1. In a proceeding before the Interstate Commerce Commission
upon the application of a carrier, under § 1(18)-(20) of the
Interstate Commerce Act, for a certificate authorizing abandonment
of part of it lines, the jurisdiction of the Commission being
challenged under § 1(22) of the Act -- which provides that the
authority of the Commission to permit abandonment of line "shall
not extend" to "street, suburban, or interurban electric railways,
which are not operated as a part or parts of a general steam
railroad system of transportation" -- the Commission should make
jurisdictional findings; and, in the absence of such findings, an
order granting the certificate should, on review, be set aide. P.
320 U. S.
689.
2. A proper regard for local interests in the management of
local transportation facilities requires that federal power be
exercised only where the statutory authority affirmatively appears.
P.
320 U. S.
691.
50 F. Supp. 497, reversed.
Appeal from a decree of a District Court of three judges,
refusing to set aside an order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Interstate Commerce Act confers upon the Interstate Commerce
Commission authority to issue certificates
Page 320 U. S. 686
of public convenience and necessity allowing any carrier subject
to the Act to abandon "all or any portion" of its line of railroad.
Sec. 1(18), (19), (20), 49 U.S.C. § 1 (18), (19), (20), 24
Stat. 379, 41 Stat. 477, 478. But the Act also provides that that
authority of the Commission "shall not extend" to the abandonment
"of street, suburban, or interurban electric railways, which are
not operated as a part or parts of a general steam railroad system
of transportation." Sec. 1(22), 49 U.S.C. § 1(22).
The New York Central Railroad Co. filed an application with the
Commission for a certificate under § 1(18-20) of the Act
authorizing it to abandon an electric branch line extending 3.1
miles from Van Cortlandt Park Junction, New York City, to Getty
Square, Yonkers, New York. This line was constructed in 1888 by a
predecessor company for the purpose of developing suburban business
between Yonkers and New York City. The line was electrified in 1926
with the hope that the suburban business would increase. It is now
a physical part of the New York Central's Putnam Division, with
which it connects at Van Cortlandt Park Junction. The Putnam
Division, in turn, connects with the Hudson Division, which is part
of the main line of the New York Central from New York City to
Chicago. The Hudson Division follows the east bank of the Hudson
River through Yonkers to Albany. The Putnam Division extends north
from Sedgwick Avenue and West 161st Street, New York City, through
Yonkers to Brewster, New York. The Putnam Division lies east of,
and is roughly parallel with, the Hudson Division. In the City of
Yonkers, the two divisions are about a mile apart. The electric
line in question is between the Hudson and Putnam Divisions. Getty
Square, its terminal in Yonkers, is .3 mile east of the Yonkers
station on the Hudson Division. The New York Central system is, for
the most part, operated by steam. Some portions of its lines are
electrified, including the Hudson Division between
Page 320 U. S. 687
New York City and Harmon, New York, and Harlem Division so far
as White Plains, New York, the Putnam Division between Sedgwick
Avenue and Van Cortlandt Park Junction, and the Yonkers line in
question. With the exception noted, no part of the Putnam Division
is electrified, its trains being operated by steam.
This Yonkers electric branch handles no freight, mail, express,
or milk traffic, and no industries are dependent on it for such
service. Its traffic is exclusively passenger traffic, principally
commuter travel between Getty Square and three other stations in
Yonkers and Grand Central Station in New York City. The trains
serving stations on this Yonkers electric branch do not go through
to Grand Central Station on account of the congested condition of
the main-line tracks funnelling into Grand Central Station.
Accordingly, these trains run only from Getty Square to Van
Cortlandt Park Junction, and thence over the main line of the
Putnam Division to the terminal at Sedgwick Avenue. Passengers from
Yonkers to Grand Central Station must transfer to Hudson Division
trains at either High Bridge or University Heights stations, which
are north of the Sedgwick Avenue Station. Tariffs of the New York
Central provide for one-way monthly commutation, and other tickets
usable between the stations in Yonkers and Grand Central Station.
Timetables of the New York Central disclose the service on this
electric branch. And its operating results are reflected in the
accounts of the New York Central.
The trains running on this electric branch are composed of two,
three, or four cars. The trains are hauled not by a locomotive, but
by so-called multiple unit cars. The structure of the line is such
that locomotives cannot be used on it. The trains on this electric
branch proceed only to Getty Square, Yonkers, and not beyond.
The Commission, though adverting to a number of the facts which
we have mentioned, did not address itself to
Page 320 U. S. 688
the question whether this electric branch line was or was not
"operated as a part or parts of a general steam railroad system of
transportation" within the meaning of § 1(22). The Commission
did not undertake to review the evidence relevant to that issue. It
made no findings respecting it. It authorized the abandonment on
the grounds that continued operation would impose "an undue and
unnecessary burden" upon the New York Central and upon interstate
commerce. [
Footnote 1] The
Commission says that the question of its jurisdiction under §
1(22) was neither presented
in limine nor urged in the
briefs, in the exceptions to the examiner's report, or in the oral
arguments. It was, however, presented in petitions for
reconsideration which the Commission denied without opinion.
This suit to enjoin the order of the Commission, brought before
a District Court of three judges, 38 Stat. 219, 220, 28 U.S.C.
§ 47, was initiated by the Public Service Commission of New
York, the City of Yonkers, and a committee of Yonkers commuters.
[
Footnote 2] The jurisdiction
of the Commission was challenged before the District Court. And
that objection, which was overruled there (50 F.Supp. 497), has
been renewed on the appeal which brings the case here. 28 U.S.C.
§§ 47a, 345.
The District Court, in sustaining the order of the Commission,
reviewed the evidence and concluded that the operation of this
electric branch was "intertwined with the operation of the system
as a whole." It relied especially on the fact that the bulk of the
traffic on this electric branch transfers at High Bridge or
University Heights
Page 320 U. S. 689
to the Hudson Division, and that those transfers made it
necessary for the New York Central to provide seats on the Hudson
Division trains for all the transferred Yonkers passengers for the
remaining short run to Grand Central Station.
The Commission itself has noted that, in the
"construction of these exclusion clauses, great difficulty has
been experienced, particularly in determining the roads properly
classifiable as interurban electric railways."
Annual Report (1928), p. 80. That difficulty is apparent here by
the division of opinion which exists in the Court whether this
Yonkers branch is an "interurban electric" railway which is
"operated as a part" of the New York Central system. [
Footnote 3] § 1(22). As stated by Mr.
Justice Brandeis in
United States v. Idaho, 298 U.
S. 105,
298 U. S. 109,
the determination of what is included within the exemption of
§ 1(22) involves a "mixed question of fact and law." Congress
has not left that question exclusively to administrative
determination; it has given the courts the final say.
Id.,
p.
298 U. S. 109.
It is settled that the aid of the Commission need not be sought
before the jurisdiction of a court is invoked to enjoin violations
of the provisions in question.
Texas & Pacific R. Co. v.
Gulf, c. & S.F. Ry. Co., 270 U. S. 266. And
the fact that the Commission fails to make a finding on this
jurisdictional question obviously does not preclude the reviewing
court from making that determination initially. But we deem it
essential in cases involving a review of orders of the Commission
for the courts to decline to make that determination without the
basic jurisdictional findings' first having been made by the
Commission.
Page 320 U. S. 690
The power of the Commission to control the abandonment of
intrastate branches of interstate carriers stems from the power of
Congress to protect interstate commerce from undue burdens or
discriminations.
Colorado v. United States, 271 U.
S. 153;
Transit Commission v. United States,
284 U. S. 360;
Purcell v. United States, 315 U.
S. 381.
And see United States v. Hubbard,
266 U. S. 474, for
an application of the doctrine of the
Shreveport
case (
Houston, E. & W.T. R. Co. v. United States,
234 U. S. 342) to
the intrastate rates of interurban electric railroads. The
exemptions contained in § 1(22) do not necessarily reflect the
lack of constitutional power to deal with the excepted phases of
railroad enterprise. Underlying § 1(22) is a Congressional
policy of reserving exclusively to the states control over that
group of essentially local activities.
See H.Rep. No. 456,
66th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 18. We recently stated that the extension
of federal control into these traditional local domains is a
"delicate exercise of legislative policy in achieving a wise
accommodation between the needs of central control and the lively
maintenance of local institutions."
Palmer v. Massachusetts, 308 U. S.
79,
308 U. S. 84. In
the application of the doctrine of the
Shreveport case,
this Court has required the Commission to show meticulous respect
for the interests of the States. It has insisted on a
"suitable regard to the principle that, whenever the federal
power is exerted within what would otherwise be the domain of state
power, the justification of the exercise of the federal power must
clearly appear."
Florida v. United States, 282 U.
S. 194,
282 U. S.
211-212. In that case, this Court set aside an
intrastate rate order of the Commission because of the "lack of the
basic or essential findings required to support the Commission's
order."
Id., p.
282 U. S. 215.
The principle of the Florida case is applicable here. The question
is not merely one of elaborating the grounds of decision and
bringing into focus what is vague and obscure.
See United
States
Page 320 U. S. 691
v. Chicago, M. St. P. & P. R. Co., 294 U.
S. 499.
Cf. Securities & Exchange Commission v.
Chenery Corp., 318 U. S. 80. Here,
as in the Florida case, the problem is whether the courts should
supply the requisite jurisdictional findings which the Commission
did not make and to which it even failed to make any reference.
[
Footnote 4]
Congress has withheld from the Commission any power to authorize
abandonment of certain types of railroad lines. It is hardly enough
to say that the Commission's orders may be set aside by the courts
where the Commission exceeds its authority. The Commission has a
special competence to deal with the transportation problems which
are reflected in these questions. The Congress has entrusted to the
Commission the initial responsibility for determining through
application of the statutory standards the appropriate line between
the federal and state domains. Proper regard for the rightful
concern of local interests in the management of local
transportation facilities makes desirable the requirement that
federal power be exercised only where the statutory authority
affirmatively appears. The sacrifice of these legitimate local
interests may be as readily achieved through the Commission's
oversight or neglect (
Illinois Commerce Commission v.
Thomson, 318 U. S. 675) as
by improper findings. The insistence that the Commission make these
jurisdictional
Page 320 U. S. 692
findings before it undertakes to act not only gives added
assurance that the local interests for which Congress expressed its
solicitude will be safe-guarded. It also gives to the reviewing
courts the assistance of an expert judgment on a knotty phase of a
technical subject.
We are asked to presume that the Commission, knowing the limit
of its authority, considered this jurisdictional question and
decided to act because of its conviction that this branch line was
not exempt by reason of § 1(22). But that is to deal too
cavalierly with the Congressional mandate and with the local
interests which are pressing for recognition. Where a federal
agency is authorized to invoke an overriding federal power except
in certain prescribed situations, and then to leave the problem to
traditional state control, the existence of federal authority to
act should appear affirmatively and not rest on inference
alone.
This is not to insist on formalities and to burden the
administrative process with ritualistic requirements. It entails a
matter of great substance. It requires the Commission to heed the
mandates of the Act and to make the expert determinations which are
conditions precedent to its authority to act.
We intimate no opinion on the merits of the controversy. For, in
absence of the requisite jurisdictional findings, we think the
order of the Commission should have been set aside.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The certificate authorizes a complete abandonment of the Yonkers
branch, including dismantlement and salvaging.
[
Footnote 2]
The Public Service Commission of New York, which took the lead
in attacking the order of the Commission before the District Court
but which has not appeared here, asserted in its complaint that
authority to discontinue the four stations was required by New York
law, but had not been sought or obtained.
[
Footnote 3]
Cf. Piedmont & Northern R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 286 U. S. 299,
286 U. S. 307,
and United States v. Chicago, North Shore & M. R. Co.,
288 U. S. 1,
288 U. S. 9-12,
which emphasize in determining the status of independent electric
roads the dominance of interurban passenger service and the
preponderance of local traffic.
[
Footnote 4]
For cases dealing with the exception of suburban or interurban
electric railways where the Commission has passed on the
jurisdictional question,
see In the Matter of Michigan United
Rys. Co., 67 I.C.C. 452;
Abandonment of Line by Boise
Valley Traction Co., 79 I.C.C. 167;
Proposed Abandonment
by Lewiston & Youngstown Frontier R. Co., 124 I.C.C. 219;
Proposed Construction of Lines by Piedmont & Northern R.
Co., 138 I.C.C. 363, 372;
Unified Operation at Los Angeles
Harbor, 150 I.C.C. 649, 661;
Glendale & Montrose R.
Proposed Abandonment, 166 I.C.C. 625.
The requisite finding was made by the Commission in the
Oregon Short Line case (193 I.C.C. 697, 705), in which the
order of the Commission was set aside by
United States v.
Idaho, supra.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, dissenting.
Congress has empowered the Interstate Commerce Commission to
authorize a railroad, when public convenience permits, to abandon
any portion of its line. But when such portion is a suburban or
interurban electric railway, abandonment may be authorized only if
it is part of a general steam railroad system of
transportation.
Page 320 U. S. 693
Section 1 (18) and (22) of the Interstate Commerce Act, as
amended 49 U.S.C. § 1(18) and (22). This Court has held that
whether such a line is of a character to permit abandonment under
federal authority need not be determined in the first instance by
the Interstate Commerce Commission, and such determination, when
made, does not foreclose an independent judicial judgment.
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Gulf, C. & S.R. Ry.
Co., 270 U. S. 266, and
United States v. Idaho, 298 U. S. 105. On
such an independent examination of the issue, the court below had
no doubt that the Yonkers branch of the New York Central, the
portion of the Central lines for which abandonment was here sought,
was not "a suburban or interurban line unconnected with the rest of
the Central's railroad system," but was, in fact, "intertwined with
the operation of the [New York Central Railroad] system as a
whole." 50 F. Supp. 497, 498. The record amply sustains this
conclusion. If this Court, however, on its own estimate of the
various elements in the financial, physical, and transportation
relations between the rest of the New York Central lines and this
Yonkers branch, had struck a contrary balance and found that the
Yonkers branch was not operated as a part of the general New York
Central system, I should not have deemed the matter of sufficient
importance to warrant expression of dissent.
But the Court does not decide on the merits. In effect, it
remits the controversy to the Interstate Commerce Commission on the
ground that the Commission did not make a formal finding, described
as "jurisdictional," that the Yonkers branch was in fact "operated
as a part . . . of a general steam railroad system of
transportation." The Commission may very well now formally make
such a finding of a connection between the Yonkers branch and the
New York Central, which in fact is writ large in the Commission's
report in granting the application for abandonment, and the weary
round of litigation may be repeated
Page 320 U. S. 694
to the futile end of having this Court then, forsooth, express
an opinion on the merits opposed to that of the Commission and the
District Court. This danger, if not likelihood, of thus marching
the king's men up the hill and then marching them down again seems
to me a mode of judicial administration to which I cannot yield
concurrence. I think the case should be disposed of on the merits
by affirming the judgment of the District Court.
This seems to me all the more called for since I find no defect
in the foundation of the Commission's order. No doubt the
Interstate Commerce Commission, like other administrative agencies,
should keep within legal bounds, and courts should keep them there,
insofar as Congress has entrusted them with judicial review over
administrative acts. Of course, when a statute makes indispensable
"an express finding," an express finding is imperative,
see
Wichita Railroad & Light Co. v. Public Utilities Comm'n,
260 U. S. 48,
260 U. S. 59.
But the history of the Interstate Commerce Act and its amendments
illumine the different legal functions expressed by the term
findings. When Congress exacts from the Commission formal findings,
there is an end to the matter. For certain duties of the Commission
and at certain stages in the history of the Interstate Commerce
Act, Congress did require formal findings, but experience led
Congress later to dispense with such formal requirements.
See
Manufacturers Ry. Co. v. United States, 246 U.
S. 457,
246 U. S.
489-490. But courts have also spoken of the need of
findings as the basis of validity of an order by the Interstate
Commerce Commission in the absence of a Congressional direction for
findings. The requirement of findings in such a context is merely
part of the need for courts to know what it is that the Commission
has really determined, in order that they may know what to review.
"We must know what a decision means before the duty becomes ours to
say whether it is right or
Page 320 U. S. 695
wrong." See United States v. Chicago, M., St.P. & P. R.
Co.,@
294 U. S. 499,
294 U. S.
509-511.
This is the real ground for the decisions which have found
Interstate Commerce Commission orders wanting in necessary
findings. They have all been cases where the determination of an
issue is not open to independent judgment by this Court, and where
the case, as it came here, rested on conflicting inferences of fact
left unresolved by the Commission. Such were the circumstances, for
instance, in
Florida v. United States, 282 U.
S. 194, particularly at
282 U. S.
214-215, and
United States v. Baltimore & Ohio
R. Co., 293 U. S. 454,
293 U. S. 455,
particularly at
293 U. S.
463-464. Findings in this sense is a way of describing
the duty of the Commission to decide issues actually in controversy
before it. Analysis is not furthered by speaking of such findings
as "jurisdictional," and not even when -- to adapt a famous phrase
-- jurisdictional is softened by a
quasi. "Jurisdiction"
competes with "right" as one of the most deceptive of legal
pitfalls. The opinions in
Crowell v. Benson, 285 U. S.
22, and the casuistries to which they have given rise
bear unedifying testimony of the morass into which one is led in
working out problems of judicial review over administrative
decisions by loose talk about jurisdiction.
The nub of the matter regarding the requirement of findings,
where the formal making of them is not legislatively commanded, is
indicated in
United States v. Louisiana, 290 U. S.
70. Reviewing the validity of the Commission's order is
the serious business of sitting in judgment upon a tribunal of
great traditions and large responsibility. An order of the
Commission should not be viewed in a hypercritical spirit, nor even
as though
elegantia juris were our concern. We should
judge a challenged order of the Commission by "the report, read as
a whole," 290 U.S.,
supra, at
290 U. S. 80,
and by the record as a whole out of which the report arose.
Page 320 U. S. 696
Viewing its order in this light makes plain enough why the
Commission never formally stated that the line which it authorized
to be abandoned was in fact operated as part of the New York
Central system. It never formally made this statement because it
was never questioned before it. On the face of the application, in
the report proposed by the Commissioner's examiner, and in the
report of the Commission by Division 4, authorizing the issuance of
a certificate of abandonment, the facts showing that the Yonkers
branch was a part of the operating system of the New York Central
are set forth in detail. Extensive exceptions were taken to the
examiner's report by the City of Yonkers and a committee of Yonkers
commuters, but not even remotely did they take the point which is
now made the ground for invalidating the Commission's order.
Elaborate petitions for rehearing were filed by the protestants,
including the Public Service Commission of New York, as the
guardian of the local interests of New York,
* but not one of
these petitions raised the objection now raised. The jurisdiction
of the Commission was questioned, but no claim was made that the
Yonkers branch was not an operating part of the New York Central.
The City of Yonkers enumerated four grounds in challenging
Page 320 U. S. 697
the jurisdiction of the Commission, but it did not specify the
one now taken by the Court. The committee of commuters rested their
claim of want of jurisdiction on the specific grounds that
"(1) the line sought to be abandoned is an interurban electric
passenger railway located wholly within the New York, and (2). . .
the alleged annual operating deficit"
of the Yonkers branch was too insignificant to burden the
operation of the New York Central. Exercising the discretion which
Congress explicitly conferred upon it, the full Commission denied
the petition for rehearing. Interstate Commerce Act, § 17(6).
In any fair construction of the action of the Commission, such a
denial is an adverse finding of such claims as were made in the
petitions for rehearing. The crucial fact is that only when the
present bill was filed in the court below did the objection which
the Court now sustains emerge in the specific claim that the
Yonkers "branch is not operated as a part or parts of a general
steam railroad system of transportation."
Can there be any doubt that this contention was not put to the
Commission because it was an afterthought? This issue was never
tendered to the Commission because the facts which deny it were
never questioned in the proceedings conducted before it with vigor
and ability by several protestants during the three successive
stages that preceded a challenge in the courts.
The case is now sent back to the Commission. The facts regarding
the relation of the Yonkers branch to the New York Central are
spread at large upon the record, and are not in controversy. In
view of the three proceedings before the Commission, it is
reasonable to assume that the Commission will add to its report the
formal finding now requested of it. If the case then returns here,
I find it too hard to believe that this Court would reject the
conclusion of the Commission and of the lower Court that the
Yonkers branch is an operating part of the New York Central
Page 320 U. S. 698
within § 1(22). Is not insistence on such an empty
formalism a reversion to seventeenth century pleading which
required talismanic phrases, as for instance, that a seller could
not be held to warrant that he sold what he purported to sell
unless the buyer pleaded
warrantizando vendidit or
barganizasset? On the other hand, if the Court, with all
the facts before it, does not think the Yonkers branch is a part of
the railway operations of the New York Central, now is the time to
say so.
MR. JUSTICE REED and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON join in this
opinion.
* Due concern for local interests in the administration of the
Interstate Commerce Act hardly calls for an exaggerated concern for
formal findings. The Interstate Commerce Act relies primarily on
state authorities for the safeguarding of local interests. It is
therefore relevant to note that the New York Public Service
Commission, which is charged with the duty of protecting the local
interests of New York against federal encroachments and which does
not appear to have been unalert in doing so, has acquiesced in the
decision below, and is not here urging the local interest on which
the decision of this Court seems to be based. That the state agency
had best be looked to for the vindication of conflicting local
interests within a state is well illustrated by the fact that,
while the City of Yonkers protested against the abandonment of the
branch line, the City of New York urged it.