Wood v. Vandalia Railroad

231 U.S. 1, 34 S. Ct. 7, 58 L. Ed. 97, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2636
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 20, 1913
Docket11
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 231 U.S. 1 (Wood v. Vandalia 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
Wood v. Vandalia Railroad, 231 U.S. 1, 34 S. Ct. 7, 58 L. Ed. 97, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2636 (1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill in this s.uit was filed by the Vandalia Railroad Company, appellee, to restrain the enforcement of an order made by the Railroad Commission of Indiana, on December 14, 1906, prescribing maximum freight rates for certain, intrastate traffic. The ground, of attack was that the rates so fixed would not yield sufficient revenue to pay thb actual cost of the transportation covered by the order- and, hence, that the order violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. The case was referred to a Special Master who made a report, sustaining the contention of the railroad company, which was confirmed by the Circuit Court. Decree was entered accordingly setting aside the order and permanently enjoining proceedings to enforce it. Members of the Commission, and the shippers on whose^petition this action was taken (who were made the defendants below), prosecute this appeal.

The assignments of error are addressed to the single ■ point that the evidence failed to warrant the conclusion that the prescribed rates were so unreasonably low that, if they were maintained, the Company would be deprived of its property without due process of law.

The Vandalia Railroad Company is a consolidated corporation, organized on January 1, 1905, under the *3 laws of Indiana and Illinois, pursuant to an agreement made by five railroad companies. Of these the Terre Haute and Indianapolis Company owned a railroad extending from Indianapolis westward to the boundary between the States of Indiana and Illinois, and the St. Louis, Vandalia and Terre Haute Company owned a railroad extending from that point to East St'. Louis, Illinois. These two lines, forming a continuous route between Indianapolis and East St. Louis, constituted what was called the St. Louis division of the new company. The other lines entering into the consolidation were the Terre Haute and Logansport, from Terre Haute to Logansport and South Bend-, Indiana; the Logansport and Toledo, from Logansport to Butler, Indiana; and the Indianapolis and Vincennes, from Indianapolis, to Vincennes, Indiana.

The order applied to that portion of the Vandalia Company’s road which lay between Indianapolis and the western , boundary of Indiana, a distance of about eighty miles, which originally belonged to the Terre Haute and Indianapolis Company. The order was further limited to the freight traffic moving.on “class rates,” that is, to the traffic, having its origin and destination on this part of the Company’s line, which was embraced in the áix classes of the “official classification” as theretofore established by the Company. The existing class rates were found by the Commission to be unreasonably high and the maximum, rates in question were ordered to be substituted as just, and reasonable.

There was no proof of the value of the .complainant’s property within the State of Indiana or of the return it received from its entire intrastate business. Nor was there proof of the value of that portion of its road which was affected by the order, or of the return from all of its intrastate business upon that part of its lines. No attempt was 'made to supply proof of that sort. For all that appears,. *4 the Vandalia Company might enjoy, notwithstanding the enforcement of the rates in question, ample revenue from its intrastate operations to give it a fair return both as to all its lines within the State and also as to that portion to which the order referred.

The total tonnage of all kinds of freight on the eighty miles of railroad from Indianapolis to the Illinois boundary cannot be ascertained from the evidence. The amount of traffic moving on commodity rates is not shown. It was found by the Master, and it is undisputed, that the gross revenue from the transportation of that portion of the traffic which constituted the classified intrastate freight, on the described eighty miles of road, during the three years prior to the making of the order, was as follows: 1904, $79,803.80; 1905, $91,067.56; 1906, $102,241.15; and that the gross revenue from the same traffic, under the rates prescribed by the Commission, would have been in 1904, $52,222.12; in 1905, $60,079.13; in 1906, $66,936.99. This would have been a large reduction in the gross revenue from that particular traffic,, but it must not be overlooked that the Commission found that the former rates were excessive;’ and the effect of this reduction upon the Company’s net return was to be satisfactorily proved and could not be assumed.

The conclusion in the court below was reached in the following manner. The complainant showed, and the Master found, that for the year 1904 the operating expenses upon the line between Indianapolis and the Illinois boundary were 74.50 per cent, of the whole earnings upon that line from every source, and that after consolidation, in the years 1905 and 1906, the operating expenses of the entire St. Louis division were respectively 73.03 and 72.64 per cent, of the entire earnings of that division. These rátios were then applied for the purpose of determining the expense of transporting that part of the freight which moved under class rates between’stations on the road from *5 Indianapolis to the Illinois boundary. Thus, it was assumed that, as the gross revenue from this classified freight was $79,803.80 in 1904, the expense of transporting it was 74.50 per cent, of that amount or $59,453.83; that, in 1905, with a gross revenue of $91,067.56, the expense was 73.03 per cent, thereof or $66,506.64; and that in 1906, with a gross revenue.of $102,241.15, the expense was 72ffi4 per cent, or $74,267.97. According to this method of calculation, the revenue which would have been received under the order of the Commission would have been less than the expense of transportation.

It is plain, however, that it does not follow from the mere fact that the total operating expenses of a railroad, or of a division of a railroad, bear a given relation to the entire receipts of that road or division, that the cost of transportation in the case of a particular class of traffic bears the same relation to the revenue derived from that class. The ratio, in the first case, is found by bringing together a great variety of operations involving various rates and different outlays for different sorts of traffic. It is predicated of the whole volume of business considered as such, and may be far from true of some part of it considered separately. It does not purport to be an expression of-the relative cost of any specified part but simply of that of the entire traffic to which it applies.

How hazardous may be the use of such a ratio to determine the relative cost of a fragment of the business is apparent in this case. Thus it appeared that the total gross earnings of the complainant’s St. .Louis division in the year 1905 was $4,750,811.13. Of this, the entire gross receipts from the classified freight here in question were only $91,067.56, or less than two per cent. The expenses of the division for that year were $3,469,544.81, or 73.03 per cent, of the'total earnings as stated. In 1906, the earnings of the St. Louis division were $5,480,094.77, and the expenses were $3,980,906.90, or 72.64 per cent. These *6

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Bluebook (online)
231 U.S. 1, 34 S. Ct. 7, 58 L. Ed. 97, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-vandalia-railroad-scotus-1913.