The District Court, reviewing an order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission establishing the tariff relationship on
imported iron ore shipped by railroad to Central Freight
Association territory from the ports of New York, Philadelphia, and
Baltimore, vacated that portion of the order relating to New York
as being without basis in the record and remanded to the Commission
for more explicit findings that portion of the order dealing with
the relationship between Philadelphia and Baltimore rates.
Held: in carrying out the District Court's direction
regarding the Philadelphia and Baltimore rates, the Commission
should be left free to take into account the effect of New York
rates on the tariff relationship between Philadelphia and Baltimore
and the effect of that relationship on New York, and to enter such
orders with respect to all three ports as the Commission may find
to be required by their interrelationship. Pp.
355 U. S.
176-178.
151 F.
Supp. 258, decree vacated in part and case remanded.
Page 355 U. S. 176
PER CURIAM.
This litigation involves the validity of an order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission dealing with the proper
relationship, under the National Transportation Policy (§ 1 of the
Transportation Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 899, 49 U.S.C. at p. 7107), of
railroad tariffs on imported iron ore shipped to a steel producing
area in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia (the so-called
"differential territory" of the Central Freight Association) from
the ports of New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. A tariff
differential in favor of Baltimore had existed prior to this
Page 355 U. S. 177
controversy. In a succession of tariff reductions, railroads
serving New York and Philadelphia filed schedules designed to
establish parity of rates among the several ports, while railroads
serving Baltimore filed schedules designed to maintain the
differential. Upon protest against the New York and Philadelphia
schedules by Baltimore civic and commercial interests and railroads
serving that port, the Interstate Commerce Commission instituted an
investigation, as a result of which Division 2 of the Commission
filed a report approving the tariff schedules giving Philadelphia
parity with Baltimore but finding all other schedules that had been
issued in this series of reductions to be not just and reasonable.
291 I.C.C. 527. On petition of various parties, the Commission
reopened the proceedings, and on October 1, 1956, the full
Commission modified the findings of the Division 2 report to the
extent of finding the New York schedules, as well as the
Philadelphia schedules, to be just and reasonable, 299 I.C.C. 195.
The full Commission's order was challenged in a proceeding
instituted under 28 U.S.C. § 1336, and an appropriate District
Court held that the Commission's approval of parity between New
York and Baltimore was without basis in the record, and ordered
that portion of the Commission's order vacated. The court further
held that the Commission's approval of parity between Philadelphia
and Baltimore was not supported by essential findings as to ocean
freight costs and anticipated traffic and remanded that portion of
the Commission's order for more explicit findings. The court also
granted other relief subsidiary to these actions.
151 F.
Supp. 258. These are the only portions of the decision below
with which we are here concerned. We put to one side those
provisions of the decree below in which the District Court affirmed
other portions of the Commission's order.
Page 355 U. S. 178
From what appears, it is not precluded that the Commission may
find an interrelationship, within the purview of the National
Transportation Policy,
supra, among lawful tariffs to be
established between these three ports and the "differential
territory." In this light, we deem it appropriate that, in
reconsidering the relationship between the Philadelphia and
Baltimore schedules pursuant to the remand of the District Court,
the Commission should be free to reconsider and take action upon
the New York schedules. In carrying out the District Court's
direction regarding the Philadelphia rates, the Commission should
be permitted to take into account the effect of New York rates on
the tariff relationship between Philadelphia and Baltimore and the
effect of that relationship on New York, and to enter such orders
with respect to all three ports as the Commission may find to be
required by their interrelationship. Accordingly, on the appeals
before us, so much of the decree of the District Court as did not
affirm the order of the Commission is vacated, and the cause is
remanded for appropriate disposition not inconsistent with this
opinion.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE BLACK would affirm the
judgment of the District Court.
* Together with No. 464,
Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v.
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. et al.; No. 465,
Erie
Railroad Co. et al. v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. et
al.,; No. 466,
New York Central Railroad Co. v. Baltimore
& Ohio Railroad Co. et al.; No. 468,
Delaware River
Port Authority et al. v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. et
al.; and No 473,
United States v. Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Co. et al., also on appeals from the same Court.