delivered the opinion' of the Court.
These cases, brought to set aside orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission, were argued together, and present, in the .main, the same questions of law. In *518 each, carriers who were found to have unjustly discriminated against shippers of lumber located on an independent short line, were ordered by the Commission to cease and desist from charging them higher through rates than were contemporaneously charged for like services from other points within what is called blanket territory. 1 Each case was heard before three judges on plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction, on defendant’s motion to dismiss the bill for want of equity, and on final hearing. In each the whole record before the Commission was introduced. In No. 40 the federal court for southern Mississippi perpetually enjoined the enforcement of the order issued by the Commission in Swift Lumber Co. v. Fernwood & Gulf R. R. Co., 61 I. C. C. 485. In No. 38 the federal court for Wyoming dismissed the bill; thus sustaining the order issued by the Commission in Pioneer Lumber Co. v. Director General, 64 I. C. C. 485. Each case is here on direct appeal under the Act of October 22, 1913, c. 32, 38 Stat. 208, 220.
The facts in No. 40 present most of the questions of law requiring discussion. The so-called blanket territory, which extends south from Jackson, Mississippi, to the Gulf of Mexico (about 200 miles), and from the Mississippi River into Alabama, produces yellow pine lumber in quantity. Through this territory, the Illinois Central' Railroad extends from New Orleans to Jackson and thence to the Ohio River crossings and leading lumber markets of the North. Partly by its main .line, partly, also, by branches, and partly by connections with independent lines, it serves a large percentage of the lumber mills in the territory. From all these points on the *519 Illinois Central main line, from all on its branches, from all on three independent short lines which connect in- • directly with it, and from all on the Mississippi Central (a longer independent line which crosses it running' East and West) the carriers have established the same through lumber rates to the northern markets, regardless, of the varying distances within the blanket territory. At Fernwood, Mississippi, a little south of its Monticello branch, the Illinois Central connects with the Fernwood & Gulf, an independent short line, on which the Swift Lumber Company has a mill at Knoxo. The distance from Knoxo to the junction is 27 miles. The joint through rate from Knoxo via Fernwood to northern points, voluntarily established by these carriers, is 2 cents per 100 pounds higher than the rate from Fern-wood or any other point within the so-called blanket territory on the Illinois Central main or branch lines or on the connections mentioned above. The distance to the northern markets from many of the points on these lines is much greater than the distance from Knoxo, which lies near - the centre of the so-called blanket territory.
The Swift Lumber Company instituted proceedings before the Commission against' the Illinois Central, the Fernwood & Gulf, and connecting carriers in which it attacked the higher rates from Knoxo both as unreasonable, under § 1 of.the Act to Regulate Commerce, and as unjustly discriminatory, under § 3. The Commission found that the rates from Knoxo were not unreasonable; but that they subject the Lumber Company to undue prejudice, in view óf the lower rates so given competing points within the so-called blanket territory. The order directed the carriers ‘‘according as they participate in the transportation ... to cease and desist ” from the discrimination found. All the carriers except the Illinois Central and the Fernwood & Gulf acauiesced in the order. *520 These two joined as plaintiffs in this suit, and urge on several grounds that the order is void.
First.
It is contended that the order exceeds the powers of the Commission. The argument is that a carrier cannot be held to have participated in an unjust discrimination unless it is a party both to the rate by which a preference has been ¿iven to others and to the higher rate which is given to the complainant; that the Fémwood & Gulf did not participate in the discrimination complained of, since it did not join- in the lower rates from other points by which the Swift Lumber Company claims to be prejudiced; and hence, that it cannot be required to cooperate with the Illinois Central in reducing rates from Knoxo which have been found to be inherently reasonable. That, on the other hand, the Illinois Central cannot be held to have subjected the Swift Lumber Company to undue prejudice, since Knoxo; is not on' its own lines and it is not in a position to remove, by its own act, the discrimination complained of. Neither proposition is sound. Proceedings, to remove unjust discrimination are aimed directly oúly at the relation of rates. By joining with the Illinois Central in establishing the prejudicial through rate from Knoxo, the Femwood & Gulf became as much a party to the discrimination practiced, as if it had joined also in the lower rates to other points which are alleged to be unduly preferential. Compare
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.
v.
United States,
Second.
It is contended that the order of the Commission is unsustained by proof. That there is discrimination against Knoxo is not denied. The rates charged from that station are higher than those charged from competing points within the so-called blanket territory for transportation of the same commodity, to the same market, for the same or longer distances, mainly over the same route; some of these competing points being located on the Illinois Central main line, some on its branch lines, and some on independent lines. But mere discrimination does not render a rate illegal under § 3. Only such rates as involve unjust discrimination are obnoxious to that section.
Manufacturers Ry. Co.
v.
United States,
A carrier is entitled to initiate rates and, in this connection, to adopt such, policy of rate-making as to it seems wise.
Interstate Commerce Commission
v.
Chicago Great Western Ry. Co.,
The Illinois Central argues that the discrimination in charging higher rate from Knoxo cannot be deemed unjust since the preferential rate to other points was granted solely for the purpose of increasing its own business, and that the lower rate from Knoxo was denied solely in order to‘ preserve its own revenues. In other words, it granted the blanket rate to all points on its own lines in order to develop business originating thereon. It declined to grant the blanket rate (and to increase the absorption) where the connecting line was wholly dependent upon it; and traffic originating thereon could be secured in spite of the higher rate. . It granted the blanket rate to points on connecting lines (and increased their absorptions) where this was deemed necessary in order to secure traffic which might otherwise go to competitors.
The effort of a carrier to obtain more business, and to retain that which it had secured, proceeds from the motive of self-interest which is recognized as legitimate; and the fact that preferential rates were given only for this purpose relieves the carrier from any charge of
*524
favoritism or malice. But preferences may inflict undue prejudice though the carrier’s motives in granting them are honest.
Interstate Commerce Commission
v.
Chicago Great Western Ry. Co.,
Every factor urged by the carriers as justifying the higher rate from Knoxo appears to have been considered by the Commission. How much weight shall be given to each must necessarily be left to it. The Commission found, among other things, that the cost of the service from Knoxo was not greater than the cost of the transportation from many other points which enjoy the lower ratd; that the value of the service was the same; and that other traffic conditions incident to shipment from Knv >xo were so similar to thosé of shipments from other poiiits enjoying a lower rate that the prejudice to which
*525
the Swift Lumber Company had been subjected was undue and. unreasonable. The innocent character of the discrimination practiced by the. Illinois Central was not established, as a matter of law, by showing that the preferential rate was given to others for the purpose' of developing traffic on the carrier’s own lines or of securing competitive traffic. These were factors to be considered by the Commission; but they did not preclude a finding that the discrimination practiced is unjust. Such was the law even before Transportation Act 1920.
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co.
v.
Interstate Commerce Commission,
Third. The Fernwood & Gulf contends that the order is obnoxious to the due process clause. The argument is that even its present division of 4 cents per 100 pounds is unremunerative; and that a smaller return would be confiscatory. To this argument there are several answers. The order does-not require a reduction of the through rate. It may be complied with by raising the rate frbm Fern-wood and other points now being preferred. Moreover, a reduction of the through rate would not necessarily result in decreasing the amount of the short line’s division. The Commission may, upon application, accord to the Fernwood & Gulf the appropriate division. 8 New England Divisions Case, 261 U. S. 184. There is no suggestion that the resulting reduction of the Illinois Central’s division would result in rendering the rate confiscatory as to it.
*527
Fourth.
The Femwood & Gulf contends also that the Swift Lumber Company is estopped from questioning the rates applicable to it. The argument is that when it acquired the mill property from a predecessor of the short line, an agreement provided that all lumber produced should be shipped over the line; and that the 2-cent arbitrary was then known to be in effect, and was thereby assented to for all. time. The contract, which is silent as to rates, is not susceptible of the construction urged. We have, therefore, no occasion to consider whether such an agreement would be valid and what its effect would be. Compare
Southern Pacific Co.
v.
Interstate Commerce Commission,
In No. 38, where the short line alone seeks to set aside the Commission’s order, this additional fact requires mention. The rate to the short line points is not a joint rate, but a combination of the trunk line rate to the junction and the short line local rate. The distinction is without legal significance in this connection. A through route was established; and the transportation is performed as the result of this arrangement between the carriers, expressed or implied. 9 Undue prejudice may be inflicted as effectively by a through rate which is a combination of locals, as by a joint through rate. The power of the Commission to remove the unjust discrimination exists in both classes of cases.
In No. ¿¡.fy decree reversed.
In No* 38, decree affirmed.
Notes
Compare
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.
v.
United States,
The cases relied upon by the carriers are not, inconsistent with this conclusion. In
Central R. R. Co. of New Jersey
v.
United States,
See
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.
v.
United States,
See
The Tap Line Cases,
As a division of only 2 cents is ordinarily deemed inadequate compensation by a connecting line, and as the trunk line is naturally indisposed to submit to a larger shrinkage of its own division, the through rate is commonly increased, by an arbitrary, if the traffic will bear it. „
Compare Idaho v. Director General, 66 I. C. C. 330, with Idaho v. Oregon Short Line, 83 I. C. C. 4.
Interstate Commerce Commission
v.
Illinois Central R. R. Co.,
In
East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Ry. Co.
v.
Interstate Commerce Commission,
This was done, after removing the unjust discrimination, in McGowan-Foshee Lumber Co. v. Florida, Alabama & Gulf R. R. Co., 43 I. C. C. 581; 51 I. C. C. 317.
See
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. United States,
