delivered the opinion of the court.
The Railroad Commission of Indiana was created and broad powers were conferred upon it by an act approved February 28, 1905, and an amendatory act approved March 9,1907. Acts 1905, p. 83; Acts 1907, p. 454; Burns’
So far as the attack upon the Act of 1909 and the order • made pursuant to it is based upon interference with interstate commerce, it very properly is conceded that,, but for a recent act of Congress, the case would be controlled by
Atlantic Coast Line R. R. Co.
v.
Georgia,
But it is insisted that this decision is no longer controlling, because Congress has since then “exercised its power as to equipment over the entire locomotive and tender and all parts and appurtenances thereof.” The reference is to the Act of March 4, 1915, c. 169, 38 Stat. 1192, amendatory of the Act of February 17, 1911, requiring. common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to equip their locomotives with safe and suitable boilers and appurtenances thereto, c. 103, 36 Stat. 913. The latter act was among those referred to in the
Georgia Case,
and held not to oust the authority of the State because it did not appear either that Congress had acted, or that the Interstate Commerce Commission, under the authority of Congress, had established any regulations concerning headlights. The amendment of 1915 extends the provisions respecting inspection, etc., to the entire locomotive and all its appurtenances. Whether those provisions authorize the Interstate Commerce Commission to prescribe any particular type of headlight, or other appliance, is a question upon which we need not now pass, for the reason that the decision of the Supreme Court of Indiana, refusing an injunction to restrain the enforcement of .the state commission’s order, was rendered and judgment thereon entered before the passage by Congress of the act referred to. Obviously, we cannot say that by that decision and judgment any right of plaintiff in error under a law of the United States was infringed, wi.tbin the mean
With respect to the question of due process of law, it is unnecessary to determine whether the Fourteenth Amendment requires that state action, legislative in its nature, of the character of the order of the Railroad Commission, shall be preceded by notice and an opportunity for a hearing. In the case before us, the Supreme Court of Indiana construed the Act of 1909 as supplemental to the Act of 1905, which, as amended in 1907 (Acts 1907, p. 469, §6; Burns’ Ann. Ind. Stats. 1908,-§ 5536), gave to any carrier or other party dissatisfied with any order made by the Commission a right to resort to the courts in an action to suspend it or set it aside. Since the order in question was made after notice and a full hearing, and plaintiff in error had and exercised the right to a judicial review by action at law, we concur in the view of the state court that there has been in this respect no deprivation of property without due process of law.
The only other point requiring mention is the insistence that the order is so indefinite and uncertain in its terms as not to furnish an intelligible measure of the duty of plaintiff in error, and is therefore a denial of due process of law. Upon this point the state court held, following its previous decision in
Chicago &c. R. Co.
v.
Railroad Comm.,
175 Indiana, 630, 638, that the Railroad Commission itself, by virtue of the act, had power to grant relief through a rehearing, and that without first resorting to that method of prpcedure plaintiff in error was not entitled to have the
Judgment affirmed.
