38 F. 656 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa | 1889
This case is submitted on an application for a temporary injunction. On the 28th of June, 1888, this complainant filed a bill in this court asking an injunction restraining the defendants as railroad commissioners of the state of Iowa from putting in force a certain schedule of rates on freight. After a lengthy bearing, and on tho 27th day of July, a temporary injunction was issued as prayed l'or. Now the-complainant files this, a supplemental bill, alleging that defendants are seeking to evade the force of that injunction, and to cast upon complainant a schedule of rates substantially the same as that heretofore enjoined, or at least that the difference is so slight as to indicate a mere evasion. The gist of the complaint is that certain jobbers and manufacturers of Iowa, interested in reducing the rates of freight, formed associations for that purpose, and employed special counsel to assist the attorney general in resisting the original application. That after the injunction had been granted a meeting of such jobbers and manufacturers was held in Davenport on August 14th, for the purpose of devising and adopting a plan of procedure for evading the operation of such injunction. In pursuance of the plan devised a circular was sent out, marked “Strictly Confidential,” to various parties in the state, in which it was recited that sections 18, 19, and 20 authorized complaints to the railroad commissioners of every unreasonable charge, and required the commissioners upon such complaints to summon the railroad making such charge to-appear and sbow that it was a reasonable one; and, if found by the com
“Therefore the committee recommended that the jobber at every shipping and manufacturing point secure evidence of the unreasonable rates being collected by the railroads, and file them with the proper petition with, the railroad commissioners at once. This plan being carried out at all points would quickly enable the commissioners to establish schedule rates which the railroad managers could neither question nor controvert as prima facie evidence of reasonable rates, and they would be in force until their unreasonableness was declared by the courts, the important point being to get the rates into effect at once, and have them in effect while the litigation is proceeding.”
In pursuance of this plan a complaint was filed by Robert Donahue and others, alleging generally that the railroad company, complainant herein, had attempted to put in force schedules of rates unreasonable and extortionate, and praying for an examination. Upon the hearing, after objection by the railroad company, a full schedule of rates for complainant’s road in the state of Iowa was prescribed by the commissioners, and then follows a matter which it is painful to record. The three gentlemen who had been railroad commissioners were candidates for election at the November election. A decision of this complaint was filed with the secretary on the 3d day of November, three days before the election, signed by two of the commissioners. The third appended to that decision the following:
“Mr. Fred Wilde of Davenport, secretary of the Twin Cities’ Freight Association, in a letter dated October 31, has threatened me in the name of the jobbers of the state with their opposition to my candidacy for railroad commissioner unless the opinion of this board in the Davenport case was made public on or before Friday, November 2, 1888. I infer that the demand is that the decision must be in compliance with their views. In this situation I- am compelled by my feelings of self-respect to decline until after election to give any expression of my views upon the subject. I do not believe that a public officer whose duty it is to determine questions of this kind, which are practically judicial, should allow personal interests to sway his judgment.
[Signed] ' “Peter A. Dey.
“Des Moines, Nov. 3, 1888.”
It is further alleged that this schedule adopted by the commissioners was the same as that they were enjoined from putting in force, with merely a change in the-classification from the so-called “Illinois” to the so-called “Western” classification, that making a difference of only 22-percent. in the complainant’s earnings, — the former schedule reducing them 30 per cent., and the latter 27 2 per cent.; and also that this schedule is unreasonable in that by it the complainant would not earn its operating expenses and fixed charges. It is still further asserted that sections 18, 19, and 20, under which these proceedings were had, gave no authority for the making of an entire schedule, and only aim at the correction of a single wrong in the matter of charges.
To this bill of complaint defendants have filed an answer, averring
This summary of the bill of complaint a.nd answer discloses the questions presented, and in support of these matters quite a volume of testimony has been presented, consisting of affidavits, testimony taken before the commissioners upon the hearing of the complaint, and upon which they acted in comparing the schedule with the reports of the complainant of its business to the railroad commissioners of Iowa for the last two or three years. This amount of testimony, as well as the intricacies
There are substantially three questions presented. First. Has there been an invasion pf the injunction order heretofore issued, and therefore a practical contempt of that order? Second. Did the sections of the statute under which'the commissioners acted give authority to render such decision and establish a full schedule of rates for the complainant? Third. Is the schedule announced just and reasonable?
With reference to the first question there is little room for doubt. In the injunction which was issued there was no assumption of power to prescribe rates, and no pretense of interfering with the commissioners in the discharge of any duties imposed upon them by statute. The limits of judicial interference were, I think, clearly stated in the opinion filed. Railway Co. v. Dey, 35 Fed. Rep. 866. Beyond that limit, as I said, the courts have no power to go; and the whole matter is relegated to the discretion of the commissioners. It would be strange indeed, after the various adjudications of the supreme court, if any court should assume to prescribe a schedule of rates. Again, the commissioners acted simply upon complaints filed. They could not abandon the duty cast upon them by the statute of receiving and acting upon such-complaints. Whatever misconduct may be imputed to the jobbers’ association as a whole, or any individual members thereof, none can be imputed to the commissioners. A tribunal, judicial or quasi judicial, is not to be held responsible for the conduct of the litigants before it, and there is no reason to doubt that the commissioners acted with the utmost impartiality, giving full hearing to both parties, and deciding according to their honest judgment. While the obvious attempt to influence the opinion of Mr. Dey was a gross outrage, it is pleasing to note the manliness with which the insult was resented. In these days, when too many officials trim their course to meet public favor, it is pleasing to note such courage of conviction, such unwillingness to even appear to be influenced by personal interest or public demand in discharge of official duties, as Mr. Dey manifested. And it is pleasing also to notice the fact that, although Mr. Dey was running on the Democratic ticket, which received several thousand votes less than the Republican, he, and he alone, on his ticket wa3 elected. Obviously the people of Iowa respect independence as well as integrity in office. Nor is there any reason to believe that the other commissioners were influenced by public clamor. Again, while it may be true that the difference between the Illinois and the Western classification is slight in its practical application to the local freight in Iowa, yet, as the commissioners were advised by the complainant itself that the difference was great, it is not to be wondered at that they took the complainant at its word. . And finally it must be observed that the question what are reasonable rates is — as perhaps none know better than these commissioners —one of exceeding intricacy and difficulty, and it would be strange indeed, if an honest effort on their part to solve that question in the discharge of their official duties could be denounced as an intentional contempt of judicial, orders. I think I but voice the opinion of every indi
With reference to the second question, the contention of complainant .is that sections 18, 19, and 20 contemplate simply the inquiring by the commissioners into an alleged overcharge in a particular shipment, with power to declare what was a reasonable charge, and to make that determination applicable in the future to all charges of a kindred nature; that only under section 17 could the commissioners proceed to make a full schedule. 1 My first reading of the statute gave me the same view, but subsequent examination convinces me that such is not the correct construction. Section 17 undoubtedly authorizes the commissioners on their own motion tó proceed and establish schedules of rates for all the railroads; indeed, it directs them so to do. Under this section they proceed , not under any complaint, but simply obeying the mandate of the legislature. Sections 18, 19, and 20 contemplate proceedings against a particular railroad company upon complaint made. Under these sections the board proceeds, not upon its own motion, but only in response to the application of some party. While the proceeding is quasi judicial in that there is a complainant and defendant, — the latter brought in by notice and a hearing and decision, — yet the scope to which complaint may be made, inquiry may go, and decision rendered, is disclosed by the first part of section 18, and a portion of section 20, which reads as follows:
“Sec. 18. Whenever any person, upon his own behalf, or class of persons similarly situated, or any firm, corporation, or association, or any mercantile, agricultural, or manufacturing society, or any body politic or municipal organization, shall make complaint to said board of railroad commissioners that the rate charged or published by any railroad company, or the maximum rates fixed by said commissioners in the schedule of rates made by them under the provisions of section 17 of this act, or the maximum rate that now or hereafter may be fixed by law is unreasonably high or discriminating, it shall be the duty of said commissioners to immediately investigate the matter of such complaint.”
“Sec. 20. * * * Such decision shall specifically set out the sums or rate which the railroad company or common carrier so complained of may thereafter charge or receive for the service therein named, and including a classification of such freight; and the said commissioners shall not be limited in their said decision and the schedule to be contained therein to the specific case or cases complained of, but it shall be extended to all such rates between points in this state and whatever part of the line of railway of such company or common carrier within this state as may have been fairly within the scope of such investigation. ”
Now, the breadth of the inquiry is obvious from the matter of which complaint may be made. It is not simply of a rate charged or published by any railroad company, which of course presupposes some action on the part of the company, but it may also be of the maximum rates fixed by the commissioners in their schedule made under section 17; not necessarily a single rate for a single class of shipments, but generally of their maximum rates. In other words, the complaint may be narrowly of a single matter, or broadly of the rates fixed by the com
This brings us to the last of the three questions suggested, to-wit, the reasonableness of the rates. In respect to this I have nothing to add to what I have said in the opinion heretofore filed concerning the rules controlling judicial action. I abide by the propositions there laid down, •and have simply sought to apply those rules to the facts developed by the testimony now presented. Neither shall I attempt any review of such testimony; its volume precludes this. All that I can do is to state conclusions and results, with two or three principal matters controlling the same. It may be premised that the testimony now presented is more definite and satisfactory than that before me in the summer. While much of it is by affidavit, still there has been since then time for examination and comparison, and the testimony is more positive and direct, and less a matter of estimate. I do not mean to say that everything. has been made clear, but the testimony taken upon the different hearings, and the examinations made by the railroad officials, are more and more bringing out the exact facts. I notice first the testimony of Mr. Ripley, the general manager of complainant. His long experience and position with the company complainant give weight to this testimony. It shows the gross earnings of 1888 of complainant’s entire road (the last two months estimated) will be $24,055,241.19, while the operating expenses and fixed charges will be $24,826,801.40, leaving a deficit of $771,560.21. If the same percentage of reduction adopted by the Iowa commissioners in their last schedule be applied to the whole business of complainant it would reduce their gross freight earnings $4,360,-000. Adding this to the actual deficit, there would be $5,131,560.21 of income less than the operating expenses and fixed charges. Now, if this were an average year, — a fair standard upon which to base our judg
“The officers of the railroad company declare that the rates fixed by the commission will so reduce its income that it will not suffice to pay the running expenses of the road and the interest on its bonded debt, leaving nothing for dividends to its stockholders. The railroad commissioners assert that their schedule was framed to produce eight per cent, income on the value of the road after paying cost of maintenance and running expenses. Which view is the correct one it is impossible to decide from the evidence submitted. There is, however, a conclusive way, — and it seems to me it is the only one, —by which this controversy can be settled, and that is by experiment: A reduction of railroad charges is not always followed by a reduction of either gross or net income. It can soon be settled which is right — the railroad company’s officers or the railroad commission — in their view of the effect of the commission’s tariff of rates by allowing the tariff to go into operation.”
While quoting this language as applicable hereto, I do not mean to indorse it as of universal application, but only under the .circumstances, of the present case. Where the effect of the rates is doubtful, with a probability that t-héy will prove compensatory, and the amount of business to be affected thereby is comparatively small, I think the courts may well wait for the test of experience. Influenced by these considerations, I am led to refuse the preliminary injunction, and to set aside the restraining order heretofore entered. It may well be that by the time this case comes to a final hearing the test of experience will have solved some of these matters, and it may be clear — as now seems probable— that the rates imposed by this last schedule are compensatory within the rule laid down in the prior opinion, in which case no injunction'ought to issue, or clear that they are not compensatory, in which case, beyond any doubt in my mind, a final and permanent injunction ought to be granted. The preliminary injunction will be refused, and the restraining order will be set aside. The same order will be made in the similar case of the Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Same Defendants.