The Interstate Commerce Commission issued an order approving
tariff regulations providing that railroads will be responsible for
claims for physical damage to shell eggs carried by them only to
the extent that such damage is in excess of specified percentages
or "tolerances." The validity of the regulations was challenged on
the ground that they violated § 20(11) of the Interstate Commerce
Act, which provides that any carrier subject to the Act receiving
property for interstate transportation "shall be liable . . . for
any loss, damage, or injury to such property caused by it" and
forbids any limitation of, or exemption from, such liability. The
Commission had concluded that, since the tolerances represented
pre-shipment and unavoidable damage not "caused by" the railroads,
their deduction from damage claims could not limit the railroads'
proper liability.
Held: the Commission's findings were insufficient to
support this conclusion or to establish that the tolerances
permitted by its order will not operate to limit carrier liability
in violation of § 20(11), and the Commission's order must be set
aside. Pp.
350 U. S.
163-173.
119 F. Supp. 86 reversed.
Page 350 U. S. 163
Opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, announced by MR.
JUSTICE CLARK.
These cases involve the validity of railroad tariff provisions
exonerating the appellee railroads from liability for stated
percentages of damage to shell eggs shipped over their lines. The
cases come to us by direct appeal [
Footnote 1] from a judgment of a three-judge district
court in Utah [
Footnote 2]
which dismissed an action brought to set aside and enjoin an order
of the Interstate Commerce Commission [
Footnote 3] approving such tariff provisions. We noted
probable jurisdiction on October 14, 1954. [
Footnote 4]
Claims against the railroads for damage to egg shipments
steadily and rapidly increased in the years following 1939,
particularly on shipments to the eastern seaboard area. [
Footnote 5] In 1950, the railroads,
believing that, because of the difficulties of proof, they were
being exposed to liability for damage for which they were not
responsible, filed with the Commission proposed tariff provisions
similar in form to those approved by the order under review. After
an investigation and hearing, [
Footnote 6] the Commission concluded
Page 350 U. S. 164
that egg shipments ordinarily contained substantial amounts of
damage for which the railroads were not responsible -- namely, (a)
damage existing prior to shipment, and (b) damage unavoidably
arising in transit because of the inherently fragile nature of
eggs. The average amount of such damage was found to be 3% for eggs
packaged at railhead points and 5% for those packaged elsewhere. On
the basis of this finding, the Commission, although rejecting the
higher percentage provisions proposed by the railroads, [
Footnote 7] found reasonable -- and
hence authorized the railroads to include in their tariff schedules
[
Footnote 8] -- the following
tolerance provision:
"On eggs placed in packages at rail point of origin of the
shipment, no claim shall be allowed where the physical damage to
the eggs at destination does not exceed 3% of the contents of the
packages containing damaged eggs. Where damage exceeds 3%, claims
shall be allowed for all damage in excess of 3% if investigation
develops carrier liability."
"Exception. -- Where bona fide certificates of Federal or State
egg inspection agencies showing extent of physical damage to eggs
determined at rail point of origin of the shipment immediately
prior to tender for rail transportation indicate the actual shell
damage to be other than 2%, the percentage of actual damage as
shown on such certificates, plus 1% shall be used in lieu of 3%
specified in this Section."
An otherwise identical provision applicable to "eggs placed in
packages at points other than the rail point of
Page 350 U. S. 165
origin" was determined to be reasonable with a tolerance of
5%.
It is claimed that these tariff provisions violate § 20(11) of
the Interstate Commerce Act, 24 Stat. 386, as amended, 49 U.S.C. §
20(11), which provides that any common carrier subject to the Act
receiving property for interstate transportation
"shall be liable . . . for any loss, damage, or injury to such
property caused by it . . . , and no contract, receipt, rule,
regulation, or other limitation of any character whatsoever shall
exempt such common carrier . . . from the liability hereby imposed.
. . ."
The Commission and the court below (one judge dissenting) held
that the tolerance provisions did not violate § 20(11) because the
pre-shipment and unavoidably-caused damage represented by the
tolerances was not damage "caused by" the railroads; hence, the
tolerance regulations, in providing a means for determining the
extent of such damage, did not limit the railroads' proper
liability, but operated simply to eliminate from damage claims the
damage for which the railroads were not liable.
The appellants attack the provisions on six principal grounds:
(1) the Commission has no jurisdiction over damage claims, and
hence no power to prescribe regulations governing their
disposition; (2) tolerances based on averages necessarily embrace a
forbidden limitation of liability since, by definition, some
shipments will contain less than the "average" damage, resulting in
those cases in the carrier being relieved of its full liability;
(3) the railroads are liable for in-transit damage even though
"unavoidable"; [
Footnote 9] (4)
the averages found by the Commission are not supported by the
evidence; (5) the approval of uniform nationwide tolerances was
unreasonable in light
Page 350 U. S. 166
of the wide differences in the egg damage experience of
consignees located in different areas of the country; [
Footnote 10] and (6) the conclusion
that the tolerances do not limit liability is not supported by the
Commission's findings. Our agreement with this last contention
makes it unnecessary for us to consider the other arguments, and we
may assume, though we do not decide, that the tariff provisions are
not invalid for any of the other reasons assigned.
The Commission's justification of the tolerance regulations as
not limiting liability rests upon two distinct propositions: (1)
that there is present in every case of eggs at destination physical
damage not "caused by" the railroads -- and hence for which they
are not liable under § 20(11) -- in the amount of the specified
percentages; and (2) that the deduction of those percentages from
damage claims operates merely to prevent liability for such damage
from being improperly imposed on the railroads. We
Page 350 U. S. 167
shall accept for purposes of discussion the validity of the
first proposition. The infirmity we find in the Commission's report
is, rather, that the second proposition is simply assumed, and is
supported by no findings upon which we can say that the
Commission's conclusion was reasonably based. Such a conclusion
being essential to remove the tolerance provisions from the
prohibition of § 20(11), the lack of findings necessary to justify
that conclusion renders invalid the Commission's order approving
the tolerance regulations.
See Florida v. United States,
282 U. S. 194,
282 U. S. 215.
Indeed, so far does the report fail to support the Commission's
conclusion that it tends affirmatively to support precisely the
opposite conclusion -- namely, that the tolerances do unlawfully
limit liability. We know of no better way to illustrate the
inadequacies of the report than by showing the manner in which the
inferences raised by it and unanswered by the Commission would, if
accepted, lead to that opposing conclusion.
In the first place, we are unable to discover in the report any
showing that damage claims include -- or should reasonably be
deemed to include -- the exempt damage which is to be deducted from
them. At common law, proof that a case of eggs contained a
specified amount of damage for which the carrier was not liable
would afford no defense to a damage claim not shown to include that
damage. To complete the defense, some showing that the damage
claimed included the exempt damage would be required, such as
evidence that all of the damage had been found and claimed.
Similarly, to justify a regulation authorizing the deduction from
damage claims of a tolerance representing exempt damage, some basis
for inferring that damage claims ordinarily include such damage
would seem required, such as a finding that the type of inspection
upon which damage claims are based is adequate to reveal
substantially all the damage present in a case.
Page 350 U. S. 168
Far from making such a finding, however, the Commission report
indicates that damage claims normally do not include all the damage
present in a case. As described by the Commission, the customary
inspection at destination upon which damage claims are based is
simply a visual examination of a layer of 36 eggs at a time,
continuing only until a layer in the case with no visible damage is
found, at which point none of the succeeding layers is even looked
at. [
Footnote 11] Inasmuch
as "damage" of the sort represented by the tolerances includes even
the most minor shell imperfections, the inference seems inevitable
that much damage is overlooked. This inference is strengthened by
the Commission's statement that much of the damage normally present
in a case could be found only "by candling and clicking, and could
not be detected by the kind of inspection performed at"
destination. [
Footnote 12]
And that damage claims do not in practice include all damage is
further indicated by the Department of Agriculture studies cited by
the Commission in which the damage overlooked by customary
inspections at destination was found to range between 3.6% and
7.3%. [
Footnote 13] Indeed,
if the inferences suggested by these latter studies be accepted,
it
Page 350 U. S. 169
would appear that there is ordinarily overlooked in the
destination inspection -- and hence not included in damage claims
-- physical damage nearly equal to or greater than the exempt
damage represented by the tolerances. If that be true, a further
reduction of the claim by the full amount of the tolerance would
necessarily operate to "limit" liability by approximately the full
amount of the tolerance.
Nor is it an answer to this that the consignee is entitled to
make a more thorough inspection than the prevailing practice
entails. By in effect requiring a consignee to prove that his
damage claim does not include the exempt damage, the tolerances
would impose on the consignee the burden of disproving a defense
which at common law it would be the carrier's burden to establish.
Whether or not the Commission has power so to alter the burden of
proof, there is nothing to indicate that it had any intention of
doing so. The Commission seems to have believed that, under the
prevailing commercial practices, the carriers were being exposed to
an improper liability, and that the tolerances, applied in the same
commercial setting, would do no more than remedy that situation. It
would pervert the Commission's purpose to deal realistically with a
commercial problem now to seek to justify the tolerances on the
ground that it is technically possible for consignees, by departing
from the normal commercial practices, to avoid the limitation of
liability caused by the tolerances. Especially is this true in the
absence of any suggestion in the Commission's report that such a
complete inspection by consignees would be commercially feasible.
[
Footnote 14]
Page 350 U. S. 170
Another inadequacy of the Commission's report arises from its
failure to distinguish between different kinds of physical damage
in the application of the tolerances. The most favorable evidence
supporting the Commission's conclusions as to the extent of the
damage not "caused by" the railroads was a Department of
Agriculture study showing that, at destination, the average case of
eggs contains 4.8% "checked" or "stained" eggs and 0.3% broken
eggs. [
Footnote 15]
Presumably, therefore, the tolerances approved by the Commission
represent physical damage in the same proportions -- that is,
primarily checked and stained eggs with only a nominal percentage
of broken eggs. Checked and stained eggs are salable at a reduced
price, and therefore, unlike broken eggs, represent only a partial
loss. The tariff provisions, however, do not differentiate between
these types of damage, and apparently authorize the deduction of
the full tolerance without regard to the nature of the damage
claimed. But to permit the offsetting of checked and stained eggs,
representing only a partial loss, against broken eggs, representing
a total loss, would seem necessarily to limit the railroads' proper
liability under § 20(11).
A third major respect in which the Commission's report falls
short of establishing that the tolerances will not limit
Page 350 U. S. 171
liability results from its failure to consider the relationship
between the physical damage represented by the tolerances and the
legal loss for which damage claims are asserted. We have thus far
assumed that "physical damage" could properly be equated with
"loss," and have shown that, even on that assumption, the
Commission has not shown the existence of a relationship between
the damage represented by the tolerances and that included in
damage claims which would justify the deduction authorized by the
tariff provisions. In fact, however, it would appear that damage
claims are based not on physical damage to individual eggs, but
rather on the loss of commercial acceptability of a case of eggs as
a whole. As the Commission observed, the "commercially sound" case
of eggs invariably contains some damage, [
Footnote 16] and it is apparently only when the damage
is so great as to make a case commercially unacceptable for its
grade that it loses value. When a commercially unsound case is
received, the consignee, rather than suffer the presumably greater
loss that would result from selling it at a lower grade or as
salvage, ordinarily "reconditions" the case by replacing the
visibly damaged eggs and, if necessary, the packaging materials.
From the character of this process as described by the Commission,
[
Footnote 17] it is apparent
that the purpose is simply to make the case commercially sound, and
not to discover and remove all the damage present in the case. The
damage claim, if liability is asserted against the carrier, then
consists simply of the cost of reconditioning the case -- that is,
the labor and material costs plus the loss on the damaged eggs
removed. [
Footnote 18]
Page 350 U. S. 172
Viewed in the above terms, the probable effect of the tolerances
on liability becomes even more apparent. Inasmuch as the highest
grade specifications prescribed by the Department of Agriculture
permit physical damage of 5%, [
Footnote 19] a case of eggs received at destination with
only the tolerance damage of 3% or 5% would presumably be
considered "commercially sound" and be salable at the full price.
Thus, it would seem that presence of the tolerance damage, by
itself, causes the consignee no loss and affords no basis for a
damage claim, and that it is only when there is additional damage,
making it necessary to recondition the case to make it commercially
sound, that there is a loss for which a claim may be asserted. And
if the additional damage is caused by the railroad, it necessarily
follows that the cost of the reconditioning made necessary only
because of that damage is a loss "caused by" the railroad within §
20(11). [
Footnote 20] Any
reduction of the damage claim in such circumstances would thus
relieve the carrier of its proper liability.
The Commission's report thus leaves us not merely with
uncertainty as to the impact of the tolerances,
cf.
294 U. S. Chicago,
M., St. P. & P. R. Co., 294 U.S.
Page 350 U. S. 173
499,
294 U. S.
504-505,
294 U. S.
510-511, but with the strong impression that they are
likely to operate in a forbidden manner. The report contains no
answers to the problems we have raised, if indeed the Commission
considered them at all. Since the report falls far short of
establishing that the tolerances will not operate to limit carrier
liability in violation of § 20(11), the order of the Commission
approving the tolerances must be set aside, and the judgment
below
Reversed.
* Together with Nos. 7 and 12,
Utah Poultry Farmers
Cooperative et al. v. United State et al., also on appeals
from the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
28 U.S.C. §§ 1253, 2325. The Secretary of Agriculture's standing
in these proceedings derives from 52 Stat. 36, 7 U.S.C. § 1291(a)
and (b).
[
Footnote 2]
Utah Poultry & Farmers Cooperative v. United
States, 119 F.
Supp. 846.
[
Footnote 3]
284 I.C.C. 377.
[
Footnote 4]
348 U.S. 807.
[
Footnote 5]
The Commission found that, on eggs shipped to New York, the
average claim per car increased more than 1800% from 1940 to 1947,
284 I.C.C. at 386, 390, and that the total claims paid in 1947
exceeded 50% of the gross revenue on such shipments,
id.
at 387.
[
Footnote 6]
36 Stat. 552, as amended, 49 U.S.C. § 15(7).
[
Footnote 7]
The tariff provisions as originally filed established 4% and 6%
tolerances, as opposed to the 3% and 5% tolerances found reasonable
by the Commission.
See 284 I.C.C. at 407-408.
[
Footnote 8]
Promptly after the Commission's order, the railroads refiled the
tariff provisions with the approved percentages. They were
permitted to go into effect on May 2, 1952.
[
Footnote 9]
It is conceded that § 20(11) codifies the common law rule making
a carrier liable, without proof of negligence, for all damage to
the goods transported by it unless it affirmatively shows that the
damage was occasioned by the shipper, acts of God, the public
enemy, public authority, or the inherent vice or nature of the
commodity.
See, e.g., Bills of Lading, 52 I.C.C. 671, 679;
Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Thompson Mfg. Co.,
270 U. S. 416,
270 U. S.
421-422;
Adams Express Co. v. Croninger,
226 U. S. 491,
226 U. S.
506-507,
226 U. S. 509.
The "unavoidable" damage to eggs is claimed to be within the
"inherent vice" exception. The appellants contend, however, that
the exception does not include damage induced by external force,
however slight or unavoidable, but is limited to loss or damage
arising solely from the nature of the property without the
intervention of human factors, such as loss from decay,
fermentation, evaporation, or natural shrinkage.
See, e.g.,
Austin v. Seaboard Airline R. Co., 188 F.2d 239, 240-241;
Akerly v. Railway Exp. Agency, 96 N.H. 396, 400-402, 77
A.2d 856, 860-861;
Jackson & Perkins Co. v. Mushroom
Transp. Co., 351 Pa. 583, 590-591, 41 A.2d 635, 639;
Watson Bros. Transp. Co. v. Domenico, 118 Colo. 133,
135-137, 194 P.2d 323, 325.
[
Footnote 10]
The Commission found that the increase of damage claims to
"substantial amounts" had occurred principally in connection with
shipments to certain points in the eastern seaboard territory --
particularly New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Boston and Newark
-- and that "Generally there has been no increase in the damage
claims on shell eggs moved by rail to other territories." 284
I.C.C. at 385-386, 392.
[
Footnote 11]
284 I.C.C. at 395.
[
Footnote 12]
284 I.C.C. at 393-394. In "candling," each egg is placed before
a light to disclose defects not otherwise detectable; in
"clicking," two eggs are knocked together, the sound revealing
shell imperfections.
[
Footnote 13]
284 I.C.C. at 396. In answer to the implications of these
uncontroverted studies, the Commission simply said:
"The record does not indicate the handling received by those
particular shipments after they were delivered to the consignees.
It does indicate, however, based on the number and amount of
claims, that the inspection of shipments of eggs arriving at New
York is being performed with a view to detecting all damaged eggs.
Claims in amounts exceeding 50 percent of the revenue on the entire
egg traffic to New York in 1947 do not appear to be based on a
cursory inspection."
Ibid. But this speculative reasoning hardly overcomes
the Commission's own explicit finding of the inadequacy of the
destination inspections to discover all the damage.
[
Footnote 14]
To the contrary, the report notes that, despite the efforts of
packers by careful inspection to eliminate all damage, "absolute
perfection is commercially impossible," and a substantial amount is
overlooked, 284 I.C.C. at 393, and the difficulties would seem even
greater under the more adverse conditions prevailing at
destination. Nor do the Department of Agriculture test studies upon
which the tolerances were based indicate the feasibility of an
inspection adequate to uncover all damage. The usual Department of
Agriculture grading inspections involve an examination only of 100
eggs from each of 15 cases out of a carload, 284 I.C.C. at 393,
and, while the Commission does not clearly say so, apparently the
test studies utilized a similar spot check inspection, from which
the total amount of damage was simply inferred. Damage claims, on
the other hand, can be asserted only for the damage that is
actually found.
[
Footnote 15]
284 I.C.C. at 393-394. "Checked" eggs have slight cracks, but
the membrane is unbroken; "stained" eggs are sound eggs which have
been stained by leakage from other eggs.
Id. at 384,
385.
[
Footnote 16]
284 I.C.C. at 393.
[
Footnote 17]
284 I.C.C. at 395. The eggs are simply transferred from the
damaged case to a new case a whole layer (36 eggs) at a time, in
the course of which any obviously damaged eggs are removed and
replaced.
[
Footnote 18]
284 I.C.C. at 385, 399.
[
Footnote 19]
284 I.C.C. at 401. Of this 5% (for Grade A or AA eggs), no more
than 0.5% may consist of broken eggs. As appears above, however,
the proportion of broken eggs represented by the tolerances is well
within this limit.
[
Footnote 20]
It seems immaterial that, in a given case, the consignee might
remove more damage than the minimum necessary to make the case
commercially sound. The cost of the extensive inspection that would
be necessary to assure that precisely the right amount of damage is
removed -- a cost the consignee would presumably be entitled to
recover -- would defeat the mitigation of damages which is the very
purpose of the reconditioning. The carrier can ask no more than
that the consignee act reasonably in mitigating damages, and there
is no suggestion that the commercially accepted method of
reconditioning unsound cases is unreasonable.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, concurring.
It seems desirable to state, summarily, the basis on which I
join the court's opinion.
The starting point of the Court's determination of the issue in
this case is recognition of the fact that the Cummins Amendment to
the Interstate Commerce Act, § 20(11), does not constitute an
affirmative congressional formulation of a carrier's liability for
damage to goods transported by it. The legal import of that
Amendment is to bar the Interstate Commerce Commission from
legalizing tariffs limiting the common law liability of a carrier
for such damage. The common law, in imposing liability, dispensed
with proof by a shipper of a carrier's negligence in causing the
damage. But for breakage unavoidable in the nature of things --
whether nature be operating within a thing or from without, it is
equally an "inherent vice" -- there would be no liability, since
the common law did not impose a liability unrelated to the
carrier's conduct.
These are the general principles to be deduced from the cases
decided at common law. A situation as complicated as the one before
us precludes mechanical or mathematical application of these
generalities. At common law, if a shipper sued for damage to eggs,
the carrier
Page 350 U. S. 174
might be able to introduce evidence demonstrating an established
percentage of loss not in any sense caused by it. Such fact of
inevitable loss could be established by adequately supported
averages, and would not require demonstration of the incidence of
inevitable preshipment or in-transit damage in a particular
shipment. To be sure, the shipper might then reply by proving an
inevitable percentage of damage caused by the railroad which was
undetected or undetectable at destination. One would have to reason
from principle, as it is called, to conclude whether the common law
would throw on the carrier the burden of showing that the total
amount of such loss was inevitably represented in the shipper's
damage claim, or whether it would allow the carrier to subtract
this inevitable damage from whatever damage claim was made, and
thus throw on the shipper the burden of finding all the damage if
he wanted a full recovery.
Likewise, if the common law allowed a carrier to urge that the
shipper suffered no loss from the undetected or undetectable damage
because he could get full price for the cases containing such
damage, it might be equally open to the shipper to urge that the
average inevitable loss which was being subtracted from his damage
claim was made up in large part of damage which was equally
undetectable by ordinary commercial inspection, and could therefore
not be represented in the damage claims that were being made. A
further complicating factor is the fact that the grade
specifications prescribed by the Department of Agriculture allow
prescribed percentages of damage.
See 284 I.C.C. at 401.
For example, 5% shell damage is permitted in Grade AA and Grade A
eggs, so that the presence of such damage does not prevent a
shipper from receiving full price.
The Cummins Amendment requires that common law principles of
liability be not impaired. But the difficulties
Page 350 U. S. 175
of proof and the presence of numerous complicating factors, some
of which have been indicated, do not permit dogmatic views
regarding the common law's treatment of such a situation as this.
The unsuitability of common law proceedings for the trial of such
complicated issues was one of the main reasons why the Interstate
Commerce Commission was established to deal with problems
pertaining to railroad tariffs and the conflicting interests they
entail. As long as the Commission is guided by the common law
principles governing the carriers' liability and takes due account
of all the factors thereby involved, this Court must stay its
hands. The order of the Commission in this case, however, is set
aside because the Commission has not made clear the basis on which
it approved the allowable "tolerances" in the sanctioned tariffs.
Since the basis of the Commission's order is not clear, the
foundation for the review of the order is wanting.
United
States v. Chicago, M., St. P. & P. R. Co., 294 U.
S. 499,
294 U. S.
510-511.
This precondition of clarity for the findings of the Commission
as a basis for review does not require us to establish the frailty
of particular findings or to examine the correctness of alternative
meanings to be attributed to dubious findings. An order of the
Commission cannot stand if we cannot tell what it has decided or if
it leaves foggy the basis of its conclusions.
In joining the opinion of the Court, therefore, I do not read it
as implying that, because any proof of tolerances may have
infirmities as a matter of mathematical demonstration or may offend
theoretical arguments based on laws of probability, it may not
satisfy the cruder standards of proof by which adjudications are
made in courts of law and which may sustain determinations by the
Interstate Commerce Commission. Specifically, I assume that the
various inadequacies which generate the uncertainty
Page 350 U. S. 176
in which the Commission's report leaves us are not to be deemed
controlling rules of law in allowing the Commission to ascertain
inevitable preshipment or in-transit damage to eggs,
i.e.,
tolerances, by such substantiality of proof as is appropriate to
the subject matter.
MR. JUSTICE MINTON, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED and MR. JUSTICE
BURTON join, dissenting.
The Court's opinion does not meet the issue in this case, as I
see it. The principal question, as was freely conceded at the
argument, was whether the Interstate Commerce Commission had the
power to promulgate the regulation under § 20(11). The Court now
accepts for the sake of argument that the Commission had the power,
and then proceeds to find the regulation unfair and unreasonable,
although a similar regulation had been in effect since 1919.
See National Poultry, Butter & Egg Assn. v. New York
Central R. Co., 52 I.C.C. 47.
In an earlier case in which the Commission had under
consideration a tariff which provided certain deductions as an
incident to the natural shrinkage of grain, it was claimed that the
carrier could not so limit its liability, because it violated §
20(11). The Commission said:
"There appears to be little or no merit in the contention that
the rule violates the inhibition clause of the act against the
limitation of liability, for the limitation is not against losses
caused
by the carrier or its connections, but rather
against liability for losses
due to the inherent nature of the
commodities themselves and attributable to no human
agency."
A. B. Crouch Grain Co. v. Atchison, T. & S.F. R.
Co., 41 I.C.C. 717-718.
See also The Cummins
Amendment, 33 I.C.C. 682.
For loss in transportation due to the inherent nature of the
goods, a carrier is not liable.
Chesapeake
& O. R.
Page 350 U. S. 177
Co. v. A. F. Thompson Mfg. Co., 270 U.
S. 416. Carrier liability must be limited to damage
"caused by it."
Adams Express Co. v. Croninger,
226 U. S. 491. A
tolerance regulation that fairly takes into consideration the
inherent nature of the goods and the damage existing prior to
receipt by the carrier, as this regulation does, is not prohibited
by § 20(11). Obviously there could not be a search and
determination egg by egg as to whether the breakage was due to the
fault of the carrier or to the inherent nature of the commodity. I
think the Commission had the power to promulgate regulations
prescribing, after full hearing, a reasonable deduction for loss
due to the inherent defects of the commodity transported. The
nature of the commodity and the impossibility of deciding this
humpty-dumpty question of who or what broke the egg is a proper
subject for regulation. Such a regulation would not be a limit of
liability, but a yardstick for measuring the damage not caused by
the carrier, but due to the inherent nature of the commodity.
What the Commission did, after long investigation and experience
with similar regulations since 1919, was to order that, as to shell
eggs packaged at railpoint of origin, no claim should be allowed
for damages not in excess of 3%. If in excess of 3%, there could be
recovery on showing that the damage was caused by the carrier. For
eggs packaged off the railhead, the tolerance was 5%.
As the basis for its action, the Commission specifically
found:
"We find that the present 5 percent tolerance on eggs, other
than those rehandled and repacked at the rail point of origin, is
not shown to be unreasonable or otherwise unlawful. We further find
that the proposed tolerances of 4 percent on eggs packed at the
rail point of origin, and 6 percent on eggs packed at points other
than the rail point of origin have not
Page 350 U. S. 178
been justified, but that tolerances of 3 and 5 percent,
respectively, would be reasonable. . . ."
284 I.C.C. at 403. The Commission report embodies basic findings
to support this conclusion. For example, the Commission concluded,
on the basis of certain Department of Agriculture studies, that
3.4% damage is the typical average damage existing in shipments of
eggs when loaded into railroad cars at points of origin, and that
an average of 1.7% damage was "incident to the movement in
transit." 284 I.C.C. at 393-394. Further, the Commission found that
the commercial destination inspections at New York, the most
important terminal for eggs shipped by rail, are "performed with a
view to detecting all damaged eggs."
Id. at 396. The
tolerances represent the considered judgment of the Commission,
after hearing voluminous evidence as to the nature of shell eggs
and the way they are handled at railpoint, off railpoint, and
during shipment. I cannot say that this is not an allowable
judgment for the Commission to make. Certainly the treatment of
this case by the majority does not make for clarity and
understanding, and it leaves yet undecided the question whether the
Commission has the power to make an order establishing such a
regulation or tariff. I think the regulation is an adequate
commercial approximation of noncarrier damage, and is reasonable
and within the power of the Commission to make.
For these reasons, and for the reasons set forth at length in
the opinion of the District Court,
119 F.
Supp. 846, I would affirm the judgment.