Public Service Commission v. New York Central Railroad

129 N.E. 455, 230 N.Y. 149, 14 A.L.R. 449, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 568
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 129 N.E. 455 (Public Service Commission v. New York Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Public Service Commission v. New York Central Railroad, 129 N.E. 455, 230 N.Y. 149, 14 A.L.R. 449, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 568 (N.Y. 1920).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

By its charter and by section 57 of the Railroad Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 49), the rate for way passengers on the New York Central railroad between Albany and Buffalo is limited to two cents a mile. Because of the Transportation Act of 1920 the company exacts and claims the right to exact a greater sum. After a hearing, on June 15, 1920, the public service commission directed the defendant to restore the two-cent rate on and after September 1, 1920. The latter refused to comply with this order and proceedings were instituted in the Supreme Court by the commission to obtain relief. These proceedings are now before us for review.

On December 28, 1917, under authority of an act of congress the president entered into possession, use, control and operation of the New York Central railroad and later fixed a rate of fare upon that road, for all passengers, at three cents a mile. This action was not justified by any of the ordinary rules of law. It can be sustained solely as the exercise of the war powers of the United States. And these powers are not limited by these ordinary rules. They are not bounded by any specific grant of authority. They are not unlike what in the states we call the police power, but the police power raised to the highest degree. They are such powers as are essential to preserve the very fife of the nation itself. When requisite to this end the liberty of the citizen — the protection of private property — the peace-time rights of the states must all yield to necessity.

That the Federal Control Act was a proper exercise of these powers — that as incident to the control of the roads, the question of fares intra as well as interstate was lodged exclusively in the president, has been held by the *153 Supreme Court. (Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. North Dakota, 250 U. S. 135.) The owners, however, did not lose their property. Their rights over it were suspended. And so as to the states. Any regulations they might have made as to the operation of the roads; any powers they possessed over intrastate traffic; any contract obligations vested in them, were merely suspended while the general government was in possession.

The time came when the necessity — the basis of the war power — ceased. The roads were to be returned to their owners, the states were once more to exercise their accustomed authority. Yet the process of re-adjustment was complex. And the power to seize the roads carried with it such reasonable power as was needed to bring about that re-adjustment in an orderly and equitable manner. The government had operated competing roads as part of one system. It had distributed cars as its needs required. It had increased the wages of employees. It had fixed the rates of fare both interstate and intrastate. The public good required that the normal state of affairs should be re-established with the least possible disturbance. Congress was well within its rights, therefore, when it provided that the tariffs in force on February 29, 1920, should continue until thereafter changed by state or federal authority, respectively, or pursuant to authority of law, and in no case should be reduced before September 1, 1920, without the approval of the interstate commerce commission.

Obviously the purpose of this clause so far as the states were concerned was to maintain fares until September first and thereafter until, in view of possible new conditions, affirmative action was taken by the state authorities. The thought was that in many instances local rates had been fixed by local commissions with a view to costs and earnings as they existed prior to 1917. Let them act if they desired to restore the old rates. It is equally obvious that when such action was taken is *154 immaterial if the actual reduction did not take effect until September first. In a case like that of the defendant where the rate is a condition of the charter or in a case where the rate is fixed by statute, there would seem to be less purpose in such a provision. Possibly it seemed wise in all cases to give the roads formal warning of reversion to the old state of affairs and an opportunity to make and file the necessary tariff schedules. In any event, Congress made no exception to the general rule.

Therefore, the New York Central Railroad Company might continue existing rates until some change was required by the state or federal authorities or pursuant to authority of law; or, as we construe the language as it affects New York, by the action of the interstate commerce commission, or the public service commission, within the limits of their respective powers, or by the action of some body having jurisdiction over the railroad and the subject-matter of rates. Such action, however, has now been taken. As we have said, the obligation of the defendant to carry way passengers for two cents a mile has not been destroyed. It was temporarily suspended. It was always subject to this possibility under the war power, if it became necessary. But when the suspension ceases, it revives with all its original force. The suspension does cease, in the language of the statute, when the three-cent rate is changed by state authority.” That authority over intrastate rates is the public service commission." Any charge made by a public service corporation in excess of that allowed by law is prohibited. (Public Service Commissions Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 48], sec. 26.) And if the commissioners shall after a hearing be of the opinion that any fare demanded is in violation of any. provisions of law, it may determine the proper fare to be thereafter charged. (Sec. 49.) This is precisely what the commission has done. True the defendant hitherto was authorized to charge three cents a mile for local fares between Albany and Buffalo. In a sense that fare was *155 allowed by law; but the law our statute refers to is our law still in existence, having all its ancient force when the war powers of the United States cease. And they do cease when our commission acts.

The Special Term, therefore, should have granted appropriate relief to the respondent, and we should now affirm the action of the Appellate Division, unless we are to be controlled by a further consideration. By stipulation there have been placed before us an order made on November 13, 1920, by the interstate commerce commission directing the New York Central and other railroads to desist from practicing undue discrimination against interstate and foreign commerce, found to exist, and to exact fares for intrastate traffic equal to fares established by the commission for interstate traffic; the opinion and findings of the commission on which this order was based, and the evidence taken before it. Although no statement is made as to the purpose of these papers, probably the theory of the appellant is that this order supersedes all prior orders made by the plaintiff, and even if the order of the Appellate Division was right at the time it was made, we should not now affirm it, and so in effect direct the defendant to do what is no longer in its power.

These papers were not and could not have been considered by the courts whose orders we review. They were not in existence when they acted.

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.E. 455, 230 N.Y. 149, 14 A.L.R. 449, 1920 N.Y. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-commission-v-new-york-central-railroad-ny-1920.