Alton & Southern Railroad v. Illinois Commerce Commission

147 N.E. 417, 316 Ill. 625
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1925
DocketNo. 16611. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 147 N.E. 417 (Alton & Southern Railroad v. Illinois Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alton & Southern Railroad v. Illinois Commerce Commission, 147 N.E. 417, 316 Ill. 625 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

In March, 1923, the Perry Coal Company and seventeen other companies, operating approximately twenty-seven mines in St. Clair and Madison counties within a radius of 20 miles of East St. Louis, filed complaints against the appellant carriers. The mines in question are within what is known as the Belleville district, or Group 2. They are also within what is known as the “inner circle” of that group. The average distance of these mines from East St. Louis is 13.43 miles, the distance varying from 6.5 miles to approximately 20 miles. (Distant mines in Group 2 are approximately 70 miles from East St. Louis.) The complainant coal companies contended that the rate of 91 cents per ton on coal in car-load lots from their mines to points within the East St. Louis switching district (the same rate as accorded mines 70 miles away) was unjust, unreasonable, unduly and unjustly discriminatory and in direct violation of the act entitled “An act concerning public utilities.” The cities of Belleville, O’Fallon, Caseyville, Collinsville, Troy and Edwardsville filed intervening petitions seeking the same relief as relators. Complainants and intervenors prayed that an order be entered directing the appellants to establish and put into effect fair, just, reasonable and nondiscriminatory rates between the points of origin and destination in question for the transportation of bituminous coal. The defendant carriers (appellants herein) and intervening coal operators operating mines beyond the 20-mile limit in the district referred to, appeared and opposed the reduction for the near-by mines. The Commerce Commission entered an order requiring appellants to reduce the rate from all mines located on their lines at a distance not greater than 30 miles from the Relay station in the East St. Louis switching district to 70 cents per ton, and to reduce the rate from all other mines located on their lines within Group 2 to said district to 80. cents per ton. Appellants prayed an appeal from this order to the circuit court of St. Clair county, which court affirmed the order of the commission to the extent that it fixed a rate of 70 cents for a distance of 20 miles or less and reversed and set aside that part of the order of the commission applying to the remaining mines in Group 2.

Appellants in their appeal to this court attack both the order of the commission and the order of the circuit court. They contend that the only question before the commission, and of which it had sole jurisdiction, was to determine the question whether or not the rates from relators’ mines were reasonable and just, and that because relators’ mines were situated within a distance of 20 miles the commission had no jurisdiction to enter any order in the case other than affecting the 20-mile distance.

The evidence introduced before the commission tended to show that the coal-carrying roads of the State of Illinois have had in effect for many years originating rate groups, in which all of the mines located within a certain group take the same rate to different destinations. Two of the principal groups in southern Illinois from which coal is transported to the East St. Louis switching district and to the St. Louis switching district, and through those districts to points beyond, are Group 2 and Group 10. Group 2 (also known as the Belleville group) includes all of the coal mines located within the counties of St. Clair, Clinton, Madison, Washington and Bond and some of the near-by mines located in adjacent counties. The distance of said mines from the East St. Louis switching district ranges from 6.5 miles to 71.84 miles. Group 10 includes the counties of Williamson and Franklin and some of the near-by mines in adjacent counties. For many years past the mines in Group 2 have had a uniform rate to the East St. Louis switching district, and this rate has been a basic rate upon which the rates from other groups in Illinois and from the western Kentucky and southern Indiana coal fields to the East St. Louis switching district have been constructed, with, certain differentials, and upon which the interstate rate to, the St. Louis switching district, with a certain differential, has been constructed. The uniform rate from the mines located in Group 2 to the East St. Louis switching district has changed from time to time, and at the time the complaint in this case was filed it was 91 cents per ton.

The complainants in the trial of this case before the commission did not question the legality or propriety of the formation of groups for the transportation of coal from' points of origin to points of destination. They did, however, contend that the rate of 91 cents from their mines,' none of which are located more than 20 miles from the Relay station in East St. Louis, was too high, and that by the assessment of the uniform rate of 91 cents from all the mines in Group 2 they were being deprived of their natural advantages on account of their location. In other words, they, in effect, were asking and contending for a división of Group 2, creating what they called in their evidence an “inner group,” the farthest mines of which would not be more than 20 miles from the Relay station in the East St. Louis switching district.

To show that the rates from their mines to the East St. Louis switching district were unreasonable and unjust and that they were discriminated against, complainants introduced evidence of a comparison of the rate per ton per mile from their mines to the East St. Louis switching district with the rates per ton per mile for long hauls in the transportation of coal in the State of Illinois, and a comparison of the rates on short hauls of coal between other points in the States of Illinois, Indiana and Minnesota. In these comparisons, however, they did not show that the circumstances and conditions in these other short hauls that they used for comparison were similar to the hauls from their mines to the East St. Louis switching district. These rate comparisons not being based on evidence showing similarity of conditions could have no probative value and were therefore incompetent.

It is contended by appellants that the circuit court exceeded its jurisdiction in entering the order and judgment which it entered in this case. Courts are not rate-fixing bodies and have no authority of law to fix or establish rates for public utilities. This power belongs to the legislative branch of the State and has by the legislature been delegated only to the Commerce Commission. The circuit court in reviewing an order of the Commerce Commission has no authority to revise or modify it, and the circuit court erred in so doing. Public Utilities Com. v. Springfield Gas Co. 291 Ill. 209; People’s Gas Co. v. City of Chicago, 309 id. 40.

It is contended by appellants that the Commerce Commission exceeded its jurisdiction and authority in ordering a reduction of rates from coal mines located upon the lines of appellants in Group 2 to the East St. Louis switching district that were not within the scope of the complaint filed in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.E. 417, 316 Ill. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alton-southern-railroad-v-illinois-commerce-commission-ill-1925.