Illinois Cent. R.R. Co. v. Miss. R.R. Com. , 143 Miss. 805 ( 1926 )


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  • * Corpus Juris-Cyc References: Carriers, 10CJ, p. 54, n.13, 20; p. 410, n.40, 42; Certiorari, 11CJ, p. 123, n.89; p. 125, n. 47 New. The Mississippi Cottonseed Crushers' Association filed a complaint before the Mississippi Railroad Commission against all the railroads in the state, charging that the freight rates on cottonseed on intrastate shipments were unreasonable; and the Jackson Traffic Bureau filed a complaint also to the same effect.

    Thereupon the railroads were cited to appear and show cause why the rates should not be revised and reduced as to cottonseed in carload lots on intrastate shipments. In due season the railroad commission heard proof, and after considering it at its December, 1925, meeting, the commission made an order fixing the rates in detail, greatly reducing the rates from the rates which had been in force for many years prior to the making of this order. Thereupon the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the Yazoo Mississippi Valley Railroad Company presented their petition to the circuit court of Hinds county praying for a writ ofcertiorari requiring that the Mississippi Railroad Commission bring before the circuit court of Hinds county the records and proceedings in this matter of freight rates.

    The appellant, Alabama Vicksburg Railway Company, adopted the petition thus presented, and was permitted by the court to become a party in the cause. The writ of certiorari operating as asupersedeas was granted by the circuit court. Upon the execution of certain bonds, *Page 814 the record in its entirety was brought up to the circuit court. Thereupon the representatives of the Mississippi Cotton Crushers' Association, Jackson Traffic Bureau, and Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation petitioned the court for leave to intervene on the motions to quash the writ of certiorari, and supersedeas, in defending the validity of the order of the Mississippi Railroad Commission, which leave was granted.

    The commission and the above-named interveners then moved the court to quash and dismiss the writ of certiorari andsupersedeas, alleging eight causes for quashing the writ ofcertiorari, but we shall quote the fifth as embracing the question here presented to this court, which is as follows:

    "(5) The action of the commission in said matter and the determination and order therein complained of were legislative in their nature and character, and the actions of the commission therein were the exercise of a legislative function, which is not reviewable by certiorari."

    The circuit court, having the entire record before it, quashed and set aside the writ of certiorari and supersedeas, dismissed the petition for the writ, and affirmed the order of the railroad commission; and the railroad companies, who petitioned for the writ, were granted an appeal to this court with supersedeas.

    The counsel for the several railroad companies insist here as their main contention in this case that the whole proceeding before the railroad commission was a judicial proceeding because it was a proceeding which, in effect, declared unreasonable the rates on cottonseed which had been in existence for many years in the state, on the theory that the proceeding before the railroad commission was a judicial one because necessarily it was determined that the rates hitherto charged were unreasonable, and that because in the exercise of its legislative function it called into play judicial acts, that therefore the case is reviewable by the courts of the land. *Page 815

    It might be well to add this statement, that the Mississippi Railroad Commission seems to have gone into the question of the rate to be established very fully. The record before us discloses that many pages of testimony were taken, fifteen or sixteen witnesses were examined, and the commission appears to have proceeded with due deliberation. But however that may be, the circuit court was correct in holding that the writ ofcertiorari did not lie to review the action of the commission herein, for the reason that the schedule of rates to be charged in the future on cottonseed from points within the state to other points within the state was a legislative rule or order adopted by the commission, which is not subject to review by the courts.

    The writ of certiorari in this case was granted under sections 72 and 73 of Hemingway's Code (sections 90 and 91, Code of 1906), which provide that the judge of the circuit court may grant the writ, and further provide upon hearing, when the case has been removed by certiorari, the court is confined to the examination of questions of law arising or appearing on the face of the record or proceedings; and, in case of reversal, the circuit court should enter such judgment as the justice should have entered, or may try the case anew on its merits. The following section 73 provides that like proceedings may be had to review the judgment of all tribunals inferior to the circuit court, whether the appeal be provided by law from the judgment sought to be reviewed or not.

    Sections 7627 and 7634 of Hemingway's Code (sections 4842 and 4849, Code of 1906) define the powers and method of procedure conferred upon the railroad commission by the legislature, and, among other things, give the commission the power to revise tariffs, and, in so doing, the commission is required to take into consideration "the character and nature of the service to be rendered and the entire business of the railroad or other common carrier and its earnings from all kinds of traffic, *Page 816 and shall so revise, fix, and regulate the charges as to allow reasonable compensation for the services to be rendered. It shall exercise a watchful and careful supervision over the tariffs of charges of every railroad and other common carrier, and shall revise the same from time to time, as justice to the public and the railroad and other common carriers may require, and shall increase or reduce any of the rates as experience and business operations show to be just."

    The railroad commission has no implied power. See Gulf ShipIsland Railroad Co. v. Railroad Commission, 94 Miss. 134, 49 So. 118; State v. Y. M.V.R.R. Co., 87 Miss. 679, 40 So. 263.

    The counsel for the railroad companies contend that the order or rule or schedule of tariffs revised and adopted by the railroad commission is divisible into two parts; the first portion of the order finding that the then existing rates were unreasonable is the judicial ascertainment of a then existing fact; that in so doing, the commission functioned judicially; that the remaining portion of the order fixing rates for the future was a legislative act; and then concede "that the latter is purely legislative and cannot ordinarily be reviewed bycertiorari though the rule is not without limitations and exceptions." The counsel's main contention for the review of this case is based upon the fact that the public interest was not considered in that the rates complained of destroyed competition from points without the state in the cottonseed industry. We may seriously question whether or not this raises any question of law which would be properly reviewable by the courts, but we shall not undertake to go into that matter, because we think the circuit court had no judicial act of the railroad commission before it, and properly quashed or dismissed the writ.

    There is no question here but that the commission fixed a schedule of rates to be observed in the future, and necessarily considered the former rate which had been *Page 817 in existence for a long time prior thereto. Counsel for appellant lay much stress upon a single sentence from the case ofInterstate Commerce Commission v. C.N.O. T.P. Railroad Co.,167 U.S. 479, 17 S.Ct. 900, 42 L.Ed. 243, wherein Mr. Justice BREWER, as the organ of the court, used this sentence in the course of his discussion:

    "It is one thing to inquire whether the rates which have been charged and collected are reasonable — that is a judicial act; but an entirely different thing to prescribe rates which shall be charged in the future — that is a legislative act" — citing numerous authorities.

    We think too much importance is attached to this declaration, and that the meaning of the court is obvious when it is considered that it was holding that Congress had not vested the Interstate Commerce Commission with the power to prescribe rates. Taking this language of Mr. Justice BREWER in connection with the context, it is manifest that he was in nowise attempting to hold that the act of Congress authorized the commission to revise or prescribe rates. As evidence of this, statutes creating railroad commissions in various states are quoted in the opinion, and especially those which gave the power to fix or revise rates, concluding with the statement that, "Congress has not conferred upon the commission the legislative power of prescribing rates, either maximum or minimum or absolute."

    The supreme court of the United States passed upon this precise question in the case of Louisville Nashville Railroad Co. v.Garrett, 231 U.S. 298, 34 S.Ct. 48, 58 L.Ed. 229, which case involved an order of the railroad commission of Kentucky, wherein it was held that prescribing rates for the future is a legislative and not a judicial act; that in prescribing intrastate rates the legislature of the state may act directly, or, in the absence of constitutional restriction, it may commit the authority to so do to a subordinate body; that the legislature may determine what are reasonable rates, either directly *Page 818 or through a subordinate body, and adopt methods like those of judicial tribunals to elicit facts without invading the judicial function, and we think the following from the opinion is decisive:

    "The contention is that, before the commission makes such an order, it is required to exercise judicial functions. It is first to determine whether the carrier has been exacting more than is just and reasonable; it is to give notice and a hearing; it is to `hear such statements, arguments or evidence offered by the parties' as it may deem relevant; and, it is in case it determines that the carrier is `guilty of extortion' that it is to prescribe the just and reasonable rate. Still, the hearing and determination, viewed as prerequisite to the fixing of rates, are merely preliminary to the legislative act. To this act, the entire proceeding led; and it was this consequence which gave to the proceeding its distinctive character. Very properly, and it might be said, necessarily — even without the express command of the statute — would the commission ascertain whether the former, or existing, rate, was unreasonable before it fixed a different rate. And in such an inquiry, for the purpose of prescribing a rule for the future, there would be no invasion of the province of the judicial department. Even where it is essential to maintain strictly the distinction between the judicial and other branches of the government, it must still be recognized that the ascertainment of facts, or the reaching of conclusions upon evidence taken in the course of a hearing of parties interested, may be entirely proper in the exercise of executive or legislative, or distinguished from judicial, powers. The legislature, had it seen fit, might have conducted similar inquiries through committees of its members, or specially constituted bodies, upon whose report as to the reasonableness of existing rates it would decide whether or not they were extortionate and whether other rates should be established, and it might have used methods like those of judicial tribunals in the endeavor to elicit the facts. It is the nature *Page 819 of the final act' that determines `the nature of the previous inquiry.' Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line, 211 U.S. 210, 227 [29 S.Ct. 67, 70 (53 L.Ed. 150)]."

    Our own court in the case of Cumberland Telephone TelegraphCo. v. State ex rel. Potter, Attorney-General, 135 Miss. 835, 100 So. 378, held that the act of the railroad commission in fixing a future rate was a legislative one. Mr. Justice HOLDEN, speaking for the court, said:

    "The attorney-general contends the writ of certiorari will lie because the order of the railroad commission isquasi-judicial in its character, and relies upon the case ofGulf Company v. Adams, 85 Miss. 772, 38 So. 348, to sustain his position. We have given exhaustive consideration to the case before us, and have carefully reviewed all of the authorities cited by counsel on either side, and we have reached the conclusion the position taken by the appellant is well grounded, and that the writ of certiorari will not lie to review an order of the railroad commission fixing rates to be charged by the telephone company.

    "We think this view is sound, and may be rested upon the sole ground that the order of the railroad commission fixing the telephone rates was a legislative act pure and simple, and, under sections 90 and 91, Code of 1906 (sections 72 and 73, Hemingway's Code), no appeal, or certiorari, lies from the order of the commission while exercising a legislative function. The authorities overwhelmingly support this view, and Gulf Co. v.Adams, supra, is not in conflict therewith. I.C.R. Co. v.Dodd, 105 Miss. 23, 61 So. 743, 49 L.R.A. (N.S.) 565; Board v. Melton, 123 Miss. 615, 86 So. 369; 5 R.C.L. 252; Wulzen v.Board, 101 Cal. 15, 35 P. 353, 40 Am. St. Rep. 17, note pages 29, 34, and 36; Degiovanni v. Public Service Commission,45 Nev. 74, 197 P. 582; 4 R.C.L. 608; Prentis v. Atlantic CoastLine R. Co., 211 U.S. 210, 29 S.Ct. 67, 53 L.Ed. 151; L. N.R.Co. v. Garrett, 231 U.S. 298, 34 S.Ct. 48, 58 L.Ed. 229. . . . *Page 820

    "In the Gulf Co. v. Adams case, it would appear at first sight that the court allowed the writ of certiorari to review the order of the railroad commission fixing a rate for privilege taxation, and in that way similar to the case before us, but on a careful review of the Gulf Company case it will be observed the commission was there adjudicating a present or past fact, in that it decided the classification of the railroad for privilege taxes. There was a dispute and a judgment there; an administrative or legislative order here. The board did not undertake to fix any rates of taxation, but merely determined the class of the railroad for privilege taxation, which taxation was fixed upon that class by the legislature, and not the commission. This was the exercise of a quasi-judicial jurisdiction."

    The railroad commission in the instant case fixed a schedule of rates to be charged for transporting cottonseed intrastate to be observed in the future, and the fixation of this rate was a matter which the legislature may have itself done by the enactment of a statute. As was held in the Garrett case, supra, the legislature may commit the delicate duty of passing this character of statute or order to a body or board called a railroad commission; and when it fixes the rate, it must of necessity be a legislative act for we do not look to the processes used by the legislative body, but to the completed act itself, and by that we must say whether or not the thing done is legislative or judicial.

    The railroad commission fixed a tariff for future observance, and in so doing unsettled another tariff which had been in existence for a number of years, and inferentially in so doing evidently thought the existing rates were not reasonable, but we cannot inquire into the mind of a legislative body where no fraud is charged to determine the nature and quality of the act. The result in the instant case of the investigation was the enactment of a law fixing a schedule of rates to be observed in the future within the state of Mississippi. This power had *Page 821 been delegated by the legislature to the railroad commission, and the court would have no more right to review this act than it would have by certiorari to review it if the same tariff had been adopted by the legislature itself. It is the same as if it had been adopted by the legislature notwithstanding judicial processes were used in the fixation of its rule or law or order. We must not look in this case to the initiation of the proceeding, but we must look to the conclusion of the matter; and the thing evolved finally by the railroad commission is to determine the nature of the proceeding. There is no dispute in the authorities. It is conceded here that fixation of rates by the legislature or by the creature of the legislature is a legislative function; and the fact, if it be a fact, that judicial processes were used in arriving at the proper rate to be fixed, does not change same from legislative to judicial.

    The circuit court properly declined jurisdiction to entertain the writ of certiorari in this case.

    Affirmed.