facilities for delivery
and immediate removal of livestock by the consignee without extra
charge is to give § 15(5) an interpretation which is not only
"ingenious" (
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United States,
supra, p. 205, dissenting opinion), but which is also quite
oblivious of the crying abuses which § 15(5) was designed to
correct. The words "all necessary service of unloading and . . .
delivery" of livestock at public stockyards must be taken to
include all services at a terminal incidental to obtaining delivery
of the livestock. And delivery "into suitable pens" must be taken
"to mean pens to which the consignees may gain unimpeded access for
the purpose of removing their stock."
Id., p. 206. As
stated by Commissioner Eastman in Hygrade Food Products Corp. v.
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co., 195 I.C.C. 553, 559, pens are not
"suitable" within the meaning of § 15(5) where they do not
"permit of reasonable opportunity to accept delivery and remove the
livestock from the premises after notice of arrival." Otherwise,
the purpose of § 15(5) in removing "an old evil" is defeated,
and "a crop of new ones" is sanctioned
"by giving stockyards and rail carriers of livestock
carte
blanche to impose vexatious charges which, for more than
thirty years, had been condemned by this court."
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. United States,
supra, 295 U.S. at p.
295 U. S. 6, 206,
dissenting opinion.
Page 316 U. S. 238
The legislative history of § 15(5) was reviewed in the
dissenting opinion in the
Atchison case. 295 U.S. at pp.
295 U. S.
207-208. The mandate contained in § 15(5)
originated with the American National Live Stock Association (59
Cong.Rec. 674) and the National Live Stock Shippers' League.
Hearings, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, H.R. 4378,
66th Cong., 1st Sess., Vol. I, pp. 139-141. The proposal was not
vague. It was that there be
"one through rate on livestock for the whole services from point
of origin to the destination at public stockyards used at market
place which shall include unloading into suitable pens and delivery
therein at such stockyards, where the animals may be counted and
checked, including such facilities as are necessary or in use for
making such delivery."
Id., p. 141. It was the enactment of the rule of the
Covington case which was specifically asked.
Id.,
p. 874. The argument was that a railroad would not
"make two rates to its own pens if it owned and operated them,
and neither should it do so with respect to pens which it uses in
the same manner. There should be one fare, the same as a passenger
rate, to such depot as they use in a given city."
Id., p. 881. The record shows that Congress was alive
to the evils of which the shippers complained, and that it
endeavored to correct them. As stated by the House Managers, the
aim of the amendment introduced in the Senate and amplified in
Conference was to provide that the "through rates on livestock
should include unloading and other incidental charges." 59
Cong.Rec. 3264. Indeed, the sole purpose of the amendment was to
impose on the Commission the duty and authority to eliminate the
practices condemned by the Covington case. In view of that explicit
history, it comes as a surprise that the Commission can now
abdicate, and say that a consignee or owner who has paid a through
rate may not have free receipt of his stock at the station. To hold
that
Page 316 U. S. 239
the separate charge for unloading livestock into pens which
§ 15(5) outlawed may now be exacted for taking the livestock
out is to make the relief afforded by that section illusory
indeed.
But it is said that the matter is subject to the Packers and
Stockyards Act of 1921, and that, if relief is to be had, the
Secretary of Agriculture must give it. The difficulty with that
view is that that Act provides,
"nothing in this Act shall affect the power or jurisdiction of
the Interstate Commerce Commission, nor confer upon the Secretary
concurrent power or jurisdiction over any matter within the power
or jurisdiction of such commission."
42 Stat. 169, 7 U.S.C. § 226. The boundary between the
Commission and the Secretary of Agriculture is not the place where
the transportation ends, but the time when the transportation
service is completed. It is not completed until the consignee has
unimpeded access to the station for the purpose of removing the
livestock. That view is supported by
Union Stock Yard &
Transit Co. v. United States, supra, where the stockyards
argued that their loading and unloading services were subject to
regulation by the Secretary of Agriculture, and not by the
Commission. We held that loading and unloading services were
"common carrier services placed under the authority of the
Commission by the Interstate Commerce Act." 308 U.S. p.
308 U. S. 221.
And we defined the scope of those services in terms of the rule of
the
Covington case.
Id., p.
308 U. S. 219.
To call the withholding of the stock until an additional fee is
paid a stockyard "service" is indeed incongruous. It is to forget
over half a century of history. It is to take away part of the
protection which Congress afforded shippers by § 15(5). It is
to interpret § 15(5) not liberally, as a remedial provision,
but strictly against the stock raisers for whose ultimate benefit
it was passed. For years, the carriers and stockyards persistently
sought to dignity this type of tribute
Page 316 U. S. 240
and exploitation as a "stockyard service." Until the present,
they were unsuccessful. They should fail again. The
Covington case states the correct rule. It is that rule
which Congress enacted into § 15(5) for the protection of the
stock raisers, who ultimately pay the tribute and vexatious charges
which the middle man exacts. It is that rule which we should
enforce until Congress changes it.
The Interstate Commerce Commission followed that rule in Hygrade
Food Products Corp. v. Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co., 195 I.C.C.
553. That case met with reversal here.
Atchison, T. & S.F.
Ry. Co. v. United States, supra. And the opinion of the Court
contained a dictum that
"Usage and physical conditions combined definitely to end
transportation, at least in respect of these shipments, with
unloading into suitable pens, as is now required by section
15(5)."
295 U.S. p.
295 U. S. 201.
It is that dictum which has haunted this litigation and which
largely shaped the ruling of the Commission in the instant case.
For the Commission proceeded from the premise that there was "no
difference in principle" between the
Atchison case and
this one, and that this Court had stated in the earlier case "that
the obligation of the line-haul carriers ceased when the animals
were placed in the unloading pens." 238 I.C.C. 179, 189, 190, 196.
But the Commission was under no such compulsion. Commissioner
Alldredge was quite right when he pointed out in his dissenting
opinion that the Commission misconstrued the opinion of this Court
in the
Atchison case. 238 I.C.C. pages 197, 198. Hence,
the conclusion of the Commission reached, in large measure under
the compulsion of that erroneous assumption, should not be given
the weight normally due findings and conclusions of such an expert
body.
We should reaffirm once more the rule of the
Covington
case, and reject the dictum in the
Atchison case. We
should hold that § 15(5) is remedial, and should be liberally
construed, and, as the Commission itself held in the
Page 316 U. S. 241
Atchison case, that this particular transportation
service includes the time-honored opportunity of the consignee or
owner to go to the station and take away his livestock without
payment of an additional toll.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE MURPHY join in this
dissent.
* It will not do to say that, if the rule of the
Covington case applied, we erred in requiring primary
resort to the Commission in the
Armour case. There were
several questions relating to complex transportations involved in
that case which required primary determination by the Commission.
They included possible readjustments of rate schedules, possible
refunds to shippers, and definition of the boundaries of the
station named in the tariff. The statement in the
Armour
case that the statute did not mark the point where the
transportation service was completed "under all circumstances and
conditions and in all cases" (312 U.S. p.
312 U. S. 200)
is borne out by the
Atchison case where the consignee, as
we have noted, sought free delivery in cars switched into its plant
and the use of an overhead runway from holding pens to its plant.
Clearly a determination of the precise facts concerning the
characteristics and use of a particular station was necessary
before a correct application of the applicable rule of law could be
made.