The fact that a railroad company is chartered by another state
and has projected its lines through several states does not make
all of its business interstate commerce and render
unconstitutional, as an interference with, and burden upon
interstate commerce, reasonable regulations of a state Railroad
Commission applicable to a portion of the lines wholly within, and
which are valid under, the laws of that state.
Quaere whether, on writ of error where the
constitutional question is whether a rate or duty prescribed by a
state commission amounts to deprivation of property without due
process of law, this Court is bound by a finding of the state court
that a rate or duty is not actually confiscatory.
There is a difference between the exertion of the legislative
power to establish rates in such a manner as to confiscate the
property of a public service corporation by fixing them below a
remunerative
Page 216 U. S. 263
standard and one compelling the corporation to render a service
which it is essentially its duty to perform, and an order directing
a railroad company to run a regular passenger train over its line,
instead of a mixed passenger and freight train, is not, even if
such train is run at a loss, a deprivation of property without due
process of law, or a taking of private property for public use
without compensation; nor is such an order an unreasonable exercise
of governmental control. Such an order, if made by the railroad
commission of a state, is not an interference with, or burden upon,
interstate commerce if it relates to a portion of the line wholly
within that state.
A state statute making provisions for passengers riding on the
caboose of freight trains will not be construed as a declaration of
the state that there is no distinction between passenger train
service and mixed train service, especially where, as in Kansas,
the liability of the railroad is limited as to persons riding in
cabooses.
An order cannot be said to be such an unreasonable exertion of
authority as to amount to deprivation of property without due
process of law because made operative only to the limit of the
right to do so.
While railway property is susceptible of private ownership and
protected by constitutional guarantees, these rights are not
abridged by being subjected to governmental power of reasonable
regulation.
Where a contract is held subject to the reserved power to alter,
amend or repeal, the right conferred, whatever be its extent, is
subject to such reserved power, and so held that a charter
privilege to regulate train service is subject to the reasonable
and otherwise legal order of a commission created by the
legislature, and such an order is not invalid under the contract
clause of the federal Constitution.
An order of the railroad commission of a state requiring a train
to be run from a point within the state to the state line is not
invalid if otherwise legal, as an interference with, or burden
upon, interstate commerce because there are no present terminal
facilities at the state line and it is more convenient to the
corporation to run the train to a further point in the adjoining
state.
76 Kan. 467 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 216 U. S. 266
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of
Kansas ordering a peremptory mandamus commanding the Missouri
Pacific Railway Company to obey an order of the State Board of
Railroad Commissioners. The order directed the putting in operation
of a passenger train service between Madison, Kansas, and the
Missouri-Kansas state line, on what is known as the Madison branch
of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company.
The branch road in question lies between Madison, Kansas, and
Monteith Junction, Missouri. From Madison to the state line is 89
miles, and from the state line to Monteith Junction is 19 miles,
the total distance between the two terminal points being 108 miles.
At Monteith Junction, the Madison branch intersects with the Joplin
line of the Missouri Pacific, by means of which connection is made
with Kansas City and other points. There being no terminal
facilities at Monteith Junction, the trains operated on the Madison
branch do not remain over at the junction, but run as far as Butler
station, three miles distant on the Joplin line, where terminal
facilities exist.
There are no large towns on the Madison branch, either in Kansas
or Missouri, and the country which that branch serves is largely
agricultural, Kansas City being the nearest and
Page 216 U. S. 267
most natural market for the products of the territory. The
greater volume of the passenger travel, however, originating on the
Madison branch, does not move to Kansas City by going to Monteith
Junction, but leaves the branch at various points between Madison
and the state line at which points the branch crosses various
roads, which, generally speaking, run in a northerly or
northeasterly direction, affording a means of reaching Kansas City
more directly than by going to Monteith and thence via the Joplin
line to that city. Three of these intersecting roads are operated
by the Atchison & Topeka, two by the Missouri, Kansas &
Texas, one by the St. Louis & San Francisco, one by the Kansas
& Colorado Pacific, and one by the Missouri Pacific. Pleasanton
is the last station on the branch in Kansas, and is six miles
distant from the state line.
Without clearing up some confusion in the record upon the
subject, we take the fact to be as stated by the court below, that
the branch between Madison and Monteith Junction, at least so far
as it was constructed within the State of Kansas, was built by a
Kansas corporation chartered in 1885, known as the Interstate
Railroad Company, and that to aid in the building of the road
within the State of Kansas, about $200,000 was contributed by
counties through which the road passed. A construction company did
the work at the contract cost of $1,095,000, and this sum was paid
by the railway company by delivering to the contractors an issue of
$1,622,000 of six percent mortgage bonds. The Interstate Railroad
Company, in July, 1890, consolidated with another Kansas
corporation known as the St. Louis & Emporia Railroad Company,
the consolidated company being designated as the Interstate Railway
Company. Subsequently, in December, 1890, by authority of a statute
of Kansas, the Interstate Railway Company and eleven other Kansas
railway corporations were consolidated, the consolidated company
being designated as the Kansas & Colorado Pacific Railway
Company.
Page 216 U. S. 268
The Missouri Pacific Railway Company is a corporation chartered
in Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska. It owns virtually all the
mortgage bonds issued by the Interstate Railroad Company for the
construction of the Madison branch and a majority of the stock of
that company. Indeed, it is the owner of a majority of the stock
and mortgage bonds of all the constituent companies which united in
forming the consolidated company known as the Kansas & Colorado
Pacific Railway Company, and, as the lessee of the latter company,
operates its lines of road, including, of course, the Madison
branch. It is not questioned that substantially all the equipment
used in operating the roads covered by the leases is owned by the
Missouri Pacific Railway Company.
In September, 1905, residents along the Madison branch within
the State of Kansas filed a petition with the board of railroad
commissioners, alleging, in substance, that only a mixed train was
furnished for passenger service on the branch, that such service
subjected the public to great inconvenience, prevented anything
like a regular and timely passenger service, and, besides, was
dangerous to those traveling over the road. An order was prayed
requiring the Missouri Pacific to operate a regular passenger train
over the branch road between Madison and the state line. The
evidence introduced before the board is not in the record. After a
hearing, the following finding and order were made:
"Now, on this seventh day of December, 1905, after hearing the
evidence and argument of counsel, in the above-entitled action, the
board finds that, during the years 1902 and 1903, when the
respondent railway company operated a passenger train on the
Madison branch of its line, that the said passenger train was
operated at a loss, and there was no testimony introduced at this
hearing that the train, if put on as asked for by the petitioners,
could be operated at a profit to the respondent company. The board
believes that the people along the line of the Madison branch of
said company are entitled to better passenger train service than
they are
Page 216 U. S. 269
now receiving, and it has been represented to the board of
officers of said company that the respondent is constructing motor
cars for establishment on its branch lines that can be operated at
a much less expense than steam service."
"It is therefore ordered by the board that, on or before the
first day of May, 1906, a motor passenger car service be put on and
operated on said Madison branch from Madison, Kansas, to the Kansas
and Missouri state line, and in the event said railroad company is
unable at that time to put on a motor car passenger service, a
regular steam passenger train service be forthwith put on and
operated."
The road not having obeyed, this proceeding by mandamus was
commenced to compel compliance.
Three special defenses were set up in the return to the
alternative writ. In the first, it was insisted that the branch
road was an interstate road and could only be operated as such, and
therefore was not subject to the jurisdiction of the railroad
commission or the courts of the State of Kansas, and in the second
it was claimed that the burden which would be occasioned by
compelling the operation of a passenger train service would be
confiscatory and in violation of rights protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment. The court below, in its opinion, thus, we think,
accurately summarized the elaborate averments relating to the two
defenses just referred to (70 Kan. 470):
"To the alternative writ an answer was filed which denies that
the company operated the Madison branch as a line of road wholly
within the State of Kansas, and alleges that said branch is a part
of the Missouri Pacific general system; that defendant maintains
terminal facilities for the branch at Butler, Missouri, twenty
miles east of the Kansas state line, where the branch connects with
the main line of defendant's railroad; that the company has no
terminal facilities near the state line within the State of Kansas,
and that the branch road cannot be operated as a road within the
State of Kansas without such terminal facilities, to maintain which
would
Page 216 U. S. 270
involve the company in ruinous expense. It also alleges that the
order is unreasonable and confiscatory, and that the company cannot
comply with it without great financial loss; that the entire
revenue of the road within the State of Kansas, including passenger
and freight business, is insufficient to meet the expense and cost
of operating the road within the state; that from July 1, 1903, to
April, 30, 1905, it maintained separate passenger train service
upon this branch, but was obliged to abandon the same and return to
the mixed passenger and freight service because the total receipts
of passenger and freight business during that period proved wholly
insufficient to meet the expenses of operation. It further alleges
that compliance with the order of the board would compel defendant
to divert its revenues from other lines and parts of its system
outside the State of Kansas to the maintenance of separate
passenger train service in the state, and that the extent of such
additional cost would amount to a confiscation of its
property."
The third defense set up that the company was diligently
endeavoring to perfect a motor car for experimental purposes, that
the practical utility of such service on railway tracks was
problematical, and that it was the design of the company
"to test the practicability of said character of service on its
said Madison branch line as soon as the same can be done, and is
also its design to furnish said motor car service for separate
passenger traffic if the cost of said service can be brought within
the passenger service cost of the mixed train service, which it now
furnishes, and if said motor car service can be successfully
operated from the standpoints of utility and safety and other
considerations necessary to be taken into account."
By stipulation, a referee was appointed to take evidence and
report findings of fact and conclusions of law. The referee
transmitted the evidence taken and made lengthy findings of fact,
upon which his conclusions of law were stated. Those conclusions
briefly were that, although it might be unreasonable
Page 216 U. S. 271
to order a separate passenger train service to be operated on
the branch line, viewed as an absolutely independent line, it was
not unreasonable to compel the furnishing of such service, viewing
the line as a part of the system of the Missouri Pacific road, and
taking into account the possible benefits which might arise to that
system. It was, however, concluded that as the branch road was an
interstate road, and could only be operated as such, the state was
without power to compel the putting in operation of the passenger
train service between Madison and the state line, and that the
relief prayed for should therefore be refused.
It was recognized by the Supreme Court of Kansas when it came to
consider the report of the referee that the authority which the
commission had exerted in making the order took its source in a
section of the act of the legislature of Kansas enacted in 1901,
and now found in § 5970, General Statutes of Kansas of 1901, the
section being as follows:
"Whenever, in the judgment of the railroad commissioners, it
shall appear that any railroad corporation or other transportation
company fails in any respect or particular to comply with the terms
of its charter or the laws of the state, or whenever in their
judgment any repairs are necessary upon its road, or any addition
to its rolling stock, or any addition to or change of its stations
or stationhouses, or any change in its rates for transporting
freight, or any change in the mode of operating its road and
conducting its business, is reasonable and expedient in order to
promote the security, convenience, and accommodation of the public,
said commissioners shall inform such corporation of the improvement
and changes which they adjudge to be proper, by a notice thereof in
writing, to be served by leaving a copy thereof, certified by the
commissioner's secretary, with any station agent, clerk, treasurer,
or any director of said corporation, and if such orders are not
complied with, the said commissioners, upon complaint, shall
proceed to enforce the same in accordance with the provisions of
this act, as in other cases. "
Page 216 U. S. 272
Reviewing the findings and conclusions of the referee, the court
held that the referee was wrong in holding that there was a want of
power in the commission to make the order, and it was therefore
decided that the order was valid and that the duty of the railroad
company was to obey it. 76 Kan. 467.
A brief summary of the questions passed on by the court will
serve to an understanding of the assignments of error which we are
called upon to consider:
a. The court disposed of certain contentions which
would seem to have been raised at the argument concerning the
repugnancy to the state constitution of the law creating the
commission and conferring authority upon that body, and held the
objections untenable. As these involved matters of purely state
concern, we shall not further refer to them.
b. The court also adversely disposed of a contention
based upon the assumption that the railway company had, by its
charter, a contract right to regulate the time and manner of
operating its trains, and hence was not subject to the order which
the commission had made. Although such contention did not deny that
the charter right relied on was subject to repeal or amendment by
the legislature, it was urged that, as the legislature had not
expressly amended or repealed the right, such a result should not
be made to flow from the section conferring powers upon the
commission, as repeals by implication were not favored.
Having thus cleared the way for the graver questions which the
case involved, the court came to consider, first, the
reasonableness on its face of the order of the commission, viewed
in the light of the findings of that body; second, the
reasonableness of the order, tested by the findings of the referee
and the evidence upon which such findings were based, and third,
the validity of the order in view of the power of Congress to
regulate interstate commerce, as applied to the nature and
character of the road to which the order of the commission was made
applicable.
Page 216 U. S. 273
As to the first, although the duty of the company under its
charter was referred to and authorities were cited, with evident
approval, holding that the obligation to operate a separate
passenger train service rested upon a railroad company in the
fulfillment of the law of its being, the court did not expressly
pass upon that aspect of the case, but held that, as it did not
plainly and obviously result upon the face of the findings and
order made by the commission, that the service required would be
rendered at a pecuniary loss, it could not, in any event, be said
that the order was unreasonable on its face. As to the second,
considering the inherent and
prima facie reasonable nature
of the service, the performance of which the order commanded, along
with the findings of the referee and the evidence, it was held that
the unreasonableness of the order had not been established, since,
taking all the foregoing into account, it had not been
affirmatively proven that any material pecuniary loss would be
sustained from rendering the service in question. In reaching this
conclusion, it was pointed out that, as a result of the state
statute, a
prima facie presumption of reasonableness
attached to the order of the commission, and therefore the burden
was on the railroad company to overcome this presumption. As to the
third contention, it was held that the exertion by the state of its
authority to regulate the operation within the state of the road
chartered by the state was but the exercise of a lawful state
police power which did not impose any direct burden upon interstate
commerce, and hence did not conflict with the Constitution of the
United States.
The grievances which the railroad company deems it may endure by
the enforcement of the order of the commission as commanded by the
court are expressed in many assignments of error. To consider them
in detail is not essential, as all the complaints which they
embrace were embodied in the argument at bar by the counsel for the
railway company in the following propositions:
"First. The order of the board and the mandate of the
Page 216 U. S. 274
state court were, in substance and effect, a regulation of
commerce among the states, and the court was without power or
jurisdiction in the premises."
"Second. The order of the board, on its face, is manifestly
unreasonable, and, in the light of the findings of fact, arbitrary,
and without the first element of due process of law, and a denial
of the equal protection of the law, guaranteed by the federal
Constitution."
"Third. The order and judgment of the state court, on the
evidence and facts found, deprived the railroad company of its
property without due process of law, and without compensation, and
denied to it the equal protection of the law."
"Fourth. The order of the board of railroad commissioners was an
usurpation of power by the board, and the construction placed upon
the law by the state court impaired the obligation of the contract
between the state and the railway company, in violation of the
Constitution of the United States, and deprived it of its property
without due process of law and without compensation, and denied to
it the equal protection of the law."
While it may be that, in some of their aspects, each of the
first three propositions involve considerations apparently distinct
from the others, as, in substance, the ultimate reasons by which
all three are controlled are identical, we consider them together.
Before doing so, however, we dispose of the question concerning the
alleged impairment of a contract right, protected by the
Constitution of the United States, which is formulated in the
fourth proposition, by pointing out the two-fold contradiction upon
which the proposition is based. As it is not denied that the
asserted charter right was held subject to the power of the state
to repeal, alter, or amend, it follows that the proposition amounts
simply to saying that an irrepealable contract right arose from a
contract which was repealable.
Hammond Packing Co. v.
Arkansas, 212 U. S. 322,
212 U. S. 345.
Stating the contention in a different form, the same contradiction
becomes apparent. As
Page 216 U. S. 275
the argument concedes the existence of the legislative power to
repeal, alter, or amend, and as it is impossible to assume that a
legislative act has impaired a contract without, by the same token,
declaring that such act has either repealed, altered, or amended,
hence the proposition relied upon really contends that the contract
has been unlawfully impaired by the exercise of a power which it is
conceded could lawfully repeal the contract. And, of course, this
reason is controlling, irrespective of the scope of the alleged
charter right, since, whatever be the extent of the right
conferred, it was subject to the reserve power.
The court in
Atlantic Coast Line v. N. Car. Corp.
Comm'n, 206 U. S. 1,
reiterating a doctrine expounded in preceding cases, said (p.
206 U. S.
19):
"The elementary proposition that railroads, from the public
nature of the business by them carried on, and the interest which
the public have in their operation are subject, as to their state
business, to state regulation, which may be exerted either
directly, by the legislative authority, or by administrative bodies
endowed with power to that end, is not and could not be
successfully questioned, in view of the long line of authorities
sustaining that doctrine."
Also in the same case, restating a principle previously often
announced, it was held (p.
206 U. S. 20) that railway property was susceptible of
private ownership, and that rights in and to such property securely
rested under the constitutional guaranties by which all private
property was protected. Pointing out that there was no
incompatibility between the two, the truism was reannounced that
the right of private ownership was not abridged by subjecting the
enjoyment of that right to the power of reasonable regulation, and
that such governmental power could not in truth be said to be
curtailed because it could not be exerted arbitrarily and
unreasonably without impinging on the enduring guaranties by which
the Constitution protected property rights.
The
Coast Line case was concerned with the exertion
of
Page 216 U. S. 276
state power over a matter of state concern. But the same
doctrines had been often previously expounded in reference to the
power of the United States in dealing with a matter subject to the
control of that government. Moreover, in the cases referred to, as
the power of the two governments operated in different orbits, it
was always recognized that there was no conflict between them,
although it was constantly to be observed that, resulting from the
paramount operation of the Constitution of the United States, even
the lawful powers of a state could not be exerted so as to directly
burden interstate commerce.
Coming to apply the principles just stated to the order in
question, and considering it generically, it is obvious that it
exerted a lawful state power. Its commands were directed to a
railroad corporation which, although chartered by other states, was
also chartered by Kansas, and concerned the movement of a train on
a branch road wholly within the state, which had been built under
the authority of a Kansas charter, although the road was being
operated by the Missouri Pacific under lease. The act commanded to
be done was simply that a passenger train service be operated over
the branch line within the State of Kansas. Unless, then, for some
reason, not manifested in the order, intrinsically considered, it
must be treated as such an arbitrary and unreasonable exercise of
power as to cause it to be, in effect, not a regulation but an
infringement upon the right of ownership, or, considering the
surrounding circumstances, as operating a direct burden upon
interstate commerce, it is clear that, within the doctrine
previously stated, no error was committed in directing compliance
with the order. And this brings us to consider the several reasons
relied upon to establish, first, that the order made by the
railroad commission was so arbitrary and unreasonable as to cause
it to be void for want of power, or second, that the order was void
because its necessary operation was to place a direct burden upon
interstate commerce.
Page 216 U. S. 277
1.
The alleged arbitrary and unreasonable character of the
order.
In its principal aspect, this contention is based on the
insistence that the order and findings of the commission and the
findings of the referee, when elucidated by the proper inferences
of fact to be drawn from the evidence, show the service which the
order commanded could not be rendered without a pecuniary loss. And
this, it is insisted, is the case not only because of the proof
that pecuniary loss would be occasioned by performing the
particular service ordered, considering alone the cost of that
service and the return from its performance, but also because it is
asserted the proof establishes that the earnings from all sources,
not only of the branch road, but of all the roads operated by the
Missouri Pacific in Kansas, produced no net revenue, and left a
deficit. It is at once evident that this contention challenges the
correctness of the inferences of fact drawn by the court below.
They therefore assume that we are not bound by the facts as found
by the court below, but must give to the evidence an independent
examination for the purpose of passing on the constitutional
question presented for decision. But we do not think that the case
here presented requires us to consider the issues of fact relied
upon, even if it be conceded, for the sake of argument only, that,
on a writ of error to a state court, where a particular exertion of
state power is assailed as confiscatory, because ordering a service
to be rendered for an inadequate return, the proof upon which the
claim of confiscation depends would be open for our original
consideration, as the essential and only means for properly
performing our duty of independently ascertaining whether there had
been, as alleged, a violation of the Constitution. We say this
because, when the controversy here presented is properly analyzed,
the first and pivotal question arising is whether the order
complained of did anything more than command the railroad company
to perform a service which it was incumbent upon it to perform as
the necessary result of the possession and
Page 216 U. S. 278
enjoyment of its charter powers, and which it could not refuse
to perform as long as the charter powers remained and the
obligation which arose from their enjoyment continued to exist. The
difference between the exertion of the legislative power to
establish rates in such a manner as to confiscate the property of
the corporation by fixing them below a proper remunerative standard
and an order compelling a corporation to render a service which it
was essentially its duty to perform was pointed out in
Atlantic
Coast Line v. N. Car. Corp. Comm'n, supra. In that case, the
order to operate a train for the purpose of making a local
connection necessary for the public convenience was upheld despite
the fact that it was conceded that the return from the operation of
such train would not be remunerative. Speaking of the distinction
between the two, it was said (p.
206 U. S.
26):
"This is so [the distinction] because, as the primal duty of a
carrier is to furnish adequate facilities to the public, that duty
may well be compelled, although by doing so, as an incident, some
pecuniary loss from rendering such service may result. It follows
therefore that the mere incurring of a loss from the performance of
such a duty does not, in and of itself, necessarily give rise to
the conclusion of unreasonableness, as would be the case where the
whole scheme of rates was unreasonable under the doctrine of
Smyth v. Ames. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"Of course, the fact that the furnishing of a necessary facility
ordered may occasion an incidental pecuniary loss is an important
criteria to be taken into view in determining the reasonableness of
the order, but it is not the only one. As the duty to furnish
necessary facilities is coterminous with the powers of the
corporation, the obligation to discharge that duty must be
considered in connection with the nature and productiveness of the
corporate business as a whole, the character of the services
required, and the public need for its performance."
Indeed, the principle which was thus applied in the
Atlantic
Page 216 U. S. 279
Coast Line case had previously, as pointed out in that
case, been made the basis of the ruling in
Wisconsin &c.
Ry. Co. v. Jacobson, 179 U. S. 287. The
fact that the performance of the duty commanded by the order which
is here in question may, as we have conceded for the purpose of the
argument, entail a pecuniary loss, is, of course, as declared in
the
Atlantic Coast Line case, as a general rule, a
circumstance to be considered in determining its reasonableness, as
are the other criteria indicated in the opinion in that case. But
where a duty which a corporation is obliged to render is a
necessary consequence of the acceptance and continued enjoyment of
its corporate rights, those rights not having been surrendered by
the corporation, other considerations are, in the nature of things,
paramount, since it cannot be said that an order compelling the
performance of such a duty at a pecuniary loss is unreasonable. To
conclude to the contrary would be but to declare that a corporate
charter was purely unilateral -- that is, was binding in favor of
the corporation as to all rights conferred upon it, and was devoid
of obligation as to duties imposed, even although such duties were
the absolute correlative of the rights conferred. Was the duty
which the order here commanded one which the corporation was under
the absolute obligation to perform as the result of the acceptance
of the charter to operate the road is then the question to be
considered.
It may not be doubted that the road, by virtue of the charter
under which the branch was built, was obliged to carry passengers
and freight, and therefore, as long as it enjoyed its charter
rights, was under the inherent obligation to afford a service for
the carrying of passengers. In substance, this was all the order
commanded, since it was confined to directing that the road put on
a train for passenger service. True it is that the road was
carrying passengers in a mixed train -- that is, by attaching a
passenger coach to one of its freight trains. Testing the alleged
unreasonableness of the order in the light of the inherent duty
resting upon the corporation, it follows
Page 216 U. S. 280
that the contention must rest upon the assumption that the
discharge of the corporate duty to carry passengers was so
completely performed by carrying them on a mixed train as to cause
an order directing the running of a passenger train to be so
arbitrary and unreasonable as to deprive of rights protected by the
Constitution of the United States. But when the necessary result of
the contention is thus defined, its want of merit is, we think,
self-evident, unless it can be said as a matter of law that there
is such an identity as to public convenience, comfort, and safety
between travel on a passenger service train and travel on a mixed
train -- that is, a train composed of freight cars with a passenger
car attached -- as to cause any exertion of legislative authority
for the public welfare, based on a distinction between the two, to
be repugnant to the Constitution of the United States. The
demonstration as to the want of foundation for such a contention
might well be left to the consensus of opinion of mankind to the
contrary. The unsoundness of the proposition was clearly pointed
out by the Supreme Court of Illinois in
People v. St. Louis, A.
& T.H. R. Co., 176 Ill. 512,, where it was said:
"Independently of the provisions of the lease, which was a
contract between the lessor and the lessee companies, the right of
the people to insist upon the running of a separate passenger train
is implied from the charter obligation to equip and operate the
road. Inasmuch as a railroad company is bound to carry both
passengers and freight, the obligation of the appellee required it
to furnish all necessary rolling stock and equipment for the
suitable and proper operation of the railroad as a carrier of
passengers, no less than as a carrier of freight. It cannot be said
that the carrier of passengers in a car attached to a freight train
is a suitable and proper operation of a railroad so far as the
carriage of passengers is concerned. The transportation of
passengers on a freight train, or on a mixed train, is subordinate
to the transportation of freight -- a mere incident to the business
of carrying
Page 216 U. S. 281
freight. To furnish such cars as are necessary for the suitable
and proper carriage of passengers involves the necessity of
adopting that mode of carrying passengers which is best adapted to
secure their safety and convenience. This can be accomplished
better by operating a separate passenger train than by operating a
mixed train -- that is to say, the duty of furnishing all necessary
rolling stock and equipment for the suitable and proper operation
of a railroad carrying passengers involves and implies the duty of
furnishing a train which shall be run for the purpose of
transporting passengers only, and not freight and passengers
together."
Even, however, if it be conceded that the reasoning of the case
just cited may not be universally applicable, because conditions
might exist which, in some cases, might cause a different rule to
apply, there is no room for such view in this case. This is so
because, as was pointed out by the court below, the statutes of
Kansas in force at the time the branch road was incorporated lend
cogency to the conclusion that the effect of the acceptance of the
charter was to bring the road under the obligation of furnishing
passenger service -- a duty which could not be escaped by giving
the service only on a mixed train, and thus subjecting passengers
to the resulting dangers and inconveniences. Nor do we think there
is any force in the argument elaborately pressed, that chapter 274,
Kansas Laws of 1907, as amended by chapter 190, Laws of 1909 (which
is in the margin
*) shows that the
law
Page 216 U. S. 282
of Kansas proceeds on the conception that there is no
distinction between a passenger train service and the carriage of
passengers on a mixed or freight train. On the contrary, we think
the statute referred to sustains the opposite inference, since it
recognizes that persons who avail of the right conferred to travel
in the caboose of a freight train are not entitled to ordinary
passenger facilities or to the legal protection ordinarily
surrounding passenger traffic. The first, because the statute
provides that persons must get on or off the caboose where the
company finds it convenient to place that car, and second, because
persons riding in the caboose are afforded redress for injury only
where the company is guilty of gross negligence.
The contention that the order is unreasonable in and of itself,
irrespective of whether there is profit in the operation of the
train service which the order commands to be operated, because it
directs the movement of the passenger train directed to be run to
the state line, where, it is said, there are no terminal
facilities, and no occasion for the termination of the transit, is
disposed of by the considerations previously stated. We say this
because its unsoundness is demonstrated by the reasoning which has
led us to conclude that there was no merit in the contention that
the fact of pecuniary loss was, of itself alone, adequate to show
the unreasonableness of the order. This follows from the principle
which we have previously expounded, to the effect that the
criterion to apply in a case like this is the nature and character
of the duty ordered,
Page 216 U. S. 283
and not the mere burden which may result from its
performance.
2.
That the order was void because it operates a direct
burden upon interstate commerce.
To support this proposition, it is urged that the charter of the
Interstate Railroad Company, the builder of the branch, provided
for a road not only in Kansas, but to extend into Texas and
Missouri, and therefore for an interstate railroad. This being its
character, the argument proceeds to assert that the regulation of
traffic on the road, whatever be the nature of the traffic, was
interstate commerce, and beyond the control of the State of Kansas.
But this simply confounds the distinction between state control
over local traffic and federal control over interstate traffic. To
sustain the proposition would require it to be held that the local
traffic of the road was free from all governmental regulation
unless at the same time it were held that the incorporation of the
road had operated to extend the powers of the government of the
United States to subjects which could not come within the authority
of that government consistently with the Constitution of the United
States. Manifestly, the mere fact that the charter of the road
contemplated that it should be projected into several states did
not change the nature and character of our constitutional system,
and therefore did not destroy the power of Kansas over its domestic
commerce or operate to bring under the sway of the United States
matters of local concern, and, of course, could not project the
authority of Kansas beyond its own jurisdiction. The charter
therefore left the road for which it provided subject, as to its
purely local or state business, to the authority of the respective
states into which it was contemplated the road should go, and
submitted the road as an entirety, so far as its interstate
commerce business was concerned, to the controlling power conferred
by the Constitution upon the government of the United States.
The contention that a burden was imposed upon interstate
Page 216 U. S. 284
commerce by causing the train to stop at the state line, where
there were no terminal facilities, but in a disguised form
reiterates the complaint which we have already disposed of that the
order, because of the direction to stop at the state line, was so
arbitrary and unreasonable as to be void. The order cannot be said
to be an unreasonable exertion of authority, because the power
manifested was made operative to the limit of the right to do so.
Besides, the proposition erroneously assumes that the effect of the
order is to direct the stoppage at the state line of an interstate
train when, in fact, the order does not deal with an interstate
train or put any burden upon such train, but simply requires the
operating within the state of a local train the duty to operate
which arises from a charter obligation. It is said that, as the
state line may be but a mere cornfield, and great expense must
result to the railway from establishing necessary terminal
facilities in such a place, it must follow that the road, in order
to avoid the useless expense, must operate the passenger service
directed by the order not only to the state line, but twenty miles
beyond, to Butler, on the Joplin line, where terminal facilities
exist. From these assumptions, it is insisted, that the order must
be construed according to its necessary effect, and therefore must
be treated as imposing a direct burden upon interstate commerce by
compelling the operation of the passenger train not only within the
State of Kansas, but beyond its borders. But, under the hypothesis
upon which the contention rests, the operation of the train to
Butler would be at the mere election of the corporation, and
besides, even if the performance of the duty of furnishing adequate
local facilities in some respects affected interstate commerce, it
does not necessarily result that thereby a direct burden on
interstate commerce would be imposed.
Atlantic Coast Line v.
Wharton, 207 U. S. 328.
Affirmed.
* Part of Chapter 274, Kansas Laws of 1907, as Amended by
Chapter 190, Laws of 1909.
"That all freight trains to which caboose is attached shall be
obliged to transport, upon the same terms and conditions as
passenger trains, all passengers who desire to travel thereon, and
who are above the age of fifteen years, and who, if under fifteen
years, are accompanied by a parent or guardian, or other competent
person, but no freight train shall be required to stop to receive
or discharge any passenger at any other point other than where such
freight train may stop; nor shall it be necessary to stop the
caboose of such trains at the depot to receive and discharge
passengers; provided, that, on such trains the railroad companies
shall only be liable for their gross negligence, and provided
further, that this act shall not be construed to apply to freight
trains on main lines, the most of which trains shall be composed of
cars loaded with livestock."
"Any officer or employee of such railroad company who shall
violate any of the provisions or conditions of § 1 of this act
shall, upon conviction, be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and
shall be fined in any sum not less than ten nor more than one
hundred dollars, or by imprisonment in the county jail for not less
than five nor more than thirty days, or by both such fine and
imprisonment."