Anchor Coal Co. v. United States

25 F.2d 462, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1092
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedApril 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 25 F.2d 462 (Anchor Coal Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anchor Coal Co. v. United States, 25 F.2d 462, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1092 (S.D.W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

PARKER, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by coal producers engaged in mining and shipping coal from southern West Virginia, western Virginia, eastern Tennessee, and eastern Kentucky, against the United States and a number of railroad companies engaged in the transportation of coal from that territory to ports on Lake Erie. Its purpose is to enjoin the enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, entered February 21, 1928, which directs that the carriers cancel certain rate schedules which they have filed, reducing by 20 cents per ton the freight rate on “lake cargo” coal from the territory named to the lake ports. A special court of three judges has been convened pursuant to statute to hear the ease, intervention has been allowed on the part of various interested parties, and it has been agreed that the court shall determine finally the rights of the parties with respect to the relief prayed, instead of hearing only the application for an interlocutory injunction.

The controversy before us, as already indicated, has relation to “lake cargo” coal, a term used to designate coal shipped to ports of the Great Lakes for transshipment *464 by vessel t,o various lake and river ports in tbe United States and Canada, whence it is distributed by rail. The rates on such coal are, in the nature of proportional rates to the lake ports for part of a through movement to across-lake destinations. The coal is transported across the lakes only during the months from- April to November; and, as this movement occurs during the summer months, when the coal trade is slack, it is of great importance to the- mine operators, since it enables them to keep their mines in operation during the dull season. All of the lake cargo coals are more- or less competitive, particularly for steam and domestic purposes; and those produced in the Pittsburgh district are highly competitive with those produced in th'e territory of complainants, so much so that a difference in price of a few cents will determine a sale. Pittsburgh Coal Producers’ Ass’n v. Ashland Coal & Iron R. Co., 126 I. C. C. 344, 345. The importance of the trade to the producers may be judged from the fact that in 1925 the volume of the across-lake .movement was 26,333,000 tons. In 1923 it was 29,840,000 tons. Its importance to complainants is shown by the fact that in 1925 they furnished practically 82 per cent, of this tonnage (126 I. C.. C. 362), and that in 1924 it constituted 12.6 per cent, of their total production (126 I. C. C. 354).

As ability to compete in the sale of lake cargo coal depends in large measure upon the freight rate applied to shipments to the Lake Erie ports,' there has been a long history of controversy over these rates. This controversy has been carried on by the operators in the coal producing region around Pittsburgh, Pa., which we shall refer .to generally as the northern field, and by those operating in territory of complainants, which we shall refer to as the southern field. The haul from the southern field to the lake ports is considerably longer than that from the northern field (see map, 101 I. C. C. 516), and the rate has always been higher than from the northern field. The difference in rate, however, has never been so greát as the difference in distance, due in part tó the fact that the carriers from the southern field, being especially well equipped for carrying coal, could transport it at a lower cost, distance, considered, than those serving the northern field, and in part to the necessity of fixing a low rate if they were to get any coal to haul.' A rate' based on anything like a mileage basis would have excluded the southern coal from the lake cargo market. These rates were fixed, originally under competitive conditions, and, until the supervisory power of the Interstate Commerce Commission was invoked, the differential between them was very small, only 9 cents per ton between the Pittsburgh and Kanawha districts; the rate being 88 cents per ton from Pittsburgh and 97 cents from Kanawha.

In 1912, for the first time, the Commission took a hand in the fixing of the rates. In that year it denied the petition of the Chesapeake & Ohio that it be allowed to increase its rates from the southern field, 22 I. C. C. 604; and reduced by 10 cents the rates from the northern field, Boileau v. Pittsburg & Lake Erie R. Co., 22 I. C. C. 640, and Pittsburg Vein Operators’ Ass’n v. Pa. Co., 241. C. C. 280. The effect of this was to spread the differential from 9 to 19 cents as between the two fields. In subsequent rate adjustments the differential was further increased to 25 cents, which was preserved in the various changes by which the rates were increased until those from the Pittsburgh district were $1.66 per ton and those from the Kanawha district were $1.91 'per ton. This was the differential between the rates from the northern and southern fields at the time of the passage of the Transportation Act of 1920, and it was continued as the differential until the order of the .Commission of May 9, 1927, which increased it to 45 cents per ton. If the proposed rates by the carriers from the southern field are allowed to go into effect, the reduction of 20 cents per ton will reduce the differential to 25 feents again. The question before us, therefore, is whether we shall enjoin the Commission from preventing a reduction of rates the effect of which will be to restore the old differential, which the Commission itself established.

The orders of the Commission, by which the differential between the northern and southern fields was increased from 25 to 45 cents, and by which the southern carriers were ordered to cancel schedules which would not only reduce rates, but would also restore the old differential of 25 cents, afford an interesting study, and present a question fraught, we think, with the gravest consequences to the future of the country, if the power asserted by the Commission can be sustained. To understand, however, exactly what the power is which the Commission has assumed to exercise, it is necessary that we go behind its merely formal conclusions that rates are reasonable or unreasonable, and ascertain exactly what it is that it has done, and upon what facts and upon the application of what principles it has arrived at its conclusions. This it is our duty to do. Southern Pacific Co. v. Interstate *465 Commerce Commission, 219 U. S. 433, 31 S. Ct. 288, 55 L. Ed. 283; U. S. v. N. Y. Central Railroad, 263 U. S. 603, 44 S. Ct. 212, 68 L. Ed. 470. And, in the performance of this duty, it is necessary that we analyze not only the report of the Commission accompanying the order whose enforcement we are asked to enjoin, but also the reports made in 1925 and 1927 with regard to the reductions of rates from the northern field, in the latter of which the differential between the two fields was increased from 25 to 45 cents.

In the ease from the northern field, the first decision in which was rendered July 16, 1925 (Lake Cargo Coal Rates 1925, 101 I. C. C.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F.2d 462, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anchor-coal-co-v-united-states-wvsd-1928.