Dayton-Goose Creek Railway Co. v. United States, Interstate Commerce Commission

263 U.S. 456, 44 S. Ct. 169, 68 L. Ed. 388, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2810, 33 A.L.R. 472
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1924
Docket330
StatusPublished
Cited by166 cases

This text of 263 U.S. 456 (Dayton-Goose Creek Railway Co. v. United States, Interstate Commerce Commission) 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
Dayton-Goose Creek Railway Co. v. United States, Interstate Commerce Commission, 263 U.S. 456, 44 S. Ct. 169, 68 L. Ed. 388, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2810, 33 A.L.R. 472 (1924).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taft

delivered the opinion of the Cour^i

The main question in this case is whether the so-called “ recapture ” paragraphs of the Transportation Act of 1920, c. 91, § 422, § 15a, paragraphs 5-17, 41 Stat. 456, 489-491, are constitutional.

The Dayton-Goose Creek Railway Company is a corporation of'Texas, engaged in intrastate, interstate and foreign commerce. Its volume of intrastate traffic exceeds that of its interstate and foreign traffic. ■ In response to orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission, the carrier made returns for ten months of 1920, and for the full year of 1921, reporting the value of its railroad property employed in commerce and its net revenue'therefrom. It earned $21,666.24 more than six per cent, on the value of its property in the ten months of 1920, and $33,766.99 *475 excess in the twelve months of 1921. The Commission requested it to report what provision it had made for'setting up a fund to preserve one-half- of these excesses, and to remit the other half to the Commission.

The carrier then filed the present bill, setting forth the constitutional invalidity of the recapture provisions of the act and the prders of the Commission based thereon, averring that it had no adequate remedy at law to save itself from the irreparable wrong about to be done to it by enforcement of the provisions, and praying that the defendants, the United States, the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the United States District Attorney for the Eastern District of Texas, be. temporarily restrained from prosecuting any civil or criminal suit to enforce the Commission’s orders, arid that the court on final hearing make the injunction permanent. The Commission answered the bill. The United States and the District Attorney moved to dismiss it for want of equity jurisdiction, and for lack of equity. An application for an interlocutory injunction before a court of three judges under thé Act of October 22, 1913, c. 32, 38 Stat. 208, 220, was deniéd and the court, proceeding to consider, the equities, dismissed the bill.

The question of equity jurisdiction raised below has not' been discussed here by counsel for the appellees either upon their briefs or in oral argument. They do not rely on it, but seek without delay a decision, on the merits.

„ While the Dayton-Go’ose Creek Railway Company was the sole complainant below and is the sole appellant here, nineteen other railway companies have; as amici curiae, upon leave granted, filed briefs in support of its appeal. Their-names appear in the margin. 1

*476 By § 422 of the Transportation Act, there was added to the existing Interstate Commerce Act find its amendments, § 15a. The section in its second paragraph directs the Commission to establish rates which will enable the carriers, as a whole or by rate groups or territories fixed by the Commission, to receive a fair net operating return upon the property they hold in the aggregate for use in transportation. By paragraph 3, the Commission is to establish from time to time and make public the percentage of the value of the aggregate property it regards as a fair operating return, but for 1920 and 1921 such a fair return is to be five and a half per cent., with discretion in the Commission to add one-half of one per cent, as a fund for adding betterments on capital account. By paragraph 4, the Commission is to fix the aggregate value of the property from time to time, using in doing so the results of its valuation of the railways as provided in § 19a of the Interstate Commerce Act, so far as they are available, and, all the elements of value recognized by the law of the land for rate-making purposes, including so far as the Commission may deem it proper, the investment account of the railways.

Paragraph 5 declares that, because it is impossible to establish uniform rates upon competitive traffic which will adequately sustain all the carriers needed to do the business, without giving some of them a net income in excess of a fair return, any carrier receiving such excess shall hold it in the manner thereafter prescribed as trustee for the United States. Paragraph 6 distributes *477 the excess, one-half to a reserve fund to be maintained ' by the carrier, and the other half to a general railroad revolving fund to be maintained by the Commission. Paragraph 7 specifies the only uses to which .the carrier may apply its reserve fund. They are the payment- of • interest' on bonds and other securities, rent for leased lines, -and. the payment of dividends, to the extent that its operating income for the year is less than six per cent. When the reserve fund equals five per cent, of the value . of the railroad property, and as long as it continues to do so, the carrier’s one-half of the excess income may be used by it. for any lawful purpose. Under paragraph 10, and subsequent paragraphs, the general railroad revolving fund is to be' administered by the Commission in. making loans to carriers to meet expenditures on capital account, to refund maturing securities originally issued on capital account and for buying equipment and facilities and leasing or selling them to carriers.

This Court has recently had occasion to construe the Transportation Act. In Wisconsin R. R. Commission v. C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 257 U. S. 563, it was held that the act in .seeking to render the interstate commerce railway system adequate to the country's, needs had, by §§418 and 422, conferred on the Commission valid power and duty to raise the level of intrastate rates when it found that they were so low- as to discriminate against inter- ■ ' state commerce and unduly to burden iff In-the New England Divisions Case, 261 U. S. 184, it was held that .under § 418 .the Commission in making division of joint rates between groups of carriers might in the public interest • consult the financial needs of a weaker. group in order to maintain it in effective operation as part of an adequate transportation system, and give it a greater share of such rates if the share of the other group was adequate to avoid a confiscatory result.

*478 ■ In both cases it was pointed out that the Transporta.tion Act adds a new and important object to previous interstate commerce legislation, which was designed primarily to prevent unreasonable or discriminatory rates against, persons and localities. The new act seeks affirmatively to build up a system of railways prepared to handle promptly all the • interstate traffic, of the .country. It aims to give the owners of the railways an opportunity to earn enough to maintain their properties and equipment in such a state of efficiency that they can carry well this burden.' To achieve' this great purpose, it puts the railroad, systems-of the country more completely than-ever under the' fostering guardianship arid control of the Commission, which is to supervise their issue of securities, théir car supply and distribution, their joint • use of terminals* their construction of hew lines, their abandonment of old lines, and by a proper division of.

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Bluebook (online)
263 U.S. 456, 44 S. Ct. 169, 68 L. Ed. 388, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2810, 33 A.L.R. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-goose-creek-railway-co-v-united-states-interstate-commerce-scotus-1924.