Southern Pacific Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission

219 U.S. 433, 31 S. Ct. 288, 55 L. Ed. 283, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1646
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1911
Docket527
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 219 U.S. 433 (Southern Pacific Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission) 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
Southern Pacific Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 219 U.S. 433, 31 S. Ct. 288, 55 L. Ed. 283, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1646 (1911).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

Whether the court below was right in refusing to enjoin at the suit of the railway companies who are appellants the enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission is the 1 : general subject'for consideration on this record.

When that which is superfluous, is put out of view, it will come to pass that every substantial controversy which the case presents will be disposed of by-determining what was the character of the order made by the Commission; that is to say, what was the power which that body exerted in .making the order in question. We state at once the pertinent facts.

The Willamette Valley, about 150 miles long, lies in the western part of the State of Oregon, south of the Columbia River, and through it there flows in a northerly direction the Willamette River, which empties into the Columbia River. Portland is on the • Willamette River at or near where that river empties into the Columbia River. From *438 Cornwallis, on the Willamette River, a point' about 97 miles south of Portland, that is, about tfyat distance from where the Willamette empties into the Columbia, the Willamette is navigable, and there is navigation iron! Portland to the sea by means of the Willamette and the Columbia Rivers. The rails of the Oregon and California Railroad from Portland pass throúgh the Willamette Valley, paralleling the Willamette River at various distances, and extend to the Oregon and California state line, where that road connects with the Southern Pacific Company. The latter has for a number of years-bperated the Oregon and California as part of its system.

In November, 1907, a complaint was filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission on behalf of the Western ■Oregon Lumber Manufacturers’ Association and- others, concerning a rate of $5 per ton, in carload lots, on:“green common rough fir lath and lumber and forest products” from Willamette Valley points to San Francisco and bay points, fixed in á tariff filed by the Southern Pacific Company with the Commission and which became operative in April, 1907. It was charged that the rate complained of was unreasonable in and of itself and discriminatory. It was averred that from about 1898 there had existed a rate of $3-10 for carrying the same character of lumber between the points named; that upon the faith of this rate and the belief that it would not' be changed large amounts of capital had been invested in lumber mills in the Willamette Valley; that the people in that valley were dependent upon the lumber industry, and that such-industry would be destroyed and the population be detrimentally affected if the new rate of $5 per ton was continued to be charged. It was alleged that the $3.10 rate was reasonable in and of itself, and that the rate had been increased without just cause upon the theory that the lumber interest in the Willamette Valley was prosperous, and that hence the traffic could- stand the increase. The *439 railroad companies answered, setting up the reasonableness of the $5 rate. They in effect averred that the $3.10 rate, which had previously prevailed, was unreasonably ,Iow and that it had been fixed solely for the purpose of enabling lumber from the Willamette Valley to reach a market in San Francisco and bay points, which it could not have done if a just and reasonable rate had been exacted. This condition, it was alleged, had arisen from the fact that from Portland and other points on the Columbia River and Puget Sound there was a highly developed lumber industry accessible to San Francisco and bay points by water at rates so low as to have absolutely excluded the shipping of any lumber from the Willamette Valley by rail to such points, unless a very low rate had been fixed by the ^railroad companies to meet the water-borne lumber traffic, and that there was no market which was commercially available for the Willamette Valley lumber other than that of San Francisco and bay points when the $3.10 rate was fixed. The complaint and the answer which we thus state ¿ire not in the record, but we have summarized their contents from a statement made concerning the same by the Interstate Commerce Commission in its answer in this suit filed in the Circuit Court.

It is certain that for a number of years the $3.10 rate was applied both to shipments of lumber not only from the Willamett^ Valley, but also from Portland. Several years, however, before the going into effect of the $5 rate fixed in the tariff of April, 1907, a tariff fixing that rate had been made applicable to Portland. During the hearing before the Commission the Portland lumber interests intervened and asked that if the $3.10 rate was restored to Willamette Valley it should also be restored to Portland, so as to prevent discrimination against Portland.

After a hearing the Commission in June, 1908, filed its report and made an order adverse to the railway companies, Commissioners Knapp and Harlan dissenting. 14 *440 I. C. C. Rep. 61. It suffices to say that the order entered directed the railroad to cease from charging the $5 rate complained of from Willamette Valley points and fixed as a proper rate from certain points in the valley the sum of, $3.40 a ton, and from the remaining points in the valley the sum of $3.66. Although some of the points embraced by the order were within a few miles of Portland that city was not given the benefit of the reduction, and therefore remained subject to the $5 rate.

The railroad companies, refusing to yield obedience to. the order, commenced this suit in equity in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of California to have the order set aside and to enjoin.its enforcement. After a demurrer was sustained, an amended bill was filed. By this bill it was averred that the jate of $5 fixed by the tariff which the Commission had set aside was a just and reasonable rate per se, and that the rate fixed by the Commission was so unreasonably low as to be unjust and unreasonable. This was alleged to be the case not only in view of the great increase in the cost of the operation of the road since the time when the $3.10 rate was put in force, but also because of the normally excessive cost of maintenance and operation resulting from the mountainous country which the road traversed, subjecting to an unusual expense for repairing damage ’done by floods and freshets, the high grades requiring the application of increased motive power, and permitting even with such power the movement of only unusually short trains, thereby causing a much greater average expense. Referring to the rate of $3.10 which had previously prevailed, the circumstances connected with its establishment were detailed. It was alleged that the rate was unreasonably low when fixed and was .so fixed by the railroad solely with the object of encouraging the lumber industry in the Willamette Valley and to enable it to reach a market, a result which otherwise could not have been attained. *441 The averments on this subject reiterated the statements made in the answer before the Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
219 U.S. 433, 31 S. Ct. 288, 55 L. Ed. 283, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-co-v-interstate-commerce-commission-scotus-1911.