United States v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

288 U.S. 490, 53 S. Ct. 406, 77 L. Ed. 914, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 969
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 13, 1933
Docket470
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 288 U.S. 490 (United States v. Northern Pacific Railway 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. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 288 U.S. 490, 53 S. Ct. 406, 77 L. Ed. 914, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 969 (1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Roberts

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal brings here for review a decree of a district court of three judges, 60 F. (2d) 302, setting aside and enjoining the enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission establishing rates on petroleum from the midcontinent field .to destinations in western Minnesota and North Dakota.

*492 The appellees’ petition charged that the Commission exceeded its powers, denied a fair hearing, and abused its discretion in refusing to reopen the case and to receive proof of changes in economic conditions arising after the closing of the evidence. The District Court held against the appellees as respects the first two charges, but found that the third was sustained arid therefore set aside the order. This the appellants «ay was error. The appellees, however, assert that the allegations and proofs as to changed conditions support the decree; and urge, in the alternative, that if this position be untenable, the action of the court was required.for the other reasons recited in the petition.

. The complaint, filed July 15, 1925, alleged the existing rates were unreasonable. A hearing was held in October, 1925, and a report and order entered March 5, 1928, fixing rates effective June 14, 1928. A rehearing was granted June 10, 1929, the case was reheard, and the reqord closed on January 15, 1930. A petition of the carriers that the case be reopened and consolidated with certain others was denied April 14, 1930. The final report and order were entered December 1, 1931, prescribing rates to become effective March 15, 1932., On February 3, 1932, the aippellees presented a petition praying that the Commission vacate the order or postpone its effective date, grant a rehearing, and reopen the case for the admission of further evidence to show a change in economic conditions since the record had been closed. This was dismissed, and the present suit was then instituted.

The appellees urge that the decision in Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. United States, 284 U. S. 248, requires us to hold that the Commission’s refusal to reopen the proceeding was an abuse of discretion. That, case, however, exhibited a substantially different state of facts. There the Commission conducted an investigation, pursuant to' the Hoch-Smith Resolution, touching the' *493 entire structure of rates on export grain from the territory west of the Mississippi River and from Illinois. Here the inquiry embraced .rates from origin points to a relatively small destination area. The diminution,> of carrier revenue consequent upon the new rates, while substantial, is far less than that effected by the order in the Santa Fe proceeding. In .that case the record was closed in September, 1928, the matter submitted on argument July 1, 1929, and a report and order entered JulyU, 1930, establishing rates to be charged on and after October 1, 1930. The effective date was postponed from time to time on account of the difficulty of adjusting the tariffs in accordance with the order. In September, 1930, the carriers requested a rehearing. Prior to action thereon the railroads brought' to the Commission’s, attention their changed financial condition due to the economic'depression. In November, 1930, a rehearing was denied. On February 18, 1931, a second petition for rehearing was presented, which was in effect a bill of review.. It averred that due to the nation-wide depression which had its inception in November; 1929, the facts exhibited by the record as closed in September, 1928, were utterly, unrepre-. sentative of conditions existing at . the effective date of the order some two and one-half years later.

In the proceedings under review the record was closed January 15, 1930. The economic depression, then begun, grew in intensity throughout that and the following year. During the pendency of the case appellees filed several petitions for rehearing, that of May 4, 1928 reciting that the carriers were unable under existing' rates to earn the fair return contemplated by § 15a of the Act. Between January 15, 1930 and February 3, 1932 no application based on changed economic conditions was made to the Commission, and that body was allowed to consider the record and prepare a report without notice of any claim in that behalf.

*494 ' The Commission is not bound to allow existing unreasonable rates to' stand solely because revision will in some degree adversely affect carriers suffering from economic depression. The decision in the Santa Fe case is not to be extended to require a rehearing in every rate case for changed, economic conditions, however insignificant the effect of the order on carrier revenue. The rule announced, while intended to safeguard substantial rights of the railroáds, may not be invoked where its application would disenable the Commission to protect the interest of1 the public.

Though the order substantially reduced the carriers’ revenues, we do not consider the merits of the application for rehearing, as we think the carriers’ lack of diligence in bringing this matter to the Commission’s ‘ attention deprived them of any equity to complain of the refusal of their petition. They sat silent and took the chance of a favorable decision on the record as made. They should not be permitted to reopen the case for the introduction of evidence long available and susceptible of production months before the Commission acted. The denial of a rehearing, in view of this delay, was not such an abuse of discretion as would warrant setting aside the order.

This conclusion requires the reversal of the decree, unless, as the appellees contend, it may be sustained upon .the other grounds presented to the District Court. We turn then to these aspects of the controversy.

The complaint attacked the existing rates as unreasonable, and did not charge undue preference or prejudice; but, it is said, the Commission based its order solely upon prejudice due to-'the relation of these rates with others in force in adjacent territory. The argument is that the relief granted was different' from that invoked and so beyond the Commission’s power. The appellees also claim that when they discovered that the Commission *495 was proceeding upon the basis of relationship, rather than reasonableness, they vainly sought an opportunity to show that the rates used as comparatives were unreasonably low, and therefore of no probative value. The Commission’s dismissal of certain petitions for. further hearing ' upon consolidated records, presently to be described, is represented as a denial of a fair hearing, in that the carriers were prevented from showing the impropriety of the comparisons used. The examination of these contentions requires a detailed statement with respect to this and other proceedings before the Commission. .

Prior to the ñling of the complaint in this case (No. 17304) the Commission was engaged in an investigation (No. 15584) of rates on petroleum from midcontinent territory to western trunk line destinations and Indiana, Illinois, and northern Michigan.

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Bluebook (online)
288 U.S. 490, 53 S. Ct. 406, 77 L. Ed. 914, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-scotus-1933.