After stating the facts as above,
delivered the opinion of the court.
If we may regard the essential character of the shipments we can have no hesitation in pronouncing them to have been in interstate commerce. This conclusion seems indeed to bq determined by the last finding of fact. It is there declared that “the shipments in controversy, together with other shipments of lumber to Sabine and •Sabine Pass, constitute a large and constantly recurring course of foreign commerce passing out through the port of Sabine.”
If the shipments were foreign commerce it is hardly necessary to make explicit the principle that the national dominion over thern was supreme; and, conversely, if the shipments were not of that character they were subject to the regulating power of the State. •
The Sabine Company, while not denying this general test, urges a more special one as applicable to the case at bar. The company contends that the supreme test is, “Was"the lumber when it left Ruliff actually launched on its journey to a point in Europe; that is to say, was it committed, by the contract or by any arrangement, between the shipper and the railroad company, or provided for by either, to a common carrier for transportation on its continuous final journey to a destination beyond Sabine, Texas?” Answering this question in the negative, it is contended that the contract of shipment did not contemplate, provide for, or even intend that the freight should go beyond Sabine “through the agency of that shipment.” Nor, it is further contended, were there any means or arrangements for its movement beyond that point, that being left to an intervening third party and a subsequent act after it was delivered to Powell Company, as it was intended to be, at Sabine; and “it took the intervention of a new and independent shipment, arrangement, or contract, to .move it beyond that point.” Fortifying the contentions, it is said that the existence of the conditions expressed is made the test of foreign commerce by the Interstate Commerce Law, its first section reading:. “That the provisions of this Act shall apply \ . . to the transportation.. . . .of property ¡hipped from one place in the. United State's to a foreign country and carried
The elements of the contentions are somewhat difficult to estimate. So far as they depend upon the character of a bill of lading and that it had not provision for carriage beyond the local destination, they are answered by
Southern Pacific Terminal Co.
v.
Interstate Commerce Commission,
That there must be continuity of movement we may concede, and to a foreign destination intended at the time of the shipment. Indeed, all of the elements of the contentions of the Sabine Company are well illustrated by Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission and Ohio Railroad Commission v. Worthington, supra.
That it. is the nature of the traffic and not its accidents which determines its character is illustrated by
Ohio Railroad Commission
v.
Worthington, supra.
A rate of 70 cents a ton was imposed by the Commission on what was called “Lake-cargo coal” from a coal field in eastern Ohio to the ports of Huron and Cleveland, Ohio, on Lake Erie,
Much stress was laid in the argument upon the fact that the coal was billed only to Huron. Replying to the contention the court said that the billing of the coal was not necessarily determinative, citing Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, supra.
Gulf, Colorado & S. F. Ry. Co.
v.
Texas,
This- court affirmed the judgment and decided that the contract between the Hardin Grain Company and the Harroun Commission Company was completed in accordance with its terms when the corn was delivered to the Hardin Company at Texarkana. • “Then and not till then,” it was said, “did the Hardin Company have full title to and control of the corn, and that was after thé first contract of transportation had been completed.” Then, and not till then, ■ we may say, did the Hardin Company acquire the means of fulfilling its contract with Saylor & Burnett; and then, and not till then, did it start to fulfill its contract with Saylor & Burnett.
It- is manifest that these facts were the determining ones, and the history of the corn prior to its arrival at Texarkana was put aside as irrelevant and the controlling fact decided to be that corn belonging to the Hardin Grain Company was shipped from Texarkana to Gold-thwaite, a strictly local shipment. This was the view taken of the case in
Ohio Railroad Commission
v.
Worthington, supra.
It was there urged to sustain the contention that the manner of billing was controlling of the character of the commerce. The contention was rejected, and, distinguishing the case and speaking of its facts, the court said (p. 109): “The facts showed that the corn was carried upon a bill of lading from Hudson [South Dakota] to Texarkana, and that afterwards, some five days later,
The facts in the case at bar are different. The lumber was ordered, manufactured and shipped for export. And we say shipped, for we regard it of no consequence that the Sabine Company had no concern or connection with it after it reached Sabine. Its relation to che shipment was' a perfectly natural one and did not change the relation of the Powell Company to it and make the lumber other than lumber purchased at Ruliff and started from there in transportation to a foreign destination. The findings are explicit and circumstantial as to this. And the shipment was not an isolated one but typical of many others, which constituted a commerce amounting in the year 1905 to 14,667,670 feet of lumber and in the year 1906, 39,554,000 feet.. Nor was there a break, in the sense of the “Interstate Commerce law and the cited cases, in the continuity of the transportation of the lumber to foreign countries by the delay and its transshipment at Sabine.
Swift & Co.
v.
United States,
Judgment reversed and case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
