1. An order of the Interstate Commerce Commission requiring a
railroad to increase its intrastate rates throughout an entire
state to correspond with interstate rates prescribed by the
Commission for potential traffic in the same commodity between
points in a limited region of that state and points in an adjacent
state, cannot be sustained under § 13(4) of the Interstate Commerce
Act as an execution of the power to remove undue prejudice "as
between persons or localities in intrastate commerce, on the one
hand, and interstate . . . commerce, on the other hand," in the
absence of explicit findings by the Commission justifying such
extension of the order. P.
282 U. S. 208.
2. An order of the Commission fixing certain interstate rates
and requiring an increase of intrastate rates to the same level,
which was made after hearing the parties interested, including the
states concerned, should not be upset merely because of the manner
in which the proceeding was initiated or because of the generality
of the complaint, if findings based on evidence show that, in
substance, the order was within the Commission's authority. P.
282 U. S.
209.
3. The power over rates "made or imposed by authority of any
state," which is conferred upon the Commission by § 13(3) and (4)
of the Interstate Commerce Act to protect interstate commerce from
unjust discrimination, applies to rates which were initiated by a
carrier and not affirmatively prescribed by the state, but which
were published under its laws and are maintained subject to its
authority. P.
282 U. S.
209.
4. The general provisions of § 13(4) prohibiting "unjust
discrimination against interstate commerce," and authorizing the
Commission to establish intrastate rates to prevent such
discrimination, is to be considered in the light of the affirmative
duty of the Commission
Page 282 U. S. 195
under § 15(a) to fix rates and take other important steps to
maintain an adequate national railway system. P.
282 U. S.
210.
5. The effective operation of the Act requires that intrastate
traffic should pay a fair proportionate share of the cost of
maintenance. And if there is interference with the accomplishment
of the purpose of the Congress because of a disparity between
intrastate rates and interstate rates, the Commission is authorized
to end the disparity by directly removing it. P.
282 U. S.
211.
6. The propriety of an exertion of this authority must be tested
by its relation to the purpose of the grant, and with regard to the
principle that, whenever the federal power is exerted within what
would otherwise be the domain of state power, the justification of
the exercise of the federal power must clearly appear. P.
282 U. S.
211.
7. The mere existence of a disparity between particular rates on
intrastate and interstate traffic does not warrant the Commission
in prescribing intrastate rates. P.
282 U. S.
211.
8. If the action of the Commission is not simply for the removal
of undue prejudice against interstate commerce as between persons
or localities, and the Commission undertakes to prescribe a
statewide level of intrastate rates in order to avoid an undue
burden, from a revenue standpoint, upon the interstate carrier,
there should be appropriate findings upon evidence to support an
order directed to that end. P.
282 U. S.
212.
9. In the present instance (where the Commission did not
undertake to establish a statewide level of interstate rates) to
sustain the order fixing statewide intrastate rates, there should
have been findings, supported by evidence, of the essential facts
as to the particular traffic and revenue, and as to the effect of
the intrastate rates, both existing and as prescribed, upon the
income of the carrier, which would justify the conclusion that the
order was needed to avoid an undue burden on the carrier's revenues
and a consequent interference with the maintenance of an adequate
transportation system. A general statement that the intrastate
rates resulted "in unjust discrimination against interstate
commerce" will not suffice. P.
282 U. S.
212.
10. A finding that the existing intrastate rates on the
particular traffic were not remunerative or reasonably compensatory
does not justify the order. P.
282 U. S.
214.
11. In dealing with unjust discrimination as between persons and
localities in relation to interstate commerce, the question is one
of the relation of rates to each other; but, in considering the
authority of the Commission to enter the state field and to change
a scale of
Page 282 U. S. 196
intrastate rates in the interest of the carrier's revenue, the
question is that of the relation of rates to income. P.
282 U. S.
214.
12. The raising of rates does not necessarily increase revenue;
it may reduce it by discouraging patronage.
Id.
13. In the absence of basic findings essential to support the
Commission's order, the Court is not called upon to examine the
evidence in order to resolve opposing contentions as to what it
shows, or to spell out and state such conclusions of fact as it may
permit.
Beamont, S.L. & W. R. Co. v. United States,
ante, p.
282 U. S. 74,
distinguished. P.
282 U. S.
215.
30 F.2d 116, 31
id. 580, reversed.
Appeal from decrees of the district court upholding an order of
the Interstate Commerce Commission reducing intrastate rates in
three suits to set it aside.
Page 282 U. S. 202
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The State of Florida and the members of its Railroad Commission
(appellants in No. 16) brought suit in the district court to
restrain the enforcement of that part of an order of the Interstate
Commerce Commission which dealt with certain intrastate rates of
the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company in Florida. The order,
made August 2, 1928, required the railroad company to establish
carload rates for logs (except walnut, cherry, and cedar) in
intrastate commerce "within the Florida" which should be the same
as the rates prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission as
reasonable for transportation in interstate commerce from points in
the northern portion of Florida to destinations in Georgia. The
order in that respect was assailed as being outside the scope of
the issues raised in the proceeding in which the order was entered,
and without substantial evidence to support it and as extending
beyond the statutory authority of the Commission and the limits of
federal power under the Constitution.
Suits for similar relief were brought by the Brooks-Scanlon
Corporation and other corporations (appellants in No. 17) and by
the Wilson Lumber Company (appellant in No. 18), manufacturers and
shippers of lumber in Florida. The Public Service Commission of
Georgia was permitted to intervene, and the three suits were
consolidated
Page 282 U. S. 203
and heard before a court of three judges, as required by the
applicable statute.
The court was of the opinion that the order of the Commission
touching intrastate rates could be construed as being limited to
points of origin on the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in the
northern part of Florida, as the Commission had confined its order
to these points of origin in fixing interstate rates. Taking the
view that, if construed so as to apply to intrastate rates
throughout the state, the order would probably be invalid, the
court sustained it upon the narrower construction. Decrees were
entered accordingly in January, 1929, dismissing the bills. 30 F.2d
116.
Thereupon, the Interstate Commerce Commission amended its order
by inserting additional exceptions of logs, and also with respect
to intrastate rates, "for the purpose of clarification," by
substituting for the phrase "within the State of Florida" the words
"within and throughout the entire State of Florida, without
exception." Petitions for rehearing and for leave to file
supplemental bills were then presented to the district court and
were granted. The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company was allowed
to intervene. On the rehearing, both the original and supplemental
bills were dismissed. 31 F.2d 580. The court upheld the amended
order of the Commission as to intrastate rates, in its statewide
operation, not "because of undue prejudice to shippers and
localities, or because of undue discrimination against the
particular interstate commerce" in the described logs, but solely
upon the ground that the order was aimed at a discrimination
"against general interstate commerce" caused by intrastate rates
which were so low as to throw an undue burden upon the interstate
revenues of the carrier.
From the decrees entered accordingly, the present appeals are
brought.
Page 282 U. S. 204
The proceeding before the Interstate Commerce Commission was
begun by the filing of a complaint by the Georgia Public Service
Commission against the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company. The
complaint stated that its object was to secure reasonable rates on
logs from points on the railroad company's line within Florida to
all destinations on its line in Georgia, and to remove any unjust
discrimination found to exist as provided in the Interstate
Commerce Act. The complaint alleged that there was competition
between mills and consumers in Georgia and those in Florida in the
purchase and transportation of logs from points in Florida to
destinations in Georgia. The intrastate log rates of that railroad
in Florida, and its interstate log rates between Florida and
Georgia for distances up to 170 miles, were set forth, and it was
alleged that the interstate rates greatly exceeded the intrastate
rates for like distances upon traffic moving under substantially
similar conditions. The complaint charged that the interstate rates
were unjust and unreasonable in violation of § 1, were unjustly
discriminatory in violation of § 2, and were unduly prejudicial to
the interstate shipper and preferential in favor of the intrastate
shipper in violation of § 3, of the Interstate Commerce Act. It was
also charged that the carrier's intrastate rates in Florida gave
unreasonable preference to intrastate shippers in that state, and
were unduly prejudicial to interstate shippers in Georgia, causing
an unjust discrimination against interstate commerce in violation
of § 13 of the Act. The complaints asked for an order requiring the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company to desist from the described
violations of the Act, and prescribing just, reasonable, and
nondiscriminatory interstate rates to be charged by the defendant
carrier for the transportation of carload shipments of logs from
all Florida points to all destinations in Georgia, and that the
measure of such rates should be no higher than
Page 282 U. S. 205
those concurrently in effect for the same kind of property
moving in intrastate commerce in Florida.
The State of Florida was notified of the proceeding, and the
Florida Railroad Commission appeared in defense of the Florida
intrastate rates. There were a number of interveners, including
shippers of logs in intrastate commerce in Florida, Georgia lumber
companies, and railroad companies operating in Florida and between
Florida and Georgia, and all parties were fully heard.
In its report, the Interstate Commerce Commission stated that,
while the complainant assailed the rates from all Florida points,
the record showed that, so far as interstate rates were concerned,
relief was desired only with respect to the rates on logs "from
that portion of Florida lying north of and including Jacksonville,
Gainesville, Burnett's Lake, and High Springs," described as North
Florida, "to destinations in Georgia for distances not exceeding
170 miles." The Commission pointed out that the Florida intrastate
rates under attack were published for carload lots for 170 miles
and less. The history of these rates was reviewed. With certain
modifications and extensions, they were what was generally known as
the "Cummer scale," which had originally been established by
contract between a predecessor railroad company and a lumber
company. This contract, the obligations of which were assumed by
the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, expired in 1918, and was
not renewed. Meanwhile, in 1914, the railroad company had entered
into a similar contract with the predecessor in interest of the
intervener Brooks-Scanlon Corporation, and this contract was to
continue in effect until certain timber, tributary to the line of
the railroad, had been transported. Accordingly, the railroad
company filed schedules with the Florida Railroad Commission
extending the Cummer Scale for described distances. The State
Commission refused to permit the proposed rates to become effective
because
Page 282 U. S. 206
they were applicable only on trainloads, and were not available
to all shippers. That Commission further advised the railroad
company that the rates were too low, and such as might be deemed
confiscatory. The rates were republished to apply on carloads over
all of the company's lines in Florida. These rates, extended with
respect to distances and modified by certain increases and
reductions, have been continued by the railroad company for the
purpose of complying with its contractual obligations, and not
because it has considered the scale to be a proper one for general
application on intrastate traffic within Florida.
While not admitting that the interstate rates were unreasonable,
the railroad company submitted to the Interstate Commerce
Commission a proposal for their revision. The Commission made a
tabular comparison of the existing interstate and intrastate rates
and the proposed interstate rates from North Florida, and, after a
further statement of the evidence, concluded that the interstate
rates thus proposed were reasonable.
The Commission then made the following findings as to interstate
and intrastate rates:
"We find that the interstate rates on logs, except walnut,
cherry, and cedar, in carloads, from points on defendant's lines in
Florida north of and including Jacksonville, Gainesville, Burnett's
Lake, and High Springs, to destinations on its lines in Georgia for
distances not exceeding 170 miles, are, and for the future will be,
unreasonable to the extent that they exceed, or may exceed, the
following distance scale of rates in cents per 100 pounds, minimum
weight 40,000 pounds, which rates we find are and will be
reasonable: [inserting schedule]. . . ."
"We further find that the Florida intrastate rates assailed,
which are lower than the interstate rates herein found reasonable
for corresponding distances, result, and
Page 282 U. S. 207
will result, in undue preference and advantage of shippers of
intrastate traffic within the State of Florida, in undue prejudice
to shippers of interstate traffic from points in the Florida to
points in the Georgia, and in unjust discrimination against
interstate commerce."
"We further find that said undue preference and advantage, undue
prejudice, and unjust discrimination can and should be removed by
the establishment of rates for intrastate application within
Florida which shall correspond with the rates herein found
reasonable for interstate application from Florida to Georgia."
"We further find that whether the aforesaid rates pertain to
transportation in interstate commerce or to transportation in
intrastate commerce, the transportation services in each instance
are performed by defendant under substantially similar
circumstances and conditions."
The order of the Commission, entered upon this report, after
prescribing the interstate rates from Northern Florida to Georgia,
continued with respect to intrastate rates in Florida as
follows:
"It is further ordered that said defendant be, and it is hereby,
notified and required to cease and desist from practicing the undue
preference and advantage, undue prejudice, and unjust
discrimination found in said report to exist in the relation of
intrastate and interstate rates, and to establish, put in force,
and maintain rates for the transportation of logs, except walnut,
cherry, and cedar, in carloads, minimum weight 40,000 pounds, in
intrastate commerce within the State of Florida which shall be the
same as those prescribed in the next preceding paragraph hereof as
reasonable for transportation in interstate commerce from points in
the Florida to destinations in the State of Georgia."
This order, as already stated, was amended so as definitely to
provide that the requirement as to intrastate
Page 282 U. S. 208
rates should apply throughout the entire State of Florida,
without exception. In making this amendment, there was no further
report or finding of the Commission.
We agree with the conclusion of the district court that, on the
facts that have been found by the Commission, the order with
respect to intrastate rates in its statewide application cannot be
sustained by reason of a proper determination of undue prejudice
"as between persons or localities in intrastate commerce, on the
one hand, and interstate . . . commerce, on the other hand."
Interstate Commerce Act, § 13(4), as added by Transportation Act §
416. The limitation of the Commission's finding as to interstate
rates, and of the order prescribing them, to transportation from
points in the northern part of Florida to points in Georgia,
defined the interstate commerce which was deemed to be concerned.
All of this commerce was potential, no actual movement from Florida
to Georgia having been shown. It would be an extreme and
unwarranted assumption that, to protect this interstate commerce
from unjust discrimination as between persons or localities, it was
necessary to alter the existing rates for the transportation of
logs between all points whatever within Florida. Such a conclusion
would not only require evidence to support it, but findings of
appropriate definiteness to express it.
Illinois Central
Railroad Co. v. State Public Utilities Commission,
245 U. S. 493,
245 U. S.
507-508;
Railroad Commission of Wisconsin v.
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co., 257 U.
S. 563,
257 U. S.
579-580;
New York v. United States,
257 U. S. 591,
257 U. S. 600.
The district court, again examining the record upon the rehearing,
reaffirmed its opinion that there was no such evidence, and it is
sufficient on this appeal to observe that there are no findings of
proper explicitness to that effect. Recognizing that the statewide
order of the Commission as to intrastate rates was upheld only
because the intrastate rates were deemed to
Page 282 U. S. 209
be so low as to cause "undue discrimination against the
carrier's general interstate commerce," the government and the
Commission have addressed their argument before this Court to the
defense of the order upon that ground.
Dealing with the order in this aspect, we may briefly dismiss
the appellants' preliminary objections in relation to the scope of
the proceeding and the adequacy of the hearing before the
Commission. As the Florida Railroad Commission appeared in defense
of the intrastate rates, and the railroad company, the rates of
which were in question, and other parties in interest, both
shippers and carriers, were heard, the question now presented
relates to the substance of the determination of the Commission and
its support in the evidence, rather than to mere matters of
pleading and procedure. In making its order, the Commission could
exercise all the authority conferred by the Interstate Commerce Act
for the purpose of removing such unjust discrimination as was found
to exist. If the Commission had made adequate findings supported by
evidence upon the point under consideration, we should not be
disposed to conclude that the order must be upset because of the
manner in which the proceeding was initiated or of the generality
of the allegations of the complaint.
Nor do we find that the order exceeds the authority of the
Commission in the view that the intrastate rates under
consideration were not "made or imposed" by authority of the state
within the meaning of § 13(3) of the Act, as added by
Transportation Act, § 416. While the "Cummer scale" of rates was
not prescribed by the Florida Railroad Commission, and was not the
result of any affirmative action on its part, these rates were
maintained in intrastate commerce subject to the authority of the
state, and were published as required by its laws. These rates may
thus be regarded as made by the authority of the state, and within
the purview of the Act unless its provisions disclose an intention
to exclude
Page 282 U. S. 210
intrastate rates of this sort. But it is clear that the
fundamental purpose of the Congress in enacting § 13, subdivisions
(3) and (4), was to reach intrastate rates that were found to
result in unjust discrimination against interstate commerce. It was
not the fact that the rate was affirmatively prescribed by the
state, but that it was maintained as an intrastate rate, and, as
such, was inimical to the proper interests of interstate commerce,
that led the Congress to give to the Interstate Commerce Commission
express authority to take cognizance of that rate and to prescribe
the intrastate rate that should be charged thereafter in order to
remove the undue discrimination.
See Board of Railroad
Commissioners v. Great Northern Railway Co., 281 U.
S. 412,
281 U. S.
424-428. The provision of § 13(3) for notice to, and
conference with, the authorities of the state is important not only
where the rates have been prescribed by the state, but also where
they are in force with the permission of the state and, as
intrastate rates, would otherwise be subject to the jurisdiction of
the state. To hold, as some of the appellants urge, that there can
be no adjustment of intrastate rates by the Interstate Commerce
Commission so far as may be needed to protect interstate commerce
until the state itself has first "sat in judgment on the issue of
the lawfulness of those intrastate rates" would be to impose a
limitation not required by the terms of the statute and repugnant
to the grant of authority.
The power of the Congress to authorize the Interstate Commerce
Commission to establish intrastate rates in order to remove an
unjust discrimination against interstate commerce is not open to
dispute.
Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. United
States, 234 U. S. 342;
Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. State Public Utilities
Commission, supra; Railroad Commission of Wisconsin v. Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co., supra; 274 U.
S. Chicago,
Page 282 U. S. 211
Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Co., 274 U.
S. 597;
Alabama v. United States, 279 U.
S. 229. In the exercise of this power, the Congress has
given to the Commission authority not only to remove an undue
prejudice as between persons or localities, but to establish a
statewide level of intrastate rates when this is found to be
necessary to accomplish the purpose of the statute. In construing
the statute, this Court has held that the general provision of §
13(4) prohibiting "unjust discrimination against interstate or
foreign commerce" and authorizing the Commission to establish
intrastate rates to prevent such discrimination is to be read in
connection with § 15a, both of which were added by Transportation
Act, 1920 (§§ 416, 422, 42 Stat. 484, 488) . There is what this
Court has called a "dovetail relation" between the two provisions.
The authority granted by § 13(4) is thus to be considered in the
light of the affirmative duty of the Commission to fix rates and to
take other important steps to maintain an adequate national railway
system.
As intrastate rates and the income from them must play a most
important part in maintaining such a system, the effective
operation of the Act requires that intrastate traffic should pay "a
fair proportionate share" of the cost of maintenance. And if there
is interference with the accomplishment of the purpose of the
Congress because of a disparity of intrastate rates as compared
with interstate rates, the Commission is authorized to end the
disparity by directly removing it.
Railroad Commission of
Wisconsin v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company,
supra; New York v. United States, supra (pp.
257 U. S.
585-586).
The question in the present cases, then, is not one of
authority, but of its appropriate exercise. The propriety of the
exertion of the authority must be tested by its relation to the
purpose of the grant and with suitable regard to the principle
that, whenever the federal power is exerted within what would
otherwise be the domain of state
Page 282 U. S. 212
power, the justification of the exercise of the federal power
must clearly appear.
Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. State
Public Utilities Commission, supra. The Commission has no
general authority to regulate intrastate rates, and the mere
existence of a disparity between particular rates on intrastate and
interstate traffic does not warrant the Commission in prescribing
intrastate rates.
Arkansas Railroad Commission v. Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific Railway Co., supra. If the action of the
Commission is not simply for the removal of undue prejudice against
interstate commerce as between persons or localities, and the
Commission undertakes to prescribe a statewide level of intrastate
rates in order to avoid an undue burden, from a revenue standpoint,
upon the interstate carrier, there should be appropriate findings
upon evidence to support an order directed to that end. Thus, in
Railroad Commission of Wisconsin v. Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy Railroad Co., supra (at
257 U. S.
566), where the question related to the general level of
intrastate passenger fares, there were findings as to the effect of
the maintenance of the intrastate fares upon the revenues of the
carriers, warranting the ultimate finding of undue discrimination
against interstate commerce as a whole. Similar facts were shown in
New York v. United States, supra (at p.
257 U. S.
601). In the present instance, the Commission did not
undertake to establish a statewide level of rates for the
interstate transportation of logs, and, in order to sustain the
statewide order as to intrastate rates (as one needed to avoid an
undue burden on the revenues of the carrier and a consequent
interference with the maintenance of an adequate transportation
system), it must appear that there are findings, supported by
evidence, of the essential facts as to the particular traffic and
revenue and the effect of the intrastate rates, both as existing
and as prescribed, upon the income of the carrier, which would
justify that conclusion.
Page 282 U. S. 213
In the paragraph, which we have quoted, containing the ultimate
finding of the Commission with respect to the unjust discrimination
caused by the existing intrastate rates as between persons and
localities, there is a concluding clause that the intrastate rates
result "in unjust discrimination against interstate commerce." This
general statement in the language of the statute, neither standing
alone nor taken in its context, could be regarded as sufficient to
support a statewide order from the standpoint of income, in the
absence of supporting findings of fact as to the revenue from the
traffic in question.
In its report, the Commission stated that the Florida Railroad
Commission and the interveners from that state had contended that
the intrastate rates were remunerative to the carrier. The state
commission introduced a cost study to support its contention, and
the carrier also submitted evidence as to the cost of transporting
logs on its line. The Interstate Commerce Commission said that both
cost studies were based on "arbitrary assumptions," and that
neither could be accepted "to show the approximate Actual cost of
transporting logs in single carloads intrastate throughout
Florida." The Commission made a comparison of
"present interstate and intrastate rates and the proposed
interstate rates from north Florida in cents per 100 pounds, and
the earnings thereunder per car of 50,000 pounds for distances to
170 miles."
The "earnings" thus set forth were merely the amounts receivable
per car for the given number of pounds under the rates for the
prescribed distances. The Commission also stated that the carrier
had shown that the earnings under the Florida intrastate rates on
logs were materially lower than the earnings under the interstate
rates from Florida to Georgia on brick, sand, lime, and cement.
Comparing the Florida intrastate rates on logs with other
intrastate rates and with interstate rates, the Commission reached
the conclusion that the intrastate rates assailed were less than
reasonably compensatory.
Page 282 U. S. 214
But to justify the Commission in the alteration of intrastate
rates, it was not enough for the Commission merely to find that the
existing intrastate rates on the particular traffic were not
remunerative or reasonably compensatory. The authority to determine
the reasonableness
per se of intrastate rates lay with the
state authorities. and not with the Interstate Commerce Commission.
In dealing with unjust discrimination as between persons and
localities in relation to interstate commerce, the question is one
of the relation of rates to each other. In considering the
authority of the Commission to enter the state field and to change
a scale of intrastate rates in the interest of the carrier's
revenue, the question is that of the relation of rates to income.
The raising of rates does not necessarily increase revenue. It may,
in particular localities, reduce revenue instead of increasing it,
by discouraging patronage.
* Railroad
Commission of Wisconsin v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy
Railroad Co., supra. The Commission stated in its report that
witnesses for the Florida interveners had testified "that any
material increase in the Florida intrastate rates would either
cause them to move their plants to the timber or abandon
operations," and that in either event the carrier would lose
considerable traffic.
The Commission made no findings as to the revenue which had been
derived by the carrier from the traffic
Page 282 U. S. 215
in question, or which could reasonably be expected under the
increased rates, or that the alteration of the intrastate rates
would produce, or was likely to produce, additional income
necessary to prevent an undue burden upon the carrier's interstate
revenues and to maintain an adequate transportation service.
The question is not merely one of the absence of elaboration or
of a suitably complete statement of the grounds of the Commission's
determination, to the importance of which this Court has recently
adverted (
Beaumont, Sour Lake & Western Railway Company v.
United States, ante, p.
282 U. S. 74), but
of the lack of the basic or essential findings required to support
the Commission's order. In the absence of such findings, we are not
called upon to examine the evidence in order to resolve opposing
contentions as to what it shows or to spell out and state such
conclusions of fact as it may permit. The Commission is the
factfinding body, and the Court examines the evidence not to make
findings for the Commission, but to ascertain whether its findings
are properly supported. If the facts as to intrastate
transportation of logs in Florida are such as to justify an order
as to intrastate rates in order to end an unjust discrimination as
against interstate commerce either as between persons and
localities or because of an undue burden upon the revenues of the
carrier, the Interstate Commerce Commission is still at liberty,
acting in accordance with the authority conferred by the statute,
to make such determinations as the situation may require.
We conclude that the portion of the order of the Commission
which is now under review with respect to intrastate rates is not
supported by the findings of the Commission, and this part of the
order must be set aside.
Decrees reversed.
* In the Florida Fertilizer Case, 151 I.C.C. 602, the Interstate
Commerce Commission, in refusing to order an increase in the
Florida intrastate rates on fertilizer, said:
"Furthermore, it is not certain that, if the Florida intrastate
rates were increased to the interstate level, additional revenue
would accrue to the carriers, for, if the prophesies of the
interior plants and of the Florida Commission are justified,
practically all shipments would be made from the ports, with the
result that the total charges would probably be no greater than
they now are."