Illinois Commerce Commission v. Thomson

318 U.S. 675, 63 S. Ct. 834, 87 L. Ed. 1079, 1943 U.S. LEXIS 1287
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 12, 1943
Docket178
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 318 U.S. 675 (Illinois Commerce Commission v. Thomson) 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
Illinois Commerce Commission v. Thomson, 318 U.S. 675, 63 S. Ct. 834, 87 L. Ed. 1079, 1943 U.S. LEXIS 1287 (1943).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case, which comes here by direct appeal under § 266 of the Judicial Code, 28 U. S. C. § 380, involves the meaning of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission and its application to the Illinois intrastate commutation passenger fares of the Chicago & North Western Railway. By interlocutory and finally by permanent injunction, the district court below of three judges has enjoined appellants, the Illinois Commerce Commission and named law enforcement officers of the state, from taking any steps to prevent a 10% increase in such fares by appellee, trustee of the Chicago & North Western Railway Company in reorganization under § 77 of the Bankruptcy Act. The 10% increase, if effective, would bring the fares in some instances above the maximum of two cents per mile imposed by state statute. Illinois Revised Statutes, 1941, c. 114, §§ 154-56.

The bill of complaint alleges, and the district court found, substantially as follows: Until March 7, 1942, appellee and his predecessor in interest, the Chicago & North Western Railway Company, had collected commutation fares for the intrastate transportation of passengers in Illinois, as required by a report and order of the Interstate Commerce Commission entered October 6, 1925, in a pro *677 ceeding under § 13 of the Interstate Commerce Act (now 49 U. S. C. i 13). The purpose and effect of that order was to require the Chicago & North Western to increase its intrastate commutation fares to substantially the same level as the fares then in force for interstate passenger traffic, which had previously been increased by order of the Commission, and thus to remove undue preference and prejudice and unjust discrimination against interstate commerce, as well as undue preference and advantage to persons traveling in intrastate commerce on the Illinois lines of the Chicago & North Western. The order was entered upon appropriate findings. Intrastate Rates Within Illinois, Docket No. 11703, 102 I. C. C. 479. It directed an increase of 20% over the then prevailing rates for the intrastate commutation fares involved in this case, but provided that this increase should be “subject to a maximum of 2 cents per mile,” the Commission’s opinion stating that this was “in deference to the state statute.” (102 I. C. C. at 485.)

On February 28, 1936, the Interstate Commerce Commission, after a general and nationwide investigation of railroad passenger fares, entered an order by which it retained its continuing jurisdiction over the Illinois intrastate commutation passenger fares here in question, by specific reference to its previous order in Docket No. 11703, although the order, did not require any modification of those fares. Passenger Fares and Surcharges, Docket No. 26550, 214 I. C. C. 174.

In December 1941, the Commission undertook a further nationwide investigation of both freight rates and passenger fares, to determine whether increases of 10%, as asked by the railroads, should be authorized in view of increased operating expenses and costs of materials and supplies. By order of January 21, 1942, in that proceeding, known as Ex parte No. 148, the Commission — upon findings that the increase was necessary for adequate and *678 efficient service during the war emergency — authorized the railroads, including the Chicago & North Western, to increase passenger fares by 10%. The order further directed that “all outstanding orders, as amended, of the Commission, authorizing or prescribing interstate and intrastate fares, or bases of fares be, and they are hereby, modified, effective concurrently with the establishment of the increased fares” approved by the order, but only to the extent necessary to permit the authorized increase to be added to “the interstate and intrastate fares approved or prescribed in, or maintained or held by virtue of, said outstanding orders”; that a copy of the order be filed “in the docket of each such proceeding, including those proceedings under § 13 of the Interstate Commerce Act enumerated in the order of February 28, 1936, in Docket No. 26550”; and “that all tariffs or supplements changing fares by authority of this order, which are maintained or held by authority of outstanding orders of the Commission, shall bear on their title pages specific reference to this order.” In a report and order of March 2, 1942, in Ex parte No. 148, the Commission reaffirmed these findings, authorized certain increases in freight rates, and made further findings of fact in support of the increases. Increased Railway Rates, Fares, and Charges, 1942, 248 I. C. C. 545.

The district court held that the Commission’s order of January 21,1942, by its specific references to all outstanding orders previously issued in § 13 proceedings, which would include that of 1925 in Docket No. 11703, had been made applicable h> the Illinois commutation passenger fares here in question.

Acting under the purported authority of these orders, appellee, about February 6, 1942, filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission, and with the Interstate Commerce Commission, tariff schedules referring to the latter’s order of January 21,1942, and increasing by 10%, effective *679 March 8, 1942, its previously existing Illinois intrastate passenger commutation fares. The fares proposed by these tariffs in some instances exceed the limit imposed by the Illinois two cent fare law. On February 18th the Illinois commission issued an order purporting to suspend these tariffs and the increased fares named in them until July 6, 1942, and ordered appellee not to file any new tariff or otherwise to change the previously existing fares during the period of suspension or any extension of it without the permission of the state commission. The order directed that a hearing be held by the state commission on the propriety of the proposed changes.

The district court held that the effect of the state commission’s order was to prescribe for appellee the continuation of the intrastate passenger fares in force immediately before February 18, 1942, and to prohibit appellee from increasing or modifying those fares save as permitted by the state commission; that appellants have threatened and continue to threaten appellee with the prosecution of numerous proceedings in the state courts to impose upon appellee and his agents fines and penalties for failure to comply with the state commission’s order; that unless appellants are enjoined from such threatened prosecutions and cumulative penalties, appellee will suffer irreparable injury.

From all this the district court concluded, as matters of law, that the Interstate Commerce Commission’s order of January 21,1942, is a valid order which modified the 1925 and 1936 orders taking jurisdiction over the intrastate commutation fares in question, and that the 1942 order, without more, authorized the increased fares prescribed in the tariffs filed by appellee. The court held that the Illinois commission’s order of February 18, 1942, was invalid and without force with respect to these commutation fares because in conflict with the 1942 order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and for the additional *680

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Bluebook (online)
318 U.S. 675, 63 S. Ct. 834, 87 L. Ed. 1079, 1943 U.S. LEXIS 1287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-commerce-commission-v-thomson-scotus-1943.