284 F. 371 | M.D. Tenn. | 1922
The state of Tennessee, acting both in its own behalf and upon, the relation of the Railroad and Public Utilities Commission of Tennessee, joined with that commission in filing a bill of complaint directed against the United States. -Since the purpose of the bill was to enjoin the enforcement of an order made by the Interstate Commerce Commission, proceedings were had pursuant to the jurisdiction and practice fixed for the Commerce Court under sections 207, ■208, and 209 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. §§ 993, 997, 996) and the Act of October 22,1913 (U. S. Comp. St. § 998.) Pursuant to the latter section, a motion for a preliminary injunction regularly came on to be heard before the court as now constituted. On such hearing the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Eouis Railway were permitted to intervene and to join in the motion made by the United States to dismiss the bill for lack of equity. The Interstate Commerce Commission also was permitted to and did intervene as a defendant and file its answer. Upon the hearing of the motion to dismiss, it was stated by counsel for the United States and for the intervening railroads that, if the motion to dismiss were overruled, they did not desire to file any answer or further pleadings. It was also
Prior to July 29, 1920, the freight rates in Tennessee and adjoining states upon broken stone, cement, and similar road-building materials had been established by the Interstate Commerce Commission and by the State Utilities Commission within their respective fields at the same amounts in each. On the day named the Interstate Commerce Commission, by its order “Ex parte 74,” authorized an increase of 25 per cent, in freight rates in this general territory in interstate traffic, and the railroads here intervening adopted this increase. They also filed with the State Commission a tariff making the same proportionate advance in their intrastate rates on all traffic. This was suspended by the State Commission and a hearing had, as a result of which the State Commission approved the increase as to all intrastate traffic, excepting that in road-building materials consigned to the United States, or the state or a municipality therein, or consigned to a contractor for such public use. As to this excepted traffic the railroads were directed to maintain the formerly existing and lower rate.
Thereupon the railroads applied to the Interstate Commerce Commission to have the intrastate rate on this excepted traffic fixed by that Commission, so as to include the same 25 per cent, advance which had been given on all interstate traffic. The railroads alleged that the order of the State Commission, which in effect prescribed for the intrastate traffic in these fields a rate 20 per cent, lower than that which had been established for the interstate shipments of the same materials, was an undue and unjust discrimination against interstate traffic. There was a full hearing before the Interstate Commerce Commission, and it found that in this respect undue preference to persons and localities in Tennessee and unjust discrimination against interstate commerce did result, which should be removed by raising the intrastate rate on these articles shipped to the United States, or to the state or counties or cities, to the same price charged against all shippers or consignees. This order was entered August 30, 1921, and was identified as No. 12132. This is the order the enforcement of which this suit is brought to enjoin.
*374 “That nothing in this act shall prevent the carriage, storage, or handling of property free or at reduced rates for the United States, state, or municipal governments.”
Whether the effect of this section is to deprive the commission .of jurisdiction to make an order preventing discrimination and preference in shipments for these favored parties is the controlling question.
“to supervise and fix the rates * * * of railroad freight and passenger tariffs * * * on the different railroads in this state.”
Clearly this authority covers the action which has been here taken, unless there is restriction elsewhere in the act. Sections 15 and 17 prohibit any carrier from receiving from any person or corporation a greater or less compensation than it charges any other person or corporation for doing a like service in the transportation of like property under substantially like circumstances and conditions, and from giving any undue or unreasonable preference or advantage to any particular person or corporation or any particular description of traffic.
These provisions are not direct limitations upon the power of the commission to authorize rates which do make discrimination; they rather imply the power of the commission to permit preference or discrimination, if the commission shall decide that it is not undue or unjust, or that the services involved are not under like circumstances and conditions; and their utmost indirect effect is to prohibit the fixing of such discriminatory rates as are in fact undue and unjust. It is dis
Section 24 of the Tennessee act is somewhat similar to section 22 of the Interstate Commerce Act, and provides that the law should not prevent any railroad company from transporting freight at reduced rates for certain specified purposes, among which shipments to a state or municipality are not mentioned. However, we do not think this enumeration of permitted preferences must be taken as exclusive. Each one of the enumerated preferences involves a benefit which, if public at all, is so indirect that the right to make the preference would be doubtful unless it were specifically given. The enumeration should not be construed to exclude a case where the public benefit is as direct as it is when a state or municipality actually pays the freight. As the Supreme Court said of a similar section in 145 U. S. at page 278, 12 Sup. Ct. at page 848 (36 L. Ed. 699), “this section is rather illustrative than exclusive.”
If there ever was any doubt of the right of such a commission to fix a rate for a particular service under special conditions at .a figure less than the maximum allowed for such general service (Lake Shore Railroad v. Smith, 173 U. S. 684, 693, 19 Sup. Ct. 565, 43 L. Ed. 858), that doubt cannot survive the decision in Pennsylvania Railroad v. Towers, 245 U. S. 6, 17, 38 Sup. Ct. 2, 62 L. Ed. 117, L. R. A. 1918C, 475. Being thus convinced that the state, with or without the support of the State Commission’s order, has a right to be heard as to the substance of its complaint, we pass to the meritorious question.
We cannot give this construction. In Interstate Commerce Commission v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., 145 U. S. 263, 278, 12 Sup. Ct. 844, 36 L. Ed. 699, section 22 was under consideration, and it was expressly said that, even in the absence of this section, free or reduced transportation for the property of the United States or states or municipal governments would not necessarily be an unjust discrimination. This is obvious, if for no other reason than because freight charges which are paid by the public must be in one way or another assessed' back against the public, including the railroads, in the form of taxes,
We think it should be inferred that section 22 is a legislative declaration of the fact, recognized in the case just cited, and that its effect is to leave the Commission without jurisdiction to forbid the railroads from carrying freight for the public at a less price than it charges individuals for the same carriage of the same freight; in other words, it excludes this particular traffic from the rate structure which the Commission is authorized to erect and control; in still other words, there is freedom of discrimination.
Counsel may prepare and submit a final decree in accordance with these views.