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[235 U.S. 314, 315] Solicitor General Bullitt for the United States.
[235 U.S. 314, 316] Mr. Charles W. Needham for the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Mr. William A. Wimbish for W. S. Duncan & Company et al.
Messrs. Albert S. Brandeis and Henry L. Stone for the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company.
[235 U.S. 314, 318] Messrs. K. T. McConnico, John A. Pitts, and Lee Douglas for the Nashville Grain Exchange and Nashville Board of Trade.
Messrs. Merrel P. Callaway and R. Walton Moore for the Nashville, Chattanooga, & St. Louis Railway.
Mr. Chief Justice White delivered the opinion of the court:
This case involves a controversy as to the legality of a reshipping privilege permitted at Nashville by the carriers who are parties to the record, described by the court below as follows:
The previous order of June 24, 1909, which had abolished the reshipping privilege at Nashville, was vacated and the Commission thereafter again considered the controversy between the grain dealers of Georgia and the Nashville dealers and carriers.
The commerce court, finding that there was no conflicting or disputed evidence concerning the origin and character of the reshipping privilege, concluded that whether such privilege was an undue preference was not a matter of fact, but a question of law, upon which it was its duty to reach an independent conclusion. The court, therefore, among other considerations, because the privilege was of long standing and was justified by water competition at Nashville, declared it to be not unlawful and not preferential. A peremptory injunction was allowed, restraining the enforcement of the order of the Commission. And the correctness of this action is the question here for decision.
In view of the doctrine announced in Interstate Commerce Commission v. Illinois C. R. Co.
While these conclusions demonstrate the error in the action of the court below, that result does not authorize us to reverse and give effect to the order of the Commission without going further, since it must be determined whether the action of the Commission was repugnant to the Constitution, in excess of the powers which that body possessed, or, what is equivalent thereto, was wholly unsustained by proof,-questions which the court below failed to pass upon because of the erroneous conception in which it indulged concerning its own powers. But if it were essential for us to consider these questions, we should be confronted with a grave situation arising from the serious doubt which would exist whether it would be possible for us to do so in view of the manner in which the Commission had discharged its functions, and whether that method had not, in and of itself, amounted to a denial of a hearing, and thus resulted in want of due process of law. See Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville & N. R. Co.
When the result of this allowance is understood, there seems to be no room for serious controversy that the right to continue the privilege is controlled by the 4th section of the act. The actual shipment from Nashville must either be considered as a movement from Nashville, irrespective of the rate which would have been applicable on a through shipment from an Ohio river point to the same point of destination, or it must be treated by a fiction as one moving from an Ohio river point to the same destination. If the first, then clearly the allowance made of a rate from Nashville to the point of destination was a lesser charge for the longer distance hauled as to such grain than was charged for the shorter distance as to any other grain moving from Nashville to intermediate points, or from such points to places further on, and came clearly within the grasp of the 4th section. If, on the other hand, it be imagined to be a shipment from the Ohio river crossing to the point of destination, upon the theory that the traffic before stoppage at Nashville originated at the Ohio river point, then exactly the same conditions would be reproduced, since the charge as the result of the reduction made was the equivalent of a lesser rate for the longer than for the shorter distance, which, as we have stated, was the prevailing system from Ohio river crossings to points of destination in the southeast.
It is true that in argument it was said that the question here is whether there was a preference or discrimination under the 2d and 3d sections of the act, and not an inquiry under the 4th section, and that a distinction between the various sections has been recognized. It has, indeed, been held that the provisions of the 2d, 3d, and 4th sections of the act, being in pari materia, required harmonious construction, and therefore they
[235 U.S. 314, 326]
should not be applied so that one section destroyed the others, and consequently that a lesser charge for a longer than for a shorter distance permitted by the 4th section could not, for such reason, be held to be either a preference or discrimination under the 2d or 3d sections. Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Behlmer,
It follows from what we have said that the court below was wrong in enjoining the order of the Commission, and, on the contrary, should have dismissed the complaint. The case will therefore be appropriately remanded to enable a decree to that effect to be entered, without prejudice, however, to the right of the carriers to apply to the Commission to be relieved from the operation of the provisions of the 4th section, if they are so advised.
REVERSED.
Mr. Justice Pitney concurs in the result.
[ Footnote 1 ] 'That in said investigation, and in arriving at its decision therein, this respondent, as in duty bound under the law, weighed and considered all the facts and arguments presented by the petitioners herein, by other carriers, and all other parties to said proceeding; that in forming its opinion and arriving at its conclusion this respondent, exercising its administrative functions and powers, considered all pertinent facts and matters set forth in many reports and statistics on file with said respondent, together with other facts coming to the knowledge of this respondent in the performance of its duties and functions prescribed and set forth in the acts to regulate commerce and the amendments thereto pertaining to the privileges of rebilling and reshipping; that from said reports and tariffs it appears that said rebilling and reshipping privileges exist at many interior points where no water competition obtains; it is therefore not competent, nor it is relevant, for said petitioners to allege that any particular fact of facts before this respondent in said proceeding are uncontradicted or conclusive in favor of the petitioners' contention; nor can the petitioners by judicial proceeding ascertain each and all the facts circumstances, and conditions in regard to said transportation that were necessarily and properly considered by, and which aided this respondent in arriving at, its conclusions that said practice of rebilling and reshipping said products from Nashville was unduly and unreasonably discriminatory.
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Citation: 235 U.S. 314
No. 39
Decided: December 07, 1914
Court: United States Supreme Court
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