67 W. Va. 448 | W. Va. | 1910
The Thacker Coal & Coke Company brought a suit in equity in the circuit court of Mingo county against the Norfolk & Western Eailroad Company to enjoin the railroad company from filing with the Interstate Commerce Commission a schedule of rate charges for transportation of coal from the miñes of the coal company, in the State of West Virginia, to points on the lakes in the State of Ohio and other states, which schedule increased the rates over those existing, the railroad company alleging that lower rates were accorded to other railroad carriers carrying coal from Pennsylvania and Ohio in competition with West Virginia coal and that the rates proposed by such schedule were discriminatory, unjust and unreasonable, and would entail irreparable injury and probable .ruin upon the Thacker Coal Company. Upon its bill a temporary injunction was granted, and this injunction having been dissolved, the Thacker Coal Company appeals.
The case is one purely of inter-state commerce. Its solution rests upon that act of Congress known as the Inter-State Commerce Act. U. S. Compiled Statutes, 1901, vol. 3, p. 3153. We must follow federal decision upon this act. We know that the great subject of inter-state commerce has been committed to the power, the vast power, of Congress by that provision of the national constitution declaring that ‘The Congress shall have power * * * to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several states”. Under this grant of power was passed the inter-state commerce act, touching, controlling and regulating, to large extent, and in material respects, commerce passing state lines. A leading feature of that act, one controlling this case, is, that it establishes a commission of weighty
As will be suggested to the mind at once, and as pointed out in those cases, if such action could be maintained, then a jury and state court would hold one rate to be proper, and the Commission another. Which shall prevail? If the state court’s rate, then of what force the act of Congress and the judgment of the Commission under it? The federal power, in a matter which nobody will deny to be within its constitutional jurisdiction, would be nullified. One state one rate, another another, the federal tribunal another, and confusion worse confounded! •Just the same may be said in our case. If we stop that schedule on its way,. and thus prevent any action on it by the Commission, do we not nullify the act of Congress and render the jurisdiction of the Commission abortive ? In Central Stock Yard Co. v. L. & N. R. Co., 112 Fed. 823, it is held that a complaining shipper must go to the Commission for relief, as the remedy given by the act through it is exclusive. So in American Union Coal Co. v. Pa. R. Co., 159 Fed. 378, and Great Northern Co. v. Kallispell, 165 Fed. 25. Counsel refer to Kallispell L. Co. v. Great Northern, 157 Fed. 845. That was not a suit to enjoin the filing of a schedule, but against enforcement of one filed pending a decision by the Commission. The cases Kiser v. Central R. Co., 158 Fed. 193, and Macon v. Atlantic R. R., 163 Fed. 738, cannot be regarded, as they were circuit court decisions, and contrary to the decision in the same .circuit in the Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlantic Coast Line v. Macon Co., 166 Fed. 306, above. In Jewett v. Chicago Co., 156 Fed. 160, it is held that no injunction lies, as a court cannot pass on a rate in advance of action of the Commission. This denies our right to pass on the rates involved in this ease.
Counsel for the- coal company say that the Abilene Case does not apply in this case, their theory being that that case was to recover damages for unfair rates imposed under established rates; that is, to recover for charges as unfair, though rates had been established by a schedule on file with the Commission, and had not yet been condemned by it; whereas, this suit is to prevent the filing of a schedule- of unfair rates, to arrest these rates on their way, and thus prevent 'their establishment. But such injunction would be for the state court to fix rates by
Brief of counsel relies upon the claim of unlawful combination between the Norfolk & Western Company and other rail-
Decree affirmed.
Affirmed.