United States v. Wabash Railroad

321 U.S. 403, 64 S. Ct. 752, 88 L. Ed. 827, 1944 U.S. LEXIS 1239
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 27, 1944
Docket453
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 321 U.S. 403 (United States v. Wabash Railroad) 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. Wabash Railroad, 321 U.S. 403, 64 S. Ct. 752, 88 L. Ed. 827, 1944 U.S. LEXIS 1239 (1944).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Me. Chief Justice Stone,

announced by Mr. Justice Robeets.

The Interstate Commerce Commission, in a report and order supplemental to its main report in Ex parte 10Jf, Practices of Carriers Affecting Operating Revenues or Expenses, Part II, Terminal Services, 209 I. C. C. 11, has directed appellee railroads to cancel certain tariff supplements by which they propose to eliminate charges for spotting freight cars at the doors of factories in the industrial plant of appellee Staley Manufacturing Co., at Decatur, Illinois. The Commission based its order upon a finding that the performance without charge of the spotting service would be an unlawful preference because a departure from filed tariffs, in violation of § 6 (7) of the Interstate Commerce Act. 49 U. S. C. § 6 (7). On appellees’ petition the District Court for Southern Illinois, three judges sitting, 28 U. S. C. § 47, set aside the Commission’s order, 51 F. Supp. 141. It held that the Commission’s conclusion that the free spotting service rendered at the Staley *406 plant is an unlawful preference, was not supported by evidence, and that the Commission’s order must be set aside because it results in discrimination contrary to §§ 2 and 3 (1) of the Act, since it appears that similar free spotting service was being rendered to Staley’s competitors against which the Commission had issued no order. The case comes here on appeal under 28 U. S. C. §§ 47a, 345. The principal question for our decision is whether, as the District Court thought, the order is invalid because it results in a prohibited discrimination.

In Ex parte 104, the Commission initiated an extensive investigation of the service rendered by interstate railroads in spotting cars at points upon the systems of plant track-age maintained by large industries. After a study of the conditions at some two hundred industrial plants to which the rail carriers made allowances for spotting service performed by the industries, and at numerous other plants where the spotting service was rendered without charge by the carriers, the Commission found that the freight rates had not been so fixed as to compensate the carriers for such service and that the railroads by assuming to perform it, or pay for its performance by the industries, had assumed a burden not included in the transportation service compensated by the filed tariffs. And it concluded that the performance by the railroads of such service, free, or the payment to the industries of allowances for its performance by them, is in violation of § 6 (7) of the Act.

The Commission, in its main report in Ex parte 104, recognized that by railway tariff practice in this country the rates on carload traffic moving to or from any city or town apply to so-called “switching” or “terminal” districts and entitle each industry within such a district to have the traffic delivered directly to and taken from its site. By this method of delivery and by use of private tracks of the industry the railroads are saved the expense of maintaining xpgrg extensive terminal facilities, the service and cost *407 of delivery within the switching district being comparable to that of delivery on team tracks or sidings or at way stations. But in the case of large industries having extensive plant trackage the Commission found that cars hauled to the industry usually come to rest at nearby interchange tracks, after which the intraplant distribution of the cars is made at times and in a manner to serve the convenience of the industry rather than that of the carrier in completing its transportation service.

In determining in such circumstances the point at which the carrier service ends and the service in placing the cars so as to meet the convenience of the industry begins, the Commission stated that the line of demarcation “should be drawn at the point where the carrier is prevented from performing at its ordinary operating convenience any further service, by the nature, desires, or disabilities of a plant,” 209 I. C. C. at 34. It 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. . . 209 I. C. C. at 44-5.

The application of such a test obviously requires an intensive study of traffic conditions prevailing at the particular plant at which the spotting service is rendered. It is for this reason that the Commission, in carrying into effect the principles announced in Ex parte 104, has found it necessary to proceed to a series of supplemental investigations of the spotting service rendered at particular plants. Accordingly the Commission made no order on the foot of its main report, but following a series of sup *408 plemental reports, including the present one, each detailing the facts found as to the spotting service rendered at the particular plant investigated, the Commission has made cease and desist orders, applicable to that service, a number of which this Court has upheld on review. See United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., 301 U. S. 402; Goodman Lumber Co. v. United States, 301 U. S. 669; A. O. Smith Corp. v. United States, 301 U. S. 669; United States v. Pan American Petroleum Corp., 304 U. S. 156. In sustaining the Commission’s findings in these proceedings, as in related cases, this Court has held that the point in time and space at which the carrier’s transportation service ends is a question of fact to be determined by the Commission and not the courts, and that its findings on that question will not be disturbed by the courts if supported by evidence. United States v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., supra, 408; United States v. Pan American Petroleum Corp., supra, 158; Interstate Commerce Commission v. Hoboken Mfrs. R. Co., 320 U. S. 368, 378 and cases cited.

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Bluebook (online)
321 U.S. 403, 64 S. Ct. 752, 88 L. Ed. 827, 1944 U.S. LEXIS 1239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wabash-railroad-scotus-1944.