United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co.

301 U.S. 402, 57 S. Ct. 804, 81 L. Ed. 1186, 1937 U.S. LEXIS 1159
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 17, 1937
Docket734
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 301 U.S. 402 (United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co.) 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
United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., 301 U.S. 402, 57 S. Ct. 804, 81 L. Ed. 1186, 1937 U.S. LEXIS 1159 (1937).

Opinion

Me. Justice Roberts

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from decrees of a specially constituted District Court 1 of three judges enjoining and setting aside orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission *404 which required certain carriers to cease and desist from spotting cars on industrial plant tracks as part of the service rendered under interstate line-haul rates and from granting allowances out of the line-haul rates to industries doing such spotting. The appellees are five industrial concerns affected by the orders. They contend that the spotting service in question is transportation within the meaning of the Interstate Commerce Act; that the performance of the service, or the payment of an allowance to an industry which itself performs it, is sanctioned by custom and practice and by previous adjudications of the Commission; and that line-haul rates were fixed in contemplation of the rendition of such service. They further charge the orders áre void because not supported by the Commission’s findings or the evidence.

Upon its own motion the Commission instituted an investigation known as “Ex Parte No. 104, Practices of Carriers affecting Operating Revenues or Expenses.” Part II of that proceeding had to do with terminal services. 2 Voluminous evidence was adduced largely consisting of testimony by operating officials of carriers and traffic representatives of shippers touching the service of spotting cars at points upon the systems of plant trackage maintained by large industries. The Commission’s report summarized its conclusions based on the evidence as to conditions at approximately two hundred industrial plants where spotting allowances were paid by the carriers and numerous plants where such services were performed by the carrier. The Commission found that line-haul rates had not been fixed to compensate the carriers for the performance of the service in question and that the railroads, after fixing their rates, had assumed a burden not previously borne by them. It found that § 15 (13) of the Act permitting allowances by carriers to those performing a portion of the service of transportation had been made the instrument of abuse by the pay *405 ment of unwarranted allowances and added: “When a carrier is prevented at its ordinary operating convenience from reaching points of loading or unloading within a plant, without interruption or interference by the desires of an industry or the disabilities of its plant, such as the manner in which the industrial operations are conducted, the arrangement or condition of its tracks, weighing service, or similar circumstances, . . . the service beyond the point of interruption or interference is in excess of that performed in simple switching or team-track delivery.” In conclusion, the report states that payment for or exemption of the cost of service performed beyond such points of interruption or interference is in violation of § 6, provides the means by which the industry enjoys a preferential service not accorded to shippers generally, dissipates the carrier’s funds and revenues, is not in conformity with the efficient or economical management contemplated by the Interstate Commerce Act and is not in the public interest. No orders were made upon the footing of the main report, but thereafter, Division 6 promulgated supplemental reports recapitulating the testimony touching particular plants and making findings with respect to each and the service rendered thereat. Upon the basis of these supplementary proceedings orders to cease and desist were entered. 3 The carriers thereupon gave notice of a revision of the applicable tariffs, cancelling allowances or withdrawing the spotting service. Each appellee filed a bill praying that the order affecting it be set aside and enforcement be restrained. The causes *406 were consolidated for hearing and were disposed of upon a single record in one opinion. Separate decrees were entered in the respective causes granting the requested relief. The appellants took a single appeal from all the decrees. We hold the Commission’s orders were lawful and should not have been set aside.

First. The appellees urge that the orders are fatally defective because the Commission failed to make the necessary quasi-judicial findings. They point out that the Commission held that an allowance furnished a means whereby an industry enjoyed a preferential service not accorded to shippers generally, and constituted a refund or remission of a portion of the rate for transportation in violation of § 6 (7) of the Interstate Commerce Act. They assert these conclusions are insufficient to support a cease and desist order because the Commission has not found, as it must to bottom an order on §§ 2, 3 and 15 (1) of the Act, 4 that the practice was unreasonable, unjustly preferential, unduly discriminatory, or otherwise unlawful. Respecting § 6 (7) 5 they say that as, by that section and § 15 (13), 6 allowances to shippers who perform a part of the service of transportation are permissible if tariffs setting forth the nature and amount of the allowance are duly filed, as they were in the present instance, it cannot be an unlawful refund or rebate for the carriers to make the allowances which the tariffs specify. If the findings were limited to the practices specified in the sections mentioned the position of the appellees would no doubt be sound, but the Commission has, in each case, found that the interchange tracks of the respective industries are reasonably convenient points for the receipt and delivery of interstate shipments and that the industry performs no service beyond those points of interchange *407 for which the carrier is compensated under its interstate line-haul rates. These findings are an adjudication by the Commission that the spotting service within the appellees’ plants is not transportation service which the carriers are bound to render in respect of receipt and delivery of freight. The statute contains this definition: “The term ‘transportation’ shall include ... all services in connection with the receipt, delivery, elevation, and transfer in transit ... of property transported.” 7 The Interstate Commerce Commission is authorized and required to enforce the provisions of the Act 8 and, after hearing, if it be of opinion that any regulation or practice of a carrier be unjust or unreasonable, or unjustly discriminatory, “or otherwise in violation of-the provisions of this act,” to determine what practice is or will be just, fair and reasonable' to be thereafter followed and to make an order that the carrier cease and desist from violation to the extent that the Commission finds violation does or will exist. 9

Second.

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Bluebook (online)
301 U.S. 402, 57 S. Ct. 804, 81 L. Ed. 1186, 1937 U.S. LEXIS 1159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-american-sheet-tin-plate-co-scotus-1937.