214 F. 465 | E.D. Ky. | 1914
The general situation appears by our former opinion (¿C. C.] 186 Fed. 176, sub nom. L.-N. R. R. v. Siler) and by the opinion of the Supreme Court (231 U. S. 298, 34 Sup. Ct. 48, 58 L. Ed.-, sub nom. L.-N. R. R. v. Garrett). On the former hearing, plaintiff urged, as one ground of relief, that the order of the Railroad Commission had been made without any evidence whatever that its newly prescribed rate was reasonable, and hence that the order was invalid; and it supported this allegation by affidavits that, upon the hearing before the Commission, no evidence to this effect was offered. We held that these affidavits stated only conclusions of law, so that the allegation of lack of evidence was itself not proved; and. this view was also taken by the Supreme Court. As to the desired injunction against the reparation order, it was held, both by this court and the Supreme Court, that the question could not be raised on a record to which the reparation claimants were not parties. The case having been remanded, plaintiff now files an amended bill and makes a new motion for interlocutory injunction. As to the future rate, the present motion is based upon the same proposition that the Commission had before it no evidence that the new rate was reasonable; and, upon this motion, the allegation is supported by a transcript of all the proceedings before the Commission, and it is said that, by this transcript, the lack of any evidence to support the Commission’s finding sufficiently appears. As to the reparation order, it now appears that the claimants under that order have been made parties.
It is next urged that, even if no evidence on the subject was put before the Commission, that fact does not justify' this court in setting aside the order fixing a future rate; in other words, it is said that the cases in which the Supreme Court has, for this reason, vacated an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission do not apply where a federal court is dealing with the order of a state commission, and-this for the reason that the Interstate Commerce Act expressly gives to the courts a power to review, while the Kentucky act contains no such general provision. It is an interesting question whether the power of this kind which the Supreme Court has exercised depends in any degree upon this clause of the Interstate Commerce Act (I. C. C. v. U. P. R. R., 222 U. S. 541, 547, 32 Sup. Ct. 108, 56 L. Ed. 308; I. C. C. v. L. & N. R. R., 227 U. S. 88, 92, 33 Sup. Ct. 185, 57 L. Ed. 431), or whether, since legislative power cannot be given to the courts, this exercise depends on the inherent right to forbid- prejudicial action under color of an order invalid because made without jurisdiction (Procter v. U. S., 225 U. S. 282, 298, 32 Sup. Ct. 761, 56 L. Ed. 1091). However this may be, we think the question is not now controlling, and we pass it by without decision, assuming, but only for the purposes of this case, that, if in truth there was no supporting evidence, the order cannot stand.
The claim that the low rates amount to nothing as present evidence ■of what is reasonable, because they were specially made to build up an otherwise impossible industry, is fully met by the railroad’s concession, made upon the argument before us and in its testimony before the Commission, that the same rates had been maintained for a long time after this reason had ceased to exist, and that its effort to discontinue these special rates was not because of the disappearance of this justification, but because the Interstate Commerce Commission had forbidden the special rate to one particular class of shippers. This concession removes all distinguishing force from this alleged unusual' reason for the rate, and leaves the prima facie evidential force of that rate so far unaffected. The situation is analogous to that concerning which the Supreme Court said (I. C. C. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., supra, at page 99 of 227 U. S., at page 190 of 33 Sup. Ct. [57 L. Ed. 431]):
“When made, the increase was not because of the absence of water competition, but to make the sum of the locals correspond with the through rates. Under the circumstances, the maintenance of these low rates, after the water •competition disappeared, tends to support the theory that, by an increase oí business or other cause, they had become reasonable and compensatory.”
We come next to the claim that the return traffic in the high-rate finished product neutralizes the evidential effect of the low inbound
Turning now to the supposed disastrous effect of the new rate upon the general grain traffic for every purpose, the railroad company is met by a similar obstacle. It has not proved that there is any other traffic of material or substantial volume which will be injuriously affected by the new rate, although, upon the hearing before the Commission, the railroad was' expressly invited to offer' any proof it had that it would suffer injury in this way. Here again the railroad company asks us to take notice and insists that the Commission should have taken notice of facts which cannot be judicially known. As to many of the interior points where distilleries are located and where the Commission’s order takes direct effect, or where a similar order will take direct effect, it affirmatively appears that there is no substantial traffic in grain, excepting to these distilleries. A few of the distilleries, however, are in towns or cities of considerable size, and, in the nature of things, there must be some such traffic to mills or to feed stores, etc., and some outbound shipment of locally grown grain from these points; but that this traffic, which perhaps we must presume has some existence, is large enough to be worth any attention or to merit the granting of an extraordinary remedy, or indeed to give jurisdiction to this court, does not appear and cannot be assumed.
It follows that there was not, upon the hearing before the Commission, an entire failure of substantial proof to support the order which the Commission made, and that the order cannot, for that cause, be set aside. The rightfulness of this result is emphasized when we consider the conduct of the railroad at the hearing before the Commission. It was given ample opportunity to produce any proof which it desired, but it deliberately elected to stand upon the supposed inefficiency of the attack on its existing rates, and declined to exert itself to show that they were reasonable or that, if the proposed new rates were put in force, it would suffer any loss of revenue to which it was reasonably entitled. Under such circumstances, the railroad has scant equity in asking relief from the result of its carefully chosen course.
“Such money paid into court and subsequent similar payments shall be refunded to the parties paying the excess respectively, if it shall finally be determined that such excess was not lawfully collected, otherwise to be returned to the complainant.”
This order was made January 12, 1911. Under its terms while the appeal was pending in the Supreme Court, a considerable sum has accumulated. The distillers who paid the freight charges covering these excess amounts so paid into court, and who have now been made parties to this case, move for an order that this fund be distributed and returned to them. We do not see how this can be done. It might have been better if our former order had provided for repayment of these amounts if it should “finally be determined that the restraining order was improvidently issued”; but this was not the form of the order. The language which was used provided that the fund should remain in court until the question of the lawfulness of the rate “shall finally be determined.” There cannot be a final determination except by final decree; and that has not come. We could set aside or modify this order as to its further effect, but we cannot change what has been done, because the railroad has paid these sums into court upon the condition specified in the order, and it is entitled to the observance of that condition. The motion for distribution is denied.
The existing restraining order will be continued only for the few days necessary for the,railroad to notify its agents that the new rate must be applied, and will then be dissolved.