CITY OF YONKERS et al. v. UNITED STATES et al.
No. 109
Supreme Court of the United States
January 3, 1944
320 U.S. 685
Mr. John J. Broderick, with whom Mr. Leonard G. McAneny was on the brief, for the City of Yonkers; and Mr. Horace M. Gray for John W. Tooley, Jr.,—appellants.
Mr. J. Stanley Payne, with whom Solicitor General Fahy and Messrs. Walter J. Cummings, Jr. and Daniel W. Knowlton were on the brief, for the United States et al.; and Mr. Harold H. McLean, with whom Mr. Thomas P. Healy wаs on the brief, for the New York Central Railroad Co.,—appellees.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Interstate Commerce Act confers upon the Interstate Commerce Commission authority to issue certificates
The New York Central Railroad Co. filed an application with the Commission for a certificate under
This Yonkers electric branch handles no freight, mail, express, or milk traffic and nо industries are dependent on it for such service. Its traffic is exclusively passenger traffic, principally commuter travel between Getty Square and three other stations in Yonkers and Grand Central Station in New York City. The trains serving stations on this Yonkers electric branch do not go through to Grand Central Station on account of the congested condition of the main-line tracks funnelling into Grand Central Station. Accordingly, these trains run only from Getty Square to Van Cortlandt Park Junction and thence over the main line of the Putnam Division to the terminal at Sedgwick Avenue. Passengers from Yonkers to Grand Central Station must transfer to Hudson Division trains at either High Bridge or University Heights stations which are north of the Sedgwick Avenue Station. Tariffs of the New York Central provide for one-way, monthly-commutation, and other tickets usable between the stations in Yonkers and Grand Central Station. Time tables of the New York Central disclose the service on this electric branch. And its operating results are reflected in the accounts of the New York Central.
The trains running on this electric branch are composed of two, three or four cars. The trains are hauled not by a locomotive but by so-called multiple unit cars. The structure of the line is such that locomotives cannot be used on it. The trains on this electric branch proceed only tо Getty Square, Yonkers, and not beyond.
The Commission though adverting to a number of the facts which we have mentioned did not address itself to
This suit to enjoin the order of the Commission, brought before a District Court of three judges (38 Stat. 219, 220,
The District Court in sustaining the order of the Commission, reviewed the evidence and concluded that the operation of this electric branch was “intertwined with the operation of the system as a whole.” It relied especially on the fact that the bulk of the traffic on this electric branch transfers at High Bridge or University Heights
Thе Commission itself has noted that in the “construction of these exclusion clauses great difficulty has been experienced, particularly in determining the roads properly classifiable as interurban electric railways.” Annual Report (1928), p. 80. That difficulty is apparent here by the division of opinion which exists in the Court whether this Yonkers branch is an “interurban electric” railway which is “operated as a part” of the New York Central system.3
Congress has withheld from the Commission any power to authorize abandonment of certain types of railroad lines. It is hardly enough to say that the Commission‘s orders may be set aside by the courts where the Commission exceeds its authority. The Commission has a special competence to deal with the transportation problems which are reflected in these questions. The Congress has entrusted to the Commission the initial responsibility for determining through application of the statutory standards the appropriate line between the federal and state domains. Proper regard for the rightful concern of local interests in the management of local transportation facilities makes desirable the requirement that federal power be exercised only where the statutory authority affirmatively appears. The sacrifice of these legitimate local interests may be as readily achieved through the Commission‘s oversight or neglect (Illinois Commerce Commission v. Thomson, 318 U. S. 675) as by improper findings. The insistence that the Commission make these jurisdictional
We are asked to presume that the Commission, knowing the limit of its authority, considered this jurisdictional question and decided to aсt because of its conviction that this branch line was not exempt by reason of
This is not to insist on formalities and to burden the administrative process with ritualistic requirements. It entails a matter of great substance. It requires the Commission to heed the mandates of the Act and to make the expert determinations which are conditions precedent to its authority to act.
We intimate no opinion on the merits of the controversy. For in absence of the requisite jurisdictional findings we think the order of the Commission should have been set aside.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, dissenting:
Congress has empowered the Interstate Commerce Commission to authorize a railroad, when public convenience permits, to abandon any portion of its line. But when such portion is a suburban or interurban electric railway, abandonment may be authorized only if it is part of a general steam railroad system of transportation.
But the Court does not decide on the merits. In effect, it remits the controversy to the Interstate Commerce Commission on the ground that the Commission did not make a formal finding, described as “jurisdictional,” that the Yonkers branch was in fact “operated as a part . . . of a general steam railroad system of transportation.” The Commission may very well now formally make such a finding of a connection between the Yonkers branch and the New York Central, which in fact is writ large in the Commission‘s report in granting the application for abandonment, and the weary round of litigation may be re-
This seems to me all the more called for since I find no defect in the foundation of the Commission‘s order. No doubt the Interstate Commerce Commission like other administrative agencies should keep within legal bounds and courts should keep them there, in so far as Congress has entrusted them with judicial review over administrative acts. Of course when a statute makes indispensable “an express finding,” an express finding is imperative, see Wichita Railroad & Light Co. v. Public Utilities Comm‘n, 260 U. S. 48, 59. But the history of the Interstate Commerce Act and its amendments illuminе the different legal functions expressed by the term findings. When Congress exacts from the Commission formal findings there is an end to the matter. For certain duties of the Commission and at certain stages in the history of the Interstate Commerce Act, Congress did require formal findings, but experience led Congress later to dispense with such formal requirements. See Manufacturers Ry. Co. v. United States, 246 U. S. 457, 489-90. But courts have also spoken of the need of findings as the basis of validity of an order by the Interstatе Commerce Commission in the absence of a Congressional direction for findings: The requirement of findings in such a context is merely part of the need for courts to know what it is that the Commission has really determined in order that they may know what to review. “We must know what a decision means before the duty becomes ours to say whether it is right or
This is the real ground for the decisions which have found Interstate Commerce Commission orders wanting in necessаry findings. They have all been cases where the determination of an issue is not open to independent judgment by this Court, and where the case as it came here rested on conflicting inferences of fact left unresolved by the Commission. Such were the circumstances, for instance, in Florida v. United States, 282 U. S. 194, particularly at 214-215, and United States v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 293 U. S. 454, 455, particularly at 463-464. Findings in this sense is a way of describing the duty of the Commission to decide issues actually in controversy before it. Analysis is not furthered by speaking of such findings as “jurisdictional” and not even when—to adapt a famous phrase—jurisdictional is softened by a quasi. “Jurisdiction” competes with “right” as one of the most deceptive of legal pitfalls. The opinions in Crowell v. Benson, 285 U. S. 22, and the casuistries to which they have given rise bear unedifying testimony of the morass into which one is led in working out problems of judicial review over administrative decisions by loose talk about jurisdiction.
The nub of the matter regarding the requirement of findings, where the formal making of them is not legislatively commanded, is indicated in United States v. Louisiana, 290 U. S. 70. Reviewing the validity of the Commission‘s order is the serious business of sitting in judgment upon a tribunal of great traditions and large responsibility. An order of the Commission should not be viewed in a hypercritical spirit nor even as though elegantia juris were our concern. We should judge a challenged order of the Commission by “the report, read as a whole,” 290 U. S. supra at 80, and by the record as a whole out of which the report arоse.
Can there be any doubt that this contention was not put to the Commission because it was an afterthought? This issue was never tendered to the Commission because the facts which deny it were never questioned in the proceedings conducted before it with vigor and ability by several protestants during the three successive stages that preceded a challenge in the courts.
The case is now sent back to the Commission. The facts regarding the relation of the Yonkers branch to the New York Central are spread at large upon the record and are not in controversy. In view of the three proceedings before the Commission it is reasonable to assume that the Commission will add to its report the formal finding now requested of it. If the case then returns here I find it too hard to believe that this Court would reject the conclusion of the Commission and of the lower court that the Yonkers branch is an operating part of the New York Central
MR. JUSTICE REED and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON join in this opinion.
