On complaint of three motor common carriers under § 204 (c)
of the Interstate Commerce Act, the Commission ordered Frozen Food
Express, another motor common carrier, to cease and desist from
transporting in interstate commerce without a certificate of
convenience and necessity fresh and frozen dressed poultry, which
it found not to be within the exemption under § 203(b)(6) of
the Act of "agricultural . . . commodities (not including
manufactured products thereof)." Frozen Food Express sued in a
Federal District Court to set aside the order.
Held: fresh and frozen dressed poultry is an
"agricultural" commodity within the meaning of § 203(b)(6),
and not a "manufactured" product thereof, and the District Court
properly set aside the Commission's order. Pp.
351 U. S.
50-54.
128 F.
Supp. 374 affirmed.
Page 351 U. S. 50
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Three motor common carriers filed a complaint with the
Interstate Commerce Commission under § 204(c) of Part II of
the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 Stat. 547, as amended, 49 U.S.C.
§ 304(c), alleging that Frozen Food Express, a common carrier
by motor vehicle, was and had been transporting fresh and frozen
meats and fresh and frozen dressed poultry in interstate commerce
without a certificate of convenience and necessity from the
Commission which covers those commodities. The complaint prayed for
a cease and desist order. Frozen Food Express admitted that it was
and had been so transporting the named commodities. but asserted in
defense that those operations were within the exemption of §
203(b)(6). [
Footnote 1]
The Commission found that Frozen Food Express had been
performing unauthorized operations and that fresh and frozen meats
and fresh and frozen dressed poultry were not within the exemption
of § 203(b)(6). 62
Page 351 U. S. 51
M.C.C. 646. Accordingly it ordered Frozen Food Express to cease
and desist from engaging in these operations. Frozen Food Express
brought suit before a three-judge District Court, 28 U.S.C. §
2325, to set the Commission's order aside, 28 U.S.C. § 1336;
49 Stat. 550, as amended, 49 U.S.C. § 305(g); 60 Stat. 243, 5
U.S.C. § 1009. The answer of the United States and the
complaint in intervention filed by the Secretary of Agriculture
supported the position of Frozen Food Express. The original
complainants before the Commission and other interested carriers
and carrier associations intervened in support of the Commission.
The District Court sustained the Commission's conclusion that fresh
and frozen meats are nonexempt commodities. No appeal was taken
from that holding. The District Court held that fresh and frozen
dressed poultry are exempt commodities under § 203(b)(6), and
restrained the Commission from enforcing its cease and desist order
as respects those products.
128 F.
Supp. 374. The cases are here by appeal. 28 U.S.C. §§
1253, 2101(b).
We agree with the District Court that the Commission's ruling
does not square with the statute. The exemption of motor vehicles
carrying "agricultural (including horticultural) commodities (not
including manufactured products thereof)" was designed to preserve
for the farmers the advantage of low-cost motor transportation.
See especially 79 Cong.Rec. 12217. The victory in the
Congress for the exemption was recognition that the price which the
farmer obtains for his products is greatly affected by the cost of
transporting them to the consuming market in their raw state or
after they have become marketable by incidental processing.
The history of the words "agricultural . . . commodities (not
including manufactured products thereof)" contained in §
203(b)(6) supports that conclusion. The bill as it came to the
floor of the House from the Interstate
Page 351 U. S. 52
and Foreign Commerce Committee (79 Cong.Rec. 12204) exempted
"motor vehicles used exclusively in carrying livestock or
unprocessed agricultural products."
Id., 12220. Mr.
Pettengill for the Committee offered an amendment which substituted
for the words "unprocessed agricultural products" the phrase
"agricultural commodities not including manufactured products
thereof." That amendment was agreed to after the following
colloquy:
"Mr. PETTENGILL. Mr. Chairman, we have heard a good deal of
discussion this afternoon as to what is a processed agricultural
product, whether that would include pasteurized milk or ginned
cotton. It was not the intent of the committee that it should
include those products. Therefore, to meet the views of many
Members, we thought we would strike out the word 'unprocessed' and
make it apply only to manufactured products."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. WHITTINGTON. In other words, under the amendment to the
committee amendment, cotton in bales and cottonseed transported
from the ginneries to the market or to a public warehouse would be
exempt, whereas they might not be exempt if the language remained,
because ginning is sometimes synonymous with processing."
"Mr. PETTENGILL. That is correct."
It is plain from this change that the exemption of "agricultural
commodities" was considerably broadened by making clear that the
exemption was lost not by incidental or preliminary processing, but
by manufacturing. [
Footnote 2]
Killing, dressing, and freezing a chicken is certainly a
Page 351 U. S. 53
change in the commodity. But it is no more drastic a change than
the change which takes place in milk from pasteurizing,
homogenizing, adding vitamin concentrates, standardizing, and
bottling. Yet the Commission agrees that milk so processed is not a
"manufactured" product, but falls within the meaning of the
"agricultural" exemption. 52 M.C.C. 511, 551. The Commission also
agrees that ginned cotton and cottonseed are exempt.
Id.,
523-524. But there is hardly less difference between cotton in the
field and cotton at the gin or in the bale or between cottonseed in
the field and cottonseed at the gin, than between a chicken in the
pen and one that is dressed. The ginned and baled cotton and the
cottonseed, as well as the dressed chicken, have gone through a
processing stage. But neither has been "manufactured" in the normal
sense of the word. The Court, in
Anheuser-Busch Brewing Assn.
v. United States, 207 U. S. 556,
207 U. S. 562,
in a case arising under the tariff laws, said,
". . . Manufacture implies a change, but every change is not
manufacture, and yet every change in an article is the result of
treatment, labor, and manipulation. But something more is
necessary, as set forth and illustrated in
Hartranft v.
Wiegmann, 121 U. S. 609. There must be
transformation; a new and different article must emerge, 'having a
distinctive name, character, or use.' "
Page 351 U. S. 54
In that case, imported corks were made ready for use in beer
bottles by stamping, by removal of dust, meal, bugs, and worms, by
washing and steaming to remove tannin and to increase elasticity,
and by drying. Plainly, the corks were processed. But the Court
held they had not been manufactured within the drawback provision
of the tariff laws.
And see Hartranft v. Wiegmann,
121 U. S. 609,
121 U. S. 615;
United States v. Dudley, 174 U. S. 670.
A chicken that has been killed and dressed is still a chicken.
Removal of its feathers and entrails has made it ready for market.
But we cannot conclude that this processing which merely makes the
chicken marketable turns it into a "manufactured" commodity.
[
Footnote 3]
At some point, processing and manufacturing will merge. But,
where the commodity retains a continuing substantial identity
through the processing stage, we cannot say that it has been
"manufactured" within the meaning of § 203(b)(6).
The Commission is the expert in the field of transportation. And
its judgment is entitled to great deference because of its
familiarity with the conditions in the industry which it regulates.
American Trucking Assns. v. United States, 344 U.
S. 298,
344 U. S. 310.
But Congress has placed limits on its statutory powers, and our
duty on judicial review is to determine those limits.
See
Social Security Board v. Nierotko, 327 U.
S. 358. Those limits would be passed here if the
Commission were permitted to expand "manufactured" to include such
incidental processing as is involved in dressing and freezing a
chicken.
Affirmed.
Page 351 U. S. 55
* Together with No. 163,
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Frozen Food Express et al., and No. 164,
Akron, Canton
& Youngstown R. Co. et al. v. Frozen Food Express et al.,
also on appeal from the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
Sec. 203(b)(6) provides:
"Nothing in this part, except the provisions of section 204
relative to qualifications and maximum hours of service of
employees and safety of operation or standards of equipment shall
be construed to include . . . motor vehicles used in carrying
property consisting of ordinary livestock, fish (including shell
fish), or agricultural (including horticultural) commodities (not
including manufactured products thereof), if such motor vehicles
are not used in carrying any other property, or passengers, for
compensation. . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
Two more changes were made in the agricultural exemption clause
before the bill reached final form. The words "fish, including
shellfish," were added after the word "livestock" (79 Cong.Rec.
12220), and the exemption was strengthened by making it "absolute,
rather than discretionary" with the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Id. at 12225-12226.
As originally enacted in 1935, § 203(b)(6) exempted motor
vehicles "used exclusively" in carrying agricultural commodities.
In 1938, the word "exclusively" was deleted and the following
language was added at the end of the clause: "if such motor
vehicles are not used in carrying any other property, or
passengers, for compensation." 52 Stat. 1237. In 1940, the word
"ordinary" was inserted before the word "livestock," making the
exemption applicable to "ordinary livestock." 54 Stat. 921.
Finally, in 1952, the words "agricultural commodities" were
broadened to "agricultural (including horticultural) commodities."
66 Stat. 479.
[
Footnote 3]
The fact that most poultry is sold alive, and is not killed and
processed by the grower, is not controlling. For § 203(b)(6)
exempts carriers transporting "agricultural commodities" unless
those products are "manufactured." The exemption is concerned with
the stage of the processing, not with the person who does it.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, whom MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, MR. JUSTICE
MINTON and MR. JUSTICE HARLAN join, dissenting.
For the reasons given by the Interstate Commerce Commission, 52
M.C.C. 511, 62 M.C.C. 646, and its administrative practice of over
15 years, I would sustain its interpretation of the Act to the
effect that fresh and frozen dressed poultry, like fresh and frozen
dressed meats, are not entitled to exemption as agricultural
commodities. No appeal has been taken from that part of the
judgment which held valid the Commission's determination that fresh
and frozen dressed meats are products manufactured from
agricultural commodities. The Commission's like treatment of
poultry is not arbitrary or unreasonable. On the contrary, there
was much evidence before the Commission which clearly supported its
decision. Consequently, we should accord that decision the weight
ordinarily given to informed administrative action. We cannot say
that the order of the Commission, which held that there is no
significant distinction between the two, is not an allowable
judgment.
"Such determinations [of fact by the Shipping Board or
Interstate Commerce Commission as a basis for administrative
orders] will not be set aside by courts if there is evidence to
support them. Even though, upon a consideration of all the
evidence, a court might reach a different conclusion, it is not
authorized to substitute its own for the administrative
judgment."
Swayne & Hoyt, Ltd. v. United States, 300 U.
S. 297,
300 U. S. 304.
See also Federal Communications Commission v. WOKO, Inc.,
329 U. S. 223,
329 U. S. 229;
United States v. Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc.,
327 U. S. 515,
327 U. S.
535-536;
Barrett Line, Inc. v. United States,
326 U. S. 179,
326 U. S.
199.