Brimstone Railroad & Canal Co. v. United States

276 U.S. 104, 48 S. Ct. 282, 72 L. Ed. 487, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1928
Docket240
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 276 U.S. 104 (Brimstone Railroad & Canal Co. 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
Brimstone Railroad & Canal Co. v. United States, 276 U.S. 104, 48 S. Ct. 282, 72 L. Ed. 487, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 289 (1928).

Opinion

*108 Mr. Justice McReynolds

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant seeks annulment of an Interstate Commerce Commission order, entered December 14, 1925, which designated the divisions- it might thereafter receive from *109 agreed joint rates and required readjustment of divisions received subsequent to August 1, 1921, when the investigation began.

The Court below dismissed the bill. Two of the objections to the order, there advanced, will be considered.

1. The Commission failed to investigate or determine the reasonableness or justness of the divisions, or whether they were unjust, unreasonable, inequitable, or unduly preferential or prejudicial, as between the carriers; also failed to consider whether the circumstances entitled one to a greater or less proportion than another of the joint rates, as commanded by Section 15(6), Transportation Act, 1920. (41 Stat. c. 91, p. 456.)

2. The joint rates were agreed upon by the parties and ' not established pursuant to any finding or order ” of the Commission, within Section 15(6), Transportation Act, 1920. Consequently, the Commission had no power to require adjustments for any period prior to the final order.

Section 1(4) Transportation Act, 1920, directs common carriers to establish through routes, reasonable and equitable rates, fares and charges; also to establish divisions of joint rates just, reasonable and equitable as between the participants, which shall not unduly prefer or prejudice any of them.

Section 15(1) empowers the Commission whenever, after full hearing, it shall find any rate charged by a carrier is or will be unjust or unreasonable or unjustly discriminatory or unduly preferential, or prejudicial, or otherwise in violation of this Act, to determine and prescribe the just and reasonable rate thereafter to be observed, and to malee an order requiring the carrier to cease and desist from such violation.

Section 15(3) provides that the Commission may, and it shall whenever deemed by it to be necessary or desirable in the public interest, after full hearing,” establish joint *110 rates, “ and the division of such rates, fares, or charges as hereinafter provided.”

Section 15(6)—

Whenever, after full hearing upon complaint or upon its own initiative, the Commission is of opinion that the divisions of joint rates, fares, or charges, applicable to the transportation of passengers or property, are or will be unjust, unreasonable, inequitable, or unduly preferential or prejudicial as between the carriers parties thereto (whether agreed upon by such carriers, or any of them, or otherwise established), the Commission shall by order prescribe the just, reasonable, and equitable divisions thereof to be received by the several carriers, and in cases where the joint rate, fare, or charge was established pursuant to a finding or order of the Commission and the divisions thereof are found by it to have been unjust, unreasonable, or inequitable, or unduly preferential or prejudicial, the Commission may also by order determine what (for the period subsequent to the filing of the complaint or petition or the making of the order of investigation) would have been the just, reasonable, and equitable divisions thereof to be received by the several carriers, and require adjustment to be made in accordance therewith. In so prescribing and determining the divisions of joint rates, fares and charges, the Commission shall give due consideration, among other things, to the efficiency with which the carriers concerned are operated, the amount of revenue required to pay their respective operating expenses, taxes, and a fair return on their railway property held for and used in the service of transportation, and the importance to- the public of the transportation services. of such carriers and also whether any particular partid-pating carrier is an originating, intermediate, or delivering line, and any other fact or circumstance which would ordinarily, without regard to the mileage haul, entitle *111 one carrier to a greater or less proportion than another carrier of the joint rate, fare or charge.”

Appellant owns and operates a railroad ten miles long in southwestern Louisiana, is a common carrier of freight only, and makes interchanges with lines of the Southern Pacific 1 and Kansas City Southern. Except five shares, its capital stock — $200,000—is owned by Union Sulphur Company, which operates mines near its line and consigns and receives over ninety per centum of the property moving thereon. Prior to 1920 appellant and connecting carriers established through rates and divisions by agreements. These were modified as permitted or suggested in Ex Parte 74 (1920) 58 I. C. C. 220, and Matter of Reduced Rates (1922) 68 I. C. C. 676.

In Ex Parte 74, the Commission considered applications under section 15a, 2 Transportation Act, 1920, for authority generally to increase rates so that carriers as a whole might earn a fair return. It found, (July 29, 1920, 58 I. C. C. 220, 246, 245):

*112 . . The following percentage increases in the charges for freight service, including switching and special services, together with the other increases hereinbefore approved, would under present conditions result in rates not unreasonable in the aggregate under section 1 of the act and would enable the carriers in the respective groups, under honest, efficient, and economical management and reasonable expenditures for maintenance of way, structures, and equipment, to earn an aggregate annual railway operating income equal', as nearly as may be, to a return of 5% per cent, upon the aggregate value, for the purposes of this proceeding, of the railway property of such carriers held for and used in the service of transportation and one-half of 1 per cent, in addition: eastern group, 40 per cent.; southern group, 25 per cent.; western group, 35 per cent.; Mountain-Pacific group, 25 per cent.
“After carefully considering the situation we find that with the exceptions hereinafter noted general percentage increases' made to fit the needs of the groups of lines serving each of the four groups must be considered for present purposes the most practicable. This conclusion is without prejudice to any subsequent finding in individual situations.”

And it accordingly authorized general increases as specified “in the rates, fares and charges of railroads within the continental United States.” It did not approve or require the adoption or maintenance of any particular rate.

In the Matter of Reduced Rates, (May 16, 1922, 68 I. C. C. 676) — instituted to determine whether further general reductions might be required under section 1, also what would constitute fair return under section 15a(3) — after referring to the. authorized increases of 1920, the Commission found that 5.75 per centum would be fair thereafter and would result if formerly authorized rates were reduced by specified percentages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 U.S. 104, 48 S. Ct. 282, 72 L. Ed. 487, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brimstone-railroad-canal-co-v-united-states-scotus-1928.