In order to compete with railroads in the transportation of
hard-surface floor-covering, motor carriers proposed to establish
rates 47.5 percent of first class, minimum 20,000 pounds
(truckload), and 45 percent of first class, minimum 30,000 pounds
(carload). The Interstate Commerce Commission rejected the proposed
rates as unjust and unreasonable, and unjustly discriminatory
between shippers, so far as subject to a minimum of 30,000 pounds.
Held that, because of the inadequacy of the record, this
Court is unable to determine whether the decision of the Commission
conforms to law, and the decree of the District Court refusing to
set aside the Commission's order must be reversed. P.
321 U. S.
209.
48 F. Supp. 432 reversed.
Appeal from a decree of a District Court of three judges
refusing to set aside an order of the Interstate Commerce
Commission, 34 M.C.C. 641.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellants are motor carrier associations who seek to put into
effect proposed rate schedules in order to meet
Page 321 U. S. 195
rail competition. The schedules cover transportation of
hard-surface floor covering,
e.g., linoleum, from points
in New England and Middle Atlantic states to various destinations
in Middle Western states. The Interstate Commerce Commission, three
Commissioners dissenting, rejected the schedules. 34 M.C.C. 641. In
so doing, it upheld the previous conclusion of its Division 3. 31
M.C.C.193. A three-judge District Court, 28 U.S.C. § 47,
sustained the Commission's decision. 48 F. Supp. 432. The appeal,
under 28 U.S.C. §§ 47a, 345, brings the decree here for
review. Eastern-Central is the principal appellant. We think the
judgment must be reversed.
When the schedules were filed, the motor carriers' rates on
carpeting generally were based on minimum weights varying between
16,000 and 20,000 pounds, roughly approximating a truckload. Below
this weight, the rate was equivalent to 70 percent of first class.
Above it, the rate varied somewhat, in the neighborhood of 45 to 50
percent of first class. Corresponding rail rates then were 70
percent of first class for shipments of less than 30,000 pounds
(less than carload lots), and 45 percent for larger shipments.
Thus, the differential according to weight was geared, in the one
case to rail carload capacity, and in the other to truckload
capacity. [
Footnote 1]
Conceiving that these structures gave the railroads an undue
competitive advantage on larger shipments, appellants proposed
specific rates designed to enable them to
Page 321 U. S. 196
compete with the railroads for such shipments. They sought to
utilize a new minimum weight. The rates tendered were approximately
the equivalent of 70 percent of first class for shipments of less
than 20,000 pounds, 47.5 percent for 20,000 to 30,000 pounds, and
45 percent for 30,000 pounds or more. The schedules therefore
substantially put rail and motor rates on the same plane for less
than 20,000 and more than 30,000 pounds, but placed motor rates
substantially lower than rail rates for shipments of 20,000 to
30,000 pounds.
Certain western rail carriers protested. Thereupon, the proposed
rates were made the subject of investigation and suspension
proceedings. 49 U.S.C. § 316(d), (g), 49 Stat. 558-560, 54
Stat. 924. Hearings were begun before Division 3. While they were
pending, appellants agreed to make applicable in connection with
their proposed rate, minimum 30,000 pounds, a tariff provision that
such shipments "must be received at and transported from the point
of origin from one shipper in one day and on one bill of lading."
[
Footnote 2] The rail
protestants therefore presented no evidence, and, after the hearing
,withdrew their protest. While the proceedings were pending, the
rail carriers also reduced their rates minimum 30,000 pounds to
42.5 percent of first class.
The hearings continued, and appellants presented evidence which
showed, among other things, that one motor carrier, Brady Transfer
and Storage Company, of Fort Dodge, Iowa, had received,
"since these rates were suspended, four loads from the Western
Trunk Line Territory, instead of 398, and three of those we haven't
collected the charges on, because the rate was too high. . . ."
It appeared, too, that the eastbound movement consists largely
of dairy products, requiring refrigeration. The
Page 321 U. S. 197
bulk of the westbound movement is frozen or salted fish.
Division 3 made findings and conclusions first that, based upon
the costs proven and comparison with motor carriers' rates on
numerous commodities, the proposed rates 45 percent were "just and
reasonable provided the minimum that is applicable in connection
therewith is reasonable." Accordingly, it examined the reasons
advanced in support of the proposed minimum of 30,000 pounds.
On this, it found in No. M-1445 [
Footnote 3] that linoleum shipments which move by rail to
the Ohio points generally are consigned to warehouses having rail
sidings, while linoleum is tendered to the appellant motor carriers
in quantities weighing from 18,000 pounds upward. It found also,
and the finding is not questioned, that it is physically impossible
to load 30,000 pounds of linoleum into a single unit of equipment
operated by appellants. While some of it can transport 25,000
pounds -- "the normal trucking load of linoleum approximates 22,000
pounds." Rejecting appellants' contention based on
Carpets and
Carpeting from Official to Southern Territory, 237 I.C.C. 651,
the Division stated:
"The Commission has found repeatedly that carload minimum
weights should be established by rail carriers with reference to
the loading capacity of their freight cars, and has condemned
minimum weights in excess of the loading possibilities of the rail
equipment. The respondents [appellants here] have not presented to
us a valid reason
from the point of view of economy in
transportation or otherwise, such as we have found to exist in
connection with certain trainload movements, [
Footnote 4] why they
Page 321 U. S. 198
should be permitted to establish a minimum weight greater than
is physically possible to load in the motor equipment usually used
by them, and, in our opinion, no such reason exists. Strictly
speaking, the proposed minimum weight of 30,000 pounds is not a
truckload minimum weight, but rather is a volume minimum weight,
which necessitates the use of more than one unit of equipment to
load and transport that quantity of linoleum. We
adopt as a
policy the condemnation
as unreasonable of a volume
minimum weight unless it is shown clearly that, as a result
thereof, motor carriers can handle the traffic at the volume
minimum weight at costs per 100 pounds which are less than the
costs incurred at a reasonable truckload minimum weight."
(Italics supplied.)
The Division then found that, on the record, a reasonable
truckload minimum on linoleum is 20,000 pounds, and there was no
showing of operating economics which would result if the proposed
rates were restricted to apply only when 30,000 pounds are
tendered. It concluded that the proposed schedules
"are just and reasonable and otherwise lawful except to the
extent that they propose to establish a minimum of 30,000 pounds;
that the proposed minimum of 30,000 pounds is unjust and
unreasonable, and that a minimum of 20,000 pounds would be just and
reasonable."
The proposed schedules therefore, to the extent found not just
and reasonable, were ordered cancelled
"without prejudice to the establishment . . . of truckload rates
on linoleum, minimum 20,000 pounds, which are not less than 45
percent of the corresponding first-class rates."
31 M.C.C.193.
Thereafter, oral argument was had before the full Commission. At
this stage, the National Industrial Traffic League intervened and
supported the Division's position. [
Footnote 5]
Page 321 U. S. 199
The Commission affirmed the Division's findings
"that the proposed rates 45 and 47.5 percent of first class are
not unjust or unreasonable except to the extent that the proposed
rates, 45 percent of first class, are subject to a minimum of
30,000 pounds."
Both rates, it said, "are within the zone of reasonableness."
But
"the proposed rates, minimum 30,000 pounds, would give an unjust
advantage to shippers of 30,000 pound lots and be unjustly
discriminatory to shippers of 20,000-pound lots."
Since, at that time, the tariffs disclosed appellants' rates
were either 45 or 47.5 percent of first class, minimum 20,000
pounds, no order for the future was made. The Commission, in
concluding its discussion, said:
"We are mindful of the fact that we approved certain [motor
carrier] rates subject to a minimum weight of 30,000 pounds on
linoleum in
Carpets and Carpeting, Official to Southern
Territory, supra. However, our report therein expresses our
doubt as to the propriety of establishing a minimum of 30,000
pounds in connection with the proposed column 45 basis, because it
would require more than one unit of equipment to transport 30,000
pounds. That report was issued over a year ago, and now we are
convinced that not only were our doubts as expressed therein well
founded,
but that, for the future, we shall follow the policy
announced in the prior report herein with respect to minimum
weight in excess of the loading capacity of the equipment
customarily used by the motor carriers."
(Italics supplied.)
The District Court, sustaining the Commission's findings and
decision, [
Footnote 6] held
that the extent to which competition
Page 321 U. S. 200
should be recognized in arriving at just rates is a matter,
within reasonable limits, for the expert judgment of the Commission
and that, in exercising its discretion, that body had met the
requirements of Section 216(i) of the Motor Carrier Act. [
Footnote 7] 49 U.S.C. §
316(i).
I
Notwithstanding the apparent difference between the Division and
the full Commission in the former's view that the proposed rate
minimum 30,000 pounds is unreasonable and the latter's that it is
both unreasonable and unduly discriminatory, the net effect is that
the rate is unlawful as a matter of policy which condemns all
volume minimum rates unless it is clearly shown they will operate
at costs per 100 pounds less than the costs incurred at reasonable
loading capacity rates.
Page 321 U. S. 201
Whether this policy is now intended to apply to all forms of
transportation -- rail, motor and water -- without regard to
competitive conditions affecting two or more of them is not clear
from the abbreviated reports made in this case. But their casting
of the matter in terms of unqualified policy, dependent only upon
proof of the required reduction in operating costs, gives both
appearance and substance to the view this may be true, if not with
respect to all carriers, then certainly with reference to motor
carriers. If so, the effect will be, as appellants urge, not to
make reduction in costs merely one factor, nor indeed even the most
important factor, in determining the reasonableness and
discriminatory or contrary character of rates. It will be, rather,
to make reduction in costs the exclusive criterion, eliminating all
other considerations, including competitive conditions amounting to
necessity. That is true notwithstanding the Commission's report,
immediately prior to stating its adoption of the policy announced
by the Division, gave expression in an abstract way to a directly
contrary principle -- namely,
"the extent to which competition between carriers may render
discrimination and prejudice not unlawful must be decided upon the
facts in each case. [
Footnote
8]"
The latter statement, taken
Page 321 U. S. 202
literally, squarely contradicts the policy unless indeed the
statement was intended to qualify it in situations not indicated or
contained an implicit limitation from context that the only "facts
in each case" which would be material are those which would prove a
reduction in costs.
That the purpose was not to qualify the policy seems apparent
not only from the latter's unqualified formulation and adoption and
from the failure to intimate in what types of situation the
qualification might operate, but also from two other
considerations. One is that the statement was followed immediately
by the broad and conclusive declaration, in general terms, without
supporting data or reasons, except as supplied by the policy
itself, that
"the competition between rail and motor carriers for linoleum
traffic does not constitute such a dissimilarity in circumstances
and conditions as to render legal the proposed discrimination."
The statement was not limited to the particular competitive
situation. In terms, it applied to all between rail carriers and
motor carriers. In short, the policy, and therefore the single
factor that there was no evidence to show reduction in cost, was
the sole criterion of decision. Other facts, including competitive
disadvantage, became irrelevant. And the significance of the
policy's
Page 321 U. S. 203
application becomes more manifest by virtue of the fact that the
case, though presented and decided on its own record, was regarded
and determined as a test case. [
Footnote 9] Finally, the Commission's review of its
previous decisions, upon which appellants relied, shows, we think,
that its purpose, in the case of motor carriers, at any rate, is to
adhere strictly to the policy and, in the manner made, may be taken
to indicate that it contemplates no departure whatever. If so, the
effect of the decision is not merely to adopt "a policy of
administration," as the Commission and the intervenors before it
assert, but is rather to adopt, as a rule of law, the principle
that only upon a showing of reduction in operating costs may a
volume minimum rate be found reasonable and not unduly
discriminatory.
II
The Commission considered chiefly previous decisions in
Carpets and Carpeting from Official to Southern Territory,
supra; Molasses from New Orleans, La. to Peoria and Pekin,
Ill., 235 I.C.C. 485, and
Petroleum Rail Shippers' Assn.
v. Alton & S. R., 243 I.C.C. 589. In the
Molasses
case, notwithstanding the Commission's previous refusal to
authorize rail volume rates for more than carload lots at less than
carload rates, it approved a multiple car rate, minimum 1,800 tons,
on molasses which was lower than the carload rate. The effect was
to authorize a lower rate to a number of carloads tendered as a
single shipment. The departure was made to enable the
Page 321 U. S. 204
rail carriers to meet water competition. However, there was a
showing that, in the circumstances, a material saving in costs per
100 pounds would be made in transporting such multiple-car
shipments. In the
Petroleum Shippers' case, the Commission
considered authorizing multiple-car rates on petroleum, but
declined to do so upon finding that the record did not establish
existence of a substantial cost saving in such shipments.
In the
Carpets and Carpeting case, the Commission
approved certain rates subject to a minimum weight of 30,000 pounds
on linoleum. In doing so, it said:
"We are not convinced that it would be reasonable for the motor
carriers to establish a minimum of 30,000 pounds in connection with
the postponed column 45 basis, because it would require more than
one unit of equipment to transport 30,000 pounds. On this record,
however, we are not prepared to say that the column 45 rates,
minimum 30,000 pounds, where not lower than the corresponding
proposed rail-water carload rates, would be unlawful, provided that
a rule is made applicable in connection therewith to the effect
that shipments of not less than 30,000 pounds actually will be
received at and transported from the point of origin from one
shipper in one day and on one bill of lading."
237 I.C.C. 651, 657, 658.
And, in
Peanut Butter from Montgomery, Ala. to Georgia,
22 M.C.C. 375, Division 2, although declaring in one breath that
motor carriers should not maintain volume rates subject to minimum
weights greater than equipment generally available can transport,
in the next noted that the national motor freight classification is
replete with such ratings, refused to condemn them, and said that,
if they were restricted to apply only when tendered by one shipper,
in one day and on one bill of lading, they would be "in consonance
with
Carpets and Carpeting from Official to Southern Territory,
supra."
Page 321 U. S. 205
III
These cases disclose departures, though tentatively made, from
the Commission's longstanding [
Footnote 10] policy in the same respect, adopted when its
powers extended only to rail carriers. Influenced primarily by the
desire to secure shipping advantages for the small shipper equal to
those given the large one, and thus to enforce the policy of the
interstate commerce legislation against undue discrimination, the
Commission at first declined to adopt wholesale rates. [
Footnote 11] The major departure was
in allowing lower rates for carload lots than for less-than-carload
shipments. This was justified by the difference in costs.
Accordingly, the structure became fixed with this as the major --
and for long, the only -- differential, and with it, the principle
that such a saving in operations alone justifies a differential.
That policy received judicial approval, [
Footnote 12] and remained controlling so long as the
Commission had authority only over railroads.
But, with the evolution of other forms of carriage, particularly
motor carriage, and the Commission's acquisition of control over
their rates and operations, a new situation arose. The Commission's
task no longer was merely the regulation of a single form of
transport to secure reasonable and nondiscriminatory rates and
service. It became not merely the regulator, but, to some extent,
the
Page 321 U. S. 206
coordinator of different modes of transportation. With the
addition of motor and water carriage to its previous jurisdiction
over rails, it was charged not only with seeing that the rates and
services of each are reasonable and not unduly discriminatory, but
that they are coordinated in accordance with the National
Transportation Policy, as declared by the later legislation.
[
Footnote 13] This, while
intended to secure the lowest rates consistent with adequate and
efficient service and to preserve within the limits of the policy
the inherent advantages of each mode of transportation, at the same
time was designed to eliminate destructive competition not only
within each form, but also between or among the different forms of
carriage.
Necessarily, the impact of these changes brought problems the
Commission previously had not faced. Necessarily too, the
Commission, in facing them, including those of adjustment among the
various forms of transportation, called upon its previous
experience in the railroad field for guidance to its judgment. But
that experience could not apply fully to the other and different
forms of carriage. Nor could it do so always when the interests of
two or more
Page 321 U. S. 207
were found in conflict. Each form of transportation presents, by
reason of its peculiar operating conditions, its own problems for
the function of ratemaking. And each, by virtue of competition with
others, presents additional complications arising from the varied
circumstances of their operation. Hence, in such situations,
principles previously established for application within a single
form of transportation cannot always be transplanted to control its
relations with another, or those of both with the public generally,
without consequences unduly harmful to one or to the public
interest.
Thus, in the problem presented by this case, application of the
principle that volume minimum rates will be allowed only when
geared to a capacity loading which makes possible a real saving in
costs of operation may be made within either the railroad area or
the motor area without substantial disturbance or difficulty. Each
has its unit of carriage or loading, and that unit has a
substantial relation to costs -- hence, upon the long-established
railroad principle, to reasonableness and the discriminatory or
nondiscriminatory character of rates. But, as between rails and
motors, the two units are different. And the two forms of carriage
compete unless the lower rates geared to the respective units are
of a character that each forces the other form of carriage from the
field. The junction of difference in available units, with rates
geared to them, and the fact of competition or competitive
possibility produces or may produce consequences neither the
character of the unit nor the fact of competition, nor both
together, could create in either form of service, taken alone. In
short, the very fact a rail carload is 30,000 pounds and a
truckload 20,000, with rates respectively tied to these weights,
may make a life-or-death difference in the competitive struggle,
with consequences affecting not only the carriers, but the public
interest as well. And appellants'
Page 321 U. S. 208
argument that a 30,000-pound minimum is necessary to meet rail
competition is necessary to meet rail competition is at least
consonant with the frequent recognition, both by the Commission and
by this Court, that there are occasions when it is appropriate for
the former to consider a carriers' need to meet other carriers'
competition as a factor justifying what otherwise would be an
unreasonable or an unduly discriminatory rate. [
Footnote 14]
But whether and to what extent competition may have destructive
effect, or other consequences hurtful to the public interest, in a
particular situation may depend not merely on the difference in
sizes of units, but on other factors. Each form of carriage has
some inherent advantages over the others, such as mobility, speed,
normal volume capacity, etc. Purely legal restrictions, such as
limitations upon tonnage placed on trucks by state laws, create
like or contrary effects. Whether, in a particular situation, the
mere difference in loading capacity or some other or others of the
many important factors affecting competitive position will be
controlling depends upon the character of, and the factors involved
in, that situation. And this is as true of one form of
transportation as of another when, but for rate structures geared
solely to costs of operation, it comes within a competitive
tangent.
IV
In such a situation, therefore, to tie rate differentials
exclusively to minimum weights based on available unit size
conceivably might allocate all shipments of that size to the form
of transportation to which it appertains. Or, if the effect were
less extensive, still it might impose conditions upon the
competition unduly burdensome or not required by the competitive
situation and the applicable statutory policies. Thus, appellants
say the Commission's
Page 321 U. S. 209
ruling has such consequences in this case -- namely, to force
them to make the 45 percent rate available on shipments between
20,000 and 30,000 pounds, thus placing the railroads at a
disadvantage on such tonnages and compelling the motor carriers to
reduce their rates on them below what the competition requires; or
to compel them to forego an equality of rate with the railroads on
shipments of 30,000 pounds and more by charging only the one rate
of 47.5 percent on all shipments of 20,000 pounds and more. From
these alternatives, it is charged the consequence is to force the
truckers "out of that very large field of traffic" and allocate it
to the railroads. Whether this is the effect or not we have no
means of knowing on this record. Nor can we tell, other than by
sheer acceptance of the Commission's conclusion, in the form of its
statement of the result and cryptic formulation of the policy on
which it is rested, whether the proposed rates will give the motor
carriers an undue competitive advantage as to shipments of 20,000
to 30,000 pounds, whether there will be discrimination in fact
between classes of shippers, or whether, though these things may
result in the particular situation, they will do so only by virtue
of its peculiar features or by virtue of its conformity to
conditions generally prevailing in regions competitive as between
rail and motor carriers.
These and other questions of like import remain unanswered upon
the record. The problem is novel. It is not free from complexity,
as appears from the Commission's hesitant departures from, then its
return to, the long-established railroad rule in inter-carrier
situations. Further, the matter is one of general importance. It
affects not only shipments of linoleum, and motor carriers, but
many kinds of shipment and all kinds of carriers within the
Commission's jurisdiction. It may touch vitally the public
interest. It involves, to some extent, the important task of
reconciling previously established railroad
Page 321 U. S. 210
policies with, or adapting them to, the requirements of the
presently effective National Transportation Policy and its
application to a coordinated transportation system. Upon a matter
of such consequence and complexity, our function in review cannot
be performed without further foundation than has been made.
We do not mean by this to imply that the result the Commission
has reached would not be sustained if a sufficient basis were
supplied in the record. We do not undertake to determine what
result the Commission should reach. But we cannot say the one at
which it has arrived has the sanction of law without further basis
than we now have. This, in itself, requires reversal. Consequently
we need not speak concerning appellants' other contentions, except
insofar as the pertinence of some of them to the necessary further
proceedings requires.
V
Appellants' broadest contention must be rejected at this stage.
It is, in effect, that, as a matter of law, in the particular
circumstances, competitive necessity becomes the controlling
consideration, and costs of operation -- that is, the requirement
that minimum volume rates be geared to loading capacity -- become
immaterial. That view must be rejected for the same reason as
requires rejection, on this record and until further buttressed, of
the Commission's converse view that costs exclusively control, and
competition becomes immaterial. Conceivably, particular
circumstances might make one or the other factor predominant, and,
in such a situation, the choice would be for the Commission to make
upon a proper weighing of the facts and opposing policies possibly
applicable. Whether in any case this contention of appellant could
be accepted may be doubtful. Certainly it should not be in advance
of further action by the Commission, and then only in
circumstances
Page 321 U. S. 211
which would justify it as being in the public interest so
clearly that no other view would be tenable.
Appellants also say that, as a matter of law, there could be no
unjust discrimination in the present circumstances, since they
insist there is no showing, upon the facts, that different classes
of shippers would be affected. On the contrary, they assert that
all shippers actually are in the same class, and all are free to
avail themselves of the alternative rates above 20,000 and 30,000
pounds, 47.5 percent and 45 percent, respectively, as they please.
But the only bases for this assertion are, first, the absence of
any finding that the availability of the 45 percent rate, minimum
30,000 pounds, "would in practical effect be confined to only a few
or a particular class of shippers," and the further assertion that
no such finding could be made, since 30,000-pound shipments of
linoleum
"are the normal units of quantity purchase and sale as revealed
by the railroad carload rates which apply between the same
localities only on shipments of 30,000 pounds."
Obviously, as the Commission noted, the mere existence of these
rates in the tariffs hardly could be taken to prove the conclusion
appellants sought to draw from that fact. Certainly it could not be
taken as conclusive evidence. Whether or not, however, the proposed
rates in fact would operate to create an undue discrimination
between shippers, or classes of them, is a matter upon which the
record factually throws no light. It is therefore one for further
examination by the Commission.
In returning the case, we emphasize that we do not question the
Commission's authority to adopt and apply general policies
appropriate to particular classes of cases, so long as they are
consistent with the statutory standards which govern its action and
are formulated not only after due consideration of the factors
involved, but with sufficient explication to enable the parties and
ourselves to
Page 321 U. S. 212
understand, with a fair degree of assurance, why the Commission
acts as it does.
Cf. United States v. Carolina Freight Carriers
Corp., 315 U. S. 475,
315 U. S.
488-489. Observance of this requirement is as necessary
when an established policy is being extended to new and significant
situations as when a new policy is being formulated and applied in
the first instance. We do not undertake to tell the Commission what
it should do in this case. That is not our function. We only
require that, whatever result be reached, enough be put of record
to enable us to perform the limited task which is ours.
The judgment is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
So it was found, in each instance, upon the evidence, and the
finding is not disputed. The figures are only approximate: that is,
30,000 pounds represents not an exact carload capacity, since
differences in loading characteristics of commodities and slight
differences in carload capacities may make possible loading
slightly more or less in a car. Similar, perhaps somewhat wider,
variations affect trucks. The findings were that 20,000 pounds
reasonably can be viewed as a minimum weight geared to truckload
capacity, though in some instances as much as 22,000 or 25,000
pounds actually can be loaded in one vehicle.
[
Footnote 2]
Cf. Carpets and Carpeting from Official to Southern
Territory, 237 I.C.C. 651;
Peanut Butter from Montgomery,
Ala. to Georgia, 22 M.C.C. 375.
[
Footnote 3]
Two proceedings,
Investigation & Suspension Docket No.
M-1216 and
No. M-1445, were heard separately, but
consolidated before the Division.
[
Footnote 4]
E.g., Molasses from New Orleans, La. to Peoria and Pekin,
Ill., 235 I.C.C. 485.
[
Footnote 5]
This intervenor did not appear in the District Court, not having
notice of the proceedings there until after the argument there. The
appearance here is by virtue of an order granting a motion to
intervene.
[
Footnote 6]
The decree dismissed appellants' bill to set aside and enjoin
enforcement of the Commission's order of suspension. The court
agreed that the proposed rate of 45 percent, minimum 30,000 pounds,
is "a mere adoption on a volume basis of rates for railroad carload
lots," having "no relation to the business of the motor carriers,"
both because there was no showing of any saving in operating costs
when carrying more than 20,000 pounds and because there was none
that a 45 to 47.5 rate, for anything beyond 20,000 pounds, "would
not enable them to maintain reasonable competition with the
railroads." As to the finding that rates of either 45 or 47.5
percent., minimum 20,000 pounds, would not in themselves be
unreasonable, the court said this
"does not negative the finding of an unjust advantage to
shippers of 30,000 pound lots in cases where shippers of 20,000
pound lots are not given the same treatment."
[
Footnote 7]
The court found that the Commission had met the section's
requirements
"in that it has given 'due consideration . . . to the inherent
advantages of transportation by such carriers, [and] . . . to the
need, in the public interest, of adequate and efficient
transportation service by such carriers at the lowest cost
consistent with the furnishing of such service. . . .'"
No specific reference was made, however, to the over-all
national transportation policy, or its requirements particularly in
relation to the Commission's duty
"to . . . foster sound economic conditions . . . among the
several carriers; to encourage the establishment and maintenance of
reasonable charges, . . . without . . . unfair or destructive
competitive practices; . . . all to the end of developing,
coordinating, and preserving a national transportation system by
water, highway, and rail. . . ."
Cf. note 13
infra, and text.
[
Footnote 8]
The Commission long has recognized that "reference to and . . .
consideration of all pertinent facts, circumstances, and conditions
affecting the rate in effect at any particular time" are necessary.
20 I.C.C. 43. Included as pertinent have been such "facts,
circumstances and conditions" as the expense attributable to the
character of the commodity --
e.g., whether it is subject
to special risks or requires special services,
cf. Interstate
Commerce Commission v. Chicago, Great Western R. Co.,
209 U. S. 108; 113
I.C.C. 389; 87 I.C.C. 711, or its transportation character is
affected by the manner of packing, 98 I.C.C. 166; the value of the
service rendered and of the commodity,
e.g., 83 I.C.C.
334; 100 I.C.C. 471; 102 I.C.C. 325;
cf. Interstate Commerce
Commission v. Delaware L. & W. R.,; the possibility of
securing continuous business or additional tonnage,
Interstate
Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co.,
145 U. S. 263;
peculiar needs or conditions affecting specific areas, 9 I.C.C.
318; 113 I.C.C. 389; 146 I.C.C. 419;
cf. Texas & P. R. Co.
v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 162 U.
S. 197; rates on the same or similar commodities
elsewhere, 113 I.C.C. 389; 122 I.C.C. 235, and the need to meet
competition, either by the same or other type of carrier,
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Texas & P. R. Co.,
162 U. S. 197;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Alabama Midland R. Co.,
168 U. S. 144;
Texas & P. R. Co. v. United States, 289 U.
S. 627;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Illinois
Central R. Co., 263 U. S. 515;
Mississippi Valley Barge Line Co. v. United States,
292 U. S. 282;
Barringer & Co. v. United States, 319 U. S.
1.
See also 142 I.C.C. 121; 235 I.C.C. 485; 235
I.C.C. 723; 237 I.C.C. 651.
[
Footnote 9]
The brief of the National Industrial Traffic League, intervenor,
points out that appellants and other carrier associations joined in
a petition to the Commission for reargument and reconsideration of
eleven cases previously decided by Divisions 2 and 3, including the
one presently involved,
I. and S. No. M-1216. The petition
was rejected, since the petitioners were not parties of record to
all the proceedings. But, coincidentally, the Commission reopened
I. and S. No. M-1216 for oral argument.
[
Footnote 10]
E.g., Paine Bros. & Co. v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 7
I.C.C. 218;
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. v. Chicago & E. R.
Co., 19 I.C.C. 592, 596;
Rickards v. Atlantic Coast Line
R. Co., 23 I.C.C. 239, 240;
Woodward-Bennett Co. v. St.
Paul, L.A. & St.L. R. Co., 29 I.C.C. 664, 665;
J. W.
Wells Lumber Co. v. Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co., 38 I.C.C.
464, 465,
and compare Scofield v. Lake Shore & Michigan So.
R. Co., 2 I.C.C. 90.
[
Footnote 11]
See note 10
supra.
[
Footnote 12]
Compare Interstate Commerce Commission v. Delaware, L. &
W. R. Co., 220 U. S. 235,
220 U. S.
240-241.
[
Footnote 13]
Motor Carrier Act of 1935, 49 Stat. 543; Transportation Act of
1940, 54 Stat. 899.
That policy demands that all modes of transportation subject to
the provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act be so regulated as,
in the statute's language, to
"recognize and preserve the inherent advantages of each; to
promote safe, adequate, economical, and efficient service and
foster sound economic conditions in transportation and among
the several carriers; to encourage the establishment and
maintenance of reasonable charges for transportation services,
without unjust discriminations, undue preferences or advantages, or
unfair or destructive competitive practices; . . . all to the end
of
developing, coordinating, and preserving a national
transportation system by water, highway, and rail, as well as
other means, adequate to meet the needs of the commerce of the
United States, of the Postal Service, and of the national
defense."
54 Stat. 899. (Italics added.)
Cf. McLean Trucking Co. v.
United States, ante.
[
Footnote 14]
Cf. note 8
supra.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, with whom the CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE REED concur, dissenting.
This case, in its essentials, can be reduced to simple terms; in
effect, the question is whether the Interstate Commerce Commission
acted unlawfully in holding unreasonable and discriminatory a
proposed schedule of rates for the shipment of linoleum in trucks
operated by members of appellants, associations of motor carriers.
The facts are these. On linoleum shipments between points in New
England, New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and New York, and
destinations in Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, and
South Dakota, the members of the Eastern Central Motor Carriers
Association charged 50% of first-class rates, minimum 20,000
pounds.
* This minimum is
approximately the weight which conventionally is a truckload.
Railroad rates on linoleum at this time were 70% of first-class for
shipments of less than 30,000 pounds and 45% of first-class for
those
Page 321 U. S. 213
weighing at least 30,000 pounds -- a conventional railroad
carload.
By schedules filed to become effective August 24th, 1940,
Eastern proposed rates of 47.5% of first-class, minimum 20,000
pounds, and 45% of first-class, minimum 30,000 pounds. The
practical effect of this change would be to require a shipper who
could send only 20,000 pounds of linoleum to pay a higher rate than
one who could ship a consignment of 20,000 and 10,000 pounds. And
two shippers, one with 10,000 pounds and the other with 20,000
pounds, could combine their shipments at the lower rate, while a
shipper of 10,000 pounds who could not conveniently join with
others would have to pay the higher rate. These are the changes
here in controversy. Upon the protest of the western trunkline rail
carriers, later withdrawn when the appellants agreed that their
30,000 pound minimum rate would apply only on shipments "received
at and transported from the point of origin, from one shipper in
one day and on one bill of lading," operation of the proposed
schedules was suspended, and Division 3 of the Commission held
hearings to determine their validity. Upon their conclusion,
Division 3 found that the proposed rates were reasonably
compensatory, but that it was physically impossible to load 30,000
pounds of linoleum into a single unit of equipment, and that there
was no showing that operating economics result when a 30,000 pound
minimum shipment involving a truckload and fraction of another
truckload is tendered. The Division thereupon concluded that
minimum weight greater than a truckload is unreasonable unless such
a rate is justified by savings in cost, and ordered the proposed
schedules cancelled to the extent found unjust and unreasonable. 31
M.C.C.193.
This decision was fully reviewed by the entire Commission upon
oral and printed arguments by the motor carriers,
Page 321 U. S. 214
the linoleum shippers and the National Industrial Traffic
League, a group organized to promote the free interchange of
commerce. The shippers and the Traffic League urged the Commission
to leave the order of Division 3 undisturbed, while the motor
carriers sought to justify the rates as legitimate means of meeting
rail competition. The Commission agreed with Division 3 that the
rates were unreasonable, and held that the 30,000 pound minimum,
based on no difference in transportation cost, would be
discriminatory. 34 M.C.C. 641.
If the sole issue were whether there would be discrimination in
favor of the 30,000-pound lot shipper as against the 20,000-pound
lot shipper, clearly the Commission could find as it did, and the
court below properly did not undo what the Commission did. 48 F.
Supp. 432. Is there in fact more? The appellants contend that rail
competition excuses and legalizes the discrimination beyond the
Commission's power to condemn. This Court does not yield to that
claim, but it does hold that either the Commission must state with
particularity why the evidence of competitive conditions in this
record is so vague and inadequate as to afford no justification for
discrimination or, in effect, requires the Commission to proceed
with a full-dress investigation of the entire competitive relations
between motor and rail carriers.
The Commission, on the basis of the evidence before it,
concluded that
"The competition between rail and motor carriers for linoleum
traffic does not constitute such a dissimilarity in circumstances
and conditions as to render legal the proposed discrimination."
Prior decisions of this Court surely do not require greater
explication of the reasons on which the Commission's conclusions
are based.
See Beaumont, S.L. & W. R. Co. v. United
States, 282 U. S. 74,
282 U. S. 86-87;
United States v. Baltimore & O. R. Co., 293 U.
S. 454,
293 U. S.
464-465. The Commission did not adopt an inflexible
"principle that volume minimum rates
Page 321 U. S. 215
will be allowed only when geared to a capacity loading which
makes possible a real saving in costs of operation,"
if its statement that
"The extent to which competition between carriers may render
discrimination and prejudice not unlawful must be decided upon the
facts in each case"
is to be accepted. Burke has said somewhere that he could not
imagine English law without the law reports. Substantially the same
considerations that call for giving reasons in rendering judicial
decisions apply to the determinations of such agencies as the
Interstate Commerce Commission. "We must know what a decision means
before the duty becomes ours to say whether it is right or wrong."
See United States v. Chicago, M., St. P. & P. R. Co.,
294 U. S. 499,
294 U. S. 511. But
we should not be more exacting of reports of the Interstate
Commerce Commission explaining its orders than we are of the
opinions of lower courts whose judgments come before us for
review.
Nothing in this record calls for more explicitness than is
ordinarily demanded. For nothing in the record requires the
Commission to discuss the conceivable validity of proposed
schedules which, aside from competitive conditions, are manifestly
discriminatory. Such discriminatory rates were supported by a bare
recital that railroad rates were nominally lower than motor carrier
rates and that the business of one motor carrier had decreased. At
the hearing before the Division, a representative of one motor
carrier stated that the proposed rates were more than adequate to
cover costs, that they did not vary substantially from rates
imposed on the shipment of other comparable commodities, and that
railroad competition had caused his company's linoleum business to
decline. He also testified that his firm competed for linoleum
shipments with other motor carriers. This is the proposed
justification for a rate differential concededly based on no
difference in transportation cost or in service rendered, and which
therefore discriminates between those who ship 30,000 pound lots
and
Page 321 U. S. 216
those who ship 20,000 pound lots. And the record becomes even
more barren when it is noted that the competitive conditions said
to require adoption of the proposed discriminatory tariffs were not
such as to prevent the rail carriers' acquiescence in the adoption
of the new schedule when, on appellants' theory, the rail carriers
had advantages intended to be mitigated by the new rates. The
Commission found that either 47.5% or 45% was an allowable rate for
either a 30,000 or 20,000 pound shipment -- either rate "was within
the zone of reasonableness." It thereby permitted the motor
carriers to compete on an entire equality with the rail carriers.
But it forbade discrimination as between linoleum shippers equally
placed. What the appellants really complain of is not that they
cannot meet the railroad competition at the 45% rate on 30,000
pound lots, but that they cannot do so and yet collect 47.5% on
lots of 20,000 pounds which are outside rail competition. Be that
as it may, a mere arithmetic difference between railroad rates and
motor carrier rates is quite blind. The rates themselves may not be
at all revealing on competitive conditions; they may not tell what
a shipper gets for his money and what he is paying for. That is,
the quality of the service, the advantages of one type of service
over the other, the availability of equipment, safety, labor cost,
and many other factors may all give significance to the figures
that figures themselves do not give.
The present ruling apparently imposes upon the Commission the
duty of pursuing such complicated and far-reaching investigations
every time a motor carrier rate that may have a relation to a
railroad rate is found to be discriminatory in relation to another
motor carrier rate affecting the same commodity. Such an
investigation is an undertaking of vast scope, involving
consideration of factors which it would require an expert merely to
catalogue. The different characteristics of rail and motor carrier
services,
Page 321 U. S. 217
the economic wisdom of excluding motor carriers from large-bulk
linoleum trade or limiting their participation in such trade, the
availability of other commodity shipments to replace linoleum trade
diverted to rail carriers, the availability of and cost of
transporting commodities which might be used to fill the truck only
partially loaded with linoleum -- these are only a few of the
factors which may become relevant.
Compare III-B Sharfman,
The Interstate Commerce Commission, pp. 572
et seq. The
appellants introduced no evidence on the basis of which the
Commission could intelligently weigh these considerations. To hold
that the Commission must, on its own initiative, embark on such an
investigation in a proceeding of this nature is to impose what may
well be a crippling burden.
To speak more particularly of the task which the Commission now
faces, it should be noted that Eastern files tariffs with the
Commission for about 650 carrier members. A typical commodities
clause from the carriers' certificates of public convenience and
necessity provides for the shipment of
"General commodities, except those of unusual value, and except
dangerous explosives, household goods as defined in Practices of
Motor Common Carriers of Household Goods, 17 M.C.C. 467,
commodities in bulk, commodities requiring special equipment, and
those injurious or contaminating to other lading, over regular
routes. . . ."
Thus, it appears that the exceptions are few, and the allowable
shipments many. An investigation of the scope apparently required
by the Court would entail a detailed study of the relations of the
rate structures in a case merely involving the rates on specific
commodities one to the other. If rail competition turns out to be
actually detrimental to the successful operation of appellants'
linoleum business, the war-time load on the railroads might become
relevant, and the Commission might have to decide whether the
atypical circumstances at this time
Page 321 U. S. 218
justify competitive discriminatory rates which might otherwise
be unreasonable.
That the Commission is an expert body to which Congress has seen
fit to commit the regulation of the intricate relationships between
the various means of national transportation is a well worn phrase
which ought not to lose its significance in practice when the
actions of the Commission come here for review. We should be very
reluctant to define for the Commission the occasions which
appropriately demand investigation of general transportation
problems, and more particularly when a contest over the rate on a
particular commodity included in a network of tariffs calls for
such a general investigation. Surely it is within the special
competence of the Commission to put on a discriminating carrier the
duty of justifying by proof his plain discrimination as to a
particular rate and not permit him to compel the Commission by a
mere assertion to embark upon a far-flung inquiry. There are
undoubtedly occasions when the Interstate Commerce Commission will
undertake such an investigation in the public interest. But it
ought not to be compelled to do so upon the occurrence, from an
administrative point of view, of a more or less accidental filing
of a tariff revision. When the carrier seeks to supplant a lawful
rate, as is the case here, the burden is on it to supply all the
essential information to justify the proposed new rate. §
216(g), Part II of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. §
316(g). If it does not do so, it has failed to sustain the duty
cast upon it by law, and the Commission, in so finding, has duly
exercised its authority. The Commission's dispositions of
Molasses from New Orleans, La. to Peoria and Pekin, Ill.,
235 I.C.C. 485 and
Petroleum Rail Shippers' Assn. v. Alton
& S. R., 243 I.C.C. 589, are entirely consistent, so far
as that is relevant, with its order in this case.
* "First-class" is used to designate the rates applied to a
class of commodities. Percentages of a class rate are used as rates
for designated commodities.