1. An order of the Interstate Commerce Commission adjudging a
preference illegal upon complaint of a shipper but refusing to
require reparation from the carrier upon the ground that no damage
was proved, is not conclusive against the right of the complainant
to recover damages from another shipper who enjoyed the preference
and who had intervened in the proceedings, but against whom no
damages were there prayed. P.
297 U. S.
511.
Page 297 U. S. 501
2. The remedy of a shipper for impairment of profits in his
business alleged to have resulted from illegal privileges and
payments granted a competitor by a railroad in interstate commerce,
no element of monopoly being involved and no conspiracy beyond the
mere agreement between the railroad and the favored shipper for the
forbidden preferences, is not by action for treble damages under §
7 of the Anti-Trust Act, but is confined to proceedings against the
railroad and the favored shipper under the Interstate Commerce Act.
P.
297 U. S.
511.
So
held in an action by a warehouse company against a
competitor in the same city and a railroad, in which it was claimed
that damage to the plaintiff was caused by an arrangement between
the defendants, published in the railroad's tariffs and for a time
upheld by the Interstate Commerce Commission but later declared
unlawful by the Commission and by this Court (
Merchants
Warehouse Co. v. United States, 283 U.
S. 501), whereby the defendant warehouse company
received certain concessions and allowances upon the mistaken
assumption that its facilities were part of the railroad's station
facilities and that it acted a the railroad's agent in the handling
of freight.
78 F.2d 591 affirmed.
Certiorari, 296 U.S. 560, to review the reversal of a judgment
for treble damages in an action under the Anti-Trust Act.
Page 297 U. S. 503
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this action under the Anti-Trust Acts (15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 15)
for the recovery of treble damages, the Terminal Warehouse Company,
petitioner in this Court, accuses a competitor, the Merchants
Warehouse Company, and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, an
interstate common
Page 297 U. S. 504
carrier, of an unlawful combination in restraint of trade and
commerce.
The business of Merchants Warehouse Company, which for brevity
will be spoken of as Merchants, began in January, 1887. Its site
was the city of Philadelphia. At the beginning, there were two
warehouses, both in convenient proximity to the Pennsylvania's
tracks and terminals. Other buildings were added from time to time
by purchase or by lease to serve other sections of the city. From
the outset, Merchants had contracts with Pennsylvania for
privileges and payments special to itself. These are the contracts
of which Terminal complains. They were renewed as they ran out from
1887 to 1931, a separate contract being made with reference to each
building. For present purposes, a summary of one contract will
serve as a summary of all, though they differ in particulars. For
illustration we choose the contract of January 25, 1917, which has
to do with the warehouse at Water and Chestnut streets. By this
contract, Pennsylvania agrees to maintain tracks adjacent to the
warehouse and to make payments at stipulated rates for services
rendered by the warehouse in the receipt and delivery of freight.
While the contract is in force, there is to be no allowance for
such services to any other warehouse company in the city of
Philadelphia. In return, Merchants agrees to give a preference to
Pennsylvania over other lines in the use of its facilities; to load
and unload freight promptly and efficiently; to collect charges due
for incoming freight, and to be responsible to the railroad company
therefor.
No secret was made of the existence of this contract or of any
of the others. On the contrary, the substance of the whole
arrangement was set forth in the tariffs of the railroad filed with
the Interstate Commerce Commission and open to the public.
Pennsylvania there showed that it had designated the warehouses of
Merchants as stations for the receipt and delivery of freight. It
also
Page 297 U. S. 505
showed the amount of the payments and allowances to be made to
Merchants for services in handling freight at the stations so
designated. For many years, the practice went unchallenged by any
agency of government. The assumption was that the warehouses,
though not owned by Pennsylvania, were nonetheless public freight
stations supplied by a contractor (
United States v. Baltimore
& Ohio R. Co., 231 U. S. 274,
231 U. S.
288), and that the railroad, in making payments or
allowances for the handling of the freight, was paying for
transportation services rendered by an agent. Decisions of the
Interstate Commerce Commission bring this out in clear relief.
Keystone Warehouse Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 53 I.C.C. 335;
Keystone Elevator & Warehouse Co. v. Director General, 73
I.C.C. 273, 274; McCormick Warehouse Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 95
I.C.C. 301. Those cases stood unquestioned until 1928, when one of
them (McCormick Warehouse Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
supra) was reheard and overruled (148 I.C.C. 299); earlier
decisions to the same effect falling along with it. The conclusion
was then announced that a warehouse company doing business under
such a contract was a consignor or consignee, acting on its own
behalf and not as agent for the carrier. With this change in its
relation, discriminatory payments or allowance became forbidden and
unlawful. 49 U.S.C. § 3(1).
Terminal, a rival warehouse, organized in 1904, was quick to
occupy the vantage ground left open by that ruling. It laid before
the Interstate Commerce Commission a complaint charging
Pennsylvania with unjust discrimination in the practices described.
It asked that a restraining order protect it for the future, and
that there be an award of reparation for losses suffered in the
past. There were separate complaints as to the acts of other
railroads (the Baltimore & Ohio and the Reading), which had
terminal arrangements with warehouses of their own
Page 297 U. S. 506
selection. Neither of these other roads had given a preference
to Merchants, and none of the three was acting in concert with any
other. The Commission, adhering to its ruling in the
McCormick
Warehouse case, held that the designated warehouses were in
truth not public freight stations, however the carriers might style
them. From this it followed that allowances and special privileges
accorded on the footing of an agency relation would have to be
abandoned. Gallagher v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 160 I.C.C. 563. The
railroads were required to cancel any tariff provisions whereby
"the facilities of the contract warehouses" were made "a part of
the respective station facilities" of the lines affected by the
order. They were required to "cease and desist" from publishing or
making the discriminatory privileges and allowances growing out of
the attempt to treat the warehouse companies as agents. On the
other hand, the Commission refused an award of reparation.
"The evidence is far too vague and indefinite to warrant the
conclusion that complainants have suffered actual pecuniary loss
attributable directly to the alleged unlawful practices."
The carriers, together with Merchants and other warehouse
companies interveners in the proceeding, brought suit in a federal
court (three judges sitting) to vacate the order of the Commission.
The bills of complaint were dismissed, one judge dissenting.
Merchants' Warehouse Co. v. United States, 44 F.2d 379.
Upon appeal to this Court, the decree was affirmed.
Merchants'
Warehouse Co. v. United States, 283 U.
S. 501. The opinion there rendered is so exact in its
description of the nature and effect of the unlawful practices as
to make elaboration useless now. In particular, the court points
out that a warehouse designated as a station was in a position to
receive package freight in less than carload lots, and ship it at
carload rates without charge to the customer for assembling the
packages and loading them, this by reason of the fact that the
warehouse had been
Page 297 U. S. 507
paid by the railroad for doing that very work. To that extent,
it could afford to underbid competitors. For the same reason, it
had a position of superiority over against its rivals in unloading
carload lots, for it could distribute and reship in packages at the
expense of the carrier. This advantage as to package freight, if
permitted to continue, would have taken the life out of rules
designed to limit the character of transportation services. By rule
23 of the Consolidated Freight Classification, a carrier may not
distribute carloads of freight in less than carload lots, nor
assemble smaller lots into carloads. 283 U.S. at
283 U. S. 510.
Thus, the opinion makes it clear that the whole system of warehouse
stations, with its payments and allowances, including the
incidental saving of demurrage, had been built upon a false
foundation. Adherence to the statute called for its
suppression.
We have seen that Terminal asked for reparation as well as for a
restraining order at the hands of the Commission. There is no doubt
that the Commission had jurisdiction in response to that request to
make an award against the railroad for damages suffered by the
complainant as a result of the unlawful practices. 49 U.S.C. §§ 8,
9, 16(1, 2);
Interstate Commerce Comm'n v. United States,
289 U. S. 385;
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Ohio Valley Tie Co.,
242 U. S. 288;
Pennsylvania R. Co. v. W. F. Jacoby & Co.,
242 U. S. 89;
Meeker v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 236 U.
S. 412;
Pennsylvania R. Co. v. International Coal
Mining Co., 230 U. S. 184. The
Commission found, however, that no damages had been proved, and its
ruling as to that was final, not subject to review by this Court or
any other.
Interstate Commerce Comm'n v. United States,
supra, at p.
289 U. S. 388;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Brady, 288 U.
S. 448;
Standard Oil Co. v. United States,
283 U. S. 235;
Alton R. Co. v. United States, 287 U.
S. 229;
Procter & Gamble Co. v. United
States, 225 U. S. 282.
True, the complainant might have
Page 297 U. S. 508
confined itself to a request for a restraining order, and, after
thus invalidating the preference, have asked a court for
reparation. 49 U.S.C. § 9. It had a choice, in other words, between
a remedy at the hands of the Commission and a remedy by suit, but
by express provision of the statute it could not have them both.
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Brady, supra. Reparation
under the Commerce Act was thus permanently barred by the ruling of
the Commission as against the offending carrier. The situation was
altogether different, however, in respect of the liability of
Merchants and other aiders and abettors. As to wrongdoers other
than the carrier, the complainant had not asked the Commission to
fix the quantum of the damages, thus relieving us of the duty to
inquire whether jurisdiction would have existed if such relief had
been demanded. 49 U.S.C. §§ 9, 16(1), and compare 49 U.S.C. § 42.
Merchants would not have been affected by an award of reparation if
the Commission had found the evidence sufficient for that relief,
and it gains nothing from the fact that reparation was refused. In
saying this, we are not unmindful that it intervened in the
proceeding. It was interested in the event, for it would be harmed
by a restraining order. 49 U.S.C. § 42. Intervention, though
permitted, did not broaden the complaint nor add to the range of
enumerated powers. Accordingly, the framers of the statute were
careful to provide that aiders and abettors should not go unwhipped
of justice. In a suit under the Commerce Act, all persons
soliciting or procuring the allowance of a forbidden preference
were to be liable, jointly or severally, to make good the damage
suffered. 49 U.S.C. § 10(4).
* Cf. 49
U.S.C. § 41(3). Here was
Page 297 U. S. 509
an ample remedy to reach a guilty participant in an unlawful
discrimination, whether reparation against the carrier had been
granted or refused.
Petitioner, not satisfied to proceed under the Commerce Act, put
that remedy aside and brought suit under the Sherman and Clayton
Acts, hoping by that maneuver to charge both carrier and warehouse,
and to charge them with treble damages. Every act of wrongdoing
proved in the new suit to have been committed by the defendants was
proved against them also (with unsubstantial exceptions) in the
case before the Commission. Now, as before, the head and front of
their offending is the use of the warehouses as stations for the
carrier with the allowances and privileges, such as exemption from
demurrage, growing out of that relation. What is true of the
offense is true also of its consequences. There has been no proof
of any loss that would not be provable in equal measure in
proceedings under the Commerce Act upon a claim for reparation.
Interstate Commerce Commission v. United States, supra;
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Ohio Valley Tie Co.,
supra. Terminal does not show that there was a conspiracy to
establish a monopoly either
Page 297 U. S. 510
of transportation by Pennsylvania or of storage by Merchants,
much less that a monopoly was actually attained. There was no
monopoly of transportation, for the statistics make it plain that
the competing lines in Philadelphia had a large percentage of the
business of carrying storage freight. Moreover, Terminal is not
here as the representative of the railroads, and may not vindicate
their grievances, if grievances there are. More important is the
consideration whether there has been a monopoly of storage. There
are many warehouses in Philadelphia for the storage of railroad
freight. Neither Merchants nor any other company has been able to
engross the business, or has even attempted to engross it. During
the years of the unlawful practices, Merchants' business declined
proportionately to the whole, and Terminal's increased, as did also
that of other warehouses, so far as the record supplies us with the
relevant statistics. Indeed, petitioner does not even claim that,
by reason of the defendants' acts, it failed to get business that
would otherwise have come to it. If there was any claim for such
damages at the beginning, it was explicitly renounced. What
petitioner contends and has contended for is this and nothing more,
that to hold and attract customers it had to keep its charges down
below the normal rate, diminishing its profit to the extent of the
reduction. In a word, its only damages are those resulting, in its
view, from the allowances for loading and unloading or like
discriminatory acts, and not from any conspiracy transcending these
particulars, a conspiracy of which allowances and privileges are a
symptom or an incident.
Upon the basis of that evidence, the trial judge left it to the
jury to say whether Terminal was a sufferer from an unlawful
combination in restraint of trade and commerce. The jury found a
verdict for $136,125 against both defendants. This verdict was
trebled by the court,
Page 297 U. S. 511
with the addition of a counsel fee ($27,000); the whole judgment
thus amounting to $437,338.81. There was an appeal to the Circuit
Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit where the judgment was
reversed. The ground of the reversal was that the decision of the
Commission refusing reparation was a bar to any claim for damages
against either of the defendants in a suit under the antitrust laws
as well as under the Commerce Act.
Pennsylvania R. Co. v.
Terminal Warehouse Co., 78 F.2d 591. This Court granted a writ
of certiorari to determine the scope and operation of important
acts of Congress.
The order of the Commission denying reparation, though it be
assumed to be conclusive evidence in favor of the carrier, is
plainly not such evidence for the carrier's confederate. We think
it better to rest our judgment on ground applicable to both
defendants. Whether such grounds exist is the question next in
order.
First. Discriminatory privileges and payments given by
a carrier to a consignor or consignee are unavailing without more
to make out a combination in restraint of trade or commerce within
the meaning of the antitrust laws. To lead to that result, the
privileges or payments must be the symptoms or incidents of an
enveloping conspiracy with its own illegal ends. In the absence of
such a showing, a sufferer from discriminatory charges and
allowances has his remedy under the Commerce Act for any damage to
his business, and that remedy is exclusive against all the parties
to the wrong.
Two cases in this Court, though not indeed decisive, are
apposite and helpful. The first,
Keogh v. Chicago &
Northwestern Ry. Co., 260 U. S. 156, was
a suit under the antitrust laws against railway companies and
others who were charged to have combined in establishing uniform
rates and thus destroying competition, all to the plaintiff's
damage. True, the rates had been approved after complaint to the
Commission, but this was not
Page 297 U. S. 512
enough, or Keogh so contended. He was entitled in his view to
the benefit of competitive rates, quite apart from any finding that
the rates established by concerted action were reasonable in amount
and without discriminatory effect. In upholding a dismissal of the
suit, the court called attention to the provisions of the Commerce
Act whereby a remedy in damages was given for rates illegally
exacted.
"If the conspiracy here complained of had resulted in rates
which the Commission found to be illegal because unreasonably high
or discriminatory, the full amount of the damages sustained,
whatever their nature, would have been recoverable in such
proceedings.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Ohio Valley
Tie Co., 242 U. S. 288. Can it be that
Congress intended to provide the shipper, from whom illegal rates
have been exacted, with an additional remedy under the Anti-Trust
Act?
See Meeker v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 162 F. 354. And
if no remedy under the antitrust law is given where the injury
results from the fixing of rates which are illegal, because too
high or discriminatory, may it be assumed that Congress intended to
give such a remedy where, as here, the rates complained of have
been found by the Commission to be legal and while in force had to
be collected by the carrier?"
260 U.S. at p.
260 U. S. 162.
These queries were coupled with a warning of the practical
inconvenience attendant on any answer different from the one that
they suggest.
"If a shipper could recover under § 7 of the Anti-Trust Act for
damages resulting from the exaction of a rate higher than that
which would otherwise have prevailed, the amount recovered might,
like a rebate, operate to give him a preference over his trade
competitors."
Id. at
260 U. S.
163.
A second case pointing the same way is
United States
Navigation Co. v. Cunard Steamship Co., 284 U.
S. 474. The suit was for an injunction under the Sherman
Anti-Trust Act and the Clayton Act to restrain a group of
Page 297 U. S. 513
steamship companies from continuing a conspiracy in restraint of
trade and commerce. The acts charged to be illegal fell within the
express prohibitions of the Shipping Act of 1916 as amended, or
were in effect, even if not in terms, a component part thereof. 284
U.S. at
284 U. S. 485;
46 U.S.C. §§ 801, 812, 815, 816, 876. The decision was that the
plaintiff must seek redress by application to the Shipping Board.
True, the Anti-Trust Laws, since the enactment of the Clayton Act,
have been explicit in providing that any one injured by an unlawful
combination might have relief by injunction against threatened
damage to his business. 15 U.S.C. § 26;
Duplex Printing Press
Co. v. Deering, 254 U. S. 443;
Bedford Cut Stone Co. v. Journeyman Stone Cutters' Assn,
274 U. S. 37. To
this there is an exception where the subject matter of the
complaint is a wrong within the jurisdiction of the Interstate
Commerce Commission, in which case an injunction, if granted, must
be at the instance of the government. 15 U.S.C. § 26;
Central
Transfer Co. v. Terminal Railroad Ass., 288 U.
S. 469,
288 U. S. 474.
The exception does not apply at all events in terms, to wrongs
within the jurisdiction of any other board. Even so, the right to
sue, however explicit on its face, was held to have been partially
superseded in respect of private suitors by the adoption of the
Shipping Act, which as to transactions within its range gave the
only remedy available. The conclusion was reinforced by a reference
to Keogh's case and to the need for a uniformity difficult of
attainment when jurisdiction is divided.
What was said in these opinions is precisely applicable here. If
a sufferer from the discriminatory acts of carriers by rail or by
water may sue for an injunction under the Clayton Act without
resort in the first instance to the regulatory commission, the
unity of the system of regulation breaks down beyond repair.
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co.,
204 U. S. 426;
Interstate
Page 297 U. S. 514
Commerce Comm'n v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
215 U. S. 452;
Robinson v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 222 U.
S. 506;
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Solum,
247 U. S. 477,
247 U. S. 483;
Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Merchants' Elevator Co.,
259 U. S. 285,
259 U. S. 291,
and see 15 U.S.C. § 26, construed in
Central Transfer
Co. v. Terminal Railroad Assn., supra. On the other hand, if
the regulatory commission has issued a "cease and desist" order, an
injunction under the Clayton Act is inappropriate and needless. 49
U.S.C. § 16(7), (8), (12). The same considerations are applicable,
and with undiminished force, where the suit under the Clayton Act
is not for an injunction, but for damages. There too, a finding of
undue discrimination by the regulatory board is a necessary
preliminary to a suit against the carrier.
See cases
supra. Certain then it is that the Anti-Trust Laws are
inapplicable in all their apparent breadth to carriers by rail or
water. A consignor or consignee aggrieved by such a wrong must
resort to the appropriate administrative agency at least for many
purposes. If he is remitted to the Commerce Act or the Shipping Act
to cancel the illegal preference, may he pass over those acts and
revert to the Clayton or the Sherman Act for the purpose of
recovering damages? The Commerce Act, like the Shipping Act,
embodies a remedial system that is complete and self-contained. It
provides the means for ascertaining the existence of a preference,
but it does not stop at that point. As already shown in this
opinion, it gives a cause of action for damages not only against
the carrier, but also against shippers and consignees who have
incited or abetted. For the wrongs that it denounces it prescribes
a fitting remedy which, we think, was meant to be exclusive. If
another remedy is sought under cover of another statute, there must
be a showing of another wrong, not cancelled or redressed by the
recovery of damages for the wrong explicitly denounced. The
opinions of this Court in their fair and
Page 297 U. S. 515
natural extension point to that conclusion.
Keogh v. Chicago
& Northwestern Ry. Co., supra; United States Navigation Co. v.
Cunard Steamship Co., supra. The opinions of other federal
courts point the same way with equal, if not greater, certainty.
United States Navigation Co. v. Cunard S.S. Co., 50 F.2d
83, 86, 89, reviewing the decisions;
Meeker v. Lehigh Valley R.
Co., 162 F. 354, 363;
United States v. Atchison, T. &
S.F. Ry. Co., 142 F. 176, 184, 185;
Glenn Coal Co. v.
Dickinson Fuel Co., 72 F.2d 885, 888. We follow these
signposts to the goal they seem to mark.
In thus holding, we do not intimate that never in any
circumstances can a carrier become a party to a conspiracy in
restraint of trade or commerce with liability for treble damages.
This has been made plain already. We enlarge on it for greater
certainty. Wherein the case is now deficient will be made clearer
by example. One may suppose a business of a manufacturer which has
assumed the form and size of a monopoly, or, if not already at that
stage, is well upon the road thereto.
Cf. Standard Oil Co. v.
United States, 221 U. S. 1,
221 U. S. 51,
221 U. S. 61;
United States v. American Tobacco Co., 221 U. S.
106;
United States v. United States Steel
Corp., 251 U. S. 417;
United States v. Swift & Co., 286 U.
S. 106,
286 U. S. 116.
One may add a situation in which a carrier has knowingly
confederated with the owner to preserve such a business or foster
it. Whatever liability grows out of that alliance is untouched by
this decision. For present purposes, we may assume that, if such a
situation should develop, the carrier would make itself a
participant in the monopoly which it had conspired to produce,
though its only overt act was a discriminatory rate of carriage.
Again, a group of manufacturers, whose business in combination
would not amount to a monopoly, might unite among themselves to lay
a burden upon commerce by concerted action as to prices.
Swift
& Co. v. United States, 196 U. S. 375;
Page 297 U. S. 516
United States v. American Linseed Oil Co., 262 U.
S. 371;
Eastern States Retail Lumber Dealers' Assn.
v. United States, 234 U. S. 600. If
a carrier were to give a preference in furtherance of that
conspiracy, it would become a participant therein, or so we may
assume; the damages being measured not merely by the consequences
flowing from the preference, but by those flowing from the
conspiracy in all its comprehensive unity.
None of these assumptions affects the case at hand. For reasons
already stated, there was no conspiracy to monopolize the storage
business to the destruction of Terminal or of others similarly
situated. There was no conspiracy to impose upon that business a
burden of any kind, except to the extent that the enjoyment of a
preference might increase the opportunities for profit of the
warehouse so preferred. Of any combination more far-reaching, more
inclusive in its aims, there is silence in the record after every
reasonable inference has been drawn from its pages. On the
contrary, the history of the relation between Pennsylvania and
Merchants indicates strongly that the illegal discrimination, far
from being a symptom of a larger combination, was the product of a
mistake of law, which was shared for many years by the regulatory
commission till the decision in McCormick's case laid down another
rule. The mistake does not relieve the carrier from liability for
the concession of a privilege which has turned out to be forbidden.
It serves, however, as a reminder that the liability must be kept
within reasonable limits, and that a preference innocent in purpose
should not be magnified into a token of a circumambient
conspiracy.
We conclude that, for Merchants as well as for Pennsylvania,
whatever liability was incurred through the forbidden
discrimination was under the act to regulate commerce and not for
treble damages.
Second. The case having been submitted to the jury on
the theory that, apart from the unlawful preference,
Page 297 U. S. 517
there was evidence of a conspiracy in restraint of trade and
commerce, and the complaint having been framed on that theory and
no other, the suit should have been dismissed as to each of the
defendants.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the judgment of
the District Court is accordingly
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
*
"
Inducing unjust discrimination; penalty; liability for
damages. If any such person, or any officer or agent of any
such corporation or company, shall, by payment of money or other
thing of value, solicitation, or otherwise, induce or attempt to
induce any common carrier subject to the provisions of this
chapter, or any of its officers or agents, to discriminate unjustly
in his, its, or their favor as against any other consignor or
consignee in the transportation of property, or shall aid or abet
any common carrier in any such unjust discrimination, such person
or such officer or agent of such corporation or company shall be
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall, upon conviction thereof
in any court of the United States of competent jurisdiction within
the district in which such offense was committed, be subject to a
fine of not exceeding $5,000, or imprisonment in the penitentiary
for a term of not exceeding two years, or both, in the discretion
of the court, for each offense, and such person, corporation, or
company shall also, together with said common carrier, be liable,
jointly or severally, in an action to be brought by any consignor
or consignee discriminated against in any court of the United
States of competent jurisdiction for all damages caused by or
resulting therefrom."