Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

225 U.S. 326, 56 L. Ed. 1107, 32 S. Ct. 742, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2090
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 7, 1912
DocketNo. 719
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 225 U.S. 326 (Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) 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
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 225 U.S. 326, 56 L. Ed. 1107, 32 S. Ct. 742, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2090 (1912).

Opinion

Mu. Justice McKenna,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The case involves the consideration of §§ 2 and 3 of the Interstate Commerce Act. Section 2 provides that if any common carrier shall directly or indirectly charge or receive from any person or persons a greater or less compensation than it charges or receives from any other person or persons “for doing for him or them ,a like and contemporaneous service in the transportation of a like kind of traffic, under substantially similar circumstances and conditions, such common carrier shall be deemed guilty of discrimination. . . .”

Section 3 is directed against giving preferences or advantages to persons, localities or descriptions of traffic in any respect whatsoever and subjecting any person, locality or traffic “to any undue or unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage in any respect whatsoever.”

The companies contend that the Commission applied these sections to the facts found by the Commission, none of them being disputed, and that, therefore, the findings of the Commission are conclusions of law. On the other hand, the Commission charges that its findings are those of fact and exclusively within its jurisdiction, and not open to review by the Commerce Court or any court. Many of its assignments of error are expressions of this view. The other assignments assert in various ways and with many shades of particularity that the Commerce Court erred in disagreeing with the Commission in regard to the traffics in the different coals, not only in its decision, as indicated in its injunction, in the matters affecting such traffic, but in substituting its judgment for that of the Commission.

The facts are certainly undisputed, or, to put it differently, the circumstances ^ and conditions which determined the order are certainly not in controversy; and while certain general inferences are disputed which may be [340]*340called inferences of fact, yet we think "power to make the order, and not the mqre expediency of having made it, is the question ” presented. Int. Com. Comm. v. Illinois Cent. R. R. Co., 215 U. S. 452, 470. In other words, that the question presented by the petition is that the order of the Commission was not merely administrative, but proceeded from a construction of §§-2 and 3 as applicable to the conditions which affected the traffic in the different kinds of coal and that the different charges for transportation constituted violations of those sections. The Commerce Court, therefore, had jurisdiction of the petition and jurisdiction to enjoin the order of the Commission if the court considered that the order would cause irreparable injury. Section 3 of the act creating the Commerce Court gives that court the power to “enjoin, set aside, annul or suspend any order of- the Interstate Commerce Commission, in a suit brought in the court against the United States.” ■Whether' the court erred in its judgment is now to be inquired into:

In its most abstract form the simple statement of' the controversy is whether the companies may charge a different rate for the transportation of fuel coal to a. given point than for the transportation of commercial coal to the same point. But when we depart from the abstract, complexities appear and attention is carried beyond the consideration’ of points equally distant, shippers equally circumstanced-and traffic affected by similar circumstances and conditions. It is asserted that there are disparities between the traffics and qualifying .circumstances' which the Commission disregarded and, in error, held that traffic in fuel coal could not be distinguishéd from the traffic in commercial coal.

The Commission insists upon'the simplicity of the problem and contends'that there is nothing in the conditions of the traffic which dispensed with the clear legal duty of the companies under the Interstate Commerce Act to [341]*341carry for all shippers alike. The Commission says: We have never held that the local rate to the junction point must be paid on shipments that are going beyond that point. What we have said is that the local rate to the junction point shall be the same for all shippers to that point, and that the through charges on shipments going beyond the junction point shall be alike for all shippers to the same destination.” Its position thus expressed the Commission has supplemented, we are told by the companies, by its Conference Ruling No. 324, published June 19, 1911, as follows: “Division on Company Coal.— Upon Inquiry, Held, That it is unlawful for carriers to make special and discriminatory divisions of joint rates upon locomotive fuel as between an originating or participating carrier and a purchasing carrier. In the division of joint rates a railroad must be treated precisely as any other shipper is treated, and the Commission will-regard any special division as a device to defeat the published rate. All divisions upon fuel coal must be made in good faith without respect to the fact that one of the carriers is the purchaser of such coal.0'.

The issue of principle between the Commission and the companies is very accurately presented, and we come to consider whether there are differences in the traffic of fuel coal which distinguish it from traffic in commercial coal, and which, as contended by the companies, make the traffic dissimilar in circumstances and conditions, or whether the opposite is true, as decided by the Commission.

The circumstances and conditions which may so far be considered as distinguishing traffics so as to take from different transportation charges the vice of preference have been described by this court. In Wight v. United States, 167 U. S. 512, 518, it is said: “It was the purpose of the section [2] to enforce equality between shippers, and it prohibits any rebate or other device'by which two shippers, shipping over the same line, the same distance, under [342]*342the same circumstances of carriage, are compelled to pay different prices therefor.” These words are given more precision by the declaration “that the phrase, cunder substantially similar circumstances and conditions,’ as found in section 2, refers to matters of carriage, and does not include competition.” And this was repeated in Interstate Commerce Commission v. Alabama Midland Ry. Co., 168 U. S. 144, 161, 166. The facts in both cases give significance to the rulings. In the first case the charges to the shippers were the same, but one was given extra facilities; in the second case the extraneous effect of competition was excluded as an element in the application of the section. There is also example in Interstate Commerce Commission v. Delaware, L. & W. R. R. Co., 220 U. S. 235. It was there held that a carrier could not look beyond goods tendered to it for transportation in carload lots “to the ownership of the shipment” as the basis for determining the application of its established rates.

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Bluebook (online)
225 U.S. 326, 56 L. Ed. 1107, 32 S. Ct. 742, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-commerce-commission-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-scotus-1912.