1. The Interstate Commerce Commission has the power under the
Interstate Commerce Act to fix the point at which line-haul or
carrier transportation service begins and ends. Pp.
339 U. S. 190,
339 U. S. 193,
339 U. S.
197.
2. The convenient points at which line-haul or carrier
transportation service begins and ends are questions of fact to be
determined by the Commission, and its findings on those questions
will not be disturbed by the courts if supported by substantial
evidence. P.
339 U. S.
193.
3. In this proceeding, the Commission's determination of the
points at which line-haul or carrier transportation service begins
and ends at the smelting companies' plants is supported by
substantial evidence, and must be sustained. Pp.
339 U. S.
188-194.
4. When the Commission has determined the point at which
line-haul or carrier transportation service begins and ends at a
particular plant, the line-haul charge thereafter must be to that
point, and not to a further point fixed in a carrier tariff, since
transportation to the latter point at the line-haul rate would be
preferential, and would violate § 6(7) of the Interstate
Commerce Act. Pp.
339 U. S.
194-197.
5. The contention that to require the carriers to conform to the
Commission's orders in this case would require the smelting
companies to pay twice for their services misconceives the scope of
this proceeding, which was solely to define what is embraced in
line-haul transportation, and not to determine whether the charge
made for the service was compensatory. Pp.
339 U. S.
197-198.
6. The Commission has authority to exclude rate questions from
this proceeding. P.
339 U. S.
198.
7. The fact that there was no appeal from an earlier judgment of
the District Court granting a temporary injunction and remanding
the case to the Commission (the court having found that there was
no evidence to sustain a Commission finding that the line-haul
rates were not compensatory for the services rendered) does not
Page 339 U. S. 187
require that the judgment here appealed from be affirmed under
the rule of "law of the case," since the earlier judgment was not a
final judgment. Pp.
339 U. S.
198-199.
Reversed.
In a suit to enjoin the enforcement of orders of the Interstate
Commerce Commission, the District Court held the orders unlawful
and permanently enjoined their enforcement. On direct appeal to
this Court,
reversed, p.
339 U. S.
199.
Page 339 U. S. 188
MR. JUSTICE MINTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Interstate Commerce Commission instituted the proceedings
leading to the orders here involved as its Seventy-fifth and
Seventy-sixth Supplemental Reports to
Ex part 104, Practices of
Carriers Affecting Operating Revenues or Expenses, Part II,
Terminal Services, 209 I.C.C. 11. The proceedings concerned
the switching and spotting services rendered by appellee carriers
at the Garfield and Murray, Utah, and Leadville, Colorado, plants
of the American Smelting Company, and the Midvale, Utah, plant of
the United States Smelting Company. Extensive hearings were held in
these supplemental proceeding for the purpose of determining the
respective points at which the carriers' line-haul transportation
service ended and the extent of the service the carriers might
render in the discharge of their obligation to deliver the freight
at these four plants.
It will not be necessary to detail the physical characteristics
of each of the plants involved here. Each has a receiving yard or
interchange tracks upon which incoming and outgoing freight is
switched. Beyond the interchange tracks, switching services are
numerous and extensive within the plants. The Garfield plant may be
described as indicative of the situation at all the plants.
[
Footnote 1] There, frozen ore
is handled in six distinct movements. A large amount of intraplant
switching is done by the carriers. To perform these switching
services at Garfield requires three train crew shifts daily. In one
twelve-month period at this plant, 22,982 carloads of inbound and
6,960 carloads of outbound freight were handled.
Page 339 U. S. 189
On October 14, 1946, the Commission entered its first orders in
these proceedings, enjoining appellee carriers from performing
switching and spotting service in violation of the Interstate
Commerce Act. On petition to the District Court, a statutory
three-judge court sitting, the orders were held unlawful. The court
was of the opinion that each of the Commission's orders was based
on the premise that the line-haul rates did not cover the
intraplant services, and held that such a finding was not supported
by the evidence. In addition, the court found that the Commission
had not
"presumed to exercise the authority which is intended to be
conferred under
Ex Parte 104, in that the order made is
not specifically based upon that authority."
The matter was remanded to the Commission "for such action as it
might find justifiable in the premises," and the Commission was
"temporarily enjoined from requiring its formal order to be carried
into force and effect. . . ." The Commission, on remand, reopened
the case, but took no more evidence. It restated the ground for its
action, and entered cease and desist orders against the carriers.
On petition of the appellees, the District Court again held the
orders unlawful, and permanently enjoined their enforcement. It is
from this judgment that the Commission and the United States have
appealed.
The Commission undertook its general investigation,
Ex parte
104, in the interest of establishing a uniform and equal
service for shippers. The Commission concluded that carrier
obligation for transportation service ends customarily when
delivery is made at a convenient point on the siding inside or
outside a consignee's plant. This delivery is such as may be
accomplished in one continuous movement without "interruption"
occasioned for the convenience of the industry, and is only the
equivalent of team track or simple placement switching. In the
Commission's view as developed in
Ex parte 104, such a
convenient
Page 339 U. S. 190
delivery point marks the beginning and end of what is termed
"line-haul" transportation, and is the extent of the service which
may be performed under the line-haul rate. The Commission's
authority to determine the point where transportation duty ends and
industry convenience begins was upheld by this Court in
United
States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., 301 U.
S. 402. We have repeatedly sustained the Commission in
its application of
Ex parte 104 principles to particular
plants where it has prohibited the performance of services beyond
the point fixed under a line-haul rate. [
Footnote 2] In issuing cease and desist orders in these
cases, the Commission has acted pursuant to its duty to enforce
§ 6(7) of the Interstate Commerce Act, which section prohibits
departure from filed tariffs and the rendering of preferential
services. [
Footnote 3]
As stated, the purpose of these proceedings before the
Commission was to determine the beginning and end of
Page 339 U. S. 191
line-haul service at appellee-smelters' plants. The next
question was whether the service rendered by the carriers conformed
to the services delimited by the Commission. Thus, the Commission,
it its proceedings after remand, was not concerned with the
question of whether reasonable rates were in force, as it explained
in its second report in the
American Smelting Company
case:
"The question of the reasonableness of published rates or of
charges that are or may be fixed for performing industrial services
can be decided only in a proceeding brought, or investigation
instituted, under different provisions of the act. It is our
purpose to make it entirely clear here that our order herein is
based solely upon our findings herein, which, in turn, are based
solely upon the principles and authority established with the
approval of the Supreme Court in our original and supplemental
reports in
Ex Parte No. 104, Part II, and that said order
is not based in whole or in part upon any conclusions or findings
in connection with tariff provisions or testimony as to whether the
published rates are reasonable and do or do not include
compensation for switching within the plant areas. We hereby
repudiate any reference or conclusion to the contrary conveyed by
our discussion or evidence relative to such questions and the
conclusions based thereon in our prior supplemental report
herein."
270 I.C.C. 362.
With that clear and distinct statement of what it was doing and
what it was not doing, the Commission made its findings of fact
which appear in the margin. [
Footnote 4] The essential
Page 339 U. S. 192
part of the findings is that line-haul began and ended at the
interchange tracks, known as "assembly yard" at Midvale, the plant
of United States Smelting, and the "plant yard" at Garfield, "hold
tracks" at Murray, and
Page 339 U. S. 193
"flat yard" at Leadville, the plants of American Smelting; that
all services beyond these points were excess services not required
of the carrier as part of its line-haul carriage, and that the
performance of services beyond these points without compensatory
charges results in preferential service in violation of §
6(7).
That the Commission is authorized to establish the point where
line-haul service begins and ends is not to be doubted. The
question, in reviewing the Commission's determination of the
convenient points at which line-haul or carrier transportation
service begins and ends is whether such determination is supported
by substantial evidence, [
Footnote
5] as this Court said in
United States v. Wabash R.
Co., 321 U. S. 403,
321 U. S.
408:
"In sustaining the Commission's findings in these proceedings,
as in related cases, this Court has held that the point in time and
space at which the carrier's transportation service ends is a
question of fact to be determined by the Commission, and not the
courts, and that its findings on that question will not be
disturbed by the courts if supported by evidence. "
Page 339 U. S. 194
In the instant case, there is substantial evidence to support
the Commission's findings that the convenient points for the
beginning and end of line-haul were at the interchange tracks, more
specifically characterized above. The Commission had before it the
extensive record of the basic proceeding, which the District Court
did not have, together with the instant supplemental proceedings.
The Commission's findings were based in part on the testimony of
its experts who had made personal surveys and observations of
switching and car movements at these plants. It is apparent from
the record that extensive intraplant services were performed on
instructions of and for the convenience of the appellee smelters.
When a car is followed through its intraplant movements on a map,
it is demonstrated that extensive services were performed in excess
of those which were established as the permissible limit of
line-haul in
Ex parte 104. The Commission's designation of
the convenient delivery points at each of these plants must be
sustained.
The contention of appellees is that there are now in effect
tariffs that compensate for line-haul and plant services. These
tariffs will be separately discussed below. Appellees urge that the
carriers cannot be guilty of violating § 6(7) when they are
fully compensated for carrier services in line-haul and plant
services beyond that, since the smelters do not then receive a
preferential service not accorded to shippers generally. The
corollary of this contention is that to require payment for the
plant services in addition to the line-haul rates, in accordance
with the Commission's orders, would be to require the smelters to
pay twice for the services.
This Court has emphasized that the preference involved in these
proceedings is based upon an application of the standards derived
from
Ex parte 104 to the unique conditions at particular
plants, a preference necessarily resulting when a service is
rendered "in excess
Page 339 U. S. 195
of that which the carriers are obliged to perform by their
tariffs."
United States v. Wabash R. Co., supra,
321 U. S.
412-413. In
Corn Products Refining Co. v. United
States, 331 U.S. 790, this Court affirmed per curiam a
decision upholding the exclusion, on grounds of irrelevancy, of
evidence pertaining to the custom and practice of carriers in
making delivery to other shippers. If custom may not be used to
interpret "line-haul" after demarcation of transportation and
industry service by the Commission, we think it follows that a
carrier definition written into filed tariffs does not make
impotent the Commission's authority to define the point.
A tariff, effective June 25, 1938, is considered applicable only
to the Midvale, Garfield, and Murray plants. By this tariff,
the
"line-haul rate includes movement of loaded cars to track scales
and subsequent delivery to any designated track within the plant
which can be accomplished by one uninterrupted movement . . . from
the road-haul point of delivery to the switching line. [
Footnote 6]"
There are additional charges for other services in the
plants.
If the Commission has the authority to fix the point at which
line-haul begins and ends, and we have held that it has, and it
designates Point X, obviously the carriers cannot by tariff fix
line-haul at Point Y, a further point, and even add one subsequent
movement. That would deprive the Commission of its right to
determine the point. In the Commission's judgment, which is
supported by the evidence, delivery to Point X is the equivalent of
team track and simple placement service -- the service other
shippers receive under a line-haul rate. For the carriers to give
the appellee-smelters service to Point
Page 339 U. S. 196
Y plus 1 is to accord them service different from that given
other shippers under
Ex parte 104 and supplemental
proceedings. By the orders in the instant cases, line-haul is
translated, as it were, into the tariffs as beginning and ending
where the Commission fixed it, and not where the appellee carriers
fixed it by tariff. Thereafter, the charge for line-haul must be to
the interchange tracks, and not to the point fixed in the tariff.
Transportation to the latter point at the line-haul rate would be
preferential, and would violate § 6(7).
The tariff which is considered by appellee carriers as
applicable only to the Leadville plant is set forth in the margin.
[
Footnote 7] It may be noted
that this tariff does not provide, as does the 1938 tariff
applicable to the other plants, that the line-haul rate includes
the intraplant services. Further, the "movement" specified in
delivery of a line-haul shipment includes not just one, as provided
by the 1938 tariff, but several switching operations which the
Commission has classified as "interrupted" terminal switching
services, performed for the convenience of the industry only.
The Commission has fixed the point at which line-haul or
transportation service ends as the "flat yard" at Leadville, and
finds there are services performed beyond this point. These
industry services must be so compensated
Page 339 U. S. 197
for, and may not be wrapped up in delivery of a line-haul
shipment.
"Since the Commission finds that the carriers' service of
transportation is complete upon delivery to the industries'
interchange tracks, and that spotting within the plants is not
included in the service for which the line-haul rates were fixed,
there is power to enjoin the performance of that additional service
or the making of an allowance to the industry which performs
it."
United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co.,
301 U. S. 402,
301 U. S.
408.
Obviously the plant services at Leadville are different from
those at Midvale, Garfield, and Murray under the 1938 tariff, which
only emphasizes the wisdom of Congress in empowering the Commission
to fix the point where line-haul begins and ends with a view to
giving all shippers equivalent service. The Commission has
standardized such service as team track or simple placement
switching. What we now hold is that the Commission has the power to
fix the point at which line-haul or carrier service begins and
ends. This is necessary because the need for switching varies from
plant to plant; indeed, some plants may need no intraplant
switching service. Thus, unless the Commission can fix the
beginning and ending point of the line-haul, some shippers would
pay an identical line-haul rate for less service than that required
by other industrial plants.
See Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v.
United States, 305 U. S. 507,
305 U. S. 526.
A different point fixed by the carrier in its tariff gives service
in excess of that accorded shippers generally as established in
Ex parte 104, and therefore amounts to an unlawful
preferential service.
As to the argument that to require the carriers to conform to
the Commission's orders would require the appellee smelters to pay
twice for their service, the short
Page 339 U. S. 198
answer is that appellees misconceive the scope of this
proceeding, which is solely to define what is embraced in line-haul
transportation. We accept the admonition of the Commission in its
second report, quoted
supra, and reiterated in its brief,
that it was not here concerned, and made no finding, as to whether
the charge made for the service was or was not compensatory. We
think that the Commission has authority to exclude rate questions
from this proceeding. If the carriers so wish, they may file a new
tariff to conform their charges to the services indicated in the
Commission's order. 49 U.S.C. § 6(1) and (3). If the carrier
makes a double or unreasonable charge, the industry may be heard
upon the reasonableness of the rate. 49 U.S.C. §§ 9, 13,
15.
Finally it is contended that the District Court judgment should
be affirmed because there was no appeal from the judgment and
mandate when the case was sent back to the Commission, the court
having found that there was no evidence to sustain a Commission
finding that the line-haul rates were not compensatory for the
services rendered. Appellees argue that that decision became the
law of the case.
The rule of the law of the case is a rule of practice, based
upon sound policy that, when an issue is once litigated and
decided, that should be the end of the matter.
Messinger v.
Anderson, 225 U. S. 436,
225 U. S. 444;
Insurance Group Committee v. Denver & R.G.W. R. Co.,
329 U. S. 607,
329 U. S. 612.
It is not applicable here because when the case was first remanded,
nothing was finally decided. The whole proceeding thereafter was
in fieri. The Commission had a right on reconsideration to
make a new record.
Ford Motor Co. v. Labor Board,
305 U. S. 364,
305 U. S.
374-375. When finally decided, all questions were still
open and could be presented. The fact that an appeal could have
been taken from the first order of the District Court was not
because it was a final adjudication, but because a temporary
injunction
Page 339 U. S. 199
had been granted in order to maintain the
status quo.
This was an interlocutory order that was appealable because
Congress, notwithstanding its interlocutory character, had made it
appealable. 28 U.S.C. § 1253. The appellants might have
appealed, but they were not bound to. We think that it requires a
final judgment to sustain the application of the rule of the law of
the case, just as it does for the kindred rule of
res
judicata. Compare United States v. Wallace & Tiernan
Co., 336 U. S. 793,
336 U. S.
800-801. And although the latter is a uniform rule, the
"law of the case" is only a discretionary rule of practice. It is
not controlling here.
See Southern R. Co. v. Clift,
260 U. S. 316,
260 U. S.
319.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON dissents.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS took no part in
the consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The plants are described in detail by the Commission in its
reports, 263 I.C.C. 749, 266 I.C.C. 476, 270 I.C.C. 385; 263 I.C.C.
719, 266 I.C.C. 349, 270 I.C.C. 359.
[
Footnote 2]
Corn Products Refining Co. v. United States, 331 U.S.
790;
Hanna Furnace Corp. v. United States, 323 U.S. 667;
United States v. Wabash R. Co., 321 U.
S. 403;
United States v. Pan American Petroleum
Corp., 304 U. S. 156;
A. O. Smith Corp. v. United States, 301 U.S. 669;
Goodman Lumber Co. v. United States, 301 U.S. 669.
[
Footnote 3]
"No carrier, unless otherwise provided by this chapter, shall
engage or participate in the transportation of passengers or
property, as defined in this chapter, unless the rates, fares, and
charges upon which the same are transported by said carrier have
been filed and published in accordance with the provisions of this
chapter; nor shall any carrier charge or demand or collect or
receive a greater or less or different compensation for such
transportation of passengers or property, or for any service in
connection therewith, between the points named in such tariffs than
the rates, fares, and charges which are specified in the tariff
filed and in effect at the time; nor shall any carrier refund or
remit in any manner or by any device any portion of the rates,
fares, and charges so specified, nor extend to any shipper or
person any privileges or facilities in the transportation of
passengers or property, except such as are specified in such
tariffs."
24 Stat. 379, as amended, 49 U.S.C. § 6(7).
[
Footnote 4]
The following were the findings of fact relating to the
Garfield, Murray and Leadville plants of American Smelting. The
findings with respect to the Midvale plant of United States
Smelting were substantially identical.
"(1) That it is the duty and obligation of the smelters to
obtain and certify to the carriers the values of ores for the
purpose of ascertaining freight charges, and that the carriers are
not under any obligation or duty to perform any switching or other
services for the purpose of ascertaining, or assisting the smelters
in ascertaining, such values."
"(2) That the 'plant yard' at the Garfield plant, the 'hold
tracks' at the Murray plant, and the 'flat yard' at the Leadville
plant, hereinafter referred to collectively as the 'convenient
points' as described in the prior supplemental reports herein, are
reasonably convenient points for the delivery and receipt of
carload traffic moving to and from the plants of the American
Smelting & Refining Company."
"(3) That the several respondents serving said plants move
loaded and empty freight cars from said convenient points to points
within the plant areas, from such points within the plant areas to
the convenient points, and between points within the plant
areas."
"(4) That the said services rendered within the plant areas to
and from the convenient points are in excess of those rendered
shippers generally in the receipt and delivery of traffic on team
tracks or industrial sidings or spurs."
"(5) That the said services rendered between points within the
plant areas are in excess of those rendered shippers generally in
the receipt and delivery of traffic on team tracks or industrial
sidings or spurs."
"(6) That the services from and to the convenient points and
between points within the plant areas are not and cannot be
performed in a continuous movement without interruption or
interference at respondents' operating convenience because of the
disabilities of the plants, including the manner in which the
industrial operations are conducted, all as explained in the prior
supplemental reports."
"(7) That the said services rendered between the convenient
points and points in the plant areas and between points within the
plant areas are in excess of those performed in simple switching
and team-track delivery and are industrial or plant services which
respondents are not obligated to and should not perform at the
line-haul rates."
"(8) That the common-carrier transportation which respondents
are obligated to perform begins and ends at the convenient points,
and that all services beyond those points in the plant areas are
industrial or plant services for which respondents should make
reasonably compensatory charges."
"(9) That the performance by respondents without reasonably
compensatory charges in addition to the line-haul rates of the
described services within the plant areas beyond the convenient
points at any and all of the said plants results in the American
Smelting & Refining Company receiving a preferential service
not accorded shippers generally and results in the refunding or
remitting of a portion of the rates and charges collected in
violation of section 6(7) of the act."
Id. at 367-368.
[
Footnote 5]
See Interstate Commerce Commission v. Hoboken Manufacturers'
R. Co., 320 U. S. 368,
320 U. S. 378;
United States v. Pan American Petroleum Corp.,
304 U. S. 156,
304 U. S. 158;
United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co.,
301 U. S. 402,
301 U. S.
408-409.
[
Footnote 6]
An "uninterrupted movement" is defined in the tariff as
"one continuous movement of switching locomotive and crew
without interruption, resulting from orders from, or requirements
of, the smelter."
266 I.C.C. at 353-354.
[
Footnote 7]
This tariff is almost identical with that which was applicable
to all of the plants in 1920. The smelters, we are informed, pay
the 1938 tariff under protest, and insist upon the 1920 tariff.
"
DELIVERY OF LINE-HAUL CARLOAD SHIPMENT DESTINED"
"
TO SMELTER AT LEADVILLE, COLO."
"Delivery of a line-haul carload shipment destined to smelter at
Leadville, Colo. will include movement within smelter plant over
track scales, to and from thaw-house, to and from a smelter sampler
or to and from a combination sampler and concentrator to a
designated unloading point indicated by the sampling company."