George B. Newton Coal Co. v. Davis

126 A. 192, 281 Pa. 74, 1924 Pa. LEXIS 571
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 13, 1924
DocketAppeals, 33 and 34
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 126 A. 192 (George B. Newton Coal Co. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George B. Newton Coal Co. v. Davis, 126 A. 192, 281 Pa. 74, 1924 Pa. LEXIS 571 (Pa. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephabt,

Shortly after war was declared with Germany, Congress passed the Fuel and Food Control Act. Under it the President appointed an administrator with full authority to make such rules, regulations, prices, apportionment, etc., that would secure an adequate supply and equitable distribution, and facilitate the movement of food, fuel, etc. Under this delegation, many orders designed to promote the efficient conduct of the war were issued and enforced. Before the treaty of peace was adopted and signed, or in January and February, 1919, some time after the armistice and the cessation of hostilities, the President suspended all orders relating to the control of fuel except some unnecessary here to discuss. The fuel administrator went out of office the *78 following summer, and with, his departure its fiscal and other affairs were closed. In the autumn, a nation-wide coal strike was threatened, and, on October 30, 1919, an executive order (Exhibit No. 12) was issued, wherein it is stated that “it is necessary to restore and maintain during the war certain rules, regulations, orders and proclamations.” The President then revoked and annulled the “orders of January 31,1919, and February 20, 1919, to the extent necessary to restore all of the said rules, regulations, orders and proclamations therein suspended concerning” fixing or regulating prices; and authority was given that “the fuel administrator shall, as occasion arises, restore, change or make such rules or regulations relating to the production, sale, shipment, distribution, apportionment, storage or use of bituminous and lignite coal as in his judgment may be necessary.”

This was followed by an order of October 30th, by the fuel administrator, wherein “the director general of railroads and his representatives [were designated] to carry into effect the order of January 11, 1918, and to make such diversions of coal which the railroads under his direction may as common carriers have in their possession, as may be necessary in the present emergency to provide for the requirements of the country in the order of priority set forth in” a former preference order. This transfer of authority was made under the Overman Act (Act of May 20, 1918, c. 78, 10 St. L. 556).

A further executive order was issued November 5th, in substance much the same as the preceding one of October 30th, and another by the fuel administrator on November 12th, eliminating, in so far as the fixing of prices was concerned, “bona fide contracts enforceable at law entered into prior to October 30,1919.”

Acting under the authority thus transferred, the director general seized many cars of coal consigned to plaintiff on prior contracts for which plaintiff was paying the government price; it was used for railroad purposes. Plaintiff was thus deprived of fuel necessary for its com *79 mitments, and, to relieve the shortage, went into the open market and purchased at increased prices the amount necessary to supply its demand. It sued the director general for damages as for an unlawful conversion of the coal consigned, and was awarded the full amount of its claim by the court below, trying the case without a jury. This appeal followed.

Aside from wartime regulations, the defendant would be bound to pay plaintiff as damages the market value of the coal converted: Hill v. Canfield, 56 Pa. 454, 459; 26 R. C. L. 1148; Norfolk & Western Ry. Co. v. Fort Dearborn Coal & Export Co., 292 Fed. 78; National City Bank of New York v. U. S., 275 Fed. 855, affirmed 281 Fed. 754; C. G. Blake Co. v. U. S., 275 Fed. 861, affirmed 279 Fed. 71; Muser v. Magone, 155 U. S. 240.

We have here presented, then, the questions whether the orders fixing prices and diversion of coal were lawful or in excess of the executive authority, and, if valid, was the consignee not entitled to just compensation for the loss sustained; and, finally, was the director general the proper defendant? In ascertaining whether the orders were illegal or exceeded executive authority, not only must the act in its entirety be considered, but also all relevant facts of record, and those of which judicial notice may be taken.

Price-fixing under proper conditions, like rate-making, is exclusively a legislative matter. To sustain acts in relation thereto an empowering statute must be pointed out. As yet it has not been determined there exists in the government an unlimited right to fix prices for all commodities, including the necessities of life. It has been held, under the police power of the several states, that the right exists by legislation or (the recognized substitute) by a delegation of legislative power to a commission to fix the rates of public service companies to be charged for their service or commodity. The right to fix similar rates for those companies engaged in inter *80 state commerce has been held to exist under the federal Constitution.

During the war the authority to fix rates and provide exclusive regulation was extended to all commodities. “A state of war, however, may affect with a public interest articles which, under normal conditions, are free to commerce in its usual channels, and thus render subject to governmental regulation that which otherwise would be unobstructed and unhindered by the law”: Lajoie v. Milliken, 242 Mass. 508, 136 N. E. 419, 433. The right was based on what has been generally termed implied “war power.” The exercise of this right or power has as its foundation the national security and defense; it is of such paramount importance alike to the country and its citizens, and of such drastic consequence, it seems imperative it must not be carried beyond what is generally comprehended by the term, or into conditions of life not justifying its existence. When lawfully brought into action by Congress, it must be kept within its own limitations. It should not exist after the circumstances are ended through which it was brought into life, namely, war or public insurrection actually existing. Until the Supreme Court of the United States determines otherwise, the act in question must be held ineffective, after the cessation of hostilities in its broadest sense, freed from technical construction by acts of Congress, having a tendency to continue on paper only hostile conditons into a time of peace. With no reason of national import to justify its exercise, and without constitutional authority to sustain it, courts will not uphold acts done either under an abortive power or one equally as bad, —a power once good but inert through its own limitation.

The reason is obvious. To hold otherwise, the supreme sovereign at any time may enter and dictate the most ordinary affairs of life, as may an absolute monarch. Up to the present at least, the toleration of this in peace times is unthinkable under our system of govern *81 ment. We do not assert, that when even peace prevails as contrasted with a state of war, domestic conditions may not assume such serious import as to be akin to an insurrection, though force of arms be not used; when such condition arises Congress should publicly declare it; executive officers should not be forced to use legislation intended for other purposes to justify their acts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 A. 192, 281 Pa. 74, 1924 Pa. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-b-newton-coal-co-v-davis-pa-1924.