Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Michigan Railroad Commission

231 U.S. 457, 34 S. Ct. 152, 58 L. Ed. 310, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2541
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 8, 1913
Docket382
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 231 U.S. 457 (Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Michigan Railroad 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
Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Michigan Railroad Commission, 231 U.S. 457, 34 S. Ct. 152, 58 L. Ed. 310, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2541 (1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appeal from a decree of the District Court, three judges sitting, denying a motion of appellants for interlocutory *459 injunction against an order of the Michigan Railroad Commission and the denial of a motion of appellants for the continuance of a restraining order theretofore entered in the case.

The Commission was constituted by the Public Acts of the State and invested with quite full and detailed powers of regulation of the railroads of the State. Act No. 300 of the Public Acts of Michigan of 1909, as amended by Act No. 139, 1911.

Section 7 as originally enacted and as amended is alone specially relevant to the discussion and is inserted in the margin, subdivision (d) being the amendment. 1

*460 After the amendment took effect, and on July 29,1911, the Grand Trunk System, which is constituted of a number of railroad lines, published a tariff of charges, to be effective September 1, 19.11, which,' among other things, set forth the rates for the designated services within the corporate limits of the City of Detroit and as to team track services as follows:

“In case team track deliveries are required for the unloading of shipments received from other carriers, or when *461 such team tracks are used for the loading of shipments for delivery to other carriers, three dollars per car in excess of the charge made for switching to or from industrial sidings will be assessed.”

This tariff also provided a charge of $5.00 for switching to and from industrial sidings and a charge of $8.00 for team track delivery from junction points with other roads within the switching limits of Detroit.

A complaint was made by one John S. Haggerty to the Commission of this difference as discriminatory. Haggerty, it is said in one of the briefs, conducts a brick-making plant, having a siding on one of the railroads in Detroit, and to supply his trade ships carloads of freight over various railroad lines doing business in the city, among which are the lines of the Grand Trunk System. •

An answer was filed to the complaint by the Grand Trunk Western Railway Company. After hearing, the Commission held that the difference in rates was discriminatory and the railway company was ordered to file a tariff removing the discrimination, that is, the discrimination between the charges for industrial switching and for switching between junction points and team tracks; and to publish and make effective “like charges for the movement of a carload shipment received from an industry within the City of Detroit, upon the said Grand Trunk Western Railway, consigned for delivery upon a team track or other siding of said road within the same city, and for a like shipment received by said Grand Trunk Western Railway from a connecting carrier at a junction point within the corporate limits of the city of Detroit, consigned to a team track or other, siding upon said road within the same city.”

Subsequently to the making of such order the Grand Trunk System published a new tariff to be effective March 16,1912, naming a rate of $5.00 between industrial tracks and a like rate between junction points with con *462 necting carriers, within the switching district of Detroit, and industrial tracks within the said limits; $8.00 between junction points with other railroad companies, within said limits, and team tracks within said limits; and $8.00 between team tracks on the railway’s ‘ own lines. The tariff was duly filed with the Commission and with the Interstate Commerce Commission.

Haggerty filed a supplementary petition with the Commission complaining that the new rates were unreasonable and exorbitant, and, on March 15, 1912, the Commission ordered the postponement of the same until April 29 to give the Commission an opportunity for investigation into “the reasonableness of such proposed rate and the matter set forth in the complaint.” Thereupon the Grand Trunk System issued a supplement to its tariff suspending the intrastate rates named in its tariff, and, on March 30, published a new tariff canceling all rates between industries having private sidings on the System and hold or team tracks on that System, and all rates between junction points with other carriers within the corporate limits of Detroit and the team tracks of the System. The effect of this tariff was to withdraw all intrastate and interstate switching movements, except as to the Detroit & Toledo Shore Line, with which the Grand Trunk was under contract for terminal switching.

On April 10 the Commission suspended this supple-, mental tariff in order to give it opportunity to investigate, and two days afterward the bill in this case was filed. On April 27 an amended bill was filed, and, on the same day, the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company filed its bill.

We may observe that the order of the Commission of April 10 is the only one in controversy. The other orders of February 6 and March 15, 1912, were directed against the Grand Trunk Western Railway, and when it'came to the knowledge of the Commission that *463 that road did not enter the city, the orders were canceled.

The bills prayed that the acts referred to and the order of the Commission be declared null and void as to complainants, that injunctions interlocutory and perpetual be granted restraining appellees from executing the order, and from taking any steps or proceedings to enforce any of the penalties or remedies of the statute.

Answers were filed to the bills, and supporting and attacking affidavits. The District Court upon hearing denied an injunction and vacated the restraining order, but suspended the formal' entry of its orders.. Subsequently the cases were consolidated for the purposes of an appeal, and ah appeal allowed. The bond was fixed at $100,000 and the restraining orders continued in force pending the appeal.

The two suits may be treated as one, the material points being identical, except as to the territory through which the roads run and the diversity of citizenship which exists only in the first suit filed. The foundation of both suits is the same, that the order of the Commission and the acts of the State under which it was made, in so far as the order and the acts require of complainants or their property any of the services above set forth or so threatened to be required, constitute the taking of their property without due process of law in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States; and is also a violation of the commerce clause of that instrument. The specification under the latter is “that Congress has taken over the whole subject matter of terminals, team tracks, switching tracks, sidings, etc., of carriers engaged in interstate commerce, and has enacted that such carriers shall not be required to give the use of such terminal facilities to other carriers engaged in like business.”

It is further objected against said order that the com *464

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Bluebook (online)
231 U.S. 457, 34 S. Ct. 152, 58 L. Ed. 310, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-trunk-railway-co-v-michigan-railroad-commission-scotus-1913.