United States v. Thompson

58 F. Supp. 213, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1687
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedDecember 7, 1944
DocketNo. 2839
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 F. Supp. 213 (United States v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Thompson, 58 F. Supp. 213, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1687 (E.D. Mo. 1944).

Opinion

HULEN, District Judge.

This case is before the Court on motion of the defendant to dismiss the complaint. The complaint is based upon an alleged violation of an order issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission on January 11, 1944, to take effect on January 13, 1944, known as Service Order No. 178.1

Service Order No. 178 purports to have been issued in conformity with United States Code Annotated, Title 49, section 1, paragraph 15. In substance, the complaint charges violation of Service Order Ño. 178 by the defendant in the shipment of empty beer containers in refrigerator cars on five separate occasions. A penalty of $500 is sought for each violation.

Defendant contends that authority, if any, for the issuance of Service Order No. 178 is subparagraph d, paragraph 15, section 1, Title 49.2 This the Government denies, but by brief concedes its willingness to meet defendant on the question thus pre[215]*215sented. On the issue thus narrowed, the defendant contends that Service Order No. 178 is invalid for the following reasons:

1. The Commission did not specify the emergency that, in its opinion, existed;

2. It did not set out the section of the country in which it was supposed to believe the emergency existed ;

3. The order is for no specified time and is, in effect, permanent in character; and

4. The provisions of subparagraph d of said paragraph 15 do not empower the Commission to make an order similar to that on which this suit is based.

We are of the opinion that Service Order No. 178 is not invalid for the reasons assigned in paragraphs 1, 2 and 4 above set out. It would have been more in keeping with the law under which the order was issued had the language of the order more specifically and carefully followed the Act. We think a fair and reasonable interpretation of the order leaves no doubt as to the finding by the Commission of the existence of an emergency and the cause of the emergency. The Commission, under the circumstances referred to in the order, was not required to stand idly by until the emergency had become so great as to convince all who might be affected by the order of the existence of the emergency. The finding of the Commission that the use of refrigerator cars for * hauling nonperishable freight is diminishing the use of such cars “actually needed for other transportation” is sufficient basis for the finding of an emergency. The finding by the Commission of the existence of the emergency is a finding of fact which this Court is without authority to overrule, under the circumstances presented by the pleadings. Service Order No. 178 nowhere refers to any section or sections of the United States as a territory, by that (section) particular term. We think a better practice in formulating the order would have been for the Commission to have used terms conforming to the law under which it was acting. However, no reasonable person could be left in doubt, after a reading of the Service Order as to the territory wherein the emergency is found to exist, because the Service Order,, instead of reciting that “every section of the country” or “the whole of the United States,” used the language “No common carrier by railroad, subject to the Interstate Commerce Act, shall furnish or supply a refrigerator car or car loaded with * * * empty beer containers.” If there was any section of the country to which the Commission did not intend the order to apply because of the lack of emergency there existing, then the Commission would have no [216]*216authority in such section. By the language used, the Commission made the existence of the emergency co-extensive throughout the country with its authority. We are not in accord with the contention of the defendant in this case that the Commission was without power to find an emergency exists in every section of the country.

We find no merit under the fourth assignment of defendant’s brief in its attack on the complaint in this case.

The defendant’s third assignment, that “the order is for no specified time and is, in effect, permanent in character”, and therefore invalid, presents a more complex problem. We think the language of the act wherein the Commission is authorized by order to “give directions for preference or priority in transportation * * * for such periods as it may determine ” sufficient to require compliance by the Commission in the issuance of its order and that means the order should state the period during which the order shall be in effect.3 If we look further and seek a reason for this provision in the law providing that the order shall be “for such periods” as the Commission may determine, it occurs to us that a cause, and a justifiable one, may well have been that Congress, in passing the Act, decided to place upon the Commission the burden of reexamining their orders at the end of the “period” for which the orders were made, in order to determine if the emergency justifying the issuance of the order still existed. Abstractly stated, section 1, paragraph IS, Title 49, U.S.C.A., gives to the Interstate Commerce Commission unusual, drastic, and in some respects dictatorial powers. Powers of such character delegated to the Commission by this law can and should be exercised only on the basis that they are necessary to meet an emergency— an emergency that does not admit of time for notice and hearing to those whose property would be affected by the order. Consequently the requirement appears in the law, and in our opinion properly so, that the Commission must find the existence of an emergency as a foundation for the exercise of any of the emergency powers to be exercised under the act. It would seem to follow that orders under the powers thus delegated, being justified only because of the existence of an emergency, the continuance in effect of such orders can only be justified because of and so long as the emergency continues.4 Hence .the provision in the law that the emergency order issued would be for such “period” as in the determination of the Commission would meet the emergency. There should be not only the relationship and consistency in the order of the finding of the existence of an emergency, as a basis for its original issuance, but the duration of the order should bear on its face a relationship and consistency with reasonable expectation, based on the judgment of the Commission, of the duration or “period” of continuance of the emergency. If the order is for a period that is. limited, it bears that relationship and shows such a consideration and finding by the Commission. Conversely if the order is without a period and to run indefinitely, containing no reference to duration, such an order on its face is inconsistent with the continued existence of the emergency which brought it into existence and fails to show any consideration was given by the Commission to duration or “period” of the emergency.

The law places the burden on the Commission in the first instance of determining the existence of an emergency as a basis for the exercise of the extraordinary powers conferred by the Act, without notice or hearing, and for the issuance of the order. It is apparent from the Act that it was intended that the burden should remain with the Commission to determine the duration of the emergency.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F. Supp. 213, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-thompson-moed-1944.