Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. United States

277 U.S. 291, 48 S. Ct. 520, 72 L. Ed. 885, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 889
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 21, 1928
Docket404
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 277 U.S. 291 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. United States, 277 U.S. 291, 48 S. Ct. 520, 72 L. Ed. 885, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 889 (1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Butler

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants, 1 for convenience called the east side lines, brought this suit to set aside an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission in respect of charges for transporting certain westbound through traffic from the lines east of the Mississippi at East St. Louis to the lines *294 west of the river at St. Louis. The Commission and the carriers on whose complaint the order was made intervened. The district court, consisting of three judges (U. S. C., Tit. 28, § 47) dismissed the case for want of equity.

The order was made by the Commission after hearing on the complaint of four, west side lines. They alleged that the practice of the east side lines requiring them to bear the expenses of transporting westbound through traffic across the river is unjust, unreasonable and illegal. They made no complaint as to the eastbound traffic, but they sought to be relieved from such charges on all the westbound through business and prayed reparation on account of such costs borne in the two years preceding the complaint. The Commission filed a report which was made a part of the order. Tl3 I. C. C. 681. It held — its Chairman and two other members dissenting — that the matter in controversy is a “practice” within the meaning of the Act. It found “ that for the future the practice of the. east side lines in requiring the west side lines to bear the transfer charges on westbound freight traffic moving through St.' Louis and East St. Louis on combination rates which are the same on St. Louis as on East St.. Louis will be unjust and unreasonable, and that the just and'reasonable practice with respect to such traffic will be for 'the east side lines to bear or absorb all such transfer charges.” The Commission was not convinced that the acceptance by the west side lines of divisions of ■joint rates did not constitute an.acquiescence, tantamount to an agreement on their part to pay a transfer charge on through traffic moved on such rates. But it commended to the carriers a careful study of the divisions of joint rates on westbound traffic with a view to readjustment if necessary to conform to the just and reasonable practice in respect of interchange approved by the report. Reparation*was denied.

*295 The order 2 requires no change of divisions of revenues derived from traffic moving on. joint rates. It covers only-such of the westbound traffic as moves bn combination through rates. It shifts from the west side lines to the carriers east of the river the burden of transferring that freight from east to west across the river. No change is ordered in the method of handling the traffic. No lack of facilities for the through routes, § 1 (3) (4), or for making the transfers, § 3 (3) was shown or found.

The appellants contend that the controversy involved rates and divisions and not a “ practice ” within the meaning of the Act, and that the evidence before the Commission was not sufficient to support a finding that it is or. will be unjust or unreasonable to require the west side lines to bear such transfer changes or to warrant the order.

*296 The traffic at this crossing is very large. The railroad lines of the east side carriers terminate on the east bank, those of the appellee carriers on the west bank, and some carriers have lines on both sides. All, or practically all, of the traffic is handled for interchange between lines east and lines west by the Terminal Railroad Association and its subsidiaries. They are jointly owned or controlled by appellant and appellee lines. The arrangéments for their use contemplate .equal treatment of all ..carriers served by them. The proprietary companies have track-age rights over the lines of the Association between St. Louis and East St. Louis, but ordinarily jthey do not use them. The average haul for transfer adross the river is about ten miles. The cost is higher than that attending transportation for like distances under ordinary circumstances.

The transfer charges complained óf were) assumed by appellee lines in order to enable them- to compete with other railroads west of the Mississippi River. At first there was a separate rate or charge for the haul across the river. But in 1877, the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company built a line from the west across the Mississippi at Louisiana, Missouri, to a junction with its north and south line east of the river. That extension enabled it to open a route from the west to East St.. Louis and there interchange with the east side lines. This competition for the haul between East St. Louis and the territory west of St. Louis compelled the four appellee lines to bear the cost of transferring across the river all through traffic in both directions. The Commission’s report shows that now five of the eight lines on the west side that serve St. Louis also reach East St. Louis, and that three of them handle freight, traffic to points west of the river without taking it’through St; Louis. This is competition that must be met — if théy would participate in the business — by the west side lines that reach East St. Louis only by means *297 of the facilities and services of the Association and its subsidiaries. Since the Alton opened its route to the west, the appellee lines have maintained the same rates from and to East St. Louis as from and to St. Louis. And,, about 1908, upon the insistence of the business interests of St.' Louis, the lines east of the fiver published and have since maintained, with some exceptions that need not be specified, the same rates from and to St. Louis as from and to East St. Louis. This was done by reducing the rates to and from St. Louis and by advancing most of the rates to and from East St. Louis. The decrease in revenue resulting from the reductions was much greater than the increase arising from the advances.

In 1905 the United .States brought suit against the Terminal Railroad Association, carriers involved in this controversy and others in the district court for the eastern district of Missouri to prevent violations of the Sherman Anti-trust Act. A final decree in favor of the United States was entered in 1917 in accordance with the directions of this Court. 224 U. S. 383, 236 U. S. 1941 On petition filed in that case by the appellee lines some yearns after the final decree, the district court, February 8, 1923, adjudged that in contempt of its decree the Association, its subsidiaries and proprietary companies, had continuously compelled the appellee lines to pay transfer charges for interchange between them and the east side lines on through traffic in both directions. It directed the east side lines to cease such -violations and to pay for the use of the west side lines the total amount of the charges paid by the latter for the transfer of westbound through freight from March 2, 1914, to the date of the order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 U.S. 291, 48 S. Ct. 520, 72 L. Ed. 885, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-united-states-scotus-1928.