Western Pacific Railroad Company v. United States

Citation86 S.Ct. 338,15 L.Ed.2d 294,382 U.S. 237
Decision Date07 December 1965
Docket NumberNo. 12,12
PartiesThe WESTERN PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY et al., Appellants, v. UNITED STATES et al
CourtUnited States Supreme Court

Walter G. Treanor, San Francisco, Cal., for appellants.

Paul Bender, Washington, D.C., for appellants, pro hac vice, by special leave of Court.

Robert W. Ginnane, Washington, D.C., and Frank S. Farrell, St. Paul, Minn., for appellees.

Mr. Justice STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.

Section 3(4) of the Interstate Commerce Act, as amended, 54 Stat. 902, 49 U.S.C. § 3(4) (1964 ed.), commands that 'All carriers subject to the provisions of this chapter * * * shall not discriminate in their rates, fares, and charges between connecting lines * * *.'1 The meaning of the term 'connecting lines' is the crucial question in this controversy between the Western Pacific Railroad Company, on the one hand, and the Union Pacific Railroad Company and the Northern Pacific Railway Company, on the other. Western Pacific contends that it is a 'connecting line' in relation to these carriers and that, therefore, it is entitled to invoke against them the provisions of § 3(4) prohibiting dis- criminatory rates. The Interstate Commerce Commission and the District Court held otherwise.

Western Pacific filed a complaint with the Commission, alleging, in part, that Union Pacific and Northern Pacific practice rate discrimination against it. 2 The alleged discrimination consists in the refusal of these carriers, except with respect to a few commodities, to enter into joint through rates via Portland, Oregon, with the route of which Western Pacific is part, although they maintain a full line of such rates with a competitor, the Southern Pacific Company. The hearing examiner found in favor of Western Pacific, but Division 2 of the Commission reversed. The Division found both that Western Pacific could not invoke the provisions of § 3(4) because it was not a 'connecting line,' and that, even if it were, the evidence did not establish the 'similarity of circumstances and conditions' that would compel rate treatment equal to that accorded to Southern Pacific. The Division refused to accord Western Pacific 'connecting line' status on the ground that it neither physically connects with the allegedly discriminating carriers at the point of discrimination, nor participates in existing through routes with them through that point. Western Pacific R. Co. v. Camas Prairie R. Co., 316 I.C.C. 795. When the full Commission denied further hearing, Western Pacific brought this action in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California to set aside the Commission's order. The three-judge court dismissed the complaint solely on the ground that Western Pacific was not a 'connecting line.' Western Pacific R. Co. v. United States, D.C., 230 F.Supp. 852. It agreed with the Commission's limited definition of the term and said, 'Any further liberalization of the present definition will have to come from the Supreme Court.' Id., at 855. We noted probable jurisdiction. 379 U.S. 956, 85 S.Ct. 656, 13 L.Ed.2d 553.

Analysis of 'connecting line' status in this case is closely tied to the geographical, structural, and economic relationships among the railroads involved. Union Pacific, Northern Pacific and their short-line connections provide exclusive rail service between many points in the Pacific Northwest and Portland, Oregon. From Portland, the two competitive routes in question descend, at times parallel, at times intertwined, to Southern California. The route closest to the seacoast consists largely of Southern Pacific. To the east of this route lies the so-called Bieber route whose completion in 1931 was authorized by the Commission to provide competition with Southern Pacific. 3 The Bieber route is composed of the end-to-end connections of three different companies: the Great Northern Railway from Portland to Bieber, California; the Western Pacific from Bieber to Stockton; and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe from Stockton to Southern California. Thus the Bieber route and Southern Pacific both connect with the allegedly discriminating carriers at Portland where facilities for the interchange of traffic exist.

The Bieber route carriers presently enjoy joint through rates among themselves. Moreover, the other two participants in that route have expressed willingness to join with Western Pacific in the joint rates it seeks with Union Pacific and Northern Pacific. Union Pacific and Northern Pacific, for over 50 years, have maintained through routes and a full line of joint rates with Southern Pacific via Portland. They have refused, however, except for a few commodities, to offer through routes and joint rates on traffic moving on the Bieber route through Portland. The joint rates established with Southern Pacific are lower than the combination of local rates that would otherwise apply. Since the Bieber route carriers can offer joint rates only with respect to a few commodities, they cannot match the lower rates offered by Southern Pacific to shippers of most commodities between points in California and points in the Pacific Northwest exclusively served by Union Pacific and Northern Pacific via Portland.

The Commission and the District Court held, however, that even under these circumstances, Western Pacific is not a 'connecting line' eligible to complain of the alleged discrimination. In argument here the Commission and the appellee railroads contend that to qualify for that status Western Pacific must show more than that it participates in an established through route that connects with Union Pacific and Northern Pacific, and that all the participants in the route stand willing to cooperate with these carriers in establishing joint through rates.4 We are urged to hold that to qualify under § 3(4) as a complainant 'connecting line' a railroad must either itself make a direct connection with the discriminating carrier, or be part of a through route that already includes the carrier. We cannot accept such a construction of the statute.

The literal meaning of the statute does not require that construction. To be sure, the term 'connecting lines' suggests the requirement of an actual physical connection between the complainant and the discriminating carrier. The term 'line,' however, admits of more than a single meaning limited to the track owned exclusively by one railroad company. It may also be interpreted reasonably to include a functional railroad unit such as the Bieber through route involved here. Moreover, all parties in this litigation recognize that in Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. United States, 284 U.S. 288, 52 S.Ct. 171, 76 L.Ed. 298, this Court rejected the contention that 'connecting line' is a term limited to the meaning that the statutory language might initially suggest. Mr. Justice Brandeis, speaking for a unanimous Court, wrote, 'There is no warrant for limiting the meaning of 'connecting lines' to those having a direct physical connection * * *. The term is commonly used as referring to all the lines making up a through route.' Id., at 293, 52 S.Ct. at 173.

There also is no warrant for limiting the meaning of 'connecting lines' to the lines making up a through route that already includes the discriminating carrier. We have been referred to no previous judicial or administrative decisions compelling that conclusion. The Atlantic Coast Line case, supra, imposes no such limitation. It established that the term 'connecting lines' extends beyond physical connection to encompass lines participating in a through route, but it does not even hint of any limitation on the nature of the through route, much less hold that the through route must already include the discriminating carrier.5 Our subsequent definition of 'through route' in Thompson v. United States, 343 U.S. 549, 72 S.Ct. 978, 96 L.Ed. 1134 adds no more to an analysis of 'connecting line' under § 3(4). In that case, which arose under §§ 15(3) and 15(4) of the Act, we held that the Commission had improperly applied the test of the existence of a through route: '* * * whether the participating carriers hold themselves out as offering through transportation service.' 343 U.S., at 557, 72 S.Ct., at 983. Section 3(4) does not use the term 'through route.' But even if, after Atlantic Coast Line, a carrier may qualify as a 'connecting line' if it is one of the 'lines making up a through route,' 284 U.S., at 293, 52 S.Ct., at 173, the Thompson test offers no solution to the problem presented here. It simply does not speak to the question whether the discriminating carrier must be one of the participating carriers offering through service in conjunction with the carrier seeking 'connecting line' status.

The reason the issue presented in this case has not been decided before now 6 may be that discrimination of the sort complained of here is uncommon. In most instances it is to the advantage of railroads such as Union Pacific and Northern Pacific to encourage the movement of traffic over their lines from as many sources as possible.7 Moreover, when such discrimination does occur the railroad connecting directly with the discriminating carrier is likely to take the lead as complainant.

In the absence of any settled construction of § 3(4), then, its manifest purpose to deprive railroads of discretion to apportion economic advantage among competitors at a common interchange must be the basic guide to decision. Just such discretion would be conferred upon railroads in a position to discriminate if we were to hold that their decisions not to enter through route relationships with connecting through routes could bar nonadjacent participants in such through routes from eligibility to complain. Indeed such a holding would result in an anomalous set of circumstances clearly illustrated in the present context. No one doubts that Southern Pacific, by virtue of its direct physical con- nection, would...

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