HARRIMAN v. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION; KAHN v. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION; INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION v. HARRIMAN
Nos. 315, 316, 317
Supreme Court of the United States
December 14, 1908
211 U. S. 407
APPEALS FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK. Argued November 3, 4, 1908.
Judge, as conceded by the Government, that the affidavit was not, in fact, presented to the Secretary of the Interior, but was simply filed in the local land office.
The demurrer was sustained, “for reasons given on consideration of the second count in the indictment,” in the case against F. W. Keitel et al. The case at bar comes within the principles applied by us in No. 287, just decided, where, in passing upon the rulings made below in the Keitel case, it was held that the second count of the indictment there considered, when the statute was correctly construed, stated no offense. The judgment below, which involved a similar ruling, is therefore
Affirmed.
HARRIMAN v. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION.
KAHN v. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION v. HARRIMAN.
APPEALS FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK.
Nos. 315, 316, 317. Argued November 3, 4, 1908.—Decided December 14, 1908.
The primary purpose of the Interstate Commerce Act is to regulate interstate business of carriers, and the secondary purpose, that for which the commission was established, to enforce the regulations enacted by it, and the power to require testimony is limited, as is usual in English-speaking countries, to investigations concerning a specific breach of the existing law; this power is not extended to mere investigations by provisions in any of the amendatory acts in regard to annual reports of interstate carriers, or of the commission, or for the purpose of recommending legislation.
Quære whether Congress has unlimited power to compel testimony in regard to subjects which do not concern direct breaches of law, and whether, and to what extent, it can delegate such power.
THE facts are stated in the opinion.
Mr. John C. Spooner and Mr. John G. Milburn, with whom Mr. Robert S. Lovett was on the brief, for Edward H. Harriman:
Congress has conferred upon the Interstate Commerce Commission authority to investigate, and in connection therewith compel the testimony of witnesses, only in aid of its duty to execute and enforce the provisions of the act to regulate commerce.
The commission is a body of limited powers derived exclusively from the act to regulate commerce. It is a purely administrative body charged with specific administrative duties and invested with specific powers. Kentucky Bridge Co. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 37 Fed. Rep. 567. The restricted operation of the act limits the powers of the commission. Neither the province of the act or the commission is coextensive with interstate commerce or interstate transportation. United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Association, 166 U. S. 290.
An analysis of the act shows that the commission is merely an administrative agency for the enforcement of the provisions of the act to regulate commerce.1
The act is primarily an enumeration of particular duties imposed upon common carriers; of particular acts on their part which are prohibited; and of particular duties and powers relating thereto conferred upon the commission. The duties it imposes and the acts it prohibits are the only duties and acts of common carriers with which the act is concerned. It is an act of details and not of generalities. Every duty it imposes is definitely specified, and a carrier which observes them complies with the act in full. The primary function of the commission is to enforce the performance of those duties and prevent the doing of the prohibited acts, and to that end the necessary machinery of investigation, hearings on complaints,
The business of a common carrier covered by the act is the business of transportation;—the movement of traffic; reasonable, equal and public rates; equal facilities; and the functions of the commission are limited to those aspects of its business. The language of the act is entirely inappropriate to the creation of a power of investigation with the aid of compulsory testimony coextensive with a visitatorial power over all the acts, transactions and relations of a corporation, although a corporation engaged in part in interstate transportation.
There is nothing in
The cases cited in support of the claim of an inquisitorial power beyond the enforcement of the provisions of the act do not sustain it. Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U. S. 447; Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baird, 194 U. S. 25; Interstate Commerce Commission v. C., N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co., 167 U. S. 479; Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S. 426, discussed and said not to sustain the power contended for by counsel for the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Mr. Walker D. Hines, with whom Mr. Paul D. Cravath was on the brief, for appellant, Kahn:
The commission has no power to ask questions of persons not connected with carriers, except to ascertain whether or not the act has been obeyed. Interstate Commerce Commission v. Reichmann, 145 U. S. 237, 242.
The general power of the commission to inquire into the management of the business of common carriers does not authorize these questions.
The questions related to the private business of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., and not to the business of the Union Pacific.
The theory that under
The commission‘s authority to inquire into the management of the business of carriers is an authority to obtain information from carriers themselves, but not from private persons.
The commission‘s authority to require information from the carriers themselves does not extend to matters having no connection with the general subject-matter of the act to regulate commerce, and the questions asked Mr. Kahn have no such connection.
The commission has no power to make inquiries of private persons merely for the purpose of considering the propriety of recommending additional legislation when such questions have no relation to any inquiry as to violations of the act.
To create such a power in the commission is to give it, by unwarrantable implication, an inquisitorial power into private affairs over which it was never intended that the commission should have any supervision. The commission‘s investigating power is given “for the purposes” of the act. “The purposes” of the act are to be found alone in the requirements expressed in the act. Those requirements can be construed and understood and applied. To go beyond that is to go into a realm of endless speculation and uncertainty.
The commission‘s duty and authority are sufficiently broad and sufficiently difficult of effective and impartial discharge when confined to the things which Congress has required, and should not be extended to those things which Congress did not require, but which the commission may assume that Congress hoped to accomplish.
Mr. Frank B. Kellogg and Mr. Cordenio A. Severance, with whom Mr. Henry L. Stimson was on the brief, for Interstate Commerce Commission:
The Interstate Commerce Commission, in making this investigation, had all the power of a congressional committee of inquiry, so far as interstate carriers are concerned, and could inquire into the management of such interstate carriers and all the financial operations and business thereof, not only for the purpose of regulating rates, fares and charges as provided by the Interstate Commerce Act, but for the purpose of recommending additional legislation. See
The end which Congress is seeking to obtain by the Interstate Commerce Act, namely, the proper regulation of interstate commerce, being indisputably within its constitutional powers, and Congress, by the sections of the act hereinbefore quoted, having emphatically declared its opinion that an inquiry into
The situation is even more serious than when a court is called upon, to pass upon the constitutionality of a statute. In such a case the court will not set aside the statute unless the unconstitutionality exists beyond a reasonable doubt. Legal Tender Cases, 12 Wall. 531; Trade-mark Cases, 100 U. S. 96; Nicol v. Ames, 173 U. S. 514.
But the case now before the court goes even further. To uphold these appellants in their contumacy is to prejudge Congress and to hold that by no rational possibility could it legislate upon the subject-matter at issue; and this without permitting Congress, through the Interstate Commerce Commission, to obtain the facts upon which such legislation could properly be constitutionally based; and without permitting Congress itself after it shall have acquired such facts, within its constitutional powers of debate, to consider them. As to the power which entitles legislative committees to elicit information of the character here sought, see In re Chapman, 166 U. S. 668; People v. Keeler, 99 N. Y. 463; People v. Sharp, 107 N. Y. 427, and Falvey & Kilbourn v. Massing, 7 Wisconsin, 630, which lay down very clearly the rule.
This inquisitorial power of the Interstate Commerce Commission has been fruitfully used. An examination of the debates of Congress and decisions of the courts will show that it was upon information developed by the commission and reported to Congress, that the Elkins Law, the Safety Appliance Law, the Employers’ Liability Act, and the Hepburn Act, were successively based; in other words, the inquisitorial work of the commission has been the basis of all congressional legislation affecting interstate carriers during the past twenty years.
The contention that the inquiry involved the private business of the appellants is no answer to the right of the commission to have the inquiry answered.
Of course, sales of property by directors to their railroad
But even if the transactions under inquiry had not concerned men who hold official positions in the company, but were transactions of purely private individuals, being, as they were, relevant to the subject-matter under inquiry by the commission, their privacy was no shield against the commission‘s probe. Wigmore on Evidence, § 2192; Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baird, 194 U. S. 46; Burnham v. Morrissey, 14 Gray, 226.
Within the sphere of inquiry entrusted to the Interstate Commerce Commission the power to investigate the truth has been deemed of such paramount importance to the public that even those privileges which usually maintain in a court of justice have been abolished by statute. No man can assert before the Interstate Commerce Commission or before a court, on an inquiry into matters within the purview of the Interstate Commerce Act, that his answer would tend to incriminate or degrade him; and his refusal to answer inquiries before that commission not only subjects him to proceedings for contempt, but is expressly made a crime (act of February 11, 1893; 27 Stat. L. 443).
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the court.
These are appeals; on the one side, from an order of the Circuit Court directing the appellants, Harriman and Kahn, to answer certain questions put during an investigation by the Interstate Commerce Commission, and, on the other, from
In November, 1906, the Interstate Commerce Commission, of its own motion, and not upon complaint, made an order reciting the authority and requirements of the act to regulate commerce (Feb. 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379), and proceeding as follows: “And whereas it appears to the Commission that consolidations and combinations of carriers subject to the act, and the relations now and heretofore existing between such carriers, including community of interests therein, and the practises and methods of such carriers affecting the movement of interstate commerce, the rates received and facilities furnished therefor should be made the subject of investigation by the Commission to the end that it may be fully informed in respect thereof, and to the further end that it may be ascertained whether such consolidations, combinations, relations, community of interests, practises, or methods result in violations of said act or tend to defeat its purposes; It is ordered that a proceeding of investigation and inquiry into and concerning the matters above stated be, and the same is hereby instituted.” A time and place was set for the first hearing, and the inquiry thus begun was continued for about two months, resulting in the report of July, 1907, entitled “Consolidations and Combinations of Carriers,” etc. 12 I. C. C. R. 277.
In the course of the inquiry the appellant Harriman was called by the commission and testified as a witness. At the time of the transactions referred to he was a director and also the president and the chairman of the Executive Committee of the Union Pacific Railroad Company. The relations between the Union Pacific and other connecting roads, parallel or not, were under investigation and are set forth in the commission‘s report. It is enough to say that the Union Pacific Railroad Company is incorporated under the laws of Utah, and, as has been asserted and assumed, has power under the state laws to purchase the stock of other railroads, a power that it has
Next he was asked with regard to stock of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company, bought by the Oregon Short Line Railroad Company, another Utah corporation, the stock of which was owned by the Union Pacific, whether it was part of the stock that had been acquired previously by him and two others, and whether it or any part of it was owned by any of the three. After answering the first question, “I think not,” he was stopped by his counsel and refused to answer further. Again, it appearing that the Union Pacific, in July, 1906, purchased 90,000 shares of Illinois Central Railroad stock from Messrs. Rogers, Stillman and the witness, he was asked whether that stock was acquired by a pool of the three, whether it was acquired with a view of selling it to the Union Pacific, and whether it or any part of it was bought at a much lower price than $175 a share with the intent just mentioned. These questions the witness declined to answer. It appearing further that Kuhn, Loeb & Company, who were the fiscal agents of the Union Pacific, had sold to it 105,000 shares of the Illinois Central stock on the same date, he was asked if he had any interest in these shares, and whether they were acquired by a pool for the purpose of selling them to the Union Pacific. These questions the witness declined to answer. Again, it appearing that the Union Pacific had purchased stock of the St. Joseph and Grand Island Railroad Company from the witness since the last-mentioned date, he was asked when he acquired the stock and what he paid for it, and again de-
The petition of the Interstate Commerce Commission set forth two other questions which the witness refused to answer, and on which it asked the order of the Circuit Court. One was a general one, whether he was interested in any stocks bought between the nineteenth of July and the seventeenth of August that appreciated, and another, more specific, was whether he or any director bought any Union and [or] Southern Pacific in anticipation of a certain dividend, the suggestion being that announcement of the dividend was delayed for the directors to profit by their secret knowledge and that they did so. With regard to these the petition was denied, and the Interstate Commerce Commission appealed.
The appellant Kahn was a member of the firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Company. He also was asked whether any of the directors of the Union Pacific were the real owners of any of the shares of the Chicago and Alton Railroad deposited, as has been stated, with Kuhn, Loeb & Company, and sold to the Union Pacific. He was asked further in various forms whether the before mentioned 105,000 shares of Illinois Central stock, or any part of them, really belonged to or were held for any of the directors of the Union Pacific. And again, whether at the same time that he bought these shares he bought for Messrs. Harriman, Rogers and Stillman the stocks they sold at the same time that he sold his. Finally he was asked whether the 105,000 shares, and the 90,000 shares turned in by Stillman, Rogers and Harriman, were all bought through his instrumentality for a pool of which they and he were members, that
Many broad questions were discussed in the argument before us, but we shall confine ourselves to comparatively narrow ground. The contention of the commission is that it may make any investigation that it deems proper, not merely to discover any facts tending to defeat the purposes of the act of February 4, 1887, but to aid it in recommending any additional legislation relating to the regulation of commerce that it may conceive to be within the power of Congress to enact; and that in such an investigation it has power, with the aid of the courts, to require any witness to answer any question that may have a bearing upon any part of what it has in mind. The contention necessarily takes this extreme form, because this was a general inquiry started by the commission of its own motion, not an investigation upon complaint, or of some specific matter that might be made the object of a complaint. To answer this claim it will be sufficient to construe the act creating the commission, upon which its powers depend.
Before taking up the words of the statute the enormous scope of the power asserted for the commission should be emphasized and dwelt upon. The legislation that the commission may recommend embraces, according to the arguments before us, anything and everything that may be conceived to be within the power of Congress to regulate, if it relates to commerce with foreign nations or among the several States. And the result of the arguments is that whatever might influence the mind of the commission in its recommendations is a subject upon which it may summon witnesses before it and require them to disclose any facts, no matter how private, no matter what their tendency to disgrace the person whose attendance has been compelled. If we qualify the statement and say only, legitimately influence the mind of the commission in the opinion of the court called in aid, still it will be seen
How far Congress could legislate on the subject-matter of the questions put to the witnesses was one of the subjects of discussion, but we pass it by. Whether Congress itself has the unlimited power claimed by the commission, we also leave on one side. It was intimated that there was a limit in Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U. S. 447, 478, 479. Whether it could delegate the power, if it possesses it, we also leave untouched, beyond remarking that so unqualified a delegation would present the constitutional difficulty in most acute form. It is enough for us to say that we find no attempt to make such a delegation anywhere in the act.
Whatever may be the power of Congress, it did not attempt, in the act of February 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379, to do more than to regulate the interstate business of common carriers, and the primary purpose for which the commission was established was to enforce the regulations which Congress had imposed. The earlier sections of the statute require that charges shall be reasonable, prohibit discrimination and pooling of freights, require the publication of rates, and so forth, in well-known provisions. Then, by
The commission it will be seen is given power to require the testimony of witnesses “for the purposes of this Act.” The argument for the commission is that the purposes of the act embrace all the duties that the act imposes and the powers that it gives the commission; that one of the purposes is that the commission shall keep itself informed as to the manner and method in which the business of the carriers is conducted, as required by
We are of opinion on the contrary that the purposes of the act for which the commission may exact evidence embrace only complaints for violation of the act, and investigations by the commission upon matters that might have been made the object of complaint. As we already have implied the main purpose of the act was to regulate the interstate business of carriers, and the secondary purpose, that for which the commission was established, was to enforce the regulations enacted. These in our opinion are the purposes referred to; in other words the power to require testimony is limited, as it usually is in English-speaking countries at least, to the only cases where the sacrifice
That this is the true view appears, we think, sufficiently from the original form of
The plain limit to the authority to institute an inquiry given by
It is true that in the latest amendment of
In
Order in 315 and 316 reversed.
Order in 317 affirmed.
Petition denied.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY, not having been present at the argument, took no part in the decision.
MR. JUSTICE DAY, dissenting.
I am constrained to dissent from the opinion of the court in this case. It seems to me that too narrow a construction has been given to the act of Congress conferring power upon the Interstate Commerce Commission to conduct investigations into the affairs of corporations engaged in interstate commerce.
The court in the prevailing opinion has not placed its decision upon the want of power in Congress to legislate concerning the subject-matter of investigation in this case. The decision is based wholly upon the construction of the act of Congress, and as I am unable to concur in the view taken in the opinion, I will state the grounds upon which my dissent rests.
The reports of committees which accompanied the enactment of the Interstate Commerce Law, in its original form, show that importance was attached to the power conferred upon the commission to make investigations as well as to make orders relating to specific complaints as to practices affecting the conduct of interstate commerce and the instrumentalities by which the same is carried on. It was to have a power of investigation, such as had been conferred upon similar bodies in the States and in the English acts regulating the subject, with a view to eliciting information important to be had, in order to lay the basis for intelligent and efficient action in the legislative branch of the Government to which the Constitution has delegated power to regulate commerce among the States and with foreign nations.
In speaking of this power, Judge Cooley, the eminent chairman of the commission, in its first annual report, said:
“This is a very important provision and the commission will no doubt have frequent occasion to take action under it. It will not hesitate to do so in any case in which a mischief of public importance is thought to exist, and which is not likely to be brought to its attention on complaint of a private prosecutor.”
In numerous instances investigations have been conducted by the commission having in view the exercise of its authority to afford information as to the manner and methods in which corporations engaged in interstate commerce are conducting their business. These investigations have been undertaken upon the initiative of the commission; witnesses have been subpœnaed; and testimony has been taken without objection from those interested that the power of the commission conferred by the acts of Congress had been exceeded. While these considerations are not determinative of the extent of the powers conferred in the act, they are suggestive of the practical construction which those interested have put upon it.
The act itself makes provision for two kinds of investigation, the one under
We are concerned in this case with an investigation undertaken upon the initiative of the commission under
“That the commission hereby created shall have authority to inquire into the management of the business of all common carriers subject to the provisions of this act, and shall keep itself informed as to the manner and method in which the same is conducted, and shall have the right to obtain from such common carriers full and complete information necessary to enable the commission to perform the duties and carry out the objects for which it was created; and the commission is hereby authorized and required to execute and enforce the provisions of this act; and, upon the request of the commission, it shall be the duty of any district attorney of the United States to whom the commission may apply to institute in the proper court and to prosecute under the direction of the Attorney General of the United States all necessary proceedings for the enforcement of the provisions of this act and for the punishment of all violations thereof, and the costs and expenses of such prosecution shall be paid out of the appropriation for the expenses
“Such attendance of witnesses, and the production of such documentary evidence, may be required from any place in the United States, at any designated place of hearing. And in case of disobedience to a subpœna the commission, or any party to a proceeding before the commission, may invoke the aid of any court of the United States in requiring the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of books, papers, and documents under the provisions of this section.”
The plain reading of this section is that for the purposes of the act the commission shall have power to require, by subpœna, the attendance and testimony of witnesses, and the production of books, papers, contracts, tariffs, agreements, and documents relating to any matter under investigation. Notwithstanding the broad language used by Congress, it is now held that the power of the commission to require testimony embraces only subjects stated in complaints for the violation of the act, or investigations by the commission upon matters which might have been the subject of complaint. I am unable to follow the reasoning which thus cuts down the expressed words of the act, which enables the commission to require testimony for all purposes of the act. The complaints under the act may relate to unreasonable rates, to discriminating practices, to the management of the affairs of the carrier as involved in or connected with the conduct of interstate commerce, to the relations of interstate carriers with each other, and the like matters, directly affecting corporations and individuals engaged in interstate commerce. These things are within the purposes of the act, but no more so, in my judgment, than the declared purpose of the act to endow the commission with investigating powers, having in view the ascertainment of the manner in which interstate commerce business is con-
For the purposes of the act this power to require the attendance of witnesses and the production of books, papers, tariffs, contracts, etc., relating to any matter under investigation, is specifically conferred by Congress. To make the act read that the power shall be conferred only for the purposes of laying the ground for redress of specific complaints, or things which might be the subject-matter of complaints, narrows its provisions from the broad power conferred in the language used by Congress to powers limited to the execution of only a part of the act. It seems to me that the restricted construction given in the opinion has the effect to entirely reform the act of Congress, substituting for it, by judicial construction, a much narrower act than Congress intended to pass, and did in fact, pass.
In
Nor are the purposes of the act for which the power to subpœna witnesses, require the production of books, papers, etc., alone defined in
The function of investigation which Congress has conferred upon the Interstate Commerce Commission is one of great importance, and while of course it can only be exercised within the constitutional limitations which protect the individual from unreasonable searches and seizures and unconstitutional invasions of liberty, the act should not be construed so narrowly as to defeat its purposes.
In the case of Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U. S. 447, 474, this court had under consideration the provisions of
“An adjudication that Congress could not establish an administrative body with authority to investigate the subject of interstate commerce, and with power to call witnesses before it, and to require the production of books, documents and
And in Interstate Commerce Commission v. Railway, 167 U. S. 506, this court said:
“It [the commission] is charged with the general duty of inquiring as to the management of the business of railroad companies, and to keep itself informed as to the manner in which the same is conducted, and has the right to compel complete and full information as to the manner in which such carriers are transacting their business.”
In the case of Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S. 438; this court said:
“The commission was endowed with plenary administrative power to supervise the conduct of carriers, to investigate their affairs, their accounts, and their methods of dealing, and generally to enforce the provisions of the act.”
In the case last cited it was held that a rate filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission could only be attacked for unreasonableness by a proceeding before the commission, with a direct view to a change in the rate. The power thus invested in the commission, no less than the power conferred in this case, affected shippers from Maine to Texas, and required a shipper making complaint against a common carrier for carriage in a remote part of the country to obtain redress for unreasonable rates only by a proceeding before the Interstate Commerce Commission, which ordinarily sits in the capital at
Assuming, for the purposes of this case and the construction of the statute, that the relations of directors in a corporation engaged in interstate commerce to the sales of stock to such corporation may be the subject of inquiry when Congress confers such power upon the commission, I think that in this act Congress has conferred such power. If such is the proper construction of the act, it follows that the commission had a right to propound the questions which the Circuit Court directed to be answered. In my view the judgment of the Circuit Court should be affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE MCKENNA concur in this dissent.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN also dissents in No. 317.
