Interstate Commerce Commission v. Stickney

215 U.S. 98, 30 S. Ct. 66, 54 L. Ed. 112, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1736
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1909
Docket251
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 215 U.S. 98 (Interstate Commerce Commission v. Stickney) 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. Stickney, 215 U.S. 98, 30 S. Ct. 66, 54 L. Ed. 112, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1736 (1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The controversy as to this terminal charge has been of long duration. A history of it antecedent to the present litigation is to be found in Interstate Commerce Commission v. C., B. & Q. R. R. Company, 186 U. S. 320.

It is well to understand the precise question which is presented in this case. That question is the validity of the terminal charge of two. dollars per car. The report of the commission opens with this statement: “The subject of this complaint is the so-called terminal charge of $2 per car imposed by the defendants, for the delivery of carloads of live stock at tiie Union Stock Yards in Chicago,” and its order was in terms that the railroad companies be—

“required to cease and desist, on or before the 1st day of February, 1908, from exacting for the delivery of live stock at the Union Stock Yards, in Chicago, Ill., with respéct to shipments of live stock transported by them from points outside of that State, their present terminal charge of $2 per car.
“It is further ordered that said defendants be, and they are hereby nptified and required to establish and put in force on or before the 1st day of February, 1908, and apply thereafter during a period of not less than two years, for the delivery of live stock at the Union .Stock Yards, in said Chicago, with respect to shipments of live stock transported by them from points outside the State of Illinois, a terminal charge which shall not exceed $1 per car, if any terminal charge is maintained by them.”

The sixth section of the act known as the “Hepburn Act,” (an act to amend the Interstate Commerce Act, .passed on June 29, 1906, c. 3591, 34 Stat. 584), requires carriers to file with the commission and print and keep, open to inspection *105 schedules showing, among.other things, “separately all terminal charges . . . and any rules or regulations which in any wise change, affect, or determine any part or the aggregate of such aforesaid rates.” By § 15 the commission is authorized and required, upon a complaint, to inquire and determine .what would be a just and reasonable rate or rates, charge or charges. This; of course, includes all charges, and the carrier is entitled to have a finding.that any particular charge is unreasonable and unjust before' it is required to change such charge. For services that it may render or procure to be rendered off its own line, or outside the mere matter of transportation over its line, it may charge and receive compensation. Southern Railway Co. v. St. Louis Hay Co., 214 U. S. 297. If the terminal charge be in and of itself just and reasonable it cannot be condemned or the carrier required to change it on the ground that it, taken with prior charges of transportation over'the lines of the carrier or of connecting carriers, makes the total charge to the shipper unreasonable. That which must be corrected and condemned is not the just and reasonable terminal charge, bht those prior charges which must of themselves be unreasonable in order to make the aggregate of the charge from the point of shipment to that of delivery unreasonable and unjust. In order to avail itself of the benefit of this rule the carrier must separately state its terminal or other special charge complained of, for if many matters are lumped in a single charge it is impossible for either shipper or commission to determine how much of the lump charge is for the terminal or special services. The carrier is under no obligations to charge for terminal services. Business interests may justify it in waiving any such charge, and it will be considered to have waived it unless it makes plain to both shipper and commission that it is insisting upon it. In the case in 186 U. S. supra, we sustained the decree of the lower court,- restraining the reduction of the terminal charge from $2 to $1 as to all stock shipped to Chicago, although the commission had stated that there had been a reduction of the through rate *106 from certain points by from $10 to $15, in reference to which reduction and its effect upon the order of the commission we said, speaking by Mr. Justice White, after quoting from the report of the commission (pp. 338, 339):

In other words, it was held that the rate, which was unjust and unreasonable solely because of the $1 excess, continued to be unjust and unreasonable after this rate had been reduced by from ten to fifteen dollars. This was based, not upon a finding of fact — as of course it could not have been so based — but rested alone on the ruling by the commission that it could not consider the reduction in the through rate, but must confine its attention to the $2 terminal rate, since that alone was the subject-matter of the complaint. But, as we have previously shown, the commission, in considering the terminal rate, had expressly found that it' was less than the cost of service, and was therefore intrinsically just and reasonable, and could only be treated as unjust and unreasonable by considering ‘the circumstances of the case;’ that is, the through rate and the fact that a terminal charge was included in it, which, when added to the $2 charge, caused the terminal' charge as a whole to be unreasonable. Having therefore decided that the $2 terminal charge could only be held to be unjust and unreasonable by combining it with the charge embraced in the through rate, necessarily the through rate was entitled to be taken into consideration if the previous'conclusions of the commission were well founded. It cannot be in reason said that the inherent reasonableness of the terminal rate, separately considered, is irrelevant because its reasonableness is to be determined by considering the through rate and the terminal charge contained in it, and yet when the reasonableness of the rate is demonstrated^ by considering the through rate as reduced, it be then held that the through rate should not be considered. In other words, two absolutely conflicting propositions.cannot at the same time be adopted. As the finding was that both the terminal charge of $2 and the through fate as reduced when separately considered, were *107 just and reasonable, and as \he further finding was that as a consequence of the reduction of from ten to fifteen dollars per car, the rates, considered together were just and reasonable, it follows that there can be no possible view of the casé by which the conclusion that the rates were unjust and unreasonable can be sustained.”

The tariff .schedules of the appellees make clear the separate terminal charge for delivery from their- own lines to the Union Stock Yards. We quote the schedule of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad Company:

“The live stock station and stock yards of this company in Chicago are located at Mayfair, and the rates named herein apply only to live stock intended for delivery at, or received and transported from the stock yards of the company at Mayfair, in Chicago.

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Bluebook (online)
215 U.S. 98, 30 S. Ct. 66, 54 L. Ed. 112, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-commerce-commission-v-stickney-scotus-1909.