An association of wholesale automobile parts dealers organized
and operated in good faith, on a nonprofit basis, for the purpose
of effecting savings in freight charges for its members by securing
the benefits of carload, truckload, or other volume rates,
held exempt under § 402(c)(1) of the Interstate
Commerce Act from regulation by the Interstate Commerce Commission
as a freight forwarder. Pp.
338 U. S.
690-691.
(a) The basis of the shipments -- whether f.o.b. destination (or
delivered price) or f.o.b. origin -- is not determinative. P.
338 U. S.
691.
81 F.
Supp. 991 affirmed.
A three-judge district court set aside and enjoined enforcement
of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission requiring the
appellee in No. 113 to discontinue operations as a freight
forwarder without a permit from the Commission.
81 F.
Supp. 991. On appeal to this Court,
aff'd, p.
338 U. S.
691.
Page 338 U. S. 690
PER CURIAM.
The appellee, Pacific Coast Wholesalers' Association, was formed
by seven Los Angeles auto parts dealers in 1935, incorporated under
California law as a nonprofit corporation in 1943, and had
forty-one members and issued freight bills exceeding one million
dollars in annual value in 1945. The issue presented is whether
this association, with respect to the shipments here involved, is
subject to regulation by the Interstate Commerce Commission as a
freight forwarder or stands in exempt status under § 402(c)(1)
of the Interstate Commerce Act. This section reads as follows:
"The provisions of this part shall not be construed to apply (1)
to the operations of a shipper, or a group or association of
shippers, in consolidating or distributing freight for themselves
or for the members thereof, on a nonprofit basis, for the purpose
of securing the benefits of carload, truckload, or other volume
rates. . . .
*"
The Interstate Commerce Commission, in 1945, considered the
status of the appellee in its first decision in this matter. At
that time, it concluded that
"It has been established in this proceeding that the traffic
handled is for members of the association, that the association was
founded and has been operated, in good faith, for the purpose of
effectuating savings in freight charges for its members by securing
the benefits of carload, truckload, or other volume rates, and that
the association is operated on a nonprofit basis. These are
operations of the character contemplated by the exemption referred
to, and may be continued without obtaining authority therefor from
this Commission."
264 I.C.C. 134, 142.
In 1947, the Commission reversed its position as it applied to
shipments on a f.o.b. destination or delivered
Page 338 U. S. 691
price basis. 269 I.C.C. 504. It left standing the exemption of
the association from regulation by the Commission in respect of
shipments on f.o.b. origin basis. It was stated that the legal
obligation to pay the freight charges rested on the nonmember
consignor, who paid the full less than carload rate, rather than on
the consignee association member. It was therefore held that the
difference between the rate paid by the nonmember and the carload
transportation cost was profit to the association, and that the
association was holding out its service to the general public. In
this view, the Commission concluded that appellee was not qualified
for the exempt status on f.o.b. destination or delivered price
shipments.
A decree of the three-judge district court set aside the
Commission's order as without rational basis.
81 F.
Supp. 991. The court considered as decisive that no shipments
by the association were ever undertaken except at the behest and
for the benefit of a member. Looking to the agency between member
and association, rather than that between buyer and seller, the
court saw no reasonable ground for ruling that the association was
on a profit basis, or that it was holding its service out to the
general public. We agree.
There is nothing in the language of the Act or the legislative
history to suggest that Congress intended the exemption to turn on
the type of shipment which was involved, whether f.o.b. origin or
f.o.b. destination (delivered price). On the contrary, it is clear
that the nature of the relationship between the members and the
group was thought to be determinative. Under that test, the valid
claim of the association to the statutory exemption is established
by the original Commission decision. The judgment below is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
* 56 Stat. 285, 49 U.S.C. § 1002(c)(1).