79 Pa. Super. 540 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922
Opinion by
On August 24, 1920, the intervening appellee complained to the Public Service Commission that an an
1. Appellant first contends that the commission lacks power to regulate the rate during the period of two years beginning March 1,1920. This objection is based on the Transportation Act of 1920 (41 Stat. at L., 484, Chap. 91) amending the Interstate Commerce Act, and generally prescribing conditions under which federal control of railroads was relinquished. Federal control continued from January 1, 1918, until February 29, 1920. Section 209 of the Transportation Act established a guaranty period of six months beginning March 1, 1920, during which the United States would make various guaranties there specified, one of which appellant accepted. The complaint of the power company assailed a rate effective during the guaranty period.
In considering the Transportation Act, in Railroad Commission of Wisconsin et al. v. C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 42 Sup. Ct. Rep. 236, Chief Justice Taft said: “From January 1, 1918, until March 1, 1920, when the Transportation Act went into effect, the common carriers by steam railroad of the country were operated by the federal government. Due to the rapid rise in the prices of material and labor in 1918 and 1919, the expense of their operation had enormously increased by the time it was proposed to return the railroads to their owners. The
“Under Title 4, amendments were made to the Interstate Commerce Act which included section 13, paragraphs 3 and 4, and section 15a......The former for the first time authorizes the Commission to deal directly with intrastate rates where they are unduly discriminating against interstate commerce, — a power already indirectly exercised as to persons and localities, with approval of this court, in the Shreveport and other cases. The latter, the most novel and most important feature of the act, requires the Commission so to prescribe rates as to enable the carriers as a whole, or in groups selected by the Commission, to earn an aggregate annual net railway operating income equal to a fair return on the aggregate value of the railway property used in transportation. For two years, the return is to be 5% per cent, with % per cent for improvements, and thereafter is to be fixed by the Commission......
“It is manifest from this very condensed recital that the act made a new departure. Theretofore the control which Congress, through the Interstate Commerce Commission, exercised, was primarily for the purpose of preventing injustice by unreasonable or discriminatory rates against persons and localities, and the only provisions of the law that inured to the benefit of the carriers were the requirement that the rates should be reasonable in the sense of furnishing an adequate compensation for the particular service rendered, and the abolition of rebates. The new measure imposed an affirmative duty on the Interstate Commerce Commission to fix rates and to take other important steps to maintain an adequate rail
“Intrastate rates and the income from them must play a most important part in maintaining an adequate national railway system. Twenty per cent of the gross freight receipts of the railroads of the country are from intrastate traffic, and fifty per cent of the passenger receipts. The ratio of the gross intrastate revenue to the interstate revenue is a little less than one to three. If the rates, on which such receipts are based, are to be fixed at a substantially lower level than in interstate traffic, the share which the intrastate traffic will contribute will be proportionately less. If the railways are to earn a fixed net percentage of income, the lower the intrastate rates, the higher the interstate rates may have to be. The effective operation of the act will reasonably and justly require that intrastate traffic should pay a fair proportionate share of the cost of maintaining an adequate railway system. Section 15a confers no power on the CQjnmission to deal with the intrastate rates. What is done under that section is to be done by the commission- fin the exercise of its powers to prescribe just and reasonable rates’; i.e., powers derived from previous amendments to the Interstate Commerce Act, which have never been construed or used to embrace the prescribing of intrastate rates. When we turn to chapter 4, section 13, however, and find the commission for the first time vested with direct power to remove ‘any undue, unreasonable, or unjust discrimination against interstate or foreign commerce,’ it is impossible to escape the dovetail relation between that provision and the purpose of section 15a. If that purpose is interfered with by a disparity of intrastate rates, the commission is authorized to end the disparity by directly removing it, because it is plainly an ‘undue, unreasonable, and unjust disrimination against interstate or foreign
“Commerce is a unit and does not regard state lines, and while, under the Constitution, interstate and intrastate commerce are ordinarily subject to regulation by different sovereignties, yet when they are so mingled together that the supreme authority, the nation, cannot exercise complete, effective control over interstate commerce without incidental regulation of intrastate commerce, such incidental regulation is not an invasion of state authority or a violation of the proviso......
“Congress in its control of its interstate commerce system, is seeking in the Transportation Act to make the system adequate to the needs of the. country by securing for it a reasonably compensatory return for all the work it does. The states are seeking to use that same system for intrastate traffic. That entails large duties and expenditures on the interstate commerce system which may burden it unless compensation is received for the intrastate business reasonably proportionate to that for the interstate business. Congress, as the dominant controller of interstate commerce, may, therefore, restrain undue limitation of the earning power of the interstate commerce system in doing state work. The affirmative power of Congress in developing interstate commerce agencies is clear: Wilson v. Shaw, 204 U. S. 24; Luxton v. North River Bridge Co., 153 U. S. 525; California v. Central P. R. R. Co., 127 U. S. 1, 39. In such development, it can impose any reasonable condition on a state’s use of interstate carriers for intrastate commerce it deems necessary or desirable.”
Appellant relies upon that decision and upon the decision in New York v. United States et ah, decided the same day and reported' in 42 Sup. Ct. Rep. 245, for the proposition that the effect of the order appealed from is to make such reduction in appellant’s intrastate earnings as to constitute unjust discrimination against interstate commerce on its line.
Subsequent paragraphs of this section provide for disposition of such part of the net operating income of any railroad as shall exceed a fair return.
It was pursuant to that conclusion that appellant on August 26, 1920, made the 40% increase in the 40-cent rate theretofore charged. That rate had originally become 40 cents during federal control, as a result of certain negotiations between the power company and an agent of the Railroad Administration, which need not now be stated.
The power company operates a large power plant at Hauto, Carbon County, Pa., annually consuming nearly 400,000 tons of No. 3 buckwheat coal. Hauto is on appellant’s road in the Panther Creek anthracite mining district extending from Tamaqua on the west to Nesquehoning on the east, a distance of about ten miles. The power plant is about .7 of a mile from Hauto station, and is reached by a spur track owned by the power company. The average haul of the coal consigned to the power company is 3.8 miles, and the traffic is of course wholly intrastate. Concerning the dispute in the record as to
The record does not contain a separation of interstate and intrastate earnings. Exhibit 34 indicates that apappellant’s gross operating revenue for 1920 was $4,-842,965; Exhibit 1 shows the entire freight revenue for 1920 was $4,616,927, leaving operating revenue from all other sources of $226,038. Of the total freight revenue ($4,616,927), 57.57% was received for hauling anthracite coal. The total freight tonnage was 6,881,496 tons, of .which 55.34% (3,808,009 tons) was anthracite coal. Of that quantity, appellant delivered to complainant 372,414 tons, or almost 10%. Three million, three hundred and two thousand, five hundred and nine (3,302,509) tons out of the total anthracite tonnage originated on appellant’s line. On the power company’s annual consumption of 372,414 tons, the reduction from 56 to 35 cents a ton will amount to $78,206.94; counsel for the power company state the. reduction “on the business of a full year” at “upwards of $75,000.” This probable reduction therefore amounts to almost 7% of the annual rental (apparently about $1,125,700) paid by the government during federal control. On those facts, appellant contends that to take about $78,000 per year from its gross freight revenue of only $4,617,000 from both classes of commerce, (of which 81.34% in 1920 went for operating expenses), is to place a burden equal to that reduction upon its interstate commerce, and unjustly to discriminate against that commerce by substantially altering the relation between the two which the Interstate Commerce Commission established in Ex Parte 74.
In that proceeding, the Interstate Commerce Commission recognized the probable necessity for correction and adjustment of inequalities in rate incident to the uniform increase approved, for it provided “......It is impracticable at this time to adjust all of the rates on
The question then is whether the Public Service Commission had power to regulate this intrastate rate in such way as to cause an annual reduction of $78,000 in the aggregate revenue possibly earnable from both classes of commerce during the two-year period at the rates so adjusted by the Interstate Commerce Commission, or whether it is the duty of the Interstate Commerce Commission to make a general adjustment. As it was not intended that carriers should charge unlawful rates, we assume for the purposes of considering this point, that the increased rate was unreasonable, as the commission found, to the extent that it exceeded 35 cents.
While it is true the record indicates a relatively large diminution in appellant’s freight revenue resulting from the reduction ordered, we must hold that it does not show discrimination against interstate commerce. There is no interstate rate with which to compare the intrastate rate in question; nor is there other evidence, for comparison, to indicate how, if at all, the reduction will affect interstate commerce. In the Wisconsin case (supra) it appeared that the interstate passenger rate was 3.6 cents a mile, while the state proposed that the intrastate passenger rate should be 2 cents a mile, which, if enforced, would result in a reduction of $6,000,000 gross revenue; the record showed a different measure of charge for practically the same service. The New York case was substantially to the same effect; see also in re Intrastate Rates in Illinois, 59 I. C. C. Rep. 350, and
2. The second objection to the order is that the evidence does not show the rate was unreasonable. There was evidence both ways. Appellant offered no evidence of the cost of performing the service in question, or of the value of its property used and useful therefor; nor is there evidence of the value of the service to the shipper or consignee though the character is described. The power company furnished an estimate of the cost of performing the service from which both parties draw conclusions said to support their respective contentions. The commission fixed a rate in excess of what the power company contended the evidence justified.
We are asked to set aside the inferences made by the commission and to adopt those suggested by appellant. Whether we may do so or not, depends on the statute. For the purposes of this appeal, the statute makes the ultimate conclusion of the commission “prima facie evidence of the reasonableness thereof,” so that we must dismiss the appeal, unless we can “upon the record find that the order appealed from is [1] unreasonable or [2] based upon incompetent evidence materially affecting the determination or order of the commission, or [3] is otherwise not in conformity with law” (article VI, sections 23, 24). But it has repeatedly been held that we may not set aside an order which has adequate evidence to sustain it, merely because we might have reached a different conclusion from the evidence: Mount Union Boro. v. Water Co., 63 Pa. Superior Ct. 337, 341; West Virginia P. & P. Co. v. Pub. Ser. Comm., 65 Pa. Superior Ct. 5, 8; I. C. C. v. U. P. R. R. Co., 222 U. S. 541, 547; I. C. C. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 227 U. S. 88, 92. Applying the rule so limiting our consideration of the record, we cannot sustain the contention that the commission erred in holding the rate unreasonable to the extent it exceeded 35 cents. We may note that during federal con
3. The third objection to the order is that the rate fixed — 35 cents a ton — is confiscatory. It is well settled we may sustain that contention only in a clear case: P. R. R. v. Phila. Co., 220 Pa. 100. “It is fundamental that the judicial power to declare legislative action invalid upon constitutional grounds is to be exercised only in clear cases. The constitutional invalidity must be manifest and if it rests upon disputed questions of fact, the invalidating facts must be proved. And this is true of asserted value as of other facts”; Minnesota Rate cases, 230 U. S. 352, 452.
What, then, are the facts proved? As has appeared, complainant produced evidence of the estimated cost of rendering the particular service in question; appellant offered no evidence on the subject but sought to justify its rate by deductions from complainant’s evidence of cost; on a consideration of that evidence, two commissions, as we have stated, inclined towards the conclusions of complainant and against the inferences suggested by appellant. In adopting the rate, the commission not only allowed all of the estimated cost and profit suggested by complainant’s evidence, but substantially more. There was no evidence indicating the value of appellant’s property used and useful in performing this service. There is a statement by a witness that “on December 31, 1920, the book value of the company’s property used in transportation service was $17,464,152.” By using that sum as a rate base for its entire operating revenue, appellant says its rate of return for 1920, on $17,464,152 was
4. Appellant objects that the commission retained "jurisdiction of the case in the matter of reparation.” It contends that the Transportation Act prohibits granting reparation by providing in section 208a that the rates in effect on February 29, 1920, when federal control terminated, "shall continue in force and effect until thereafter changed by state or federal authority, respectively, or pursuant to authority of law; but prior to September 1, 1920, no such rate, fare or charge shall be reduced ......unless such reduction or charge is approved by the [Interstate Commerce] Commission.” During federal control both interstate and intrastate rates were made
5. Appellant finally asks that we reverse because the commission refused a rehearing. Three reasons for the rehearing are given: 1. To call attention to the commission’s misapprehension of the testimony; 2. To supplement the evidence that other carriers charged sub
It follows from what we have said that the items making up the total of $17,464,000 could not have changed our conclusion. As it does not appear that the information concerning the similarity of conditions governing the applicability of the rates charged by other carriers was not available before appellant closed its evidence, and as the evidence to which we have referred, concerning the cost of service was apparently persuasive with the commission, we do not consider the order unreasonable for failure to grant a rehearing.
The appeal is dismissed.