293 F. 31 | N.D. Ga. | 1923
Lead Opinion
American Railway Express Company seeks in this proceeding to enjoin the enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, granted at the instance of the Southeastern Express Company. That order requires the establishment of additional through routes between named regions north of Washington, served exclusively by the American Railway Express Company and certain points on the Southern Railroad south of Washington, with transfer at Washington, notwithstanding the existence already of reasonable through routes, and that shippers shall have the choice of routes. The proceedings are reported in 78 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 126, and 81 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 247. It is riot contended that the existing through routes are discriminatory or unreasonable, but the purpose of the order is stated by the Commission to be:
s “That there will be at least two reasonable direct routes between such points, one of which shall be via the transfer point selected by the Southeastern Express Company (Washington), and the other via the transfer point selected by the American Railway Express Company.”
Thp transfer point selected by each company for each route is, of course, such as will give it the longest possible haul. The Commission
1. By paragraph 3 of section 15 of the amended Interstate Commerce Act power is clearly given the Commission, either on complaint or on its own initiative, to establish through routes when deemed necessary or desirable in the public interest. When one sufficient through route already exists, there can be no necessity for another in the strictest sense, but certainly another may be desirable in the public interest. The competition between the carriers interested in the routes is generally considered to be itself in the public interest, because better service is likely to ensue. The repeal by the Act of June 18, 1910, of the proviso which formerly prevented the enforced duplication of routes shows the congressional intent that it should be allowed. We are not prepared to say the order is arbitrary or unreasonable, because made avowedly to foster competition.
2. Nor do we think the order infringes the constitutional guaranties to liberty and property in giving the shipper an election which may deprive the American Railway Express Company of its long haul. If otherwise valid, it is only a part of the system of regulation and rate-making to which public service companies consent, or at least subject themselves, when they enter the business. Such regulation, when done in the public interest and not arbitrarily, is not unconstitutional. Besides, it must be assumed that full justice will be done when the rate comes to be divided.
3. We think the order transgresses the prohibition of paragraph 4 of section 15 of the Interstate Commerce Act:
“In establishing any such through route, the Commission shall not (except as provided in section 3, and except where one of the carriers is a water line) require any carrier by railroad, without its consent, to embrace in such route substantially less than the entire length of its railroad and of any intermediate railroad operated in conjunction and under a com,man mamaffement or control thereicilh, which lies between the termini of such proposed through route, unless such inclusion of [suoK] lines would make the through route unreasonably lonff as compared with another 'practicable through route which could otherwise be established.” (Italics always ours.)
“Carrier by railroad” is a phrase much used by Congress in recent legislation. Its literal meaning is one who carries by means of a railroad — who uses a railroad in his carriage. It is opposed to carrier by any other means, such as “carrier by water,” or by highway, or by air. There is no greater necessary implication of ownership of the railroad used by the one than of the sea, river, public road, or atmosphere used By the others. But the fact is that those who carry by means of railroads are so predominantly the railroad companies that they and they alone are generally in mind, and words used in legislation are apt- best to fit them and their concerns. “Carrier by railroad” is an abbreviation evolved from the words of section 1 of the original Interstate Commerce Act (Comp. St. § 8563):
“Common * * * carriers engaged in the transportation of passengers or property wholly by railroad or partly by railroad and partly by water.”
Because the act concerned itself so largely with things that railroad companies'alone had and controlled, and with duties which they alone could perform, the Interstate Commerce Commission early held that only railroad companies were intended to be described, notwithstanding the acknowledged breadth of the language, and notwithstanding much of the legislation could and should be applied to express companies. In re Express Companies, 1 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 349. In other acts, such as the Safety Appliance Act of 1893 (27 Stat. 531 [Comp. St. §§ 8605-8612]) and of 1908 (35 Stat. 476 [Comp. St. §■§ 8624 — 8629]), the Boiler Inspection Act of 1911 (36 Stat. 913 [Comp. St. §§ 8630-8639]), Railroad Arbitration Act of 1913 (38 Stat. 103 [Comp. St. §'§ 8666-8676]), Hours, of Service Act of 1907 (34 Stat. 1415 [Comp. St. §§ 8677-8680]), Reports of Accidents Act of 1910 (36 Stat. 350 [Comp. St. §§ 8642-8647]), and Employers’ Liability Act of 1908 (35 Stat. 65 [Comp. St. §§ 8657-8665]), the same' or similar words are used with application to such persons or things as pertain to railroad companies only. The Employers’ Liability Act has been held noflo apply to express companies, in view of the contents of the act, and the expression “common carriers by railroad” and its equivalents in this and other acts was said to refer only to carriers owning and operating railroads. Wells Fargo Co. v. Taylor, 254 U. S. 175, 187, 41 Sup. Ct. 93, 65 L. Ed. 205. It may even be conceded that such is now the common and prima facie meaning of the expression. But in none of these acts did Congress define the term “carrier.”
In the case of the Interstate Commerce Act, Congress, by an amendment of June 29, 1906 (Comp. St. § 8563 et seq.), brought pipe line carriers under the act by the simple declaration that “the provisions of this act shall apply” to them. But, to bring express and sleeping car
“Common carriers including express companies and sleeping ear companies engaged in the transportation of passengers or property wholly by railroad,’ etc.
Thereby such express companies as carry property by railroad, and such sleeping car companies as carry passengers by railroad, and only such, are made subject to the act. The matter is followed up by broadening the definition of “railroad” to include, not only railroads owned or operated under any sort of contract, but “terminal facilities of every kina used or necessary in the transportation * * * or delivery of any such property,” and of “transportation” to include the use “of cars and other vehicles and all instrumentalities and facilities of shipment or carriage irrespective of ownership, or of any contract, express or implied, for the use thereof, and all services in connection with * * * the handling of the property transported.” These lafter definitions were framed with a purpose of adapting the terms used in the act to the broadest possible application to the means of carriage employed by the various carriers of passengers and property now brought under the, act, and to apply to them what had been specially ordained for railroad companies only. In this same act, in its amendment of section 6 (Comp. St. § 8569), is, so far as we can find, the first itse by Congress of the short expression “carriers by railroad.” It occurs in the requirement that:
“Carriers subject to the act [all of them] shall file and pablish their rates from points on their own lino to those on the lines of other carriers by railroad, by water or by pipe Une.”
Very plainly all the carriers subject to the act are intended to be included in this threefold classification, and “carriers by railroad” includes not only railroad companies, but express and sleeping car companies, which use railroads in carriage. It was a short equivalent "for the language of section 1, “Common * * * carriers engaged in the transportation of passengers or property * * * by railroad,” and included what that included. Out of abundant caution, however, section 6 was made also to declare that “ ‘carrier’ wherever used in this act shall mean common carrier.”
The phrase “carrier by railroad” was introduced into paragraph 4 of section 15 by the Transportation Act of 1920 (41 Stat. 456, 485). It is used often in that act, but since, for the differing purposes of the act the term “carrier” is formally defined in no less than six different ways, some including, some excluding, express companies (see sections 204 [a], 209, 300, 400, 422,-and 439), no help can be got from the portions of it other than .that amending the Interstate Commerce Act, any more than from the numerous former acts in which it is not defined
It must be admitted that there are .portions of the act that cannot be applied to express and sleeping car companies, though they are “carriers by railroad” or “carriers subject to this act,” as the case may be. Thus requirements as to passenger service cannot be applied to express companies because they do not carry passengers; nor can those as to freight be applied to sleeping car companies for like reason; nor can those relating to engines, switches, and tracks, or train operations, apply to either, because neither has them. But the use in paragraph 4 of section 15 of the expression “its railroad” or “railroad operated in conjunction with it” does not make such a case. The thing dealt with in paragraphs 3 and 4 of section 15 (which are to be construed together) is not one that touches'the owner or operator of a railroád, and that could be answered for only by such an one. It touches the furnishing to the public, of a through railroad transportation servicq, which the express company has and can answer for. ' So far as the public and this service are concerned, it matters not who owns or operates the railroad, or under what sort of an arrangement the express company obtains the use of it and its equipment.
As respects this service, the owner and operators of the railroads'are the servants and employees of the express company. 6 Cyc. 369, note 37, and cases cited. So far as its patrons are concerned, the railroads used by the express company are in a substantial and legal sense “its railroads.” Yet again, the definitions of “railroad” and “transportation” in the dictionary of the act are broad enough to cover all the facilities for carriage and delivery which the express company itself owns and operates, as well as its privilege of carriage over the railroad tracks, “irrespective of ownership or any contract express or implied for the use thereof.” The case, indeed, is not one of ordinary construction, in which the reasonable intent of Congress is to be gathered from the context, but is rather one of executing a positive legislative mandate defining terms. The only question is whether the provision of the statute can have any reasonable application under these definitions, and we think it can. Since “carrier,” wherever used iri the act, means “common carrier,” and since “common carrier,” as used in this act, shall include express and sleeping car company,” “carrier by railroad,” in paragraph 4 of section 15, must be read “common carrier, including express and sleeping car company, by railroad.” And, so read, the provision can reasonably be applied to an express.company, and its transportation arrangements with and over railroads, referred to as “lines” in the end of the paragraph under discussion.
(1) The natural justice in permitting one who initiates a thing to carry it forward and reap its benefits as far as possible. This has been recognized by the Commission in Dakota Junctions, 81 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 275, Western Mines, 66 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 108, and by this court in American Railway Express Co. v. Railroad Commission of Georgia (D. C.) 274 Fed. 649. .This reason would apply as strongly to an express company as to a railroad company.
(2) The amendment of 1906 had imposed on the initial carrier responsibility for the whole carriage. It would seem right that it carry and control the shipment as far as possible — a reason applying with equal force to railroad and express companies.
(3) The uncertainty, delay, and risk of loss and damage incident to unnecessary transfers would apply equally to freight and express.
(4) The investment of the carrier on which it must make a return may differ in degree as between railroad and express companies,, but not in substance. That the amount of investment itself was not controlling appears, in that a railroad which is merely operated is expressly protected equally with one owned. Many railroad companies merely run a train over the road of another, as in the case of trains running into Washington from Richmond, paying for the privilege no more, perhaps, than the express company pays for its transportation arrangements. We can think of nothing that can be said to differentiate an express company’s “line” from a railroad company’s “line,” unless that of the express company is longer, usually covering many railroads. But, again, the length of the “line” is not made material, unless in comparison with the proposed new route it is unreasonably long.
4. The objection to the order, that it puts a route into operation without having first fixed the division of the rate, is unsustainable. The record shows a waiver of the matter. Furthermore, the prefixation is not required by the Interstate Commerce Act. Railway Co. v. United States, 43 Sup. Ct. 270, 67 L. Ed. 605, decided February 19, 1923. And lastly the division can often be more justly made after some trial of the new route.
5. Whether the shipper’s choice of routes, when established, follows as a necessary consequence of the establishment of them, or whether the Commission has power, under paragraph 3 of section 15, to provide for it as one of the “terms and conditions” on which the route is to be used, or whether the power is to be considered as given by an application to express companies of paragraph 8 of section 15, we do not find it necessary to decide. Having concluded that the order before us is violative of paragraph 4 of section 15, it must be enjoined, irrespective of whether the new rates, if established, would open an insistence
An interlocutory injunction will be granted, but without prejudice to the right of the Commission' to inquire whether,' because the existing routes are unreasonably long, or for other cause particularly appearing, any of the proposed new routes can be established consistently with paragraph 4 of section 15 of the Interstate Commerce Act, and, if so, to order their establishment.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). During the war all express •companies then existing were consolidated into the American Railway Express Company, which after the consolidation was the only express company in the country. It operated on all railroads from July 1, 1918, until May 1, 1921, when the Southeastern Express Company entered the field and began to do business over what is called the Southern Railway System, principally in territory south of the Ohio and Potomac rivers, and east of the Mississippi river, although it also operates over an electric railway line from Washington to Baltimore, and over the Maryland &'Pennsylvania Railway Company from Baltimore to York, Pa. The territory selected by the Southeastern was promptly abandoned by the American. The Southeastern attempted to concur in the tariffs of the American, but the latter attempted to prevent this by supplements, by which it made applicable through routes and joint rates only between its exclusive offices and the exclusive offices of the Southeastern.
After hearings upon applications made by the Southeastern and certain shippers, for through routes between the two express companies, the Commission reviewed the proceedings before it in two opinions reported in 78 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 126, and in 81 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 247. Among other things, the Commission found that:
•“Express shipments from a Southeastern exclusive point-to an American exclusive point move over a through route at a joint rate. From an intermediate common point, a shipment over the same route is assessed the combination rate, which is higher. * * * Undue prejudice is said to result from the fact that between exclusive Southeastern points and exclusive American points through routes and joint rates apply, while between near-by common points and American exclusive points a shipper has access only to the American route in the absence of proportional rates, and from the fact that some common points are accorded joint routes to and from American exclusive offices and other common points are not.”
And thereupon the Commission entered an order requiring the plaintiff company to establish and maintain—
“through routes between all points in the states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, New York, N. Y., and all points on the direct routes of the American Railway Express Company between New York and Washington, I). C., on the one hand, and all points on the main line 'of the Southern Railway Compay from Washington to and including Birmingham, Ala., on the other, with transfer between the American Express Company and the Southeastern Express Company at Washington, D. O.”
1. The Interstate Commerce Commission did not have the power to establish through routes under the original Interstate Commerce Act of 1887; hut by the amendatory Act of June 29, 1906, 34 Stat. 584, it was empowered to establish through routes and to prescribe the terms and conditions under which they should be operated--
“when that may be necessary to give effect to any provision of this act, and the carriers complained of have refused or neglected to voluntarily establish such through routes and joint rates, provided no reasonable or satisfactory through route exists.”
The proviso was stricken out in 1910, at which time it was provided that:
“In establishing such through route, the Commission shall not require any company, without its consent, to embrace in such route substantially less thin; the entire length of its railroad and of any intermediate railroad operated in conjunction and under a common management or control therewith which lies between the termini of such proposed through route, unless to do so would make such through route unreasonably long as compared with another practicable through route which could otherwise be established.” 36 ¡átat. 552.
The establishment of through routes under the Act of 1910 was dependent upon the failure of the carriers to establish voluntarily such through routes, but in 1920 by Transportation Act, 15 (3), they were authorized to be established whenever necessary or desirable in the pub - lic interest. I.imitation upon the right to establish through routes war' not substantially changed, “except as provided in section 3,” and except that for the word “company” in the act of 1910, the words “carrier by railroad,” which the majority opinion holds includes express companies, were substituted in section 15 (4) of the Transportation Act of 1920, and the limitation was further made subject to cases of emergency.
The language, in the original act of 1887, “the provisions of this act shall apply to any common carrier or carriers engaged in the transportation of passengers or property wholly by railroad, or partly by railroad and partly by water when both are used, under a common control, management, or arrangement” (24 Stat. 379), was early held by the Interstate Commerce Commission not to include express companies. Express Cases, 1 Interst. Com. Com’n R. 677. But it was provided in the act of 1906 that the term “common carrier” should include express companies, and they are clearly within section 15 (3) of the Transportation Act of 1920, where jurisdiction is given to the Commission to establish through routes “applicable to the transportation of passengers or property.”
In the Transportation Act, the term “carriers by railroad” is usually employed to designate railroad companies, Section 1 (10, 11, 12, 13,
Section 6 (1) imposes the duty upon express companies, as well as other carriers, to publish schedules of rates. It is clear that it is the intention to make this' requirement apply from points on the route of one carrier to points on the route of another carrier. Tn doing so the second named points are defined as being on the route of another carrier by railroad, by pipe line, or by water. It may be that the language was not happily chosen to define the points of destination, but the context clearly shows that express companies are included. There can be no destination points of express companies within the jurisdiction of the Commission which are not upon the route of a carrier by railroad or water, because every point on a route of an express company is alsp a point upon a route of a railroad'company.
In construing section 1 (24), no difficulty is encountered in concluding that express companies are included within the language “any common carrier by railroad or water, or otherwise.” It will be noted that in section 3 (2) there is added to the usual designation, “carriers by railroad,” the words “subject to the provisions of this act.” It is at once apparent that the designation is different from that used in section IS (4). '
The plaintiff argues that shippers of express are given the right to designate the routing of it by section IS (8), although the carrier there defined “is any railroad corporation, being a common carrier.” If that be true, it only emphasizes the importance of considering the context in an effort to ascertain the meaning of the language used in any particular paragraph. The expression “any carrier by railroad” in section 15 (4) is limited and qualified by the language, “the entire length of its railroad and of any intermediate railroad operated in conjunction or under a common management therewith,” etc.
But it is insisted that the limitation and qualification are intended to' designate user, instead of ownership. That construction, as it appears to me, cannot possibly include “any intermediate railroad operated un
The liability of the initial carrier, whether railroad company or express company, for loss or damage to shipments, described in section 20 (11), is appealed to as a reason for including express companies along with railroad companies in section 15 (4), so as to enable such express companies to protect themselves, so far as possible, against liability due to the default of connecting carriers. It is not to be assumed that the Commission would establish through routes and compel the initial carrier to deliver either freight or express to a connecting carrier, which was unable to make good any loss caused by it.
Although it is conceded that a shipper of express has the right to route, yet the plaintiff contends, since such right did not exist at common law, it is not conferred by the act unless by section 15 (8). The Commission defends that part of its order allowing routing by shippers by a provision of section 15 (3), which authorizes it to prescribe the terms and conditions under which through routes may be operated, and also by special rule 3, providing for the routing of express by shippers, prescribed by it and acquiesced in by the plaintiff. When the act conferred upon the Commission the power to establish through routes, it thereby took away from the initial, carrier the common-law right to select its connecting carriers. As stated by the Commission in its opinion, the establishment of through routes would be of no advantage if shippers could not make use of them.
Furthermore, I think it is clear from the act that express companies do not stand on the same footing as railroad companies. Formerly the several express companies operated in different parts of the country, and upon all the railroads in their respective territories. There was a semblance of competition between several of them in some parts of the country, but, because of their intercorporate relations, as pointed out by Commissioner Fane in the Express Cases, 24 Interst. Com. Com’n TR. 379, there was little actual competition. The contract between the American Express Company and the railroad companies over whose lines it operates provides for a pooling of freights and a division of earnings, which is made unlawful, except by permission of the Interstate Commerce Commission, acting in the public interest (section 5 [1]), and can exist only under such rules and regulations and upon such .terms and conditions as the Commission finds to be just and
If express companies are included within the term “carriers by railroad” in section 15 (4), and therefore have a right to the long haul over the railroads with which they have contracts, then the American Railway Express Company, having such contracts with all railroad companies except the Southern, has it within its power to prevent competition by other express companies, and thus, to a considerable and dangerous extent, at least, to monopolize the express business of the entire country. The whole history of the Interstate Commerce Act, and of the many amendments to it, repels the idea that such a result was ever intended by the Congress.
2. It is to be conceded that the Interstate Commerce Commission cannot order an express company to do- an unreasonable thing. It cannot arbitrarily establish a through route, and can only do so when it acts in the interest of the public.- When it does so act, however, any damage incidental to the nature of the business of an express company does not render an order of the Commission unjust or unreasonable. I am unable to say that it is unjust or unreasonable to compel the American to deliver to the Southeastern express packages shipped from points north of Washington to points on the main line of the Southern Railway. The inequalities and discriminations which result from the present situation sufficiently appear from the reports of the Commission. The disadvantages which it is claimed by the American would result from a compliance with the Commission’s order would be largely, if not completely, overcome by a proper division of rates.
3. The fact that the Commission did not prescribe the division of rates, but withheld that subject for further consideration, does not invalidate the order. The Commission deferred that matter until the question of its right to establish routes had been determined. This it had. the right to do. Railway Co. v. United States, 43 Sup. Ct. 270, 67 L. Ed. 605, decided February 19, 1923.
I think the application for an interlocutory injunction should be denied.