United States v. Terminal Railroad Assn. of St. Louis

236 U.S. 194, 35 S. Ct. 408, 59 L. Ed. 535, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1750
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 23, 1915
DocketNos. 452, 572, and ___, Original
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 236 U.S. 194 (United States v. Terminal Railroad Assn. of St. Louis) 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. Terminal Railroad Assn. of St. Louis, 236 U.S. 194, 35 S. Ct. 408, 59 L. Ed. 535, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1750 (1915).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was decided April 22, 1912 (224 U. S. 383), and the question now is, Was due effect given to the mandate of -this court? A clear understanding will come by the merest outline of some of the legal proceedings preceding and following that decision! The decree which was reversed was entered by a circuit court composed of four judges in accordance with the Expedition Act. The cir *196 cuit courts having been abolished when the decision of this court was ■ rendered, the mandate was directed to the appropriate district court. There the United States filed the mandate and asked an interlocutory decree giving the time fixed by .this court to take the steps which were decided to be necessary to make the organization of the defendants a legal one under the Anti-Trust Act. The defendants presented a statement of what was proposed by them to be done in compliance with the decree of this court to accomplish the result stated, and over some objection on the part of the United States an interlocutory decree was entered which in many respects accepted as sufficient what was proposed to be done by the defendants. On the taking of those, steps and after a full hearing of the parties the court announced its purpose to enter a final decree not following in some respects a proposed form of final decree suggested by the United States. Thereupon the United States by petition for prohibition filed in this court asserted the entire want of jurisdiction in the court as constituted to entertain the enforcement of the mandate, as that could only be done.by a court composed like the one which had rendered the judgment, that isA one composed under the Expedition Act. The prohibition was granted (226 U. S. 420), and jurisdiction to enforce the mandate was assumed by a court of three circuit judges sitting in the district court in pursuance of the Expedition Act. In that court after a hearing as to a proposed interlocutory-decree and as the result of steps taken by the defendants to comply with the decision of this court which were deemed sufficient for that purpose, a final decree was entered on March 2, 1914. This decree was objected to by the. United States because of the insufficiency, at least in form, of the steps taken by the defendants for the purpose of complying with the decree of this court and of the failure by the court below to insert in the decree various clauses suggested by the United *197 States and which it was insisted were necessary to give effect to the mandate of this court. For these reasons the United States on March 27, 1914, appealed, and such appeal is now before us and constitutes No. 452 referred to in the caption.

The day after this appeal (March 28) the defendants moved .to modify the decree by striking out the first paragraph on two grounds: First, because it referred to the Terminal Company as illegally organized in violation of the Anti-Trust Act, although under the supervision and approval of the court such steps had been taken as were directed by this court tó remove all objection to the organization, of the Company. Second, because the restrictions imposed on the business which the Terminal Company might lawfully do, were susceptible of being construed as forbidding the Company to carry on as ancillary to its strictly terminal work a transportation business originating upon one part of its line and destined exclusively to other points on such line. And the necessity of not prohibiting the Company from doing such work, the petition to modify asserted, was shown by the fact that “on account of the necessary extent of its tracks, covering an area of seventy-five to one hundred square miles, -it is frequently called upon to take traffic from one point on its line to another point on its line, completing the entire movement on its own tracks:” In addition the petition to modify alleged as follows:

“As an illustration: The Terminal Association operates in the early morning and late in the afternoon some trains to transport laborers engaged in industrial factories from Granite City, Illinois, to the different stations on its line, in St. Louis, Missouri. This it is prohibited from doing under the decree.
“Another illustration: Many factories are located upon the Terminal Association’s tracks on both sides of the Mississippi river. Under this order the defendant, Ter *198 minal Association, would be restrained from accepting either raw material or finished products shipped from one such factory to another, although it could, with great convenience to the public, render such service.”

At about the same date petitions to be allowed to intervene were filed on behalf of the Evens & Howard Fire Brick Company, Union Sand and Material Company and fifty-three others, all based upon the ground that the petitioners would suffer great injury by the serious loss occasioned to their business or the destruction thereof which would arise from forbidding the Terminal Company to engage in transportation moving exclusively from one point on its line to another point on its line. Some of these petitions alleged that the raw material was prepared at one point and the manufactured product made by using the raw material at another and that consequently an impossibility of continuing business would result from the inability to transport from one place to another. All these petitions prayed a modification of the order so as to make it clear that it did not forbid the Terminal Company as an incident to its purely terminal business to carry on the business in question. On June 20 the petition of the Terminal Company to modify and the petitions of the various parties to be allowed to intervene and praying a modification came on for hearing; the United States opposing the allowance of all. In support of its petition affidavits were filed by the Terminal Company showing the movement of many thousands of cars annually in the business referred to and giving the names of very many of those concerned in the movement. The prayer of the Terminal Company for a modification was refused without passing on its merits, the court expressly holding that it had no jurisdiction to do so, as the previous appeal taken by the United States from the final decree had transferred the case to this court. The petitions of intervention of the other parties.over the objection of the United States *199 were permitted to be filed, but after filing, the prayer to modify was also in each of said cases denied on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction because of the appeal taken by the United States. From this decree all the defendants to the original suit appealed and the record referred to in the caption as No. 572 is the one embracing such appeal.

In this court the Evens and Howard Fire Brick Company and the Union Sand &

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Bluebook (online)
236 U.S. 194, 35 S. Ct. 408, 59 L. Ed. 535, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-terminal-railroad-assn-of-st-louis-scotus-1915.