50 F. 867 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1892
This is an application on petition of the New York & Northern Railway Company, as a person interested, to enforce obedience to an order or requirement made May 6, 1891, by the interstate commerce commission, and is presented under section 16 of the interstate commerce act, as amended by chapter 682 of the Laws of 1889. Upon the return day of the order to show cause, heretofore granted, defendant filed its answer, and, before any proofs were taken, moved to dismiss the petition. Such a motion must be determined upon the assumption that the averments of the petition and the findings of fact of the commission (made by the statute prim,a fade evidence) cor
“Sec. 3. That it shall be unlawful for any common carrier subject to the provisions of this act to make or give any undue or unreasonable preference or advantage to any particular person, company, firm, corporation, or locality, or any particular description of traffic, in any respect whatsoever, or to subject any particular person, company, firm, corporation, or locality, or any particular description of traffic, to any undue or unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage in any respect whatsoever. Every common carrier subject to the provisions of this act shall, according to their respective powers, afford all reasonable, proper and equal facilities for the interchange of traffic between their respective lines, and for the receiving, forwarding, and delivery of passengers and property to and from their several lines, and those connecting therewith, and shall not discriminate in their rates and charges between such connecting lines. But this shall not be construed as requiring any such common carrier to give the use of its tracks or terminal facilities to another carrier engaged in like business.”
Section 13 provides that any person (or) corporation complaining of anything done or omitted to be done by any common carrier subject to the provisions of this act, in contravention of the provisions thereof, may apply to the commission by petition, -which shall briefly state the facts. Under that section this petitioner applied to the commission, and, after taking proofs, obtained the order or requirement it is now seeking to enforce.
The respondent contends that the second clause of section 3-, above quoted, enacts two different and independent subjects as grounds of complaint against carriers; the one being the denying reasonable, proper, and equal facilities for the physical interchange and prosecution of traffic between a company’s line and connecting lines; the other being discrimination in respect to rates and charges between such connecting lines. A similar construction is adopted in the opinion of the commission, which holds that the provision “ embraces the imposition of an affirmative duty to interchange and forward traffic between, connecting lines, and a prohibition that there shall be no discrimination in rates and charges between such connecting lines.” Respondent further contends that the charge and allegations before the commission dealt only with one of these subjects, and that, therefore, any order of the commission requiring the respondent to cease and desist from any violation which is embraced within the other subject would not be a “lawful” order; amd apparently also insists that the judgment of the commission was in fact confined to discrimination in rates and charges. An examination of the record, however, does not support this contention. The petition which was presented to the commission charged that the respondent was depriving petitioner of reasonable, proper, and equal facilities (as compared with those afforded to the Housatonic Railroad, a competing connecting line) for the interchange of traffic between petitioner and respondent,
¡ffinoe the service of the order the respondent has restored the joint through tariff. It has also desisted from refusing to accept freight on through bills, but has so arranged the running of its trains that the facilities for interchange, forwarding, and delivering are fas is alleged) substantially no better than before, and not equal to those afforded to the competing line. The respondent contends, however, that such aqts may not be shown before this court, acting summarily under section 16 in review and enforcement of the order of the commission, because no question of the hours of running trains was presented to the commission. It is manifest that equal facilities may be refused quite as much in one way as in the other, and both grounds of complaint relate to the subject-matter of physical interchange and prosecution of traffic, instead of to a discrimination in rates. To refuse altogether to receive traffic from one connecting line; to receive it only under arrangements which impose such obligations upon the shippers as to transfer and rebilling as would
The consideration of the next objection, viz., that the point where the respondent exchanges traffic with the petitioner is 16 miles from the point where it exchanges traffic with the competing road, and that it cannot be required to furnish equal facilities to all roads at different places, may be postponed till the proofs are closed. No doubt, as respondent contends, the question of the existence of discrimination and of an actionable refusal-of equal facilities is to be ascertained by applying all the considerations of equity affecting the case, and should be found to exist only when such facilities can be afforded “under substantially similar circumstances and conditions;” but there is nothing in the act which makes mere. distance between connecting points, whether a furlong, a mile, or ten, or twenty, controlling of that question. There is =no suggestion here of affording new, facilities at a new connecting point. So lar as the record show's, the affording of equal facilities to both connecting roads at their several points-of connection has been at all times entirely practicable, easy, and convenient, and the existing equality was ’ destroyed by the defendant solely to divert the business of petitioner to a more favored road. . In the face of the finding of the commission that “the physical condition for interchanging of traffic with both the connecting lines are suitable, adequate, and substantially equal,” — a finding which the form of this motion leaves unchallenged, — the requirements
It is further contended that there is no question here of equal facilities io two connecting lines; that what the petitioner is really asking is that the New iinglaud Company shall extend to petitioner’s line the same facilities which it extends to its own line. The facts do not seem io warrant such a contention. The Ilousatonic Company is a separate corporation, independent from the Now England Company. The latter, so lar as appears, does not own even a share of the former’s stock. It neither built, nor bought, nor leased it. It neither conducts its business, nor takes the earnings therefrom. The only link between them is such community of interest as springs from the existence of the contract for the interchange of traille, which it is claimed secures the former road unequal facilities. If it be that such a contract makes each line a more continuation or extension of the other, it is hard to conceive how a case of refusing equal facilities could ever be made out. The very granting of superior facilities to one line would make it a part of the one that favored it, and no longer a connecting road, when compared with its 'unsuccessful rival. Nor am T able to see that the mere ownership of half the stock of the terminal company, which connects the terminus ol the Ilousatonic road with New York, alters the situation in any way, when the immediate question is as to the respective facilities accorded to the Ilousatonic Railroad and to the petitioner. Respondent cites the first section of the act, providing that it shall “ apply to any common carrier or carriers engaged in (he 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, ” etc., “ to any other state,” etc. That the respondent (considered by itself) is so engaged is not disputed. It runs through or into the states of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New York. It is no doubt true that the arrangements between respondent, the Ilousatonic road, and the terminal company are such that they form a combination of carriers, within the meaning and effect, of section 1, so as to make them a legal unit within the provisions of the act, and, as such, jointly responsible for affording equal facilities in proper (¡ases to competing lines connecting with such combined continuous lino. But, besides the duty which any one of these corporations may owe, jointly with the others, it is not relieved from its obligations under the act to all roads which connect directly with itself. The New England Railroad might, perhaps, by reason of its combination with the other two, he charged with some duty* towards lines connecting physically with the Housa tonic Railroad, hut such combination cannot excuse it from fulfilling its own obligations to roads which connect physically with itself, unless its union with the other combined lines is of such a character that their lines have become its own; and such a state of affairs does not seem to exist here. The