178 F. 664 | 2d Cir. | 1910
(after stating the facts as above). The act to further regulate commerce, known as the “Elkins Act” (Act Feb. 19, 1903, c. 708, 32 Stat. 847 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1909, p. 1138]), as it existed at' the time of the aforesaid transactions, made it a mide-meanor for any person or corporation—
“to offer, grant or give or to solicit, accept or receive any rebate, concession, or discrimination in respect of the transportation of any property in interstate or foreign commerce by any common carrier subject to the said act to regulate the commerce and the acts amendatory thereof, whereby any such property shall by any device whatever be transported at a less rate than -that named in the tariffs published and filed by such carriers, as is required by said act to regulate commerce and the acts amendatory thereof, whereby any other advantage is given or discrimination is practiced.”
Whether, then, the defendant offered a rebate or concession in violation of this statute depends upon whether it was a carrier subject to the interstate commerce act (Act Feb. 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3154]). If it were not required to file its rates and were not bound by rates filed by other carriers, it had full right to carry at lower rates.
The interstate commerce act, broadly speaking, applies to railroad companies. All railroads engaged in interstate-transportation come within its provisions. On the other hand, broadly speaking, the act 'does not apply to carriers by water. As a general rule, such carriers are not required to file or publish their rates, and are under no statutory restrictions with respect to rebates or other discriminations. The fact even that an independarit water line is part of a through interstate route does not in and of itself bring it within the act. But certain water carriers are subject to the act and that which is necessary to bring such a carrier within its provisions is stated by the act itself. Section 1, as it existed at the time of the transactions in question, provided:
“ * * * That the provisions of this act shall apply to any Common carrier or carriers engaged in the transportation of passengers or property wholly by railroad, or partly by railroad and partly by water when both are used, under a common control, management or Arrangement for a continuous carriage or shipment, from one state or territory * * * to any other state or territory. * * * ”
The defendant, then, was subject to the act only in case it is established that it was “under a common control, management or arrangement” with the railroad carriers. And as no arrangement with respect to. the carriage of other freight for other shippers is shown, and as it is not contended that the defendant and any of the railroad carriers were under a “common control” or “management,” the inquiry may be reduced to the question whether it is shown that there was a “common arrangement” for the continuous carriage of this iron pipe for the Camden Iron Works from Emaus to Winnipeg. The-phrase “common arrangement,” in view of. its context, evidently means
It is not necessary that a “common arrangement” should be established by proof of formal concurrences in tariffs and division sheets. In the absence of a prior special agreement, we think that a “common arrangement” might be established by receiving and carrying freight under a through bill of lading stating a division of the charges. In the present case, although the defendant had not concurred in the tariff fded by the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad Company, it might, by receiving and transporting the iron pipe under the bill of lading and other documents showing the 4914-cent rate and the apportionment thereof, have made itself a party to the rate, and have carried under a “common arrangement,” had it not been for its special contract with the shipper.
The real arrangement under which this freight moved was made between the defendant and the shipper. The defendant entered into no agreement with the other carriers. They were not parties to its agreement with the shipper. The defendant agreed with the shipper to “protect”' — i. e., guarantee — a through rate of 45 cents from port of origin to destination. This amounted to an agreement upon its part to see that the other carriers were paid their legal charges and to accept what was left for the water transportation. The defendant did not agree that the other carriers should reduce their charges, nor did it seek to have them do so. The mere fad: that the initial carrier made out the bill of lading according to its published rates and division sheets, and that the defendant permitted the carriage to go on under such documents, did not, in our opinion, make it a party to a “common arrangement’’ for a rate in excess of that stipulated in the real contract under which the freight was offered for transportation.
If the defendant, after making its contract with the shipper, bad notified all the. railroad carriers that it had guaranteed a through rate of 45 cents, and would pay them their full published rates and accept what was left for its own services, it could hardly be claimed that the defendant entered into a “common arrangement” for a -RH/Acent through rate merely because the initial carrier made out the documents to accompany the shipment upon that basis. And, if the defendant did not uotify the other carriers, we think the principle not essentially different. An intermediate water carrier which is a party to a special agreement with a shipper covering a shipment cannot properly be said to be a party to a “common arrangement” wholly inconsistent therewith merely because of recitals by the initial carrier in the bill of lading. Especially should this be true where the water carrier has refrained from concurring in the tariff under which the recitals arc made.
But it is contended by the government that the Supreme Court determined what is a “common arrangement” in the “Social Circle” Case (Cincinnati, etc., R. Co. v. Int. Com. Com., 162 U. S. 184, 16 Sup.
Mr. Justice Shiras said (Page 193 of 162 U. S., page 704 of 16 Sup. Ct. [40 L. Ed. 935]):
“All we wish to be understood to bold is that when goods shipped under a through bill of lading from a point in one state to a point in another are received in transit by a state common carrier, under a conventional division of the charges, such carrier must be deemed to have subjected its road to an arrangement for a continuous carriage or shipment within the meaning of the act to regulate commerce.”
A “conventional division of the charges” obviously means an apportionment of the charges by agreement of the participating carriers. No agreement of this character is shown in the present case. The necessary payments to the railroads of their legal rates did not amount to such an agreement. The mere recital by the initial carrier of a division in the bill of lading would be insufficient to show that the defendant agreed to it in the face of its special arrangement with the shipper to the contrary. Here there was no agreement, express or implied, to participate in the 49%-cent rate. On the contrary, there was a special agreement made in advance for the 45-cent rate which necessarily involved a materially different division. In our opinion the decision in the “Social Circle” Case is inapplicable to the facts in this case, and we agree with Judge Dallas of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third District in the case appealed by the Camden Iron Works to that court from a judgment convicting it of receiving the rebate which the defendant is here charged with giving. Camden Iron Works v. United States, 158 Fed. 561, 564, 85 C. C. A.. 585, 588. Judge Dallas, in comparing the “Social Circle” Case with the one before him said:
“But the nature of the case with which that tribunal was dealing, when it made the deliverance that has been referred to, was so essentially different from the case now under consideration as to render the decision in the former wholly inapplicable to the latter. The sort of ‘arrangement’ to which the attention of the Supreme Court was directed was one between the carriers themselves, and all that was actually adjudged is that a state common carrier by railroad, who receives in transit goods shipped under a through bill of lading from a point in one state to a point in another, and ‘under a conventional division of the charges;’ subjects its road to an arrangement within the meaning of the act. Thus understood, there is nothing in that case with which our view of the present one conflicts. In this instance the contract for continuous carriage or shipment was between the shipper itself and a single carrier by water. * ⅜ * But, as to the transit company itself, the proofs show that an element which materially influenced the result in the case of*669 me Ciu.. X. O. & Tex. I’ac. Kailway Company is wholly lacking from this rase, unless, indeed, the transit company's necessary concessions to the carriers by railroad of their own lawful rates constituted ‘a conventional division of the charges,’ and to us it seems clear that it did not.”
But, even if the defendant was a party to a “common arrangement” for tlie continuous carriage of the iron pipe and subject to the inter-' state commerce and Elkins acts, it is still necessary to show that it violated the provisions of the latter. That a carrier is subject to a statute does not tend to show that it has offended against it.
It must be shown, in the first place, that the defendant ivas bound by the rate which it is charged with offering a rebate or concession from. Otherwise there would be no offense. Carriers, as a general rule, become bound by through rates by formally agreeing thereto or concurring therein. Section 6 of the interstate commerce act as it existed at the time of these transactions provided, among other things:
"Every common carrier subject to the provisions of this act shall lile with the commission hereinafter provided for copies of its schedules of rates, fares, and charges which have been established and published in compliance ■with the requirements of this section, and shall promptly notify said commission of ail changes made in the same. Every such common carrier shall also file with said commission copies of all contracts, agreements, or arrangements with other common carriers in relation to any traffic affected by the piw isions of this act to which it may be a party.
“And in cases where passengers and freight paps over continuous lines or roídos operated by more Hum one common carrier, and the several common '¾rriers operating such lines or routes establish joint tariffs or rates or faros or charges for such continuous line's or routes, copies of such joint tariffs shall also, in like manner. lie filed with said commission.”
Concecledly the defendant at the time of the shipments in question was not a formal party to any contract in relation to through traffic nor to any joint tariffs on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission. Its previous concurrence had been canceled before these transactions took place, and, so far as formal action is concerned, it stood at such times .as a wholly independent carrier by water. But, under certain conditions, a carrier may become bound by a rate published and filed by another carrier without formal concurrence therein. The concluding paragraph of the Elkins act, in the form in force in 1904, provided:
“Whenever any carrier files with the Interstate Commerce Commission or publishes a particular rate under the provisions of the act to regulate commerce or acts amendatory thereto, or participates in any rates so filed or published, that rate as against such carrier, its officers or agents, in any prose-en! inn bosun under this act shall lie concluso ely deemed to bo the legal rate, and any departure from such rate, or any offer to depart therefrom, skull he deemed to be an offense under this section of this act.”
And in United States v. New York Central R. R. Co., 212 U. S. 509, 515, 29 Sup. Ct. 313, 314, 53 L. Ed. 629, Mr. Justice Day said of tMs provision: „
■‘We think it entirely clear that the concluding part of section 1 of the El-kins act which we have above quoted brings all of the carriers who have participated in any rate filed or published within the terms of the act, as much so as if the tariff had been actually published and filed by such participating carrier.”
Now, the only evidence tending to show that the defendant participated in the published rate was that which we have already considered as tending to show the “common arrangement” — the through bill of lading, shipping receipts, and other documents. In other words, the evidence which it is contended makes the defendant subject to the statute must also serve to establish an essential element of the offense of violating it.
We think it very doubtful whether the defendant upon the evidence presented can-be said to have participated in the 24d/b-cent rate, the 25-cent rate, or the total of the two, the 49%-cent rate. To participate in a rate is to share in a rate, and the defendant under its express antecedent contract with the shipper which established the real rate could hardly share in any excess over it. If as a matter of convenience in bookkeeping the defendant received more than it was really entitled to and returned the balance, it is by no means clear that it participated in the advanced rate, within the meaning of the statute. And if the defendant did not participate in, and thus become bound by, the published rate, it was not guilty of offering rebates or concessions from it.
We prefer, however, to place our decision upon the ground that the defendant was not subject to the statute which it is charged with violating, rather than upon the ground that, being subject to the statute, it did not contravene its provisions.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed.