after ^stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
it will be observed that the order of the_ Commission required appellants to cease and desist-from granting Young the alleged undue preference for a period of not less than tyro1 .years from September 1, 1908 (subsequently extended to November 15)., It is hence contended that the order of the Commission has expired and that the case having thereby become moot, the appeal should be dismissed.
This court has said a number of times that it will only dеcide actual controversies, and if, pending an appeal, something occurs without any fault of the defendant which renders it impossible, if our decision should be in favor of the plaintiff, to grant him effectual relief, the appeal will be dismissed.
Jones v. Montague,
In the case at bar the order of the Commission may to some extent (the exact extent it is unnecessary to define) be the basis of further proceedings. But there is a broader consideration! The questions involved in the orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission are usually continuing (as are manifestly those in the case at bar) and their consideration ought not to be, as they might be, defeated, by short term orders, capable of repetition, yet evading review, and at one time the Government and at another time the carriers have their rights determined by the Commission without a chance of rédress.
In United States
v.
Trans-Missouri Freight Ass’n, supra,
the object of the suit was to obtain the judgment of the court on the legality of an agreement between railroads, alleged to be in violation of the Sherman law. In the case at bar the object of the suit is to have declared illegal an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission. In that case thére was an attempt to defeat the purposes of the suit by a voluntary dissolution of the agreement, and of the attempt-the court sаid: “The mere dissolution of the association is not the most important object of this litigation. The judgment of the court is sought upon the question of the legality of the agreement itself, for the carrying out of which the association was formed, and if such agreement be declared to be illegal the court is asked not only to dissolve the association named in the bill, but that the defendant should be enjoined for the future. . . . Private parties may settle their controversies at any time, and rights which a plaintiff may have had at the time оf the commencement of the action may terminate before
In Boise City Irr. & Land Co. v. Clark, supra, the period for which a municipal ordinance fixed a water , rate expired pending the litigation as to its legality, and it was contended that the case had. become moot. The court rеplied: “But the courts have entertained and decided such cases heretofore, partly because the rate, once fixed, continues in force until changed as provided by law, and partly because of the necessity or propriety of deciding some question of law presented which might serve to guide the municipal body when again called upon to act in the matter.”
The motion to dismiss is denied.
Four errors are assigned in the action of the Circuit
Two facts are prominent in the case, that the piers of the Terminal Company are facilities of import and export traffic at the port of Galveston and that the arrangement of the Terminal Company with Young has enabled him to largely and rapidly increase his business until his exports of cotton seed products are more than twice those of all other competitors, that he derives therefrom 30 to 40 cents per ton over the ordinary buying and selling profit, and that some who were his competitors have ceased to éxport. A direct advantаge to Young is manifest. A direct detriment to other exporters is equally manifest.
The situation challenges attention. Appellants find in it nothing but the natural and legal result of the sagacity which could see an opportunity for profit and the enterprise which could avail of it. It was the simple matter on the part of Young, it is contended, of bringing his business to the ship’s side and cutting out intervening expenses. And it is said that the Terminal Company had an equally lawful inducement. It had an idle property, it is contended, over winch it had absolute contrоl and which it turned to use and profit by the arrangement with Young. And this, it is insisted, was a simple exercise of ownership. If the elements of the controversy are correctly stated, the justification may be considered as made out.
It is clear, therefore, that it was the purpose of the ordinance and of the act confirming it to secure shipping facilities for the city, open to public use, and necessarily so, for the property was to be the terminal of a railroad and steamship system. It may be, as it is cоntended, that there was no necessity for the ordinance, “except for the purpose of a valid relinquishment of the municipal right, often asserted by it, of opening streets through the bay front property and constructing wharves thereon.” The relinquishment was treated as valuable and Huntington pledged the property to a public use as a consideration for it. And, as we have said, such use was also a condition expressed in the act of -the legislature. It was not discharged by the expenditure of $150,000 and the ereсtion of wharves by Huntington, as seems to be the contention.
The case has no likeness whatever to
Louisville &c. R. R. Co.
v.
West Coast Co.,
It is true that there was a contention that the wharf was a public one, but the contention was based only on the fact that the wharf was built at the foot.of a public street by authority from the city of Pensa<jola and the State of Florida. That fact alone was not considered sufficient to support the contention. And it was said, “The city or State authorities in granting the right to erect such facilities might, of course, have attached such conditions as they thought wise, but in their absence neither the public nor this plaintiff, as the owner of goods, would have the right, on this state of facts, to go to-the wharf with vessels for the purpose of continuing transportation of goods in competitiоn with defendant.” It is true it was said that the railroad company never became a common ’carrier as to the wharf, in the sense that it was bound to accord to the public or to the West Coast Company the right to use it upon payment of compensation. But it was added that,the railroad company would be bound to carry the West Coast Company’s goods on the rails which led to the wharf, for the same purpose and upon the same terms that it did for others, viz., in order that it might itself, or through others it had contracted with, fоrward
Nor is
Weems Steamboat Company
v.
People’s Company,
Another and important fact is the control of the properties by the Southern Pacific Company through stock ownership. There is a separation of the companies if we regard only their charters; there is a union of them if We regard théir control and operation through the Southern Pacific Company. This control and operation are the important facts to shippers. It is of no consequence that by mere charter' declaration the Terminal Company is a wharfage company or the Southern Pacific a holding company. Verbal declarations cannot alter the facts. The control and operation* of the Southern Pacific Company of the railroads, and the Terminal Company have united them into a system of which all are necessary parts, the Terminal Company as well as the railroad companies. As said by the Interstate Commerce Commission, “the Terminal Company was organized to,;furnish terminal
The reasoning of the Commission is justified by the
The property of the Terminal Company is “necessary in the transportation or delivery” of the interstate and foreign freight transported by the lines of the Southern Pacific system.' It is the only terminal for freight moving over the lines of such system, .the rails of one of those lilies, the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway Company, connecting with tracks upon the docks of the Terminal Company. That the latter collects a track-age charge from the former and it a switching charge from the Terminal Company are, to quote the Commission, “but incidents of tho separate corporations.”
In opposition to -these views appellants urge the legal individuality of the different railroads and the Terminal Company and cite cases which establish, it is contended, that stock ownership simply or through a holding company does not identify thеm. We are hot concerned to combat the proposition. The record does not present a case of stock ownership merely or of a holding company which was content to hold. It presents a case, as we have already said, of one actively managing and uniting the railroads and the Terminal Company into an organized system. And it is with the system that the law must deal, not with its elements.* Such elements may, indeed, be regarded from some standpoints as legal entities; may have, in a sense, separаte corporate operation; but they are directed by the same paramount and combining power and
It is next contended that the lease to Young under the facts proven does not constitute an unlawful or undue preference under the Interstate Commerce Act.
■ To a certain extent we have considered this contention. An absolute advantage to Young cannot be denied. A facility that has enabled him to acquire practically all the export of cotton seed products must have something in it of advantage which other shippers do not receive, and it would seem to proclaim a power working for his benefit which is not working for others. And yet it is urged that there is a contrariety. of opinion about it among cotton seed cake producers, and as to whether Young is able to dominate the Texas market and to command the foreign trade. The facts, we think, put the matter beyond conjecture or opinion and demonstrate the potency of his situation. That it is a preference, however, is denied; and it is urged that by the agreed statement , of facts all cotton seed cake producers “agree that if there was a general establishment of plants in Galveston, so that a monopoly could not be acquired
”
by Young, “it would be of great benefit to the cotton seed industry.” But it is also agreed that neither the Galveston Wharf Company nor the Terminal Company has space enough to afford facilities to “all exporters doing business at Galveston” such as Young. And the Commission found that as a practical matter other ship-, pers could not be given the same facilities on the samе conditions as those granted to him,, nur could such fa
. Appellаnts bring forward the same argument to support. the contention under consideration which they advancé to support their first contention, to wit, the right, as owner of the property, to make a lease of its “unused property,” subject only -to the limitation that there shall be ho interference “with the use of the adjacent navigable waters.” It would seem-that, if the argument have any force at all, it would extend the rights of ownership to used as well as unused property and be exercised in any form of preference, еven to. the exclusion of some shippers from the wharves. However, as appellants do not press the argument so far we need not dwell upon it and will only add that the terminal facilities contemplated by the ordinance of. the city of Galveston and the act of the legislature of Texas confirming it were public terminal facilities, not those which might be granted or withheld in preferences or discriminations.
•. The last contention advanced is that “the order of the Commission transcends its jurisdiction, in that it regulates cоmmerce purely State and intrastate, and also purely foreign commerce, -neither of which is subject to its authority.”
In support of - this contention it is insisted that the evidence shows the following facts: The cake and meal purchased by Young care bought by him in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas, but chiefly in Texas, and shipped to him on bills of lading and way bills, showing
This evidence establishes, appellants contend, that the transit of the cake and meal is absolutely ended at the leased premises at Galveston, and that it is “a final point of concentration and manufacture, the cotton seed cake being there manufactured, into meal and sacked for export.” But this does not distinguish between the meal and the cake, nor between the meal that is purchased at points outside of Texas and directly exported, from that so purchased and manufactured on the wharves of the Terminаl Company. Nor does it take account of the fact that the wharves were intended for shipping facilities, a means of transition from land carriage to water carriage. It is manifest, as.we have.said,, that to make, the wharves manufacturing or concentrating points for one shipper and not for all is to give that shipper a preference. And, being a preference, the traffic necessarily comes under the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission. In other words, the manufacturer or concentration on the wharves of the Terminal Company are but incidents, under the circumstances presented by the record, in the trans-shipment of the products in export trade and their regulation is within the power of the Interstate Commerce Commission. To hold otherwise
Decree affirmed.
