Pennsylvania Railroad v. Towers

245 U.S. 6, 38 S. Ct. 2, 62 L. Ed. 117, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 1844
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 15, 1917
Docket31
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 245 U.S. 6 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. Towers) 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
Pennsylvania Railroad v. Towers, 245 U.S. 6, 38 S. Ct. 2, 62 L. Ed. 117, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 1844 (1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Day

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action in the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, Maryland, to enjoin the Public Service Commission of Maryland from enforcing an order to sell commutation tickets at certain rates specified. The injunction was refused, and on appeal the Court of Appeals of Maryland affirmed the decree and held that although the order fixing the rates declared the same to be *8 in force for ten years, there should be reserved to the railroad company the right to apply to the Commission after the lapse of a reasonable time for a rescission or modification of its order if experience demonstrated that the revenue derived under the tariff as established by the Commission was not properly compensatory for the services performed. 126 Maryland, 59.

The order of the Commission required the Penrisylvania Railroad Company, lessee of the Northern Central Railway, to sell tickets for the transportation of passengers between Baltimore and Parkton within the. State of Maryland on the line of the Northern Central Railway.

A table appearing in the opinion of the Court of Appeals shows the relative rates under the former schedules and the new order of the Public Service Commission to be as follows:

Rates as per SchedRates under Order

Rates Prior to Nov. 25, 19.Í4. ule piled NoV. 25, 1914. P. S. Com.,. Dec. 23, 1914. ■

1: Round trip, 10 day, 2Mc. per M. Round trip, no limit, 2Mc. per M. Round trip, 2Mc. per M.

2: Exc. 2-10 days, 2M<>. per M. Discontinued. No ruling made.

3: 10-strip ticket, 1 yr., 1 8/10c. per M. 10-trip, 3 mos., 2Me. per M. 10-strip, 3 mos. 2c. per M.

4: 60-trip 1 mo., 2c. for first 3 M., Me- for ea. addi. M M. 60-trip, 1 mo. former rate plus 25c. flat. 60-trip, 1' mo. former ' rate plus 25c.

5: 100-trip, 1 yr. at double 60-trip. Discontinued. 100-trip, 4 mos., former rate, plus $1.

6: 180-trip 3 mos. same as 4, less 10% 180-trip, 3 mos. at 3 times 60-trip. 180-trip, 3 mos., form* er rate plus 75c.

7: 46-trip School, 1 mo., 46/60 of 60-trip. 46-trip School, 1 mo., 46/60 of 60-trip. 46-trip Sehool, 1 mo., 46/60 of 60-trip.

The attack upon the order of the Commission in this court is based upon the contention that its effect is to take the property of the railroad company without due process of law, contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment to *9 the Constitution of the United States. It is also averred in the bill that the order, if enforced, will work a discrimination against interstate travel in favor of travel within the State, and is otherwise unreasonable and void.

The Court of Appeals of Maryland stated the question to be whether it is within the power of the Public Service Commission to require the establishment of a schedule of commutation rates by the railroad company, not where no such rates had theretofore been established, but where a new system of commutation rates had been proposed by the railroad company and submitted to the Commission. Whether commutation rates should be established was declared to be a question of policy to be decided by the company. The court found authority in the Commission under the statutes of Maryland to revise commutation rates where such rates had already been established by the action of the company. We must accept this definition of authority in the Commission, so far as the state law is concerned, and direct our inquiry to the federal question presented.

The question, as counsel for plaintiff in error states it, is whether a state legislature, either directly or through the medium, of a public service commission, under the guise of regulating commerce, may compel carriers engaged in both interstate and intrastate commerce to establish and maintain intrastate rates at less than both the interstate and intrastate standard and legally .established maxima. It is asserted that there is no constitutional authority to compel railroad companies to continue the sale of commutation or special class tickets at rates less than the legally established standard or normal one-way single passenger fare upon terms more favorable than those extended to the single one-way traveler.

To maintain this proposition plaintiff in error relies upon and quotes largely from the opinion of this court in Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co. v. Smith, 173 *10 U. S. 684. In that case a majority of this court held a statute of the State of Michigan to be invalid. A previous statute of the State had fixed a maximum passenger rate of three cents per mile. The statute in controversy required the issuing of mileage books for a thousand miles, good for two years, at a less rate. This court held that a maximum rate for passengers having been established, that rate was to be regarded as the reasonable compensation for the service, and that the fixing of the less rate to particular individuals was an arbitrary exercise of legislative power and an unconstitutional interference with the business of the carrier, the effect of which was to violate the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution by depriving the railroad company of its propery without due process of law and denying to it the equal protection of the law.

The Lake Shore Case did not involve, as does the present one, the power of a state commission to fix intrastate rates for commutation tickets where such rates had already been put in force by the railroad company of its own volition, and we confine ourselves to the precise question presented in this case, which involves the supervision of commutation rates when rates of that character have been voluntarily established by the carrier. The rates here involved are wholly intrastate. The power of the States to fix. reasonable intrastate rates is too well settled at this time to need further discussion or a citation of authority to support it.

In Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., 145 U. S. 263, this court held that a “party rate ticket” for the transportation of ten or more persons at a less rate than that charged a single individual did not make a discrimination against an individual charged more for the same service, or amount to an unjust or unreasonable discrimination within the meaning of the Act to Regulate Commerce. In the course of the opinion the *11 right to issue tickets at reduced rates good for limited periods upon the principle of commutation was fully recognized. See pp. 277, 278, 279, 280.

Having the conceded authority to regulate intrastate rates, we perceive no reason why such power may not be exercised through duly authorized commissions and rates fixed with reference to the particular character of the service to be rendered.

In Norfolk & Western Ry. Co. v. West Virginia, 236 U. S. 605, 608, after making reference to

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Bluebook (online)
245 U.S. 6, 38 S. Ct. 2, 62 L. Ed. 117, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 1844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-towers-scotus-1917.