1. Whether a rate is unjustly discriminatory is a question on
which the finding of the Interstate Commerce Commission, supported
by substantial evidence, is conclusive, unless there was some
irregularity in the proceeding or some error in the application of
rules of law. P.
272 U. S.
663.
2. The fact that the purpose of a carrier in making a trackage
arrangement with another is to increase its own business is not a
legal excuse for unjust discrimination in through rates, resulting
from the arrangement, among shippers on the carrier's line. P.
272 U. S.
663.
3. An order of the Interstate Commerce Commission for abatement
of unjust discrimination among shippers on a carrier's line
resulting from a trackage arrangement may be directed to that
carrier as well as to the other with which the arrangement exists,
although the latter alone may be responsible for the rates granted
the favored shippers. P.
272 U. S.
665.
Page 272 U. S. 659
4. A finding of the Commission that a rate is unreasonable is
binding on this Court when supported by evidence, without regard to
the soundness of the Commission's reasoning and conclusions or
their consistency with findings in other proceedings. P.
272 U. S.
665.
5. Section 15(3) of the Act to Regulate Commerce does not
require that the Commission make a special finding of public
interest before it can prescribe how an existing through rate found
to be unreasonable and discriminatory shall be made conformable to
law. P.
272 U. S.
666.
6. The fact that an order of the Commission requiring a carrier
to establish through rates from its lines over lines of two other
carriers may result, through duplication of routes, in
discrimination against shippers on lines of those carriers does not
make it unreasonable or otherwise illegal. P.
272 U. S.
667.
7. The force and effect of a decree of a federal court
dismissing a bill and dissolving an interlocutory injunction are
not suspended as a mere consequence of an appeal to this Court,
even if a supersedeas is allowed. P.
272 U. S.
668.
8. Under the Act of October 22, 1913, the district court of
three judges has power to grant a stay of an order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission pending appeal to this Court from a
decree refusing a temporary injunction and dismissing the bill. P.
272 U. S.
668.
9. The Act of 1913, in this respect, is
in pari materia
with § 266 of the Judicial Code, and to be similarly construed. P.
272 U. S.
671.
10. A stay of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission
pending appeal from a decree refusing an injunction is not a matter
of right, even if irreparable injury may otherwise result to the
appellant, and requires much stronger and more special reasons for
its justification when the decree has dismissed the bill on the
merits than where it is interlocutory. P.
272 U. S.
672.
11. When not otherwise apparent to the parties and the appellate
court, the grounds of a decision of the district court should be
indicated by an opinion -- particularly in equity matters involving
complicated facts. P.
272 U. S. 675.
No. 281, affirmed.
No. 282 reversed.
Cross-appeals from a decree of the district court refusing a
temporary injunction and dismissing the bill in a suit against the
United States and the Interstate Commerce Commission to enjoin an
order of the latter respecting rates on coal. The appeal of the
defendants was from
Page 272 U. S. 660
so much of the decree as restrained enforcement of the order
pending the perfecting and determination of the primary appeal.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
An extensive territory in West Virginia, comprising the coal
mining districts known as New River, Tug River, and Pocahontas, is
served by three railroad systems. Each grants blanket rates to
destination from the mines within the district served by it. The
blanket rates to each destination are the same on all the systems.
Two of them, the Chesapeake & Ohio and the Norfolk &
Western, have lines extending from the Atlantic Ocean to the Middle
West. The line of the third, the Virginian, extends only eastward
to tidewater. Some mines in the district are served directly by
only one of these railroads, some by more. Nintey-nine mines are
located only on the Virginian. Of these, 45 enjoy, by reason of the
trackage agreements to be described, the same rates to the West as
do mines on the Chesapeake & Ohio and on the Norfolk &
Western. The remaining 54 are denied the opportunity of reaching
the Western markets.
Some of the 54 made complaint to the Interstate Commerce
Commission that they are denied access to the
Page 272 U. S. 661
Western markets, and sought relief under both § 1 and § 3 of the
Act to Regulate Commerce. For most of these 54 mines, access to
these markets was and is physically possible through a junction of
the Virginian and the Chesapeake & Ohio. But that route is
closed commercially, because these two carriers have not
established any joint rates to the West from any of these 54 mines,
and the combination of the Virginian's local rate from the mines to
the junction with the Chesapeake & Ohio's rates from the
junction to the West results in charges so high as to be
prohibitive. The complainants contended before the Commission that
the existing rate schedule to the West subjects them to unjust
discrimination, and also that the combination rates are
unreasonable. To establish the discrimination, the shippers relied,
among other things, upon the fact that 45 other mines located only
on the Virginian enjoy the favorable blanket rates to the West. To
establish the unreasonableness, they showed, among other things,
that mines similarly situated, located only on the Chesapeake &
Ohio and on the Norfolk & Western, enjoy those rates.
The Chesapeake & Ohio did not oppose granting to the 54
mines the relief sought. The Virginian resisted strenuously. The
complete record of the proceedings before the Commission occupies
713 pages of the printed record in this Court, besides 67 exhibits,
many of them elaborate -- one covering 89 pages. The proceedings
before the Commission, begun on May 15, 1922, did not close until
February, 1923. The proposed report of the examiner was served on
April 30, 1924, was submitted to Division 3 of the Commission on
June 30, 1924, and its original report was filed on March 10, 1925.
The Commission found that the existing rates from the mines in
question subjected the shippers to undue prejudice, and also that
the rates were themselves unreasonable. Wyoming Coal Co. v.
Virginian Railway Co., 96 I.C.C. 359, and 98 I.C.C.
Page 272 U. S. 662
448. It ordered the carriers, "according as they participate in
the transportation," to cease and desist from collecting, for the
transportation of coal from certain stations on the Virginian
Railway to interstate destinations in the West, rates which exceed
those to be prescribed pursuant to the order, and then directed the
carriers to establish "rates which shall not exceed the district
rates maintained on like traffic" by those carriers respondents to
the same destinations
"from mines in the New River districts of the Chesapeake &
Ohio Railway Company and the Virginian Railway Company,
respectively, and the Pocahontas and Tug River districts of the
Norfolk & Western Railway Company, those districts forming part
of what is generally referred to as the Outer Crescent."
See Bituminous Coal to Central Freight Association
Territory, 46 I.C.C. 66, 69. A petition for reargument before the
whole Commission was denied on April 14, 1925, but an amended
report and order was filed on May 19, 1925.
This suit was brought by the Virginian against the United
States, the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the Chesapeake
& Ohio, in the federal court for the Southern District of West
Virginia, to enjoin the enforcement of the order and to set it
aside. All three defendants answered, the Chesapeake & Ohio
asserting its readiness to comply with the Commission's order.
Several coal companies intervened as defendants. The case was
heard, on May 28, 1925, before three judges, upon application for
an interlocutory injunction and also upon final hearing. The order
was assailed mainly on the ground that the findings made were
unsupported by evidence. It was also contended, among other things,
that findings essential to the relief granted had not been made.
Besides the full transcript of the proceedings before the
Commission, the Virginian introduced, under objection, some
additional evidence in support of a claim that the order should be
set aside because of certain facts occurring since it was
Page 272 U. S. 663
entered. On September 19, 1925, the court entered a final decree
denying the injunction and dismissing the bill on the merits. No.
opinion, written or oral, was delivered.
Before entry of the decree, the Virginian indicated an intention
to appeal, and asserted that irreparable damage would result,
pending the appeal, if the decree should be reversed. Thereupon the
district court included in the final decree a clause restraining
enforcement of the Commission's order pending the perfecting and
determination of the appeal. No. 282 is a cross-appeal by the
United States and the Commission from so much of the decree as
restrains enforcement of the Commission's order pending the appeal.
No. 281 is the appeal by the Virginian. under the Act of October
22, 1913, c. 32, 38 Stat. 208, 220, from so much of the decree as
denied the injunction and dismissed the bill. The contentions made
by the Virginian here seem to be the same that were made by it
below, and largely the same that it made before the Interstate
Commerce Commission.
First. The Virginian attacks the Commission's finding
of unjust discrimination. There clearly was substantial evidence to
support every fact specifically found. To consider the weight of
the evidence before the Commission, the soundness of the reasoning
by which its conclusions were reached, or whether the findings are
consistent with those made by it in other cases is beyond our
province. Whether a rate is unjustly discriminatory is a question
on which the finding of the Commission, supported by substantial
evidence, is conclusive unless there was some irregularity in the
proceeding or some error in the application of rules of law.
Western Paper Makers' Chemical Co. v. United States,
271 U. S. 268. No
irregularity in the proceedings before the Commission is even
suggested.
Second. The Virginian contends that the specific facts
found are, as matter of law, insufficient to support the finding of
undue prejudice. The facts material are these.
Page 272 U. S. 664
Ever since the Virginian was constructed, it has adhered to the
policy of providing for the output of mines on its line
transportation only to tidewater. This policy is pursued not only
because it is deemed profitable to the company, but also because it
enables the Virginian to furnish to shippers the most efficient
service at reasonable rates. It has never held itself out as
equipped to carry coal to the West, or joint rates to Western
markets. The 45 mines on its line which enjoy the blanket rates to
the West have them as a natural result of certain trackage
agreements entered into by the Virginian with the Chesapeake &
Ohio for an entirely different purpose. The purpose was to secure
additional east-bound tonnage without wasteful expenditure by
paralleling branch lines. To be able to secure the eastbound
traffic from certain mines located on independent lines connecting
with the Chesapeake & Ohio, the Virginian, having acquired the
independent lines, sought the right to use that system's tracks to
those mines. As compensation for the trackage rights over the
Chesapeake & Ohio, it gave that company the right to use the
Virginian's tracks to these 45 mines. The carriers, instead of
using these trackage rights by operating over the other's tracks,
substituted, solely as a matter of economy and convenience, a
reciprocal switching arrangement. As a result, the Virginian hauls
west-bound coal from these 45 mines to a junction with the
Chesapeake & Ohio; the latter absorbs the switching charges of
the Virginian, and these mines enjoy the same rate to the West as
do those located on the Chesapeake & Ohio. But the Virginian's
purpose in making the traffic agreement was solely to increase its
east-bound traffic.
The fact that the Virginian's intention was not to give the 45
mines a preference over others, but to increase its own east-bound
business from mines located on the other system, and that the
preference resulting is merely an incident of a legitimate effort
to develop the carrier's east-bound
Page 272 U. S. 665
traffic, is not of legal significance. These 45 mines to which
the Western market has been thus opened obviously enjoy thereby an
advantage over the 54 mines, found to be similarly situated, to
which the market is closed, and the Commission has found that the
preference is unjust. In essence, the situation is the same as that
considered in
United States v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
263 U. S. 515,
263 U. S. 523,
and
United States v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 266 U.
S. 191,
266 U. S. 199.
The contention that there can be no order to remove the
discrimination, because the Virginian is in no legal sense
responsible for the lower Western rates granted to the favored
mines, is likewise disposed of by the earlier case. At pp.
263 U. S.
520-521.
Third. The Virginian contends that the evidence before
the Commission does not support its finding that the rates on coal
from the Virginian's mines via the Chesapeake & Ohio are
unreasonable to the extent that they exceed the New River district
rates maintained by the latter carrier from mines on its own and
connecting lines having no other outlet to the Western markets. The
argument is that these rates cannot be considered standards of
reasonableness because, as the Commission declared in the present
controversy, they are "the outcome of competitive strain and stress
through long periods of development," and, as it had stated in an
earlier case, they have been made "in practical, if not absolute,
disregard of distance, and all transportation conditions that
ordinarily are taken into consideration in the making of rates,"
and "are below the level at which maximum reasonable rates might be
maintained." Bituminous Coal to C. F. A. Territory, 46 I.C.C. 66,
122, 145. The finding of reasonableness, like that of undue
prejudice, is a determination of a fact by a tribunal "informed by
experience."
Illinois Central R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 206 U. S. 441,
206 U. S. 454.
This Court has no concern with the correctness of the
Page 272 U. S. 666
Commission's reasoning, with the soundness of its conclusions,
or with the alleged inconsistency with findings made in other
proceedings before it.
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Union
Pacific R. Co., 222 U. S. 541. It
was shown that a huge coal traffic moves from this territory, under
like operating conditions at the blanket rates which were
voluntarily established by the other carriers to serve mines
similarly located. This fact, and much else in the voluminous
record, afford substantive evidence to support the finding that the
existing rates are unreasonable, and that those which the order
directs are reasonable.
Fourth. The Virginian contends that the order is void
because the Commission directed the establishment of through routes
and joint rates without finding that they are necessary in the
public interest. Such a finding is essential to the validity of an
order under § 15(3). But the order here in question was not sought
or made under § 15(3), and does not direct the establishment of
through routes and joint rates. Through routes to the West were
already in existence, and there were through rates by combination.
See Through Routes and Through Rates, 12 I.C.C. 163;
Memphis Freight Bureau v. Ft. Smith & W. R. Co., 13 I.C.C. 1,
8; Baer Bros. M. Co. v. Mo. P. Ry. Co., 17 I.C.C. 225: Swift &
Co. v. Pa. R. Co., 29 I.C.C. 464; Lourie Mfg. Co. v. Cincinnati N.
R. Co., 42 I.C.C. 448; Kansas City Bd. of Trade v. A. T. & S.F.
Ry. Co., 69 I.C.C. 185, 188-189;
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. v.
United States, 245 U. S. 136,
245 U. S. 139,
note 2. The fact that the combination rates were excessive
constituted the only obstacle to the movement. The Chesapeake &
Ohio did not oppose the reduction of its rates from the junction to
the West. It was willing that these 54 mines on the Virginian
should enjoy the rates already open to the other 45. The Virginian
resisted a reduction of its local rate to the
Page 272 U. S. 667
junction. The Commission found that the combination rate was
both unreasonable and discriminatory. It prescribed through rates
which it found were reasonable and nondiscriminatory. It did not
order joint rates. And no question of divisions was before the
Commission. The order was sought and made under § 1 and § 3.
Section 15(3) does not require that the Commission must make a
special finding of public interest before it can prescribe how an
existing through rate found to be unreasonable and discriminatory
shall be made conformable to law. [
Footnote 1]
Fifth. The Virginian contends that the order should be
set aside because of the following facts, which occurred after
entry of the original order and before the hearing below: an
agreement to lease the Virginian to the Norfolk & Western for
999 years was approved by the respective
Page 272 U. S. 668
boards of directors of the two companies, approval by the
stockholders was expected, and approval by the Interstate Commerce
Commission was hoped for. In anticipation of such approval, the
Virginian and the Norfolk & Western established and published
through routes and joint rates from substantially all mines on the
Virginian to substantially all important markets in the West. The
Virginian then filed, on April 27, 1925, a petition before the
Commission to reopen the case and modify its order so that the
routes which had been opened via the Norfolk & Western in
partial compliance with the order should be accepted as the
equivalent of full compliance, and the requirement of routes and
rates via the Chesapeake & Ohio should be eliminated. That
petition was denied on May 11, 1925. The Virginian contends that,
in view of these facts, the order requiring transportation service
also via the Chesapeake & Ohio is so unreasonable as to
transcend the limits of the Commission's discretion, among other
reasons, because, through the duplication of routes not available
to mines served only by the Chesapeake & Ohio and the Norfolk
& Western, respectively, it would give to mines on the
Virginian an undue preference and advantage. The argument urged in
this connection is appropriate for consideration by the Commission,
and has presumably been duly considered by it. The fact that it has
not proved persuasive affords no basis for the contention that the
Commission's action in making the order was arbitrary or otherwise
illegal. [
Footnote 2]
Sixth. The cross-appeal is directed to so much of the
final decree as stays enforcement of the Commission's order pending
the appeal. It is settled that the force and effect of a decree of
a federal court dismissing a bill and dissolving an interlocutory
injunction is not suspended
Page 272 U. S. 669
as a mere consequence of an appeal to this Court, even if a
supersedeas is allowed.
Hovey v. McDonald, 109 U.
S. 150,
109 U. S. 161;
Knox County v. Harshman, 132 U. S. 14. An
injunction which was in terms dissolved by the decree, or which
expired by limitation, cannot be revived to take effect during the
pendency of an appeal except by a new exercise of power by a court
having the authority. Ordinarily such authority is vested in the
lower federal court, as well as in this Court. Under Equity Rule
74, the judge who allows the appeal may, if he took part in the
decision of the cause, make at the time of such allowance an order
continuing an interlocutory injunction which would otherwise be
vacated.
Merrimack River Savings Bank v. Clay Center,
219 U. S. 527,
219 U. S. 535.
Prior to the establishment of the Commerce Court, Act of June 18,
1910, c. 309, 36 Stat. 539, the circuit courts had jurisdiction of
suits to enjoin or set aside orders of the Commission.
Compare Act of June 26, 1906, c. 3591, § 5, 34 Stat. 584,
590. As an incident of that jurisdiction, they had the usual power
to preserve the
status quo pending an appeal. The
government contends that the rule theretofore prevailing was
abrogated by the Act of 1910, and that, because of similar
provision in the Act of October 22, 1913, c. 32, 38 Stat. 208, 220,
the power in question was not conferred upon the district
courts.
The latter act, which abolished the Commerce Court and
transferred to the district courts the jurisdiction in this class
of cases, requires that applications for an interlocutory
injunction to restrain the enforcement of an order of the
Commission be heard before three judges; permits the issue by them,
or a majority of them, of "a temporary stay or suspension" of the
Commission's order for not more than 60 days pending the
application for an interlocutory injunction; similarly permits them
"at the time of hearing such application . . . [to] continue the
temporary stay or suspension . . . until decision
Page 272 U. S. 670
upon the application;" provides for expediting the hearing, and
authorizes a direct appeal to this Court from the order granting or
denying the interlocutory injunction, if taken within 30 days.
Compare United States v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co.,
225 U. S. 306,
225 U. S. 322.
The argument of the government is that the thing of which the
operation is suspended, pending the appeal, is not the decree of
the district court, but the order of the Commission, an independent
federal tribunal; that, by the language of the Act, the power of
the district court to suspend the operation of the Commission's
order ends with the "decision [in the district court] upon the
application;" and that, for these reasons, the customary power of a
court of equity to preserve the
status quo is not
applicable to the suspension pending the appeal here involved.
It is clear that this Court, or a Justice thereof, has power to
grant a stay of the Commission's order pending the appeal. The
power was exercised by the full Court in
Omaha & Council
Bluffs R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 222 U.
S. 582, in a case coming from the Commerce Court under
the Act of 1910. Whether the district court of three judges under
the Act of 1913 possesses like power has never been considered by
this Court. The existence of the power was affirmed by a divided
district court in
Louisville & N. R. Co. v. United
States, 227 F. 273, and the power was exercised to the extent
of staying enforcement of the Commission's order until this Court
should have the opportunity of determining whether a stay pending
the appeal should be granted. The power has been exercised by the
district court in a few other instances. But, in those cases,
although the government objected to the action taken, it did not
take a cross-appeal, and the question was not considered or raised
upon the argument before
Page 272 U. S. 671
this Court. [
Footnote 3] The
question now presented was, however, passed upon under similar
legislation and conditions in
Cumberland Telephone &
Telegraph Co. v. Louisiana Public Service Commission,
260 U. S. 212. The
practice there held appropriate in a proceeding under § 266 of the
Judicial Code must be held to be likewise authorized under the Act
of 1913.
Section 266 provides for the hearing before three judges of
applications for an interlocutory injunction to restrain the
execution of a state statute, or of an order of an administrative
board of the state pursuant to a state statute, where the statute
or order is assailed on the ground that it violates the federal
Constitution. We declared in the
Cumberland Telephone &
Telegraph Co. case, p.
260 U. S. 219
that, while this Court has power to grant a stay pending the
appeal, the district court acting through three judges, or a
majority of them, also possesses that power, and that, because such
court is
"best and most conveniently able to exercise the nice discretion
needed, . . . the court of three judges, who have heard the whole
matter, have read the record, and can pass on the issue
[application for a suspension pending the appeal] without
additional labor,"
the determination of the application will ordinarily be left to
it. The language of § 266 which limits the
Page 272 U. S. 672
power to grant the restraining order and the interlocutory
injunction is substantially the same as that employed in the Act of
October 22, 1913. The two statutes are
in pari materia. It
is under § 266 that proceedings to enjoin the enforcement of rate
orders of state Railroad and Public Utility Commissions are
commonly instituted.
The character of the proceeding and the end sought are the same
in the two statutes. The two provisions originated in the same Act.
Section 266 is a codification of § 17 of the Act of June 18, 1910,
c. 309, 36 Stat. 539, 557. The provision of the Act of 1913, here
in question, is an adaptation to the district courts of § 3 of the
Act of 1910, which prescribed the procedure for such applications
before the Commerce Court. No reason is suggested why the rule
governing in cases of appeals from the district court under § 266
should not apply also to appeals from those courts under the Act of
1913. Moreover, the latter Act, in referring in the same connection
to appeals from final decrees, declares that "such appeals may be
taken in like manner as appeals are taken under existing law in
equity cases." Congress evidently deemed that it had adequately
guarded against the dangers incident to the improvident issue of
the writs of injunction in cases of this character by the
provisions which require action by the court of three judges, which
permit of expediting the hearings before the district court, which
shorten the period of appeal, and which give a direct appeal to
this Court.
Seventh. The government contends that, even if the
district court had power to say the order of the Commission pending
the appeal in this Court, its action was not warranted by the
facts. A stay is not a matter of right, even if irreparable injury
might otherwise result to the appellant.
In re Haberman
Manufacturing Co., 147 U. S. 525. It
is an exercise of judicial discretion. The propriety of its issue
is dependent upon the circumstances
Page 272 U. S. 673
of the particular case. An application to suspend the operation
of the Commission's order pending an appeal from a final decree
dismissing the bill on the merits calls for the exercise of
discretion under circumstances essentially different from those
which obtain when the application for a stay is made prior to a
hearing of the application for an interlocutory injunction, or
after the hearing thereon but before the decision. In the two
latter classes of cases, if the bill seems to present to the court
a serious question, the fact that irreparable injury may otherwise
result to the plaintiff may, as an exercise of discretion, alone
justify granting the temporary stay until there is an opportunity
for adequate consideration of the matters involved. But to justify
a stay pending an appeal from a final decree refusing an
injunction, additional facts must be shown. For the decree creates
a strong presumption of its own correctness and of the validity of
the Commission's order. This presumption ordinarily entitles
defendant carriers and the public to the benefits which the order
was intended to secure.
In this class of cases, an appeal bond can rarely indemnify
fully even private parties to the litigation for the loss of the
benefits of which the stay deprived them, and the public would
usually be left wholly remediless. To justify granting the stay
after a final decree sustaining the Commission's order, it must
appear either that the district court entertains a serious doubt as
to the correctness of its own decision, or that the decision
depends upon a question of law on which there is conflict among the
courts of the several circuits, or that some other special reason
exists why the order of the Commission ought not to become
operative until its validity can be considered by this Court.
[
Footnote 4]
Page 272 U. S. 674
The district court made no finding or statement bearing upon its
exercise of discretion in suspending the operation of the
Commission's order except the recital in the decree that, from all
the evidence in the case, it is "of opinion . . . that irreparable
damage will result to the complainant pending such appeal if this
decree shall be reversed on appeal." We must therefore look
elsewhere in the record for additional facts necessary to justify
the suspension. We fail to find any. The suit was of a character
deemed by Congress of such importance that it had made special
provision for both adequate and speedy consideration. The
strenuousness of the contest and the extensive record made clear
the importance of the case not only to the mines and carriers
directly concerned, but also to the consuming public in the western
markets. It was clear that the appeal bond could not indemnify the
Virginian mines or the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad for the loss
resulting from a stay, and also that the public might suffer losses
for which there would be no remedy. The decree was not entered
until nearly four months after the hearing, that period being
doubtless required for adequate consideration of the voluminous
record. No opinion, written or oral, was delivered. In view of the
importance of the litigation, we interpret the absence of an
opinion as tantamount to a declaration that, upon careful scrutiny
of the record, the questions presented for judicial determination
appeared to be simple, or, at all events, that the case did not
involve the determination of any question of law which was novel or
as to which there was, or could be, reasonable doubt. The decree of
the district court was not unanimous, but this fact alone would not
justify a stay. For aught that appears, the district court may
Page 272 U. S. 675
have divided on some questions of fact, or on the construction
of a document. [
Footnote 5]
Under the circumstances appearing, the suspension of the order
pending the appeal was unwarranted. The objection to the decree
asserted by the government in No. 282 must therefore be
sustained.
Unless an opinion indicating the grounds of the decision is
delivered, a defeated party may often be unable to determine
whether the case presents a question worthy of consideration by the
appellate court. This is particularly true where the case is in
equity and the decree is entered upon a hearing involving
complicated facts, for, being in equity, matters of fact as well as
of law are reviewable, and the reviewable issues of law are rarely
sharply defined by request for rulings. The failure to accompany
the decree by an opinion may thus deprive litigants of the means of
exercising a sound judgment on the propriety of an appeal, and the
appellate court, being without knowledge of the grounds of the
decision below, is denied an important aid in the consideration of
the case, and will ordinarily be subjected to much unnecessary
labor.
No. 281 -- Decree affirmed as to matter appealed
from.
No. 282 -- Decree reversed as to matter appealed
from.
[
Footnote 1]
Thus, in many cases, as in the case at bar, the Commission has
found a combination through rate unreasonable or discriminatory as
an entirety, and has ordered it to not higher than a specific
amount without any finding of public interest. United Verde
Extension Co. v. Director General, 57 I.C.C. 625; Gillespie Coal
Co. v. Ill. Traction System, 62 I.C.C. 335; Freight Bureau v.
Beaumont, etc., Ry. Co., 74 I.C.C. 601; Ariz. Corp. Comm'n v. A. T.
& S.F. Ry. Co., 87 I.C.C. 271; Babbitt Bros. Trading Co. v. A.
T. & S.F. Ry. Co., 88 I.C.C. 614; Lone Star Gas Co. v. C., C.,
C. & St.L. Ry. Co., 101 I.C.C. 465; Tioga Coal Co. v. B. &
O. R. Co., 101 I.C.C. 611; Lookout Paint Mfg. Co. v. Mo. P. R. Co.,
101 I.C.C. 691; Illinois Oil Co. v. Cape Girardeau N. Ry. Co., 102
I.C.C. 154; Humble Oil & R. Co. v. L. & N.W. R. Co., 102
I.C.C. 761; Eriksen v. Ann Arbor R. Co., 102 I.C.C. 374; Omaha
Grain Exchange v. A. N. Ry. Co., 102 I.C.C. 533; Vera Chem. Co.
v.Ala. Cent. R. Co., 104 I.C.C. 408; Marion Machine Co. v. Pa. R.
Co., 104 I.C.C. 471; West Va. Paper Co. v. B. & O. R. Co., 104
I.C.C. 495; Wilson & Co. v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 104 I.C.C.
641.
Compare Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce v. C., C.,
C. & St.L. Ry. Co., 58 I.C.C. 515; Prairie Pipe Line Co. v.
Director General, 88 I.C.C. 167; J. D. Hollingshead Co. v. Deering
S.W. Ry. Co., 88 I.C.C. 659; Public Service Comm'n v. A. T. &
S.F. Ry. Co., 88 I.C.C. 728; Caruso & Co. v. Chi. & Eastern
Ry. Co., 102 I.C.C. 619.
[
Footnote 2]
On July 2, 1925, the Norfolk & Western applied to the
Commission for an order under § 5, par. 2, authorizing it to
acquire the Virginian by lease. The application was denied on
October 11, 1926.
[
Footnote 3]
Opinions have been written by this Court in 32 direct appeals
from decrees refusing to set aside orders of the Interstate
Commerce Commission; 6 being from decrees of the Commerce Court
under the Act of 1910, and 26 from decrees of the district court
under the Act of 1913. In 3 of those cases, the district court
stayed the order of the Commission pending the appeal, either until
this Court could pass upon an application for such a stay
(
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. United States, 227
F. 273;
242 U. S. 242 U.S.
60;
Central R. Co. of New Jersey v. United States,
257 U. S. 247), or
until this Court should decide the appeal (
Lehigh Valley R. Co.
v. United States, 243 U. S. 412). In
one other case only was an application mate to the lower court for
a stay pending the appeal, and that was denied.
Colorado v.
United States, 271 U. S. 153.
Insofar as the records show, stays were not asked for below in the
other 28 cases.
[
Footnote 4]
See Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Railroad
Commission, 208 F. 35, 57, 60;
Louisville & Nashville
R. Co. v. United States, 227 F. 273;
Corona Coal Co. v.
Southern R. Co., 266 F. 726, 735.
Compare Cotting v.
Kansas City Stockyards, 82 F. 850, 857;
Western Union Tel.
Co. v. Wright, 168 F. 558, 559;
Louisville & Nashville
R. Co. v. Siler, 186 F. 176, 203;
Rail & River Coal
Co. v. Yaple, 214 F. 273, 283;
Chadeloid Chemical Co. v.
H.B. Chalmers Co., 242 F. 71, 72;
Masses Publishing Co. v.
Patten, 245 F. 102.
[
Footnote 5]
So far as the record discloses, the stay included in the final
decree was not a continuation of a temporary restraining order, but
a matter wholly original. Apparently no restraining order issued
prior to the final decree. The matter is not referred to in any of
the briefs.