The parties will be designated as in the court below, namely plaintiff and defendant.
The defendant is a stockyards owner and subject to the provisions of the Packers and Stockyards Act 1921 (7 USCA c. 9). On October 20, 1921, the defendant published and filed with the Secretary of Agriculture, as required by the act, schedules showing- its rates and charges for stockyard services rendered at its stockyards in Omaha, Neb., which thereupon became and were the only charges which it could lawfully collect during the time that such schedules remained unchanged.
Its Tariff No. 1 read as follows:
“Yardage; including privilege of the market:
Cattle.....................35 cents per head
Calves (maximum 425 pounds) 25 cents per head
Hogs......................12 cents per head
Sheep or goats...............8 cents per head
Horses and mules...........35 cents per head
“For live stock planted and resold in commission division, one-half the above rates additional will be charged.”
The plaintiff was a trader at the stockyards and the assignee of the claims of a number of other traders upon the same market, who bought, planted, and resold a large number of animals between the 20th day of October, 1921, and the 1st day of October, *61 1923. The plaintiff and his assignors were charged and had paid the additional yardage or reweighing charges provided by the tariff, to the amount of $34,988.52, which amount the plaintiff sued to collect, on the ground that these charges were discriminatory and therefore) unlawful.
On June 22, 1923, upon the complaint of T. G. Inghram, a similar dealer, that the additional charge referred to was discriminatory, the Secretary of Agriculture found that it was, and ordered that after July 10, 1923, the defendant desist from demanding and collecting it. No reparation was ordered by the Secretary, and no findings of the existence of any right to reparation were made.
Planting and reselling of animals is done by small traders, who place or leave the animals they buy with the commission men for the purpose of having them resold; this for the reason that the large packers do not buy from the small trader, but from the commission men. In other words, the commission men sell not only their animals, but the animals “planted” with them by the traders.
The defendant claimed that the complaint did not state a cause of action, and that the court had no jurisdiction to award any judgment for the plaintiff, because of the absence of allegation or proof that the Secretary of Agriculture had determined that any right to reparation existed, either on behalf of the plaintiff or any other person who had paid the charges.
After hearing the testimony, the court below gave judgment for the defendant on the ground that no order had been made by the Secretary fixing any right to reparation. It is the correctness of this disposition of the case which the plaintiff challenges by these proceedings in error.
The Packers and Stockyards Act is patterned upon the Act to Eegulate Commerce, and the plaintiff concedes the applicability to this case of the rule recognized by this court in Chicago, B.
&
Q. R. Co. v. Merriam
&
Millard Co.,
It is claimed, however, that such an interpretation of the Packers and Stockyards Act and of the Act to Eegulate Commerce renders them unconstitutional, because it gives to the Secretary of Agriculture, in the one instance, and to the Interstate Commerce Commission, in the other, judicial powers. No case is cited in the plaintiff’s brief which has any bearing on the specific question. He refers to the general proposition that executive, legislative, and judicial functions shall be kept separate, and that persons intrusted with power in any one of these three branches shall not be permitted to encroach upon the powers confided to others. About this, of course, there is no dispute. He cites Interstate Commerce Comm. v. Brimson,
That the Interstate Commerce Commission possesses certain quasi judicial powers has long been recognized by the Supreme Court, without perturbation. In Interstate Commerce Comm. v. Louis.
&
Nash. R. R.,
“In the comparatively few eases in which such questions have arisen it has been distinctly recognized that administrative orders, quasi judicial in character, are void if a hearing was denied; if that granted was inadequate or manifestly unfair; if the finding was contrary to the ‘indisputable character of the evidence.’ ”
In Interstate Commerce Comm. v. Cincinnati, etc., Ry. Co.,
It is the general rule that “statutes conferring on officers, boards, or commissions quasi judicial functions, as, for example, the necessity of inquiry into, and a finding of, facts incidental to the exercise of powers properly within the scope of legislative or executive authority, are not unconstitutional as encroachments on the judiciary.” 12 C. J. 809.
*62
Much the same contention as is made by the plaintiff here was made with respect to the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission in Mitchell Coal Co. v. Penn. R. R. Co.,
“Section 9 [Act to Regulate Commerce (49 USCA § 9; Comp. St. § 8573)] gives the plaintiff the option of going before the Commission or the courts for damages occasioned by a violation of the statute. But since the Commission is charged with the duty of determining whether the practice was so unreasonable as to be a violation of the lavy, the plaintiff must, as a condition to his right to' succeed, produce an order from the Commission that the practice or the rate was thus unreasonable and therefore illegal and prohibited.
“It is argued that under the Abilene, Robinson, and Pitcairn Cases this may be true as to existing rates in which the public have an interest, but it is urged that a claim based upon the unreasonableness of past rates and discontinued practices raises a judicial question, of which the courts and not the Commission have jurisdiction.
“There are several answers to this proposition. In the first place, the plaintiff cannot claim under the act and against it. To say the least, it is extremely doubtful whether, at common law, one shipper had a cause of action because the carrier paid another shipper more than the market value of transportation services rendered to the carrier. I. C. C. v. B. & O. R. R.,
S. Ct. 358,
Furthermore, on page 259 (
“As to past and present practices for allowances, the Commission has the same power and there is the same necessity to take preliminary action. This was recognized in Texas, etc., Ry. v. Abilene Co.,
See, also, Penn. R. R. v. Clark Coal Co.,
The same principles apply to this case. An order of the Secretary of Agriculture, determining that a rate is unreasonable or discriminatory and awarding reparation, is a quasi judicial order.
The judgment is affirmed.
