St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Ry. v. Brownsville Navigation District

304 U.S. 295, 58 S. Ct. 868, 82 L. Ed. 1357, 1938 U.S. LEXIS 1078
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 16, 1938
Docket300
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 304 U.S. 295 (St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Ry. v. Brownsville Navigation District) 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
St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Ry. v. Brownsville Navigation District, 304 U.S. 295, 58 S. Ct. 868, 82 L. Ed. 1357, 1938 U.S. LEXIS 1078 (1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Butler

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Respondents applied to the United States court for the southern district of. Texas to obtain a writ of mandamus 1 *297 commanding petitioners to transport certain traffic and to furnish and continue for all time to furnish cars for transportation of freight between the Port of Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Mexico. Petitioners by pleas to *298 the jurisdiction asserted that the questions raised were essentially administrative and that therefore resort must first be had to the Interstate Commerce Commission. The district court heard evidence on the issues tendered by the pleas, sustained the petitioners’ contention and dismissed the case. The circuit court of appeals reversed. 91 F. 2d 502. This Court granted a writ of certiorari.

The city of Brownsville is on the north side of the Rio Grande opposite Matamoros. The respondent Navigation District, called the “Port of Brownsville,” was incorporated under Texas law; 2 it includes a channel extending from the Gulf of Mexico about 17 miles to a. turning basin which is located outside, and about five miles from the center of, Brownsville. The Port has no locomotive or cars; it has facilities at the basin to load and unload vessels, and a railroad track extending from the básin about a mile, to junction, at the boundary of the district, with a short branch or spur of petitioner, the Port Isabel & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company. Each of the other two respondents is engaged in business at the port as stevedore, freight broker, and forwarding agent. All the respondents are directly interested in the transportation of freight between the Port of Brownsville and points in Mexico via Matamoros.

Petitioner Thompson, as trustee in proceedings under § 77 of the Bankruptcy Act, operates the St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Railway and other lines of the Missouri Pacific System for transportation between gulf ports in Texas and Rio Grande crossings into Mexico. The Port Isabel, in all about 26 miles long, extends from the gulf to tracks operated by the trustee in the city, of Brownsville. The Brownsville & Matamoros Bridge Company has a bridge and railroad tracks connecting the trustee’s tracks in Brownsville with the National Rail *299 ways of Mexico in Matamoros. Shipments between the Port of Brownsville and Matamoros must move about a mile over the tracks of the Navigation District, 7 .4 miles over the Port Isabel, 2.49 miles over the trustee’s tracks and 1.24 miles over the Bridge Company’s rails.

There is ho joint rate applicable to transportation between the Port and Matamoros or any other point in Mexico over the tracks of petitioners, the Bridge Company and any railway in Mexico. The service performed by each petitioner is covered by a switching charge specified in its_tariff filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. Neither the tariff of the Port Isabel nor that of the trustee contains any rule, regulation or provision relating to the furnishing of cars for the transportation in question. The Port Isabel performs the initial movement of traffic from the Port; it has no cars or means to acquire .any. The Mexican National Railways are the initial carriers of tráffic in the other direction; they refuse to permit their cars to leave Mexico.

The trustee furnishes cars for transportation from the ports of Corpus Christi and Houston to gateways at Rio Grande crossings, including Laredo and Brownsville; in all that transportation he has substantial line hauls. But he refuses to permit cars delivered by him to the Port Isabel and taken by the lattér to the basin for unloading to be reloaded for shipment into Mexico, and refuses to deliver to the Port Isabel cars under his control to be loaded at the Port; and if loaded them for transportation into Mexico he refuses to switch them en route. Without regard to ownership, control or distribution, the Port Isabel is willing to switch cars between the Port and its junction with the trustee’s tracks.

After the district' court dismissed this case, respondents filed with the Commission a complaint alleging that petitioners, principally by their failure to furnish equipment, refused to permit traffic to move between the Port and Matamoros, in violation of §§ 1 arid 6 of the Interstate *300 Commerce Act, and that the trustee’s refusal to permit such use of his equipment, while permitting it between other ports and Mexico, violates § 3 of the Act. They prayed an order requiring petitioners to furnish equipment and to remove the prejudice and preference alleged. After hearing by the Commission -but before its report, the circuit court of appeals announced its decision, in which it held that the district court has jurisdiction to grant mandamus, notwithstanding the petition for the writ alleged unreasonable and prejudicial discrimination against the Port of Brownsville. After this Court granted the writ of certiorari, respondents filed a petition with the Commission asking it to defer acting upon their allegations of violation of §§ 1 and 6. And the Commission did limit its decision to alleged violations of § 3. It held that the refusal of the trustee to furnish cars was not unduly prejudicial or preferential.

The respondents do not complain that petitioners refuse to switch cars furnished by other carriers or by the Port itself. Their grievance is not that petitioners refuse tp do the switching covered by their tariffs at the specified rates; it is that in applying their tariffs, they discriminate against the Port of Brownsville in order to divert traffic to other ports and gateways so that the trustee may obtain substantial line hauls. The Act extends to transportation only so far as it takes place in this country. Petitioners are not bound by any law, regulation, or tariff to furnish cars for transportation in Mexico. But that freedom from obligation does not imply that, in furnishing equipment for transportation beyond the boundary, petitioners may unreasonably discriminate between shippers, places, or classes of traffic within the United States. Cf. Lewis-Simas-Jones Co. v. Southern Pac. Co., 283 U. S. 654.

As the Port Isabel does not own or control any freight cars, respondents may not have relief on the ground, that the failure of that carrier to furnish them is'unreasonable *301 discrimination. As the trustee participates in traffic between the basin and points in Mexico only to the extent of an intermediate switching movement, he is not, as a matter of law, bound to furnish cars even for the part of the transportation that is performed within the United States. The question, whether the discrimination in the application of his tariff covering the switching movement is unreasonable, is an administrative one.

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Bluebook (online)
304 U.S. 295, 58 S. Ct. 868, 82 L. Ed. 1357, 1938 U.S. LEXIS 1078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-brownsville-mexico-ry-v-brownsville-navigation-district-scotus-1938.