Appellee, a terminal switching railroad, maintained with trunk
lines joint rates on traffic which it interchanged with (
inter
alia) Seatrain. Much of the traffic so interchanged moved on
lighterage-free rates, under which appellee was obligated to load
and unload cars at shipside. Seatrain operated vessels on which it
transported loaded railroad cars. By Seatrain's method, cars were
loaded on and unloaded from its vessels by means of a cradle, and
the necessity and expense of loading and unloading freight to and
from the cars, usual on interchange with other water carriers, were
eliminated. Under a contract between them, appellee made payments
to Seatrain in respect of interchanged traffic moving on
lighterage-free rates, the payments approximating the cost of
unloading or loading freight cars. In 1936, appellee filed with the
Interstate Commerce Commission a complaint seeking an increase of
its divisions of the joint lighterage-free rates and an adjustment
with respect to traffic moving on Commission-prescribed rates
subsequent to the filing of the complaint, so as to compensate it
for its contract payments to Seatrain. The Commission found that
appellee's divisions with the payments to Seatrain excluded were
"not unjust, unreasonably low, inequitable, or unduly prejudicial,"
that the corresponding divisions received by the trunk lines were
"not unjust, unreasonably high, inequitable, or unduly preferential
of them," and dismissed the complaint.
Held:
1. Although Seatrain's service has since February, 1942, been
discontinued, the complaint sought adjustment of divisions received
on Commission-prescribed rates subsequent to its filing, and to
that extent, at least, the case is not moot. P.
320 U. S.
376.
2. The Commission's findings that appellee's transportation
service with respect to carload freight interchanged with Seatrain
begins and ends at Seatrain's cradle; that the rail lines perform
the interchange transportation service covered by their tariffs
"when they place the cars in or take them from the Seatrain
cradle;" and that, consequently, the payments made by appellee to
Seatrain "cover no part of its transportation service under the
lighterage-free
Page 320 U. S. 369
rates, and are in addition to the full costs of that service,"
are supported by evidence. P.
320 U. S.
377.
3. The Commission's determination of the point in time and space
at which a carrier's transportation service begins or ends is an
administrative finding which, if supported by evidence, is
conclusive on the courts. P.
320 U. S.
378.
4. Appellee is entitled to receive by way of divisions only its
just and equitable share of the proceeds of the joint rail
transportation service rendered, and cannot claim as a part of its
share the costs of a service which is not a part of the rail
service called for by the joint rates. P.
320 U. S.
379.
5. From the Commission's finding that the loading and unloading
of its vessels is incident to Seatrain's transportation service, it
follows that Seatrain is entitled to compensation therefor in its
tariffs, which, if inadequate, may be increased, rather than
through participation, by way of allowances paid to it by appellee,
in the proceeds of a joint rail service of which it performs no
part. P.
320 U. S.
379.
6. Whether the payments to Seatrain induced the performance of
an interchange service resulting in savings to the rail carriers is
irrelevant to a determination of divisions of the joint rates for
the rail service of which the ship loading and unloading service
performed by Seatrain is not a part. P.
320 U. S.
380.
7. Section 15(6) of the Interstate Commerce Act, which
authorizes the division of joint rates applicable to a
transportation service, contemplates only the apportionment of the
proceeds of that service among the parties to it, and not the
compensation of others for a service not covered by the joint rates
to be divided. P.
320 U. S.
380.
8. Prescription by the Interstate Commerce Commission of
divisions of joint rates is not a mere partition of property, but
is an aspect of the general rate policy which Congress has directed
the Commission to establish and administer in the public interest.
At least where the Commission prescribes for the complaining party
a fair return for the transportation service which it renders, the
question as to what is a proper division is one for the
Commission's discretion, reviewable only for unreasonableness,
departure from statutory standards, or lack of evidentiary support.
P.
320 U. S.
381.
9. The Commission's determinations of rate policy in this case
cannot be set aside as arbitrary or as resulting in unjust
divisions. P.
320 U.S.
382.
10. The Commission's refusal to include in appellee's divisions
payments which were voluntarily made to Seatrain does not
constitute confiscation of appellee's property. P.
320 U.S. 382.
47 F. Supp. 779 reversed.
Page 320 U. S. 370
Appeal from a judgment of a District Court of three judges
setting aside an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal under 28 U.S.C. §§ 47a, 345, from a
judgment by which the District Court for New Jersey, three judges
sitting, set aside an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission,
Hoboken Mfrs.' R. Co. v. United States, 47 F. Supp.
779.
The question is whether appellee, a terminal switching rail
carrier, is entitled to an increase in the divisions which it now
receives out of joint class and commodity freight rates maintained
by it and numerous trunk line carriers, appellants here, on traffic
interchanged by appellee at Hoboken, New Jersey, with Seatrain
Lines, Inc., a common carrier by water. The answer depends upon
whether the Commission is required to treat as part of appellee's
costs of performing its carrier service as prescribed by the joint
rates, allowances paid by appellee for services performed by
Seatrain in effecting the interchange. The Commission's order
dismissed a complaint by which appellee sought to have the
Commission prescribe for it increased divisions. The order,
reviewable by the District Court, is reviewable by this Court on
appeal.
Alton R. Co. v. United States, 287 U.
S. 229,
287 U. S.
237-240;
Page 320 U. S. 371
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. United States,
298 U. S. 349,
298 U. S. 358;
Rochester Tel. Corp. v. United States, 307 U.
S. 125,
307 U. S.
142.
Appellee, Hoboken Manufacturers' Railroad Company, operates a
terminal switching line extending along the waterfront of Hoboken,
New Jersey, for a distance of 1.632 miles. It connects with the
Erie Railroad and, over it, with other trunk lines reaching New
York Harbor. Numerous piers on New York Harbor are served by
Hoboken at which the vessels of various steamship lines regularly
dock, including those of Seatrain.
Seatrain is a common carrier by water, subject to the
Commission's jurisdiction under § 1(1)(a) of the Interstate
Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. § 1(1), (a), by reason of its control
of Hoboken.
Investigation of Seatrain Lines, Inc., 195
I.C.C. 215; 206 I.C.C. 328. Since 1932, it has operated vessels in
which it transports freight in loaded railroad cars between
Hoboken, New Jersey, Havana, Cuba, and Belle Chasse, Louisiana, a
point on the Mississippi River near New Orleans. The loaded cars
which it transports are placed upon standard gauge railroad tracks
located upon four decks of the Seatrain vessels. In loading the
vessel, each car is switched onto a track located on a cradle
placed alongside the vessel. An overhead crane lifts the cradle
containing the car, swings it over the vessel and lowers it through
a hatch to the appropriate deck, where the car is moved onto one of
the railroad tracks on the deck.
In unloading, the procedure is reversed. Each car is moved from
the deck track onto the cradle. The cradle containing the car is
then lifted by the crane and placed on the dock alongside the
vessel, where the car is switched by Hoboken over its own tracks to
a connecting trunk line over which it proceeds to its rail
destination. By this operation the expense is avoided of loading
and unloading freight into and from the cars at shipside,
ordinarily incident
Page 320 U. S. 372
to exchange of traffic between rail and water carriers.
In 1932, Seatrain secured control of Hoboken by the acquisition
of all of its shares of capital stock except the qualifying shares
of five directors, and the two corporations were brought under the
management of common officers. In 1936, Hoboken filed a complaint
with the Interstate Commerce Commission under §§ 1(4) and
15(6) alleging that the divisions it was receiving out of joint
class and commodity rates maintained by it and the trunk lines,
appellants here, on carload rail traffic interchanged with Seatrain
were too low, and asking an increase. It also sought adjustment of
all divisions with respect to such traffic moving under rates
prescribed by the Commission subsequent to the date of filing the
complaint.
Part of the traffic interchanged with Seatrain moves on
so-called lighterage-free rates, and part on nonlighterage-free
rates. Under the lighterage-free rates, the rail carriers obligate
themselves to place freight within reach of ship's tackle, and to
receive freight at the foot of ship's tackle -- an obligation which
normally requires unloading and loading of cars and may also
require lighterage and various other services. Hoboken has
generally provided for this loading and unloading service by
contract with the steamship companies with which it interchanges
traffic. The work is done with steamship stevedore labor for which
Hoboken has paid the steamship companies at the rate of
approximately 75 cents a ton. Under nonlighterage-free rates, the
shipper performs or provides for necessary loading or unloading of
cars, in which case Hoboken has only a switching service to
perform.
On carload traffic interchanged with water carriers other than
Seatrain's and moving on lighterage-free rates, which is loaded or
unloaded by Hoboken or at its expense, Hoboken's division of the
joint through rate has been $1.35 per ton. On carload traffic
moving to and from Hoboken on nonlighterage-free rates, which is
loaded or unloaded
Page 320 U. S. 373
by the shipper or consignee or at his expense, Hoboken's
division has been 60 cents per ton. [
Footnote 1]
Since November, 1932, which was shortly after Seatrain acquired
stock ownership control of Hoboken, it has paid to Seatrain a
tonnage allowance on interchanged freight other than coal. At first
40 cents a ton, the allowance on lighterage-free freight was, in
1937, increased to 73 cents a ton, which is the approximate cost of
loading or unloading carload freight. At the same time, the 40
cents allowance on nonlighterage-free freight was abolished. Upon
Seatrain freight moving on lighterage-free rates, the trunk lines
accord to Hoboken a 60 cents per ton switching division, the same
as for freight moving on nonlighterage-free rates, since, with the
one as with the other, there is no necessity for the carloading
service.
In the proceedings before the Commission, Hoboken asked for the
existing division of 60 cents per ton out of nonlighterage-free
rates and for an increase to $1.35 per ton in its division out of
lighterage-free rates on traffic interchanged with Seatrain, on the
ground that its tonnage allowances to Seatrain are a part of its
costs of performing its rail transportation service with respect to
the Seatrain traffic, and that, in any case, the trunk lines,
parties to the joint rates, are benefited by Seatrain's shiploading
devices to the extent that the rail carriers are relieved of the 75
cents per ton loading and unloading charge which they would
otherwise incur.
The Commission rendered its report after a full hearing at which
evidence was taken. [
Footnote
2] It found from the evidence
Page 320 U. S. 374
that Seatrain had established its shiploading devices at large
expense and had, by their adoption, made unnecessary, in the
interchange of traffic with Seatrain, the loading and unloading of
the cars at shipside which would otherwise be required by the
lighterage-free tariffs; that, in effecting the interchange, "the
rail lines do all that is required when they place the cars in or
take them from the Seatrain cradle;" and that
"the payments which complainant makes to Seatrain cover no part
of its transportation service under the lighterage-free rates, and
are in addition to the full costs of that service."
The Commission recognized that, if the payments by Hoboken to
Seatrain are not borne in part by the rail lines through a decrease
in their divisions and a corresponding increase in Hoboken's
divisions, "they will receive an unearned benefit," since, by
reason of Seatrain's shiploading method, they are relieved of the
necessity of compensating Hoboken for performance of the loading
and unloading service ordinarily called for by their
lighterage-free tariffs. It pointed out, however, that
lighterage-free rates "are based on average conditions," and said
that, if a steamship line now docking on the New York waterfront
and served by lighter at the New Jersey rail carriers' expense
should shift to a dock with direct rail connections on the New
Jersey shore, a similar unearned benefit would result, yet "it
would hardly be suggested" that the rail carriers should compensate
the steamship company for the shift. Moreover, it found no evidence
that the payments were necessary to induce Seatrain to furnish its
shiploading service. It stated that Hoboken's contract with
Seatrain was not such evidence, in view of Seatrain's control of
Hoboken, that it did not appear that Seatrain received such
payments from any independent rail connection, and that Seatrain's
method of transfer by which it receives and delivers loaded cars
has sufficient advantages to impel its use
Page 320 U. S. 375
by Seatrain regardless of contributing payments by its rail
connections.
It concluded that Seatrain's improved method of transfer is only
an incident to its plan of transportation, that the transfer is
consequently not a necessary part of the rail transportation
service, and that Hoboken is adequately compensated for its part in
that service without including the payments to Seatrain in its
divisions. The Commission accordingly found that Hoboken's
divisions with the payments to Seatrain excluded "are not unjust,
unreasonably low, inequitable, or unduly prejudicial," and that the
corresponding divisions received by the trunk lines "are not
unjust, unreasonably high, inequitable, or unduly preferential of
them," and ordered Hoboken's complaint dismissed.
The District Court sustained the Commission's findings that
Hoboken's rail transportation service begins and ends at Seatrain's
cradle, and that the payments by Hoboken to Seatrain "do not
constitute a legitimate transportation cost," and held that, upon
these findings, "supported by evidence," the Commission's "judgment
is final." But it thought that, even though the contract payments
should be disregarded, Hoboken might be obligated to pay to
Seatrain the reasonable value to it of the use of the Seatrain
method of interchange, and that, if that use were found to have no
value, at least any "windfall" resulting to the rail carriers as a
whole should be divided equitably among them.
The District Court accordingly set the Commission's order aside
and remanded the cause to the Commission, directing it to consider
whether the Seatrain devices "are an efficient aid to railroad
transportation," if it found that they were, to evaluate their
worth to Hoboken and to include in Hoboken's costs the amount of a
legitimate payment for their use, and if it found that they were
not,
Page 320 U. S. 376
to determine whether any windfall to the rail carriers resulted
from their use and to establish an equitable basis for its division
among the rail carriers. The Commission has brought the case here
on assignments of error challenging the District Court's
determination that compensation for any part of Hoboken's payments
to Seatrain should have been included to Hoboken's divisions.
Section 15(6) of the Interstate Commerce Act directs that,
whenever the Commission, upon complaint or on its own motion,
determines that the divisions of joint rates applicable to the
transportation of passengers or property, "are or will be unjust,
unreasonable, inequitable, or unduly preferential or prejudicial"
as between carriers parties to such rates, "the Commission shall by
order prescribe the just, reasonable, and equitable divisions
thereof to be received by the several carriers." In cases where the
joint rate has been established pursuant to a finding or order of
the Commission, it may also determine and order just and reasonable
divisions for the period subsequent to the filing of the complaint
"and require adjustment to be made" in accordance with its
determination.
At the outset, it is necessary to consider the suggestion that
the case may have become moot by reason of the fact that, since
February, 1942, Seatrain's vessels have been in Government service,
and Seatrain's service has been discontinued. We may assume that
the resumption of the service is so uncertain as to render it
conjectural whether the Commission's present determination will be
given any future operation. But that determination under §
15(6) is decisive of appellee's request for adjustment of the
divisions of joint rates prescribed by the Commission which have
been collected since the beginning of the present proceeding.
Brimstone Railroad & Canal Co. v. United States,
276 U. S. 104,
276 U. S.
121-123. While the present record does not disclose the
full extent to which joint rates,
Page 320 U. S. 377
divisions of which are here sought, were prescribed by the
Commission, it does appear that the Commission has, in prior
proceedings, prescribed joint rail-water-rail rates between eastern
trunk line and New England territories and southwestern territory
applicable over Seatrain lines, to which Hoboken, Seatrain, and
most if not all of the trunk lines which are appellants here are
parties.
Seatrain Lines v. Akron, V. & Y. Ry. Co., 226
I.C.C. 7; 243 I.C.C.199. As to them, decision of this case controls
the division of rates for the period since appellee's complaint was
filed with the Commission. To that extent, at least, the case is
not moot.
Apart from the Commission's exclusion of Hoboken's tonnage
allowances to Seatrain, we have no occasion to consider the
sufficiency of the present divisions to Hoboken. The Commission
found, upon abundant evidence, that
"they are sufficient to cover the cost of the service performed
by complaint and also a reasonable return on the property owned or
used by it in performing such service."
And appellee conceded before the Commission that, if the
payments to Seatrain are not to be considered a part of appellee's
costs, the divisions are adequate, and "we are not entitled to
anything more."
As essential steps in determining whether Hoboken's payments to
Seatrain are a part of the rail transportation costs, we think the
court below correctly sustained the Commission's findings that
Hoboken's transportation service with respect to carload freight
interchanged with Seatrain begins and ends at Seatrain's cradles;
that the rail lines perform the interchange transportation service
covered by their tariffs "when they place the cars in or take them
from the Seatrain cradle;" and that, consequently, the allowances
paid by Hoboken "cover no part of its transportation service under
the lighterage-free rates, and are in addition to the full costs of
that service." These findings were based upon an extensive
examination
Page 320 U. S. 378
of the method of interchange of freight between rail and water
carriers generally, and between Hoboken and Seatrain. It is not and
could not be seriously contended that they are unsupported by
evidence.
We are of opinion that these findings are decisive of this
appeal. The Commission's determination of the point in time and
space at which a carrier's transportation service begins or ends is
an administrative finding which, if supported by evidence, is
conclusive on the courts.
Los Angeles Switching Case,
234 U. S. 294,
234 U. S.
311-314;
United States v. American Sheet & Tin
Plate Co., 301 U. S. 402,
301 U. S. 408;
United States v. Pan American Petroleum Corp.,
304 U. S. 156,
304 U. S. 158;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. United States, 305 U.
S. 507,
305 U. S.
525-526;
Swift & Co. v. United States,
316 U. S. 216,
316 U. S.
222-225, and cases cited. In the
Tin Plate and
Pan American cases, this Court sustained the Commission's
order prohibiting, as in violation of § 6(7) of the Act,
payment of allowances to an industry by rail carriers for spotting
cars on its industrial tracks. The Court accepted as controlling
the Commission's findings that, under prevailing conditions and
practice, the interchange tracks of the industry were convenient
and usual points for the receipt and delivery of the interchanged
cars, that the rail line-haul service accordingly ended there, and
that, for that reason, the industry performed no service in
spotting cars on its own tracks for which the rail carrier was
compensated under its line-haul tariffs and for which the industry
was entitled to be compensated by allowances out of the line-haul
charges.
The same principles apply in prescribing divisions of joint rail
carrier charges where, independently of considerations not present
here, the measure of the carrier's participation in the joint
transportation service is the measure of its divisions of the joint
transportation charges,
New England Divisions Case,
261 U. S. 184,
261 U. S. 195;
United States v. Abilene & Southern Ry. Co.,
265 U. S. 274,
265 U. S.
284;
Page 320 U. S. 379
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. United States, supra,
298 U. S.
360-362; Sharfman, Interstate Commerce Commission, vol.
III-B, pp. 287-8, and the carrier is entitled to "just compensation
only for what it actually does,"
Tap Line Cases,
234 U. S. 1,
234 U. S. 29;
cf. Louisiana & Pine Bluff Ry. Co. v. United States,
257 U. S. 114,
257 U. S. 118.
Here, the Commission was concerned with the division of joint
rail rates which covered the rail carrier service between inland
points of rail shipment or destination and the point of interchange
at Hoboken. The Commission has found that this point is the
Seatrain cradle at shipside, and that the service rendered by
Seatrain in loading and unloading the loaded freight cars upon and
from its vessels is no part of the rail carrier service with
respect to which divisions are here sought. Consequently, neither
Hoboken nor Seatrain is entitled to compensation out of the joint
rail haul charges for the ship loading and unloading service. Since
Hoboken is entitled to receive by way of divisions only its just
and equitable share of the proceeds of the joint rail
transportation service rendered, it cannot claim as a part of its
share the costs of a service which is not a part of the rail
service called for by the joint rates. Neither the joint rates of
the rail carriers nor the rates of Seatrain are here under attack,
and presumptively they yield adequate but not excessive
compensation for the transportation services rendered under them.
Beaumont, S.L. & W. Ry. Co. v. United States,
282 U. S. 74,
282 U. S. 90;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. United States, supra,
298 U. S.
356.
From these findings of the Commission, and its further finding
that the interchange service rendered by Seatrain is incident to
Seatrain's transportation service, it would seem to follow that
Seatrain is entitled to compensation for it as such, and presumably
is so compensated by its tariffs. If the compensation is
inadequate, the remedy lies in an increase in Seatrain's rates or
in its divisions of joint rail and
Page 320 U. S. 380
water transportation rates -- for which it has an application
pending before the Commission,
Seatrain Lines, Inc. v. The
Akron, Canton & Youngstown R. Co., No. 28668, filed May
22, 1941 -- rather than in its participation, by way of allowances
paid to it by Hoboken, in the proceeds of a joint rail service of
which it performs no part.
Hence, the District Court's direction to the Commission to
determine what part of the value of the interchange service
rendered by Seatrain should "be allowed in establishing Hoboken's
legitimate costs," as an "aid to railroad transportation," is
inconsistent with its conclusion that the Commission correctly
found that the payments by Hoboken to Seatrain "do not constitute a
legitimate transportation cost," and that Seatrain's interchange
service is no part of the rail transportation. If these findings be
sustained, as they must, inquiry whether the payments to Seatrain
have induced the performance of an interchange service resulting in
savings to the rail carriers is irrelevant to a determination of
divisions of the joint rates for the rail service of which the ship
loading and unloading service performed by Seatrain is not a part.
Cf. Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. United States, 243 U.
S. 444,
243 U. S.
446-447.
Section 15[6], which authorizes the division of joint rates
applicable to a transportation service, contemplates only the
apportionment of the proceeds of that service among the parties to
it, and not the compensation of others for a service not covered by
the joint rates to be divided. Seatrain is not a party to this
proceeding, and it is not a necessary party to a proceeding to fix
divisions of a joint rail rate -- or of a portion of a joint
rail-water rate -- in which it does not participate.
United
States v. Abilene & Southern Ry. Co., supra, 265 U. S. 283;
Beaumont, S.L. & W. R. Co. v. United States, supra. We
are accordingly not concerned with the adequacy of Seatrain's
tariffs to compensate for its ship loading and unloading service or
with the
Page 320 U. S. 381
lawfulness of the payments to it by Hoboken. A determination by
the Commission of the extent of the saving to the rail carriers
attributable to Hoboken's payments to Seatrain was therefore not
prerequisite to its order prescribing divisions. And its order is
adequately supported by its findings that the rail transportation
service begins and ends with the placing of the cars in Seatrain's
cradles, and that the ship loading and unloading service forms no
part of the rail transportation.
These findings, as we have seen, are based upon substantial
evidence, and, since they are dispositive of the case, we need not
examine the evidence further to ascertain whether it supports the
Commission's additional finding that payment of the allowances to
Seatrain was not necessary to induce Seatrain to perform its ship
loading service in a manner which resulted in savings to the rail
carriers.
There is an additional reason why the case should not be sent
back to the Commission to reconsider its decision that Hoboken
should receive no part of whatever windfall may result to the rail
carriers from the use of Seatrain's method of loading and
unloading. The prescription of divisions where carriers are unable
to agree is not a mere partition of property. It is one aspect of
the general rate policy which Congress has directed the Commission
to establish and administer in the public interest.
New England
Divisions Case, supra, 261 U. S. 195;
United States v. Abilene & Southern Ry. Co., supra,
265 U. S.
284-285;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. United
States, supra, 298 U. S.
358-360. On such an issue, at least where the Commission
prescribes for the complaining party a fair return for the
transportation service which it renders, the question as to what is
a proper division is one for the Commission's discretion,
reviewable only for unreasonableness, departure from statutory
standards or lack of evidentiary support.
New England Divisions
Case, supra, 261 U. S. 204;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., supra, 298 U. S. 359;
Mississippi
Page 320 U. S. 382
Valley Barge Line Co. v. United States, 292 U.
S. 282,
292 U. S.
286-287;
Board of Trade v. United States,
314 U. S. 534,
314 U. S. 546;
Barringer & Co. v. United States, 319 U. S.
1,
319 U. S. 6-7.
The Commission has determined that it is more consistent with
the nature of lighterage-free rates, which are "based on average
conditions," that the switching carrier receive only fair
compensation for the performance of whatever service may be
required of it by the tariffs and the method of rail-water
interchange, than that it share in any windfall resulting from the
use of an economical method of interchange. And it stated in its
report that, in general, the divisions of a short switching line
should be determined on the basis of full remuneration for its
services, without regard to the level of the joint rates, unless
they are as a whole unremunerative. [
Footnote 3] We can hardly say that such determinations of
rate policy are arbitrary, or result in such an unjust division
that the court must set it aside.
Cf. O'Keefe v. United
States, 240 U. S. 294,
240 U. S.
303-304.
We need not consider whether the contention that the
Commission's order is confiscatory adds anything to the contention
that the divisions which the Commission approved are unjust,
unreasonably low, or inequitable.
Compare Baltimore & Ohio
R. Co. v. United States, supra, 298 U. S.
364-369,
with id., 298 U. S.
383-385. As we have seen, the claim of confiscation is
restricted to the Commission's refusal to allow as a part of
appellee's divisions the payments made by it to Seatrain. These
payments voluntarily made by appellee, were not exacted by the
Commission. The Commission's refusal to include them in divisions
of which they were not lawfully a part, not being an infringement
of any right of
Page 320 U. S. 383
appellee, is obviously not confiscation of its property.
Cf.
General American Tank Car Corp. v. El Dorado Terminal Co.,
308 U. S. 422,
308 U. S. 428;
Louisiana & Pine Bluff Ry. Co. v. United States,
supra. The Commission's order is sustained, and the judgment
of the District Court setting it aside is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
These divisions have been increased by 5 or 10%, depending on
the commodity shipped, as a result of a general rate increase
authorized in
Fifteen Percent Case, 1937-1938, 226 I.C.C.
41.
[
Footnote 2]
For prior reports of the Commission dealing with various aspects
of Seatrain's method of operation,
see Investigation of
Seatrain Lines, Inc., 195 I.C.C. 215; 206 I.C.C. 328;
Seatrain Lines, Inc. v. Akron, C. & Y. R. Co., 226
I.C.C. 7; 243 I.C.C.199;
Hoboken Mfrs.' R. Co. v. Abilene &
So. R. Co., 237 I.C.C. 97; 248 I.C.C. 109.
[
Footnote 3]
See also Divisions of Joint Rates for Transportation of
Stone, 41 I.C.C. 321, 328;
Rates of Peoria & Pekin
Union Ry. Co., 93 I.C.C. 3, 22; 115 I.C.C. 469, 481-497, 501;
Hoboken Mfrs.' R. Co. v. Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co.,
132 I.C.C. 579;
Western M. Ry. Co. v. Maryland & P. R.
Co., 167 I.C.C. 57, 63.