The commodity clause of the Hepburn Act applies not only to the
carrier's goods from point of production to the market, but also to
goods from market to that point.
While the power to regulate interstate commerce is subject to
the provisions of the Fifth Amendment, an enactment, such as the
commodity clause, which does not take property or arbitrarily
deprive the carrier of a property right does not violate that
Amendment.
In dealing with interstate carriers, the fact that some of them
are also engaged in private business does not compel Congress to
legislate concerning them as carriers in such manner as not to
interfere with such private business.
The commodity clause is general, and applies to all shipments,
even if innocent in themselves, which come within its scope; its
operation is not confined to particular instances in which the
carriers might use its power to the prejudice of shippers.
Supplies, purchased for use in operating a carrier's mines, 75% of
the product of which is intended for sale and only 25% intended for
the carrier's own use, are not necessary for the conduct of its
business as a carrier, and fall within the prohibition of the
commodity clause of the Hepburn Act.
Although the purchaser may have the right to rescind for a
condition subsequent, title may pass on delivery, and so
held in this case that title to hay purchased by, and
delivered to, a railroad company passed to it although payment was
postponed until after inspection and acceptance.
The facts, which involve the construction of the Commodities
Clause of the Hepburn Act of June 29, 1906, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 231 U. S. 368
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company was
indicted for hauling, over its lines, between Buffalo, New York,
and Scranton, Pennsylvania, twenty carloads of hay belonging to the
company, but not necessary for its use as a common carrier. This
transportation
Page 231 U. S. 369
was charged to be in violation of the commodity clause of the
Hepburn Act, 34 Stat. 585, c. 3591, which makes it unlawful
"for any railroad company to transport [in interstate commerce]
any article . . . it may own . . . or in which it may have any
interest . . . except such . . . as may be necessary . . . for its
use in the conduct of its business as a common carrier."
On the trial, it appeared that the defendant was not only
chartered as a railroad, but had also been authorized to operate
coal mines. The hay referred to in the indictment had been
purchased for the use of animals employed in and about the mines at
Scranton, all the coal taken therefrom being sold for use by the
public except the steam coal which was used as fuel for the
company's locomotives.
The defendant was found guilty and sentenced on each of the
twenty counts. It brought the case here insisting that the
commodity clause violated the Fifth Amendment, deprived the company
of a right to contract, and prevented it from carrying its own
property needed in a legitimate intrastate business conducted under
authority of a charter granted by the State of Pennsylvania, many
years before the adoption of the Hepburn bill.
1. This contention must be overruled on the authority of
United States v. Delaware &c. Co., 213 U.
S. 366,
213 U. S. 416.
It is true that the decision in that case related to shipments of
coal from mine to market, while here the merchandise was
transported from market to mine. But the statute relates to "all
commodities, except lumber, owned by the company," and includes
inbound as well as outbound shipments. Both classes of
transportation are within the purview of the evil to be corrected,
and therefore subject to the power of Congress to regulate
interstate commerce. The exercise of that power is, of course,
limited by the provisions of the Fifth Amendment.
Page 231 U. S. 370
Monongahela Co. v. United States, 148
U. S. 336;
McCray v. United States,
195 U. S. 27;
Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U.
S. 364, but the commodity clause does not take property,
nor does it arbitrarily deprive the company of a right of property.
The statute deals with railroad companies as public carriers, and
the fact that they may also be engaged in a private business does
not compel Congress to legislate concerning them as carriers so as
not to interfere with them as miners or merchants. If such carrier
hauls for the public and also for its own private purposes, there
is an opportunity to discriminate in favor of itself against other
shippers in the rate charged, the facility furnished, or the
quality of the service rendered. The commodity clause was not an
unreasonable and arbitrary prohibition against a railroad company
transporting its own useful property, but a constitutional exercise
of a governmental power intended to cure or prevent the evils that
might result if, in hauling goods in or out, the company occupied
the dual and inconsistent position of public carrier and private
shipper.
It was suggested that the case is not within the statute
because, as the company could buy, in Scranton, hay that had
already been transported over its line, no possible harm could come
to anyone if it bought the same hay in Buffalo and then hauled it
to Scranton for use at the mine, but not for sale in competition
with other dealers in stock food. But the courts are not concerned
with the question as to whether, in a particular case, there had
been any discrimination against shippers or harm to other dealers.
The statute is general, and applies not only to those particular
instances in which the carrier did use its power to the prejudice
of the shipper, but to all shipments which, however innocent in
themselves, come within the scope and probability of the evil to be
prevented.
2. In this case, the hay was purchased for use in operating
Page 231 U. S. 371
mines where 75 percent of the coal produced was "assorted sizes"
intended to be sold for domestic purposes. The remaining 25 percent
was steam coal, all of which was used as fuel on the company's
locomotives. This steam coal was in the nature of a byproduct from
a mine operated primarily for the purpose of obtaining coal for
sale. Hay purchased for use in such mining cannot be said to have
been necessary for the use of the company in the conduct of its
business as a common carrier.
3. Lastly, it was contended that the hay did not belong to the
railroad company at the time of the transportation, and therefore
the conviction should be set aside, since the statute only
prohibits the hauling of commodities owned by the carrier.
This contention is based upon the terms of the contract by which
the Vassar Company, of Millington, Michigan, agreed to sell to the
railroad company 3,000 tons No. 1 timothy hay at $15.40 per ton,
f.o.b. Buffalo, payment to be made as follows: Upon the delivery of
the hay to the purchaser at Buffalo, same will be transported by
the purchaser to various points on its line of railroad, to be
determined by the purchaser at which places the purchaser shall
have the right to inspect such hay before acceptance, and if, upon
such inspection, said hay shall prove to be of the kind specified,
the purchaser shall accept such hay and pay for the same within
thirty days after such acceptance. Each of the twenty carloads of
hay mentioned in the indictment was received by the company at
Buffalo. Each was then reconsigned to itself at Scranton. The
waybills were marked, "Freight free -- Co. use." After arrival at
Scranton, it was inspected, accepted, and used.
On these facts the defendant insists that the title did not pass
until after acceptance, and many authorities are cited to support
the proposition that, in a contract for the sale of personal
property, not only delivery by the
Page 231 U. S. 372
seller, but acceptance by the buyer is necessary for the
transfer of title. But there are two kinds of acceptance -- one of
quality and the other of title. They are not necessarily
contemporaneous. There may be an acceptance of quality before
delivery, as where goods are selected by the purchaser, delivery
and transfer of title being postponed until a later time. Or there
may be an acceptance of title without an acceptance of quality, so
that, in many cases, after the title has passed, the purchaser may
recover damages if the goods, upon inspection, prove to be of a
quality inferior to that ordered.
Day v. Pool, 52 N.Y.
416;
Zabriskie v. Central Vermont R. Co., 131 N.Y. 72;
Bagley v. Cleveland Rolling Mill Co., 21 F. 159 (3), 164;
Miller v. Moore, 83 Ga. 684. Again, though there may be
such an acceptance as will transfer the title, the purchaser may,
under the contract, have the right to rescind, as for a condition
subsequent, if the goods do not correspond with the specifications.
Such was the case here. When the hay was received by the purchaser
at Buffalo, there was such an acceptance as to transfer title to
the railroad, which accordingly took possession and exercised
control in fixing when and to what point on its line the hay should
be shipped. Title
prima facie passes when delivery is
made, and if such possession, followed by acts of ownership, did
not transfer the title to the railroad company, it left the risk of
unknown dangers at unknown points, for an indefinite time, upon the
seller. So hard and unusual an incident is not, under facts like
these, necessarily to be implied from the use of the ambiguous
phrase, "pay after inspection and acceptance," and no such
construction should be given unless demanded by the explicit terms
of the contract. The parties, by their conduct, showed that they
did not understand that the hay remained the property of the seller
after it had been delivered to the buyer, for the hay, after being
received, was consigned by the company to itself, and went
Page 231 U. S. 373
forward from Buffalo to Scranton on waybills containing the
entry, "Freight free -- Company use." If the hay did, in fact then
belong to the Vassar Company, such a shipment on such a waybill
would have been a departure from the published tariff, contrary to
the provisions of the Act to Regulate Commerce. No such offense,
however, was committed, for the contract, both by its terms and in
the light of the conduct of the parties, meant that the title
should pass when delivery was accepted by the defendant at Buffalo,
but that the railroad company might rescind if, on later
inspection, the quality was found to be different from what had
been described in the contract of sale. But, after such delivery
and before such rescission, the title was in the railroad company.
Allen v. Maury, 66 Ala. 10;
Burrows v. Whitaker,
71 N.Y. 291;
Kuppenheimer v. Wertheimer, 107 Mich. 77. As
the hay belonged to the defendant and was intended for use in its
private business of mining, the transportation over its lines in
interstate commerce was a violation of the commodity clause.
Judgment affirmed.