81 W. Va. 457 | W. Va. | 1917
This is an informal application authorized by statute, 'for annulment of an order of the Publie Service Commission, requiring the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, an interstate and intrastate carrier of passengers and freight, to desist from a practice relating to distribution or allotment of cars for intrastate shipments of coal, which, in the opinion of the Commission, works an unjust and unreasonable discrimination against the miners and shippers of coal, on whose complaints the order was made, and all other persons and corporations similarly situated.
The character of the numerous complaints inducing the procedure and the scope and effect of the action of the Commission are indicated by the order in question, which reads as follows:
“The Commission is of opinion to and doth order as follows:"
“First: That the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, a corporation, do forthwith cease and desist from' its practice of furnishing to team track loaders, i. e. persons engaged in loading coal from wagons and motor trucks, railroad box cars exclusively for intrastate shipment and commerce; and that- said' Railroad Company do furnish to said team track loaders for intrastate shipment and commerce the same percentage of open top gondola or hopper cars, to which they are entitled under their allotment, as it furnishes to tipple loaders, i. e. to persons engaged in loading coal on railroad cars from tipples or other structures of like character, for intrastate shipment and commerce.”
“Second: That the said The Baltimore & Ohio Railro'ad Company be, and it is hereby required, to furnish said team track loaders, for the purpose of loading coal for intrastate shipment and commerce,. the same percentage of the allotment of cars to which they are entitled, as it shall furnish to persons engaged in loading coal from tipples or other, structures of like character, for intrastate shipment and commerce. ’ ’
“Third: The said The Baltimore'& Ohio Railroad Company is not required to furnish team track loaders with cars*460 of any character upon private sidings connected with said railroad, unless said sidings shall be owned by said team track loaders, or said team track loaders shall have the consent of the owners thereof to use the same.”
Admitting the discrimination complained of, the railroad company endeavored to justify it in law, before the Commission, on several grounds. Right to assign the open top ears known as gondola and hopper cars, to mines loading their coal from tipples, and box cars to mines loading by means of wagons and trucks, in view of the inconvenience attendant upon the loading of the latter class from tipples, causing delay in shipments, and the relative unimportance of the production and shipments from team track mines, is claimed on the ground of public necessity for exercise of the carrier’s maximum powers and capacity for the handling of coal, under the extraordinary conditions' prevailing throughout the country and especially in the sections dependent upon water transportation through the Great Lakes, which was delayed by the backward season and will be terminated by the approaching winter, when coal is needed worst.
From Nov., 1916 to June, 1917, inclusive,. 137,869 cars were loaded at tipple mines; and 2,597, at wagon and truck loading mines, on two divisions of the road, the Mononga and the Cumberland. In the first month of that period, only .55% of the cars were loaded at mines of the latter class, on those divisions, and 4.33% in the last month. The unusual demand for coal and consequent high prices thereof have evidently occasioned a large relative increase in the out-put of" wagon loading mines, but more than 95% of the coal shipped by rail came from tipple loading mines in June, 1917, nevertheless, wherefore it is apparent that facilitation of the transportation of the production of these mines more nearly approximates fulfillment of the fuel requirements of the general public, than would expeditious handling of the out-put of the other mines.
Box cars are inconvenient and unsuitable for both classes of shippers, and their use for coal shipment entails losses or burdens in both time and expense. But the extraordinary
This contention is not reduced or referred to any defined legal principle. There is no claim of right to discriminate between classes of shippers, in the manner complained of, on account of an 'extraordinary demand for coal within the state, exceeding the capacity of the carrier to supply it, without discrimination. The business of the railroad company is carriage for shippers rather than provision for what it may deem public exigencies. Legally and theoretically it is the servant of all shippers on'its lines. By its service for them,it promotes the public, welfare, wherefore its service to them is its primary duty and its contribution to the general welfare, though highly important, is a mere incident of such service. Avoidance of its duty to a shipper or a class of shippers, as a means of promotion of-what it may conceive to be advantageous to the general public, would be an assumption pro tanto of a status variant from that which it legally occupies, and its inability to effect such a change or alteration of its character and function, without legislative authority, is obvious.
In so far as its business and functions are purely intrastate, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company has the same rights, powers and privileges,' and is subject to the same liabilities, as a railroad company organized under the laws of this state and operating a railroad wholly within its territorial limits. Code, ch. 54, sec. 30; Allen v. Baltimore
Some of the facts relied upon in support of this untenable view, however, may constitute ground for successful impeachment of the order, under the' incontrovertible right of the railroad company and all other public service corporations, recognized by the state law, to discriminate reasonably and justly between classes of patrons and kinds of business, on account of substantial differences in point of character. This right, when available, is a limitation upon the powers of the Public Service Commission. United Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission, 73 W. Va. 593. It is firmly asserted and well defined in Elk Hotel Co. v. United Fuel Gas Co., 75 W. Va. 200. Since the date of the former of these decisions, the Public -Service Commission Act has been amended, but it .still permits just discrimination, for the Commission is authorized to change only unjust, unreasonable, insufficient and unjustly discriminatory “regulations, measurements, practices, acts and service.” Code, 1916, ch. 150, sec. 23. As amended, it does not clothe the Commission with unlimited power over the subject of classification. Just, reasonable and fair discrimination is still recognized and contemplated by the law. The order complained of abrogates a regulation or order of the railroad company, by which it has classified shippers of coal with reference to their methods of loading, the commercial qualities of their coal, the relative quantities produced, the stability and permanence of their business and other facts, including the extra
For express inhibition of the classification set aside by the Commission, a clause of sec. 66c, ch. 54, Code, 1916, is relied upon. It says: ‘! Every railroad corporation along whose line of railroad the industries of mining coal or manufacturing coke is carried on, shall without discrimination between or amongst shippers, and without unnecessary delay, make a reasonable provision for the transportation of all such coal and coke offered for transportation over its railroad, and no such railroad corporation shall discriminate in rates, distribution of cars or otherwise against or among shippers of coal or coke offered for shipment on its line or lines.” It contemplates mining industries and the terms should be applied, and the provision enforced, in the sense in which the language was used. The legislation was invoked to prevent discrimination between' and among persons, firms and corporations regularly engaged in the industry and operating mines properly equipped for loading coal, to compel reasonable provision for transportation of coal from such mines. The section deals with mining industries, and requires impartial provision of facilities for them, but it cannot be fairly interpreted as requiring equal facilities to persons not regularly engaged in coal mining, nor having the usual and ordinary mining equipment. Its purpose was to promote and encourage efficient coal mining and transportation, not to embarrass or hamper them.
Until the late fall of 1916, the team track loading mines constituted a negligible quantity in the mining and shipment of coal. Since that time, the extreme- demand for coal and phenomenally high prices have brought hundreds of them into existence, each one producing only small quantities and all, less than 5% of the total shipments, in June, 1917. Under'normal conditions, they could not profitably operate at all, and, when such conditions are restored, their production will no doubt.cease. For this reason, railroad managers have denominated them “Snow Bird” mines or shippers. Ordinarily, they do not load more than one ear a day. They
At none of the regularly equipped mines, except a few having box car loaders, can box cars be used without infliction of great delay and confusion. One large operating company on the Mononga division operates box car loaders at about six of its twenty-three mines. Generally, the permanent mines are equipped for tipple loading only and the use of open top cars. Manifestly, the inconvenience, expense and loss of time in the use of box ears at these mines greatly exceed those incident to their use at team track mines. Many of them are immense industries, equipped with mining machinery, such ’ as cutting machines, electric haulage and screening and sorting apparatus, and employing hundreds of men. Delay to such enterprises works great public injury, while that occasioned to team track mines employing a dozen or fewer poorly equipped miners is slight and comparatively inconsequential. Besides, box cars can be used more advantageously, or with less inconvenience, at side tracks in the open country than at tipple mines. These facts make it apparent that the railroad company’s classification is founded upon, real and substantial differences and puts each class of ears in that branch of transportation in which it can be
They are not denied shipping facilities nor the right to operate their mines and dispose of their products in the market. They are merely subjected to a discrimination respecting the quality of the service afforded them, on account of the character of their shipments. In the infliction of this discrimination, the carrier cannot be said to have made a distinction without a difference. The difference in situation and circumstances is marked, obvious and radical. Like every other business, that of mining, transportation and sale of coal, considered as a whole, has acquired, under normal conditions, qualities and characteristics, developed principles and brought into existence conditions, that cannot be instantaneously altered, for the accommodation of persons desiring the temporary introduction and maintenance of new qualities, principles, methods and conditions, without a disastrous dislocation and disturbance of those previously fixed and settled by long experience, vast expenditures of money and the exercise of the highest degree of skill and efficiency. Mining and coal transportation are closely allied industries. Mines are opened and equipped with reference to railroads and railroads built, equipped and operated with reference to. the mines and coal markets and terminal requirements and facilities.
The complainants at whose instance the Commission order-was made are not equipped for the production and shipment of coal, in the manner in which that business is generally conducted, nor do they contemplate such equipment. Their methods do not harmonize or correspond with existing and firmly established conditions. Nevertheless, they demand, as of right, a service and facilities in - all respects, equal to those afforded properly equipped mines having an established and permanent business, even' though compliance with their demand involves disarrangement and impairment of a complex system upon which the efficient operations and functions of two or three great industries vital to the public welfare depend, and the introduction of chaotic conditions in mining, transportation, manufacturing. and domestic life.
Another circumstance to be noticed and accorded considerable weight is the meagerness of the intrastate coal busi-aicss, the order in question is supposed to conserve and project. Of the 153 cars reported to have been shipped by a number of the complainants, only two went to intrastate destinations, without having passed through the State of Maryland, and three went to points in this state by transportation, In part, over Maryland territory. The great bulk of their ^business seems to be interstate. If their intrastate business Is not to be increased, the order complained of will be practically ineffective for cither good or evil. But the ruling of
No doubt the power of the Commission to pass upon the reasonableness and fairness of the regulations, practices, acts and service of public service corporations, is administrative, but it is not an unlimited nor unrestricted power, whatever its legal and technical character may be. It may set aside unreasonable and unjust regulations and establish reasonable and just ones' in lieu thereof. This is the extent of the authority conferred by the letter of the statute and there is no warrant in law for an extension thereof. The public service agencies have the right of initiation and, unless the measures they adopt fall within the condemnatory provisions of the act, they cannot be abrogated. Authority to annul unreasonable and unjust discriminatory regulations and substitute reasonable and just measures for them, is not authority to disturb them when they are reasonable, just and legal. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Public Service Commission, 78 W. Va. 667, 89 S. E. 844; Interstate Commerce Commission v. Union Pacific R. Co., 222 U. S. 541; Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 206 U. S. 441. When the order of a commission is based upon facts establishing injustice, sustained by evidence, or found from conflicting evidence, it cannot be disturbed, because the courts will not review the findings as to the facts. But, if the facts are undisputed and the reason and justice of the ease is clear and plain, an order made in contravention thereof has no foundation in law, and is .not beyond the power of judicial abrogation. This is the obvious meaning of the language found in the opinion in Houstan & Texas Ry. Co. v. United States, 234 U. S. 358, saying “And the question whether the carrier, in such a case, was giving undue or unreasonable preference
The last clause or provision of tbe order, is assailed on tbe ground that it impairs tbe obligations of contracts between the railroad company and tbe owners of private sidings, one provision of these contracts being that no person other than the owners may use them without tbe consent of both tbe owner and tbe railroad company. In so far as these contracts stand in the way of duty the railroad company owes to the public, they are not within the protection of the constitutional guaranty invoked. Benwood v. Public Service Commission, 75 W. Va. 127. Railroad companies are bound to make reasonable provision for all shippers and this includes allowance of side-track connections. State ex rel v. White Oak Fuel Co., 65 W. Va. 15. Nothing is relied upon here-in resistance of this part of the order, except the bare contracts. The railroad company has adduced no evidence tending to disprove necessity or justification of requirement of the use of these side-tracks, as reasonable provisions for shippers. The Commission had before-it some evidence of such necessity. It appeared that there was a public demand for their use in the loading and shipment of coal, and it is not even suggested here that the demand was insufficient to justify this provision of the order, or, in other words, that it is unreasonable. The order is not necessarily a permanent provision o'f universal application, and, if it should prove to be harsh-and unreasonable in any particular case, the Com
For the reasons here stated, the first and second paragraphs of the order complained of will be suspended, set aside and annulled.
Order of Public Service. Commission suspended in part.