Interstate Commerce Commission v. United States ex rel. Arcata & Mad River Railroad

65 F.2d 180, 62 App. D.C. 92, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2950
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1933
DocketNo. 5873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 180 (Interstate Commerce Commission v. United States ex rel. Arcata & Mad River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit 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. United States ex rel. Arcata & Mad River Railroad, 65 F.2d 180, 62 App. D.C. 92, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2950 (D.C. Cir. 1933).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

Areata, & Mad River Railroad Company, which we shall call appellee, operated a narrow gauge line from Areata, Cal., where it connected with the Northwestern Pacific Railroad, to Korbel, Cal., a distance of about 13 miles. Its entire capital was owned by Northern Redwood Lumber Company, and it was' built primarily to transport the lumber company’s product for delivery to connecting carriers. Approximately 92 per cent, of its revenues were derived from traffic furnished by the lumber company. The Commission found as a fact that when the timber of the lumber company was exhausted the operation of the line would be abandoned.

Under the President’s 1917 proclamation all carriers by railroad, including appellee, were taken under federal control. In June, 1918, the Director General relinquished control of appellee and many other short-line railroads. In August, 1925, appellee filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission a claim under section 204 of the Transportation Act of 1920 (USCA, title 49, c. 3, § 73) for reimbursement in accordance with that section in the amount of $72,401.84 for the period January 1, 1918, to February 29', 1920. The Commission rejected the claim, and ap-pellee filed in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia a petition for mandamus. The Commission answered, and appellee,de-murred. The court below sustained the demurrer and granted mandamus, and the case is here on appeal. The facts are undisputed. The prayer of the petition was that the court command and direct the Commission to “ascertain in the manner prescribed in section 204 of the Transportation Act, 1920, the amount by which relator’s [appellee’s] railway operating income decreased during the [181]*181Federal control period as compared with the so-called test period, and to certify said amount to the Secretary of the Treasury for payment.”

Section 204 of the Transportation Act was a post-war measure designed to compensate short lines for losses sustained during that part of federal control during which they operated their own property. On behalf of ap-pellee it is argued that section 204 is ministerial and requires the Commission only to ascertain the facts and make the certificate, but that, instead, the Commission dismissed the claim for lack of jurisdiction; that this was wrong, and that, since appellee has no other adequate remedy, mandamus should issue. The Commission, on the other hand, insist that the duty imposed by section 204 is judicial and not ministerial, and that the application of the section requires construction and interpretation by it as a condition precedent to the issue of the certificate, and that it fully heard and decided the claim on the merits.

Section 204 defines “carrier” to mean a railroad “engaged as a common carrier in general transportation, and [which] competed for traffic, or connected, with a railroad under Federal control, and which sustained a deficit in its railway operating income for that portion (as a whole) of the period of Federal control during which it operated its own railroad.”

The Commission was required by the act to compare the results of the period when the road was operated by itself with those of the test period, and, if tes favorable during the former, i. e., the period of federal control, to certify an award as provided in the statute. The Commission considered appellee’s petition and reported the facts in relation to its status, operation, and general character of business, including the fact that, contrary to the general custom of railroads at the time in question, appellee failed to avail itself of the increased rates provided by the Director General’s order, and that the effect of this, and of this alone, was to so decrease appel-lee’s net railway operating income during the federal control period as compared with the test period as to create a small deficit. But the loss thus sustained, the Commission reported, was compensated by a gain to the same extent to the lumber company to which it belonged, and so considered was not a real but a fictitious loss which it would be discriminatory and unfair to require the government to pay. As a result of this conclusion, the Commission declared that appellee was not a carrier within the terms of section 204, and likewise, for the reasons stated, was not entitled to its benefits.

tí will thus appear that the grounds on which the Commission rejected the application were twofold: First, that appellee was not engaged in general transportation, and, second, that its self-imposed losses, accruing as they did to the benefit of its owner, were not reimbursable under the act; in other words, that, under the facts as applied to the law, appellee did not come within the terms of the aet and was not entitled to the certificate provided in the statute. If this amounted to a dismissal of the claim for want of jurisdiction, and if the admitted facts clearly show that appellee was fairly and squarely within the terms of section 204, and if it be decided that the function of the Commission was purely administrative, it would follow that the lower court was right. If, on the other hand, it be decided that the aet imposed on the Commission the power to deeide a justiciable controversy, and if the Commission’s report shows that it considered and decided the claim on the merits, the decision, whether right or wrong, would be impregnable to attack by mandamus.

A similar question was considered by us in United States ex rel. Abilene & S. R. Co. v. Commission, 56 App. D. C. 40, 8 F.(2d) 901, and there we said, referring to section 204, that the duty of the Commission to ascertain and certify the amount of the deficit to the Secretary of the Treasury was judicial and not ministerial, and therefore not subject to control by mandamus. And still later in Cripple Creek, etc., R. Co. v. Commission, 56 App. D. C. 168, 11 F.(2d) 554, we held that the Commission’s refusal to treat combined lines as a “system of transportation” under section 204, though erroneous, was beyond the jurisdiction of courts to correct by mandamus.

Obviously, if we adhere to the position taken by us in these two cases, we shall be obliged to hold that the lower court was in error. But we are told we should not, because since they were decided the Supreme Court has construed section 204 differently in the case of Continental Tie & L. Co. v. U. S., 286 U. S. 290, 52 S. Ct. 529, 530, 76 L. Ed. 1111.

This seems to have been the view taken by the court below.

We have therefore examined the Continental Tie Case to determine whether it goes the length contended for. We think not. That case involved the question whether a [182]*182payment received under section 204 by a short-line railroad — very much, we are told, of the same general character as. appellee— was income under the Revenue Act qf 1918, and also whether, if income, it should have been returned by the taxpayer railroad in its 1920 tax return. We quote the part of the opinion which is said to control:

“The petitioner kept its accounts upon the accrual basis. The government insists, and the Court of Claims held, that the right to payment having ripened in 1920, the taxpayer should have returned the estimated award under section 204 as income for that year.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 180, 62 App. D.C. 92, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-commerce-commission-v-united-states-ex-rel-arcata-mad-river-cadc-1933.