United States ex rel. Chicago, New York, & Boston Refrigerator Company v. Interstate Commerce Commission/Opinion of the Court

By section 209(c) of Transportation Act 1920, c. 91, 41 Stat. 456, 464 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, § 10071 1/4 dd), the United States guarantees, for a period of six months after March 1, 1920, with respect to any carrier with which a contract has been made fixing the amount of just compensation under the Federal Control Act, that the railway operating income of such carrier as a whole shall not be less than one-half the amount named in such contract as annual compensation.

By the same section, subdivision (a), the term 'carrier' is defined to mean:

'(1) A carrier by railroad or partly by railroad and partly     by water, whose railroad or system of transportation is under      federal control at the time federal control terminates, *  *  *      and (2) a sleeping car company whose system of transportation      is under federal control at the time federal control      terminates. * *  * '

By subdivision (g), p. 466, the Interstate Commerce Commission is directed to--

'ascertain and certify to the Secretary of the Treasury the     several amounts necessary to make good the foregoing guaranty      to each carrier.'

On March 15, 1920, plaintiff in error, hereafter called the Car Company, filed with the Commission its written acceptance of the provisions of section 209, and at a later time applied to the Commission for the ascertainment and certificate mentioned in subdivision (g). The Commission denied the application, upon the ground that the Car Company was not a carrier within the meaning of the act. Thereupon a mandamus was sought from the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, to compel the Commission to comply with the provisions of subdivision (g), but that court, after a hearing, discharged the rule and dismissed the petition. Upon appeal to the Court of Appeals this judgment was affirmed. 288 Fed. 649, 53 App. D. C. 111.

The single question presented is whether the Car Company is a 'carrier by railroad.' Immediately prior to federal control, the Car Company owned 1,340 refrigerator cars, which were operated over various lines of railroad under contracts with the railroad companies. The Car Company did not own or control any railroad property or facilities, aside from these cars. The contracts provided for payment of compensation for the use of the cars by the railroad companies on the basis of mileage-that is, a fixed sum for each mile over which the cars were run. The cars were under the control of the railroad companies, subject to the observance, on their part of the directions of the Car Company as to the distribution of the cars. The Car Company solicited freight from shippers for which it was generally paid commissions, and exercised a degree of supervision over the shipment. Sometimes cars containing shipments were delivered by noncontract railroads, from which the Car Company received payment of the mileage charges. Bills of lading covering shipments were generally made by the railroad companies; but a small percentage, perhaps 10 per centum, of the shipments originating west of Chicago were rebilled on the forms of the Car Company, subject to tariffs and classifications of the railroad companies then in effect. Waybills were made out by the railroad companies, and all freight charges were paid to the railroad companies, no payment for transportation being made by the shippers to the Car Company. The Car Company was incorporated to manufacture, sell, or rent freight cars, rolling stock and for other specified purposes; but nothing is said in its articles of incorporation in respect of any operation as a carrier. It filed no tariffs with the Commission, as interstate railroad carriers are required to do; nor did it keep its accounts in accordance with the rules of the Commission. The refrigerator cars were taken over and used by the Director General of Railroads during the period of federal control and compensation therefor paid to the Car Company. Upon the expiration of such control the cars were surrendered to the Car Company. The court below accurately summarized the testimony as showing:

'That the Refrigerator Company is not incorporated as a carrier, does not control or use the     necessary facilities for performing carriage, does not hold      itself out to perform carriage by publishing rates applicable      thereto, and does not in fact perform carriage or receive any      compensation from shippers whose shipments move in its cars. The cars are rented to railroad companies. They are subject     to the control of the latter and are to all intents and      purposes their property during the period of the lease. In a     word, the Refrigerator Company carries nothing.'

In Wells Fargo & Co. v. Taylor, 254 U.S. 175, 187, 188, 41 Sup. Ct. 93, 65 L. Ed. 205, this Court defined the words 'common carrier by railroad,' as used in the Employers' Liability Act of April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65 (Comp. St. §§ 8657-8665), to mean 'one who operates a railroad as a means of carrying for the public-that is to say, a railroad company acting as a common carrier.' If this definition be applied here, it disposes of the question against the contention of the Car Company, since it is plain that it does not operate a railroad-that is, it is not a railroad company acting as a common carrier. The contention, however, is that this definition was confined to the words as used in the Employers' Liability Act, and that they are used in the Transportation Act in a different sense. It is quite true that because words used in one statute have a particular meaning they do not necessarily denote an identical meaning when used in another and different statute. But in the Taylor Case the definition was not made to rest upon any peculiarity in the act under review, but was said to be 'in accord with the ordinary acceptation of the words,' and this ordinary meaning was enforced by a consideration of certain provisions of the act, which were enumerated.

In Ellis v. Int. Com. Comm., 237 U.S. 434, 443-444, 35 Sup. Ct. 645, 59 L. Ed. 1036, it was held that the Armour Car Lines which owned, manufactured and maintained refrigerator, tank and box cars, and let them to railroads or to shippers, was not a common carrier subject to the Act to Regulate Commerce, § 12, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379, 383 (Comp. St. § 8576). The facts in respect of ownership of cars, use, relation to the railroads, etc., were much the same as those in the present case. After reciting them, this court said:

'It has no control over motive power or over the movement of     the cars that it furnishes as above, and in short,      notwithstanding some argument to the contrary, is not a      common carrier subject to the act. It is true that the     definition of transportation in section 1 of the act includes      such instrumentalities as the Armour Car Lines lets to the      railroads. But the definition is a preliminary to a     requirement that the carriers shall furnish them upon      reasonable request, not that the owners and builders shall be      regarded as carriers, contrary to the truth. The control of     the Commission over private cars, etc., is to be effected by      its control over the railroads that are subject to the act. The railroads may be made answerable for what they hire from     the Armour Car Lines, if they would not be otherwise, but      that does not affect the nature of the Armour Car Lines      itself.'

We need not review the arguments and contentions made here to the contrary. It is enough to say, that under the facts the Car Company is not a carrier by railroad, or, indeed, a common carrier at all, within the ordinary acceptation of the words, and there is nothing in the terms of the Transportation Act which suggests a different view. Such inferences as are to be drawn from the provisions of the act as pointed out by the court below, are the other way. The guaranty itself is in respect 'of railway operating income.' The Car Company's income may be 'operating income,' but certainly it is not 'railway operating income.' The income arises, not from operating a railway, but from the use of facilities let to the railway companies for fixed compensation. Stress is laid on the assertion that there is no specific language in the contracts, except in one instance, to the effect that the cars are leased. It is not necessary that there should be. In pursuance of the contracts the cars were delivered to, operated and controlled, and their use as instrumentalities of transportation paid for by the railroads. This is enough to establish a letting for hire; and there is nothing in the contracts or in any of the details of their performance which requires a different conclusion.

If the Car Company is a carrier by railroad, it would seem to follow that sleeping car companies and express companies are likewise included within the words. Evidently, however, Congress did not think so, since section 209 of the act contains special provisions in respect of these companies, which would have been entirely unnecessary, if they had been so included. The contention that the Car Company, if not a carrier by railroad, is a 'system of transportation,' and hence within the words of the statutory definition, may be readily disposed of. The phrase forms part of the definition:

'A carrier by railroad, or partly by railroad and partly by     water, whose railroad or system of transportation is under      federal control,' etc.

It is plain that the words 'whose railroad or system of transportation' etc., are not to be read independently, but as qualifying the language immediately preceding, and they are to be taken distributively as though the clause had read 'a carrier by railroad, whose railroad is under federal control, or a carrier partly by railroad and partly by water, whose system of transportation is under federal control.'

It follows that the judgment of the lower court is right, and it is

Affirmed.