1. Where an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission finding
a rate differential unduly prejudicial and preferential as to
certain shippers and prescribing a readjustment, has been
acquiesced in by the carriers affected, a shipper who is thereby
deprived of an economic advantage over competitors incident to the
exercise of the supposed right of the carriers to maintain the old
differential, but none of whose own rights is violated by its
elimination, has no standing to maintain an independent suit to set
the order aside upon the ground that there was no basis for the
finding. P.
281 U. S.
254.
2. An order of that character was attacked under the Act of June
18, 1910, as amended by the Urgent Deficiencies Act of October 22,
1913, in a suit brought by some of the carriers, and in another
brought by shippers who enjoyed the alleged preference, the suits
being consolidated and heard as one case. Upon dismissal of the
bills, the plaintiff carriers took no appeal, and joined the
other
Page 281 U. S. 150
carriers in complying with the order by filing the new rates
prescribed.
Held:
(1) That the shippers could not maintain.an appeal to this Court
upon the issue of undue preference, first, because they lacked an
independent standing and, second, because, through the carriers'
acquiescence, that issue had become moot. Pp.
281 U. S. 254,
281 U. S.
257.
(2) That the suit could not be maintained upon the ground that
the order, in alleged excess of the authority conferred by § 15 of
the Interstate Commerce Act, had increased certain rates without a
prior finding and hearing as to the reasonableness of the rate
levels, since the order left open any question of reasonableness,
and shippers aggrieved in that regard had their remedy before the
Commission under §§ 13 and 15. P.
281 U. S.
258.
3. The Commission's order in this case leaves the appellant
shippers free to demand allowances for transportation service
performed by them under contract with the carriers and which
properly should be performed by the carriers. P.
281 U. S.
259.
4. A decree dismissing on the merits a consolidated suit which
became moot after the decree was entered should, as far as concerns
the plaintiffs in one bill, who appealed, be reversed with
directions to dismiss their bill without costs, but should stand as
to the plaintiffs in the other bill, who took no appeal. P.
281 U. S.
260.
23 F.2d 874 reversed.
Appeal from a decree of the district court, of three judges,
dismissing the bills in two consolidated suits to set aside an
order of the Interstate Commerce Commission. The appellant shippers
were the plaintiffs in one of the suits. Plaintiffs in the other,
who were carriers, took no appeal. �281 U.S. 251�
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Interstate Commerce Commission entered, on April 4, 1927, an
order directed to the railroads operating in Oklahoma, Arkansas,
Texas, and Louisiana, which required them to remove, in a manner
prescribed, undue prejudice and preference caused by their rates on
cotton shipped from interior points to Houston and other ports on
the Gulf of Mexico. Application of Rates on Cotton to Gulf Ports,
100 I.C.C. 159; 123 I.C.C. 685. Two suits, under the Act of June
18, 1910, c. 309, 36 Stat. 539, as amended by Urgent Deficiencies
Act of October 22, 1913, c. 32, 38 Stat. 208, 220, were promptly
brought in the federal court for Southern Texas, to enjoin the
enforcement of the order and to set it aside. The first suit was
brought by Alexander Sprunt & Son, Inc., and others interested
in cotton compresses and warehouses located at wharves on the
waterfront. The second by the Texas & New Orleans Railroad
Company and other rail carriers. The two cases were, with the
consent of the parties, ordered consolidated as a single cause with
a single record. The consolidated case was heard by three judges.
An interlocutory injunction issued. Upon final hearing, the
district court sustained the validity of the order; dissolved the
injunction, and entered a decree dismissing the bills. 23 F.2d
874.
None of the carriers appealed from the decree. Acquiescing in
the decision of the district court and in the order of the
Commission, the railroads promptly established the prescribed rate
adjustment, and it is now in force. This appeal was taken by
Alexander Sprunt & Son, Inc., and those shippers and
associations of shippers which had joined below as co-plaintiffs in
the bill filed by it. No stay of the decree pending the appeal was
granted or sought. And no railroad was made a party to the
proceedings on the appeal. At the argument, this
Page 281 U. S. 252
court raised the preliminary question whether there is any
substantive ground for appeal by the shippers alone. In order to
answer that question, a fuller statement is necessary of the matter
in controversy before the commission and of the terms of the order
entered by it.
From interior points in Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Arkansas
to the several ports on the Gulf of Mexico, there were on all the
railroads two schedules of rates on cotton -- the domestic or
city-delivery rates, and the export, or ship-side rates. The latter
were, prior to the entry of the order complained of, 3 or 3.5 cents
per 100 pounds higher than the former. All rates permit
concentration and compression in transit, and include free
switching to and from the warehouses and compresses. [
Footnote 1] Complaint was made that, in
applying these rates, the railroads unjustly discriminated against
other shippers and in favor of Alexander Sprunt & Son, Inc.,
and other owners of warehouses and compresses at the wharves, by
applying the domestic rates on shipments to their plants of cotton
intended for export or for transshipment by vessel coastwise. It
was sought to justify this practice on the ground
Page 281 U. S. 253
that the conditions which had led to charging the higher rate
for export cotton were absent in the case of these waterfront
plants.
The difference of about 3.5 cents per 100 pounds between the
domestic and the export rates is approximately equal to the cost of
transporting the cotton, by dray or by switching, from uptown
concentrating and high density compressing plants in the ports to
shipside. This difference served to equalize rates as between the
uptown plants and the interior plants. Louisiana Cotton, 46 I.C.C.
451; Galveston Commercial Assn. v. Alabama & Vicksburg Ry. Co.,
77 I.C.C. 388. In 1921, and later, warehouses and high density
compressing plants were located at the waterfront, almost within
reach of the ship's tackle. From these plants, there was no need of
local transportation, by dray or switching, to shipside. The lower
domestic rates were accordingly applied on cotton shipped to them,
even though intended for export.
This practice gave to the waterfront plants an obvious advantage
over those located up town in the ports and over those located in
the interior. Widespread complaint of undue prejudice and
preference led the Commission to institute, upon its own motion, a
general investigation concerning the lawfulness of the practices of
the carriers in connection with the application of the
city-delivery and shipside rates, with a view to determining, among
other things,
"whether any change should be made in existing tariff
regulations or rates in order to avoid or remove such undue
preference, if any, that results or may result in favor of said
waterfront shippers or localities. [
Footnote 2]"
Practically all the railroads operating in the four southwestern
states were made respondents to that proceeding.
Page 281 U. S. 254
After extended hearings, the Commission found that the existing
adjustment of rates to ports was unduly prejudicial to the
warehouses and compresses uptown and in the interior; that it was
unduly preferential of those at the waterfront, and that the rates
should be readjusted so that one rate would apply for all
deliveries within the usual switching limits of the respective
ports, except that the export rates should be made higher than the
domestic rates by an amount equal to the wharfage. The Commission
did not, at first, specify the particular rate adjustment to be
established to accomplish the result directed. Without inquiring
into the reasonableness of the rates, it stated that the equality
of treatment might be effected by any readjustment which would
preserve, but not increase, the carriers' revenues. 100 I.C.C. 159,
167. But, upon reopening the proceeding pursuant to petitions
therefor, the Commission prescribed specifically what the rate
adjustment should be. It found that,
"for the purposes of this case, a fair and reasonable basis for
equalizing the city-delivery and shipside rates will be to increase
the city-delivery rates 1 cent per 100 pounds and reduce the
shipside rates exclusive of wharf or pier terminal charges
equivalent to 2 cents per 100 pounds, to the basis of the increased
city-delivery rates."
123 I.C.C. 685, 695.
First. The appellants contend that there is no basis
for the Commission's finding of undue prejudice and preference. We
are of opinion that appellants have no standing, in their own
right, to make this attack. Insofar as the order directs
elimination of the rate differential previously existing, it
worsened the economic position of the appellants. It deprived them
of an advantage over other competitors of almost 3.5 cents per
hundred pounds. The enjoyment of this advantage gave them a
distinct interest in the proceeding before the Commission under § 3
of the Interstate Commerce Act. For their competitive advantage
Page 281 U. S. 255
was threatened. Having this interest, they were entitled to
intervene in that administrative proceeding. And, if they did so,
they became entitled under § 212 of the Judicial Code to intervene,
as of right, in any suit "wherein is involved the validity" of the
order entered by the Commission. [
Footnote 3] But that interest alone did not give them the
right to maintain an independent suit to vacate and set aside the
order. Such a suit can be brought by a shipper only where a right
of his own is alleged to have been violated by the order. And his
independent right to relief is no greater where, by intervention or
otherwise, he has become a party to the proceeding before the
Commission or to a suit brought by a carrier. In the case at bar,
the appellants have no independent right which is violated by the
order to cease and desist. They are entitled as shippers only to
reasonable service at reasonable rates and without unjust
discrimination. If such service and rates are accorded them, they
cannot complain of the rate or practice enjoyed by their
competitors or of the retraction of a competitive advantage to
which they are not otherwise entitled. The advantage which the
appellants enjoyed under the former tariff was merely an incident
of, and hence was dependent upon, the right, if any, of the
carriers to maintain that tariff in force and their continuing
desire to do so.
Why the carriers filed the new rate structure now in force is no
concern of the appellants. If the carriers had done so wholly of
their own motion, obviously these shippers would have had no ground
of complaint, before any tribunal, unless the new rates were
unreasonable or unjust. If they were believed by the appellants to
be so, a complaint before the Commission would be the appropriate
remedy.
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co.
v. Abilene
Page 281 U. S. 256
Cotton Oil Co., 204 U. S. 426;
United States v. Merchants' & Manufacturers' Traffic
Association, 242 U. S. 178,
242 U. S. 188;
Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Merchants' Elevator Co.,
259 U. S. 285,
259 U. S. 295.
The appellants' position is legally no different from what it would
have been if the carriers had filed the rates freely, pursuant to
an informal suggestion of the Commission or one of its members; or
if the filing had been made by carriers voluntarily after complaint
filed before the Commission, which had never reached a hearing,
because the rate structure complained of was thus superseded.
[
Footnote 4] The carriers who
were respondents before the Commission filed the new rates,
presumably because they now desire them. Nothing to the contrary is
shown. So far as the carriers are concerned, it is as if the new
rates had been filed wholly of their own accord, and as if there
had never been a controversy before the Commission. Since the
appellants' economic advantage as shippers was an incident of the
supposed right exercised by the carriers, the appellants cannot
complain after the carriers are satisfied or prefer not to press
their right, if any.
Appellants' present position resembles in all essentials one
which was put forward in
Edward Hines Trustees v. United
States, 263 U. S. 143,
263 U. S.
147-148, and
United States v. Merchants' &
Manufacturers' Traffic Association, 242 U.
S. 178,
242 U. S. 188.
There, as here, the plaintiffs were deprived by the order of the
Commission of a competitive advantage. But the plaintiffs there, as
here, were not
Page 281 U. S. 257
subjected to or threatened with any legal wrong. And, since the
carriers acquiesced in the order of the Commission, the plaintiffs
could not maintain an independent action to annul the orders.
Appellants' present position is unlike that of the plaintiffs in
the cases relied upon.
United States v. Village of
Hubbard, 266 U. S. 474;
The Chicago Junction Case, 246
U. S. 258;
Skinner & Eddy Corp. v. United
States, 249 U. S. 557;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Diffenbaugh,
222 U. S. 42. In
each of those cases, an independent legal right of the plaintiff
was affected by the order which it was sought to set aside.
[
Footnote 5]
Moreover, by the action of the carriers, the issue of undue
prejudice and unjust preference, which had been passed upon by the
Commission, has become moot.
Compare United States v. Anchor
Coal Co., 279 U.S. 812. Most of the carriers never sought to
annul the order. Those that joined in the suit to set it aside have
since voluntarily severed themselves from the shippers who
object
Page 281 U. S. 258
to it. The fact that some carriers at one time protested is of
no significance, among other reasons, because their protest may
have been directed not against that part of the order which
commanded an equalization of rates, but against the particular
figure at which equalization was ordered. [
Footnote 6] There is nothing to show that any carrier
is now in sympathy with the appellants' attack on the order. A
judgment in appellants' favor would be futile. It would not restore
the appellants to the advantage previously enjoyed. If the
Commission's order is set aside, the carriers would still be free
to continue to equalize the rates, and, for aught that appears,
would continue to do so.
Second. Appellants complain of the order also on the
ground that it authorized an increase in the local or domestic
delivery rates without a hearing and findings as to the
reasonableness of the level of either the old or the new rates. It
is urged that § 15 of the Act does not authorize the Commission to
fix the rates necessary to remove undue prejudice without such
hearing and findings. But plainly appellants cannot, in their own
right, be heard to complain in this suit of this part of the order.
The Commission's first order left the carriers free to choose the
method for the removal of the preference.
Compare American
Express Co. v. Caldwell, 244 U. S. 617,
244 U. S. 625;
United States v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 263 U.
S. 515,
263 U. S. 521.
If the carriers had, of their own accord, adopted the plan later
prescribed by the Commission, appellants could, obviously, not be
heard to complain of the reasonableness of the rate adopted, except
in a proceeding before the Commission instituted under §§ 13 and 15
of the Act. For reasons which it is unnecessary to detail, the
carriers were unable to agree upon a plan. They petitioned the
Page 281 U. S. 259
Commission for help. In reopening the proceedings, the
Commission notified the parties that one of the issues to be
decided was "what rates shall be established to comply with [its]
findings and order." The carriers have accepted the rate fixed by
the Commission. In prescribing the rate, the Commission in no way
prejudiced any preexisting rights or remedies of the appellants.
Any question as to the reasonableness of the level of the rate was
expressly left open by the Commission. [
Footnote 7] It did not prescribe any rate as the minimum.
If appellants are aggrieved by the level of the new rates, they
still have their remedy before the Commission under §§ 13 and 15 of
the Act.
Third. The appellants urged a further objection. In
order to avoid congestion in heavy traffic periods and undue
detention of cars, shippers from uptown warehouses customarily
deliver their cotton to shipside by dray or barge, in lieu of
switching by the carriers, and they are paid allowances by the
carriers for this substituted service. The Commission's first
report stated: "This finding is not to be construed as condemning
the practice of the carriers of absorbing drayage charges in lieu
of switching." 100 I.C.C. 159, 167. In its second report, the
Commission reaffirmed this position. But, in response to questions
raised by the carriers, it stated that no allowances could lawfully
be made with respect to what it termed the "intraplant" movement by
hand truck, overhead trolley, etc., to shipside from warehouses and
compresses on and adjacent to the wharves operated as part
Page 281 U. S. 260
of such warehouses or compresses. [
Footnote 8] Appellants urge that this prohibition is
arbitrary, and should be enjoined.
The question of these allowances was only incidentally raised in
the proceedings before the Commission. It made no order with
respect to them. The statements complained of appear only in the
report, and are not specifically referred to in the order. The
Commission recognized the right of shippers to allowances for
substituted transportation service furnished by them. It did not
undertake to define what such services might be for all cases. Nor
did it specifically refer to the services rendered by any of the
appellants. Indeed, appellants insist that their warehouses or
compresses are not operated as part of or in conjunction with the
adjacent wharves or piers. If, under their contracts with carriers,
the appellants perform services which properly should be performed
by the carriers, the appellants are free to demand allowances
therefor, and to enforce their demands by appropriate proceedings
before the Commission and in the courts. In such proceedings,
specific issues will be presented and decided.
The decree below dismissed the consolidated suit on the merits.
As the matter, insofar as it relates to the bill filed by these
appellants, has become moot since the decree was entered, the
decree should be reversed, so far as it
Page 281 U. S. 261
concerns appellants, and the district court should be directed
to dismiss their bill without costs.
See United States v.
Anchor Coal Co., 279 U.S. 812. So far as concerns the
carriers, no appeal having been taken by them, the decree entered
below should stand.
Reversed, with direction to dismiss.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE did not take part in this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Cotton is usually ginned at country points and put in bales
weighing 525 pounds with a density of 11 or 12 pounds per cubic
foot. Before these bales can be dealt in on the cotton exchanges,
they must commonly go through two further processes. Concentration
for purposes of merchandising -- that is, grading and assorting
into lots of quality and quantity demanded by the ultimate
purchasers. Compression for purposes of transportation -- that is,
reducing the size of the bale by increasing its density, which, in
order to secure favorable rail rates, must commonly be 22.5 pounds
per cubic foot, and, in order to secure favorable vessel rates,
must commonly be 32 pounds per cubic foot. The former is called
standard density; the latter, high density. Some concentration and
high density compression plants are located at interior points.
Many are located in the ports at places remote from the waterfront,
or the wharves. These are called uptown plants. Since 1921, several
plants have been located at the waterfront, in close proximity to
the vessels by which the cotton is shipped abroad or coastwise.
[
Footnote 2]
With this general investigation, there was consolidated a formal
complaint, Weatherford, Crump & Co. v. Abilene & Southern
Ry. Co.
et al., which had been filed earlier. 100 I.C.C.
159, note 1.
[
Footnote 3]
Originally the Commerce Court Act, June 18, 1910, c. 309, 36
Stat. 543; U.S.C. Tit. 28, § 45a.
[
Footnote 4]
Compare Rules of Practice (Revised to December 2, 1919)
IV(i); Manufacturers' & Jobbers' Union of Mankato v.
Minneapolis & St. Louis Ry. Co., 1 I.C.C. 227; Lincoln Board of
Trade v. Union Pacific Ry. Co. & So. P. Ry. Co., 2 I.C.C. 229;
Pennsylvania Co. v. Louisville, New Albany & Chicago Ry. Co., 3
I.C.C. 223; American Wire Nail Co. v. Queen & Crescent Fast
Freight Line, 3 I.C.C. 224; Alan Wood Iron & Steel Co. v. Pa.
R. Co., 24 I.C.C. 27, 33.
[
Footnote 5]
Two suits were involved in the
Diffenbaugh case. One
was against a carrier to recover allowances for substituted
transportation facilities alleged to be due under § 15 of the Act.
The Interstate Commerce Commission was joined and its order
prohibiting the allowances sought to be enjoined because the order
would otherwise have constituted a defense to the suit. In the
other action, interested carriers intervened as parties plaintiff
and persisted in their effort to set aside the order. In
Skinner & Eddy Corp. v. United States, the right under
the last paragraph of § 4 of the Act not to pay increased rates
except when due to reasons other than the elimination of water
competition was clearly the right of the shipper. In the
Chicago Junction Case, the order violated the plaintiff's
right under paragraph 2 of § 5 to equal treatment, and the
plaintiff, with those similarly situated, was the only person in
interest against the order. In the
Hubbard case, the
challenged order increasing rates was alleged to violate a contract
between the plaintiff and the carrier, who, it was alleged, was not
subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission.
[
Footnote 6]
See 123 I.C.C. 685; 23 F.2d 874, 876.
[
Footnote 7]
The Commission said, with reference to the rate, "the . . .
finding is without prejudice to further inquiry into the
reasonableness of the above rates in connection with other cases
now pending." 123 I.C.C. 685, 695.
[
Footnote 8]
"But, upon cotton delivered to shipside from and by waterfront
warehouses or compresses over adjacent wharves or piers operated as
a part of, or in conjunction with, such warehouses or compresses, a
different condition exists. The hand or electric trucking, or
movement by overhead trolley, from the part of the waterfront
facility known as the warehouse or compress to that part known as
the wharf is not a substitute for rail transportation, but is an
intraplant movement just the same as the handling of cotton from
the interior of an uptown warehouse to the railroad car or dray is
an intraplant movement. No allowances may lawfully be made for
these intraplant movements."
123 I.C.C. 685, 696.