Southern Pacific Co. v. United States
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the right of the Government to deduct from the public terminal-to-terminal tariffs of a railroad over a route, partly of land-grant aided mileage, identical with part of the mileage of another earlier constructed route of the same road between the same terminals, sums based upon the higher proportion of land-grant aided mileage in this latter route. On account of the importance of the question in administration, certi-orari was granted.
The carrier owns and operates two lines of railroad between Portland, Oregon, and Roseville, California, and Davis, California, both southern points being on the Central Pacific, now the Southern Pacific, Railroad in California. From the California junctions, there is direct connection over the same Southern Pacific rails into San Francisco. The older line is called the Siskiyou, the newer the Cascade Route. For a considerable portion of the distance between Portland and San Francisco, the two routes are identical. There are two differences; one is between Eugene, Oregon, and Black Butte, California. On
Where the routes are identical, some of the mileage is land-grant aided. Some is not. The mileage of the Siskiyou which is different from the Cascade is largely land-grant aided. None of the Cascade Route, except where it uses the same rails as the Siskiyou, has land grants. Based on the proportion of aided mileage and the percentage of deduction allowed to the Government from the tariffs charged private shippers, the United States-, between San Francisco and Portland, is entitled to a land-grant deduction via the Siskiyou Route of 42.792 -per cent. Via the Cascade Route, the deduction is 17.801 per cent. There are slight variations for East Portland'.
During December, 1931, and January, 1932, the carrier transported, in both directions, certain property of the United States on Government bills of lading, from Portland or East Portland to San Francisco. No directions were given by the Government as to the routes over which the shipments were to move. While before November 11, 1931, the terminal-to-terminal rates over the two routes were the same, after that date authorized revisions resulted in a rate competitive with water borne commerce over the Cascade and a higher rate over the Siskiyou. These public tariffs were so much lower over the Cascade than they were over the Siskiyou Route, that the net cost to the Government, after the deductions.
The Government was billed on the Cascade tariffs with deductions for land-grant mileage of about 17 per cent. It paid on the basis of the Cascade tariffs but deducted on the ratio of the land-grant to total miles between the terminals on the Siskiyou Route, or some 42 per cent. The Government claims that it is entitled to the lowest rate, between the terminals, less the percentage of deduction over the original land-grant aided route. The carrier protested and brought this action in the Court of Claims to recover the difference between the Cascade tariffs less the Cascade ratio of land-grant mileage and that paid by the Government, the Cascade tariffs less the Siskiyou ratio. The Court of Claims, after making special findings of fact, adjudged that the carrier was not entitled to recover and dismissed its petition.
The Government obtained concessions from the established tariffs by virtue of the acceptance by the carrier of grants of land, ten alternate sections per mile on each side of the line, to aid in the construction of a railroad as described in the statute authorizing the conveyance.
In December, 1887, the Siskiyou Route was finished:. The road running from its southern terminus at Roseville, to San Francisco had been finished in 1870. This gave a through‘route from San Francisco to Portland, 774.16 miles long with 663.16 land-grant aided. The Cascade Route was built later in small sections primarily for local service or links in other projected distinct railroad undertakings. The California deviation from the Siskiyou between Tehama and Davis was finished in 1882. The Oregon section, forming with that portion of the Siskiyou an irregular ovoid figure, was put together between 1905 and 1926, being completed September first of the latter year. This route is 725.03 miles between Portland'and San Francisco with 258.13 miles built with grants in aid. Each route is necessary for adequate transportation service to the areas traversed. At the time of the completion of the' Cascade and until November 10, 1931, the tariffs over the two routes between the terminals were the same.
On May 23, 1928, there was enacted an act for the relief of the land-grant railroad operated between East Portland, Oregon, and Roseville, California.
The Act of 1866, granting the aid, specified, only generally, the route of the new road. It was to begin at some point on the Central Pacific Railroad in the Sacramento Valley and thence run northerly to Portland. By the grant of millions of acres of public lands, the Government prepaid for transportation
The two acts are quite clear in their requirement that the company which constructed the. road or its successors in ownership or operation should transport the property
The. construction adopted in the Court of Claims was reached in United States v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co.
It is urged, however, that in this instance we have a new line, an addition, rather than a cüt-off in or a shortening or straightening.of an original line.
Affirmed.
Cf. Schedule of Land Grant and Bond-Aided Railroads of the U. S., Office of the Quartermaster General of the Army, Circular No. 4, February 1, 1922. This shows the, land-grant mileage in the United States at the date of issue. In order to obtain a share of government traffic, non-land-grant roads have entered widely into freight land-grant equalization agreements by which they agree to carry freight, routed over their lines at “the lowest net rates lawfully available, as derived through deductions account of land grant distance. . . .” Cf. Circular 3, Feb. 6, 1935, Office of Quartermaster General, War Department, Freight Land Grant Equalization Agree-/ ments.
Act of July 25, 1866, c. 242, 14 Stat. 239.
Id. 680; cf. United States v. Central Pacific R. Co., 118 U. S. 235, 238.
The Act of May 23, 1928, c. 720, 45 Stat. 722-723, provides:
“Chap. 720. — An Act For the relief of the land-grant railroad operated between the station formerly known as East Portland, in the State of Oregon, and Roseville, in the State of California.
“Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the landrgrant-railroad heretofore operated, and now being operated, between the station formerly known as East Portland, in the State of Oregon, and Roseville, in the State of California, shall hereafter receive compensa
Lake Superior & M. R. Co. v. United States, 93 U. S. 442, 454, 455; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. United States, 273 U. S. 321, 323. Act of June 7, 1924, c. 291, 43 Stat. 477, 486. This act determined thr proportion of the regular tariff to be paid for the. transportation.
Louisville & N. R. Co. v. United States, 267 U. S. 395, 402.
§ 5, Act of July 25,1866, -14 S.tat. 240.
The laws relating to land-grant and bond-aided railroads contain several types of conditions. The most prevalent condition rías that “the said railroad shall be and remain a public highway for the use of the Government of the United States, free from toll or other charge upon the transportation of any property or troops of the United States.” This was construed to require the railroad to furnish only free use of the rails and permanent structures. Lake Superior & M. R. Co. v. United States, 93 U. S. 442. It is to be found in the following acts: Act of Sept. 20, 1850, 9 Stat. 466 (Ill. Cent. R. R.; Mobile & O. R. R.); Act of June 10, 1852, 10 Stat. 8 (Chicago, B. & Q. R. R.; Missouri Pac, Ry.; St. Louis & S. F. Ry.); Act of Feb. 9, 1853, 10 Stat. 155 (Chicago, R. I. & Pac. Ry.; St. Louis, Iron Mtn. & So. Ry.); Act of May 15, 1856, 11 Stat. 9 (Chicago & N. W. Ry.; Chicago, B. & Q. R. R.; Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry.; Chicago, R. I. & Pac. Ry.); Act of May 17, 1856, 11 Stat. 15 (Louisville & N. R. R.; Seaboard Air Line Ry.); Act of June 3, 1856, 11 Stat. 17, 18, 20, 21 (Ala. Great So. R. R.; Central of Ga. Ry.; Chicago & N. W. Ry.; Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry.; Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry.; Duluth, So. Shore & At. Ry.; Grand Rapids & Ind. R. R.; Grand Trunk R. R.; N. Y. Cent. R. R.; Louisville & N. R. R.; Mich. Cent. R. R.; Missouri, Kan. & Texas Ry.; Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry.; Pere Marquette R. R.; Southern Ry. Co.; Vicksburg, S. & Pac. R. R.); Act of Aug. 11, 1856, 11 Stat. 30 (Ala. & Vicksburg Ry.; Gulf & Ship Id. R. R.); Act of March 3, 1857, 11 Stat. 195 (Chicago & N. W. Ry.; Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry.; Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry.; Great No. Ry.; Northern Pac. Ry.); Act of Match 3, 1863, 12 Stat. 772 (Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry.; Missouri, Kan. & Texas Ry.); Act of May 5, 1864, 13 Stat. 64 (Northern Pac. Ry.); Act of May 5, 1864, 13 Stat. 66 (Minneapolis, St. P. & S. Ste. Marie Ry.); Act of May 12, 1864, 13 Stat. 72 (Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry.); Act of March 3, 1865,
(1888) 3 Dig. Dec. 2d Comp. 299. Followed in (1899) V Dee. of Comp, of Treas. 364; (1911) XVII Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 633; (1914) XXI Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 238; (1917) XXIV Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 193; (1923) 3 Dee. of Comp. Gen. 267; (1931) 10 Dec. of Comp. Gen. 552; (1936) 15 Dee. of Comp. Gen. 614. But see (1900) VII Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 224; (1902) VIII Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 474. 1 ’•
Cf. Fox v. Standard Oil Co., 294 U. S. 87, 96; Armstrong Paint & Varnish Works v. Nu-Enamel Corp., 305 U. S. 315, 329-30.
Broad River Co. v. South Carolina, 281 U. S. 537, 548.
30 F. 2d 655; rehearing denied, 32 F. 2d 698.
United States v. Kansas Pacific Ry. Co., 99 U. S. 455; United States v. Denver Pacific Ry. Co., 99 U. S. 460; United States v. Central Pacific R. Co., 118 U. S. 235.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The land-grant Act of July 25, 1866, and compliance with it constitute a contrast.
I.
The grant was made to induce and aid construction of a railroad between Portland and some point to be selected by the grantees on the Central Pacific to serve the Willamette, Umqua, and Rogue River Valleys in Oregon, and the Sacramento and Shasta Valleys in California, and to be located as shown on maps made by the grantees and filed with the Secretary of the Interior. The railroad was located and constructed, and, since its completion in 1887, has been maintained and kept in use, in accordance with the contract. The aided portion is 663.13 miles long, extending between East Portland, Oregon and Roseville, Cálifomia, a point on the Central Pacific east of Sacramento and about- 111 miles from San Francisco. It is now called the Siskiyou Route.
Section 5 declares that the grantees shall keep “said railroad” in repair and use; that it shall be “a public highway” for the use of the United States; and that property and troops of the United States shall be transported over “said road” at the cost, charge, and expense of the corporations or companies owning or operating “the same,” when so required by the Government.
Plainly the contract applies only to the land-aided railroad between Portland and Roseville; not to the haul between Portland and San Francisco, nor to that between Roseville and San Francisco. The contract neither 'expresses nor implies any special undertaking by the carrier as to charges for government transportation be
The Act of May 23, 1928
The Cascade stretch was not completed until 1926 and, as shown, by the findings, it is made up of branches extended during a number of years prior to 1912 little by little from Black Butte to Kirk to reach productive forest and agricultural areas. See Diagram 1, opposite. At its northerly end á short piece from Springfield Junction to Natron was completed in 1891; in 1912 that branch-was built to Oakridge to serve timber areas on both sides of the Cascades and ultimately to be a part
The Court of Claims found that since the completion of the Cascade stretch “plaintiff has had and now has two complete lines of railroad or routes in Oregon and northern California, one the Siskiyou route . . . serving the valleys and areas described . . . producing much tonnage of timber, agricultural products, livestock, etc., and the other the Cascade route . . . also serving large timber areas and agricultural and livestock producing areas, each of these lines of railroad serving producing areas quite generally at all points. Plaintiff has maintained the Siskiyou route, transporting ¶, substantial and varied traffic and serving a large and important area; The Siski-you route and the Cascade route are two separate and distinct routes or lines of railroad,, necessary for adequate transportation service to the interested areas or territories traversed by such lines.” •
Upon completion of the Siskiyou Route, plaintiff established through rates between Oregon and California points; in order to meet competition of water carriers, it was compelled to make rates between Portland and San Francisco lower than rátes between intermediate points. In 1912, after enactment of the long and short haul clause of § 4, Interstate Commerce Act, the Commission permitted the.maintenance of lower through rates; it found they were forced by water competition and were lower than normal, fair and reasonable rates. In 1920, § 4 was again amended to require the Commission to find that the lower through rates permitted by it were reasonably com
The aided mileage in the Siskiyou Route, 663.16 miles, between Portland and San Francisco, is 85.584 per cent of the total. The aided mileage in the Cascade Route is 258.13 miles, or 35.602 per cent of the total. Charges for the shipments in question applicable via the Cascade Route, less 17.801 per cent (one-half of the per cent of land-grant mileage to total) are substantially less than those via Siskiyou, less 42.792 per cent. The Government did not expressly direct the shipments in question to be hauled over the Cascade Route but it did in fact choose to have them go that way. It was plaintiff’s duty to send them over the route on which the charges would •be lower. The Government refused to pay more than
The findings compel the conclusions that the Cascade stretch between Springfield Junction and Black Butte was not built to better alignment or lessen grades of, add trackage to or otherwise improve, the land-aided, stretch .via Siskiyou between the same points; that it was made up of-branches und extensions constructed from time to time to develop productive areas, to serve local needs and, upon completion, to be a separate and distinct railroad between Springfield Junction and Black Butte, a part of which was also to serve as a section of the transcontinental route above referred to. Clearly it is not a part of the railroad aided by the grant of 1866. It was not constructed to aid transportation on, or as a substitute for, any part of the aided railroad. The fact that it is used to haul government shipments like those in question does not suggest any failure of plaintiff fully to perform the land-grant contract to maintain and keep-in use the aided railroad between Portland and Roseville. There is nothing in the grant,, or in the circumstances under which it was made and complied with, that gives any support to the government’s claim that, from the lower charges applicable to shipments by private parties via Cascade, it is entitled to deduct the higher land-grant percentage applicable to transportation via Siskiyou.
II.
The opinion of the Court of Claims shows its judgment ■to have been reached on an assumption of fact that is not sustained by the findings or otherwise supported. It says: “The method of settlement with plaintiff used by the General Accounting Office in this, case has been consistently and uniformly followed, by the defendant’s ac
There is no .finding to that, effect, but to support the statement the opinion continues: “The principle was stated by the Second Comptroller of the Treasury in a decision April 17'¡1888, as follows: Tf a railroad have a line between two points, aided in whole or in part, and subsequently acquire a new line or lines nonaided between those same points, the accounts for Government transportation, when performed over the new line or lines, shall be stated in the same proportion of aided to non-' aided miles as though the transportation were over the original line.’ ”
The decision referred to has not been reported or anywhere published. It may be found on file in the General Accounting Office, Miscellaneous Claims Division, Yol. 55, p. 422. The passage above-quoted is one of two sentences excerpted from different parts of the document and together published, without more, as paragraph 1160, Vol. 3, p. 299 of Kern’s 1893 Digest of Decisions of the Second Comptroller of the Treasury.
To give weight to the Second Comptroller’s dictum and justify its application to this case, the lower court adds: “This rule as stated has been uniformly observed in the' settlement of accounts for government transportation.of property and troops of the United States, and has been applied in settlement of accounts for transportation ren
■As to that passage, it is to be observed:
The opinion states that the rule, said to have been established by administrative practice, has been applied to transportation rendered by a “shorter line substituted in whole or in part for the longer aided and original line.” The court definitely found that the Cascade stretch is a line separate and distinct from the aided railroad. It was not substituted for or used in lieu of the Siskiyou Route. It was chosen by or for the Government because applicable charges, whatever the basis of calculation of land grant deductions, were less than those for like transportation via the other- stretch.
The cited stipulation between the Northern Pacific Railway and the United States cannot here be made to serve in lieu of special findings of fact.
The .lower court’s statement that, from the completion of the Cascade stretch in 1926 until the shipments here involved, plaintiff acquiesced in the rule adopted by the court is not supported by the findings. But, even if warranted, it is without significance for the question presented in this case did not and could not arise while the rates applicable between Portland and San Francisco were the same.
III.
The Court of Claims failed to find as fact that the Government followed, or the carriers accepted as sound, the dictum excerpted by Kern from the decision of the Second Comptroller of April 17, 1888. To supply the omission, the Government cites in its brief, without adequate statement of the facts or explanation, all administrative rulings and judicial decisions it deems to have any bearing on the question now before us. The former are referred to in footnote 10 of this Court’s opinion.
. The bond-aid contract had been construed to require the Treasury to retain the compensation for government transportation over bond-aided mileage and to apply it in payment of the bonds. United States v. Kansas Pacific Ry. Co., 99 U. S. 455. United States v. Central Pacific R. Co., 118 U. S. 235. These cases definitely established that compensation for government transportation over nonaided extensions of the aided railroads should not be-withheld or applied to pay the bond debt. But the Sec-
More specifically to disclose the point, the Second Comptroller referred to the contractual relations between the Government and the carriers, and asked himself: “Are those relations impaired by the railroad, if it pursues the course which in the present case it contends to be right?” He answered affirmatively and to sustain that view reasoned as follows: To reimburse itself the Government may withhold compensation for “carriage over an aided line.” The security is impaired if the railroad “parallels or duplicates an aided line between two points diverts the government business to that line without in some way recognizing its indebtedness to the government.”
Then, granting that on strictest legal construction of the statutes and of the decisions of this Court there was nothing to preclude such a course by the railroad, the Second Comptroller went on to say: “But the principles of equity and ethics forbid the application of such a construction.” .Invoking the maxim “He that seeks equity must do equity” as being “most forcibly pertinent,” he declared that so long as the railroad is indebted to the Government on account of the bond-aided line, it must
The company claimed that acquisition of Route 2 was necessary because it threatened the existence of the Central Pacific and that Route 3 was acquired for convenience because it had better grades than the original line. It argued that the Government had an interest in the new lines and should be willing to pay entire compensation for carriage over them. Against that contention the Second Comptroller said: “But the acquiring or building by a railroad of new lines connecting two points already connected by the road of the company is one of the ordinary elements of modern railroading, intended to enhance the usefulness of the original line, in the same way as does the replacing of iron by steel rails, or wooden by stone buildings, of hand-brakes by automatic appliances.
He denounced as untenable both the position of the Government and that of the company, and declared “that a medium course is not only practicable and equitable, but is justified under the Acts ... by the changed and apparently unanticipated condition of affairs since the construction of the railroad was contemplated.” He suggested that the company should recognize that the Government’s security should not be impaired by a duplicating line, and that the Government should recognize such an improvement of route as materially lessens distance or difficulties of transportation between two points. Then reasoning in more definite terms, he said:
. “If of the original 140 miles . . . 103 were aided, and the accounts were so stated as to pay the railroad for 37 miles and carry 103 miles to the railroad’s credit, the same ratio should be applied when transportation is over a new line between those points, and 103/140 of the total distance traversed should be considered au aided and should be carried to the railroad’s credit on the Government’s books, compensation for the balance of 37/140 being paid direct to the railroad.”
Following these passages the Second Comptroller said: “If a railroad have a line between two points aided in whole or in part, and subsequently acquire a new line or lines, nonaided, between those same points, the accounts for Government transportation, when performed over the •new line or lines, shall be stated in the same proportion of aided to nonaided miles, as though the transportation were over the original line.” This is the statement found in par. 1160, 3 Dig. 2d Comp. 299, on which the Court of Claims grounded its judgment.
Applying the generalization so attempted' he ruled; “On this basis the accounts of the railroad coming to this bureau will be finally settled. I am of the opinion that
The crucial phrase of the generalization, “a new line or lines nonaided,” would include mileage that is separate and distinct from an aided railroad maintained and kept in use between the same points. But the Second Comptroller, on the grounds that acquisition of new lines^was the same as making additions and betterments to • the original aided line and that Routes 2 and 3 were used to replace Route 1, treated the lines constituting the three routes as a single railroad bond-aided to the extent of 103/140 of its length.
The decision does not relate to the question in this case. Plaintiff does not contend that, if aided mileage of the Siskiyou stretch not used may be attributed to the Cascade stretch that was used to do the hauling in question, the corresponding percentage, 42.792 per cent, should not be applied. Plaintiff’s point is that the findings preclude the assignment of any aided mileage to the nonaided Cascade stretch. The text of the Second Comptroller’s decision shows that he did not decide or deal with any such issue.
2. Ruling of January 5, 1899 by Acting Comptroller Mitchell in a Southern Pacific case, Y Dec., of Comp, of
3. Ruling of November 19, 1900 by Assistant Comptroller Mitchell in an Illinois Central case, VII Dec. of. Comp, of Treas. 224. See Diagram 3. The company operated a land-aided railroad between Cairo and Chicago. It had two routes for passenger travel between-Cairo and St. Louis: the shorter via Carbondale and Pinckneyville, had some unaided mileage; the longer, via Du Quoin, was aided throughout. - The .Government having failed to designate either route and the shorter being the usually traveled one over which all through trains operated, the company carried the government passenger that way: The question was whether the land-grant deduction should be calculated on the percentage of land-aided mileage in the route used or on the greater percentage in the other route. Assistant Comptroller Mitchell did not follow the general statement of Second Comptroller Butler in the Central Pacific case but held that, as the Government did not choose between the routes, the deduction should be calculated' on the mileage used.
In the list of administrative rulings, cited by the Government, this is the first one that involves construction of a land-grant Act. Land-aid differs essentially from bond-aid. Contracts in respect of the latter require government transportation over aided mileage at “fair and reasonable rates” and that the compensation earned be applied on the bond debt. No diminution of charges for government transportation is exacted. The railroad re
4. Ruling of January 21, 1902 by Comptroller Trace-well in a Great Northern case, VIH Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 474. See Diagram 4. The Government shipped-
est route, “c”; it was generally used for like service-. The question was whether land-grant deduction should be calculated on the percentage of the shorter line actually used or the higher percentage of the longer one not used.
The decision, as well ’as the quoted generalization, of Second Comptroller Butler are in terms broad enough to
If followed, this ruling would require land-grant deduction in the case at bar to be calculated on the land-grant mileage of the Cascade Route used. Compare Diagrams 1 and 4.
5. Ruling of February 28, 1911 by Comptroller Trace-well in a St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern (Missouri Pacific) case, XVII. Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 633. See Diagram 5. The company had a land-aided railroad between Birds Point, Missouri (on the west bank of the Mississippi opposite Cairo, Illinois), and Texarkana, Arkansas, via Dexter, Missouri. Government shipments from Cairo to Dexter were generally .transported across the river at Birds Point and thence by the land-aided line. On Government shipments between Cairo and Texarkana by that route, 99.247 per cent was land aided. Because of a change in the bed of the river, it was necessary to haul the shipments in question via Thebes and Illmo. The land-grant deduction applicable to that route was 81.234 per cent. The railroad insisted, that, having been forced to give- up the old route? it should not be required. to make deduction for the nonaidgd mileage .between Cairo and Dexter via Thebes. But the Comptroller re
There is a fundamental difference between that case and the one before us. The carrier had abandoned the land-aided route for hauls between Cairo and Dexter. The Southern Pacific kept the Siskiyou Route in use.
6. Ruling of October 19, 1914 by Comptroller Downey in an Atchison case, XXI Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 238. See Diagram 6. The company has a line in Kansas between Lawrence and Chanute, land-aided to the extent of 91.3 miles and unaided as to 3.02 miles, part of the distance between Chanute and' Humboldt. It has another line between Atchison and the Colorado boundary via Topeka and Emporia, all of which is land-aided. To connect these two aided' lines there was built an unaided branch between Lawrence and Topeka and later another between Ottawa and Emporia. The Government shipped cement from Chanute to Holbrook, Arizona. Earlier the shipment would have moved through Humboldt, Ottawa, Lawrence, Topeka, Emporia, and thence to point of des-
tination. But, because of the construction of the branch between Ottawa and Emporia, the shipment in question was hauled over that line. By this route the haul be
As the ground on which that -ruling rests is abandonment of a part of the aided line, it gives no support to the judgment before us. -
7. Ruling of October 1, 1917 by Comptroller Warwick in a Missouri Pacific case, XXIV Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 193. The published report does not disclose the physical situation. It is indicatéd by Diagram 7 prepared on the basis of information found in an unpublished opinion in •the same case rendered May 8, 1917. The Government shipped Stone from Batesville, Arkansas on an unaided line via Kansas City to Leavenworth Penitentiary, Kansas. An older route between the same points was via White River -Branch .Connection, Cairo Branch Connection,. Carondolet Branch Connection, Pacific, and Kansas City. The ratio applicable in computing land-grant deduction for shipments hauled that way is 17.933 per cent. The Warden at Leavenworth paid the company for the service in question over the unaided line, without any land-grant deduction. However, the Comptroller held
It requires no discussion to show that the direct route used should have been chosen for the transportation in question. Thé Comptroller cited no land-grant contract to support the rule that he made applicable to future-' shipments. - Nor did he cite Second Comptroller Butler’s ruling or any case — and so far as disclosed by diligent research, briefs of counsel and this Court’s opinion just announced — there is none that tends to sustain so incongruous an attribution of aided mileage not used to an unaided route used.
8. Ruling of October 27, 1923 by Comptroller McCarl. in a Southern Pacific case, 3 Comp. Gen. 267. See Diagram 8. This case involved a government shipment from Marshall (Spokane), Washington, to Roseburg, Oregon. It was routed over an unaided line of the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Company subject to an equalization agreement that charges would not exceed the amount payable had the service been by the land-grant line yielding, the lowest net rate. The Northerns Pacific line between Marshall and Portland via Pasco and Tacoma was land-aided.' Later there was built between-Pasco and Portland a line jointly owned by the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern; it is a part of the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway. Upon completion of', that line, the Northern Pacific canceled its rates applicable between Marshall and Portland by its aided fine through Tacoma and announced that the rates in its tariffs would
over the original land-grant line,” and directed that land-grant deduction should be allowed.
That case differs from the one át bar in that the Northern Pacific, having no tariff applicable to the shipment.
9. The decisions in Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. United States are next in chronological order. See Diagram 9,
on p. 428, On government request, the company transported two Marines by through passenger train from St. Paul to Seattle. The Northern Pacific land grant
The issue in the case was whether, in addition to an undisputed deduction ,of 3 per cent, thére should be .deducted from the full commercial fare, $63.16, a land-grant percentage of 46.001 per. cent,, as claimed by the company, leaving a balance of $33.09, or 47.285 per cent, as claimed by the Government, leaving a balance of $32.29. Thus the amount in issue as to each passenger was 80 cents.
The controversy arose from the - fact that the Government attributed to the route' used the stretches of aided mileage between Little Falls and Staples via Brainerd and between Palmer Junction and Auburn via Meeker, amounting in all to 94.24 miles.
The Government’s theory was that the new unaided lines were “merely alternate or lieu routes — routes estab-
10. Ruling of June 23, 1931 by Comptroller General .McCarl in a Missouri Pacific case, 10 Comp. Gen. 552. See Diagram 10. The company constructed an unaided cut-off between Jedburg Junction and Eureka Junction, intermediate points on its land-aided line between St. Louis and Pacific. The distance between them via the cut-off is 2.99 miles. Over >the old land-aided line via Glencoe, it is 4.93 miles. That' track was still in use for some local trams. At anothér place on its line, within the city of St. Louis, the company substituted 0.68 of a mile of nonaided line for a longer one which is aided. The Comptroller General held that the aided mileage not used should be attributed to the cut-off mileage used. He said: “It would seem to.be too clear for serious argument that
It requires imagination to discover in that case anything in principle or in fact that will support the conclusion reached by the Court of Claims in the case at bar.
11. Ruling of January 16, 1936 by Comptroller General McCarl, 15 Comp. Gen. 614. It has no bearing upon the case at bar. The question was whether, in computing percentage of lan'd grant deduction, the line of the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway between Pasco and Portland (see Diagram 8), owned jointly by the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern, is to be regarded as a Northern Pacific line. The Comptroller General answered in the affirmative.
IV.
Theré is apparent attempt to draw from the Act of 1928 some-support for the construction on which this Court affirms the judgment below. But, so far as concerns the question in this case, that Act does not indicate any congressional interpretation of the land-grant Act. of 1866. The sole .purpose of that measure was to substitute .50 per cent deduction-in place of free transportation; it was passed in order to relieve the Southern Pacific of a burden to which other aided railroads were not subject. When it was enacted, May 23, 1928, only eight of the rulings above referred to had been made; two related to bond-aid contracts and are not in point; two were in favor of the railroads and do not support the judgment in this case. And, as above shown, none gives any support to
reversed. 22 F. 2d 858 (1927). That case was not decided in the circuit court of appeals until 1929, 30 F. 2d 655. If the Act could be deemed to be a construction of
Y.
The land-grant line has been kept in use. The contract is that, where government transportation is wholly over that line, deduction of 50 per cent shall be made and that, where it is partly over that line, there shall be deducted the percentage that aided mileage'used is of total haul. But this Court holds that, even if the Government elects to have its freight move over a separate and distinct unaided railroad, the plaintiff is bound to apply the percentages applicable to charges for transportation over the aided line. Thus the. decision implies a formula or rule to the effect that a land-grant deduction once found applicable to charges for transportation over a route made up'of aided and unaided mileage between two points is to be applied to all subsequent government shipments between those points, even if the route actually used includes no aided mileage. There is nothing in this contract or in any of the railroad land-grant Acts, either as written or as hitherto construed, to warrant that construction.
I am of opinion that the judgment should be reversed.
Lake Superior & M. R. Co. v. United States, 93 U. S. 442. Union Pacific R. Co. v. United States, 104 U. S. 662, 664. United States v. Central Pacific R. Co., 118 U. S. 235, 238. Burke v. Southern Pacific R. Co., 234 U. S. 669, 680. United States v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 256 U. S. 51, 64. United States v. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co., 279 U. S. 401.
“And be it further enacted, That the grants aforesaid are made upon the condition that the said'companies shall keep said railroad .' . . in repair and use, and shall at all times transport the mails upon said railroad ... for the government of the United States, when required so to do by any, department thereof, and that the government shall at all times have the preference in the use of said railroad . . . therefor at fair and reasonable rates of compensation, not to exceed the rates paid by private parties for the same kind of service. . And said railroad shall be and Veniain a public highway for the use of the government of the United States, free of all toll or other charges upon the transportation of the property or troops of the United States; and the same shall be transported over said road at the cost, charge, and expense of the corporations or companies owning or operating the same, when so required by'the government of the United States.” 14 Stat. 239, 240-241.
“An Act For the relief of the land-grant railroad operated between the station formerly known as East Portland, in . . . Oregon, and Roseville, in . . . California. Be it enacted . . . That the land-grant railroad heretofore operated, and now being operated, between the station formerly known as East Portland, in . . . Oregon, and Roseville, in . . . California, shall hereafter receive compensation for transportation of property and troops of the United States at the same rate as is paid to land-grant railroads organized under the Land Grant Act of March 3, 1863, and the Act of July! 27, Í866 (chapter 278) [pursuant to which such railroads transport government property at a charge of 50 per cent of the regular tariffs]: Provided, that the Congress hereby reserves the right at any time by law to prescribe such charges as it deems advisable for such government transportation.”
The first sentence reads: “The Central Pacific Railroad Company should recognize the Government’s demand that its security for repayment of money advanced in aid of the construction of the original line be not impaired or whittled away by a duplicating of the line.”
See M. E. Blatt Co. v. United States, 305 U. S. 267, 277. Stone v. United States, 164 U. S. 380, 383. Crocker v. United States, 240 U. S. 74, 78. Brothers v. United States, 250 U. S. 88., 93. United States v. Wells, 283 U. S. 102, 120. United States v. Esnault-Pelterie, 299 U. S.
The footnote reads: “(1888) 3 Dig. Dee. 2d Comp. 299. Followed in (1899) V Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 364; (1911) XVII Dee. of Comp, of Treas. 633; (1914) XXI Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 238; (1917) XXIV Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 193; (1923) 3 Dec., of Comp. Gen. 267; (1931) 10 Dec. of Comp. Gen. 552; (1936) 15 Dec. of Comp. Gen. 614. But see (1900) VII Dee. of Comp, of Treas. 224; (1902) VIII Dec. of Comp, of Treas. 474.”
And then, the decision quotes a passage from a message of President Cleveland, then very recently sent to Congress ¡with the report of three commissioners appointed to investigate the affairs of railroad companies that had received government aid, declaring that the acts were passed upon the theory that the roads should be constructed “according to the common rules of business, fairness, and duty, and that their ability to pay their debts should not be impaired by unfair manipulation's.”
Italics in quotations are added.
Under our decisions, the contract extended only to the aided railroad. United States v. Kansas Pacific Ry. Co., 99 U. S. 455. United States v. Central Pacific R. Co., 118 U. S. 235. As Route 2 had no aided mileage and Route 3 only 63 of its 151 miles, the Comptroller, erred in treating the lines constituting the three routes as a single railroad.
Between Minneapolis and St. Paul the Northern Pacific uses, under an operating contract, 8.23 miles, of land-aided road belonging to another company. That stretch was not involved in the litigation.
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