(dissenting.) The finding of facts by the commission is adopted for the purposes of this opinion, together with some further facts not inconsistent therewith, proven by the testimony, or of which judicial notice is taken.
It is a legitimate rule in the construction of language employed in statutes that attention should be given to results which will follow from a proposed interpretation, and if those results are contrary to the general purpose and object of the act, and are plainly' seen to be such as were not intended, it should be rejected, unless the terms employed are too rigid to bear some other interpretation in harmony with the general policy of the law. The object sought to be attained is the guiding light always, and in the construction of this statute, couched as it is broad and general language, it should be kept constantly in sight. For reasons presently to be stated, it appears to me that the conclusions of the commission, and the order founded thereon, are productive of results quite different from those intended. The general purpose of the interstate commerce act was to prevent the practice of extortion by common carriers in the transportation of freight and passengers between the states by the imposition of unjust and unreasonable rates. This is well known as matter of history, and the courts take judicial notice of it. The law was passed for the protection of the public, and not for the benefit, or to redress any grievance, of common carriers. They were known to be able to take care of themselves. And the closing paragraph of the first section sounds the keynote to the whole act when it says that “every unjust and unreasonable charge for such service is prohibited and declared to be unlawful.”
And this suggests a question somewhat preliminary in its nature, *1013concerning the purpose of the proceeding, and the province and duty of the court in dealing with it, which appears to me to deserve consideration. The act provides by the thirteenth section that any person, corporation, or association, or any body politic, may make complaint to the commission for any violation by-a common carrier of its provisions. Notice is thereupon required to be given by the commission to the carrier of the charges preferred, and it is called upon to satisfy the complaint, or give its reason for refusal. If the earlier makes reparation for the injury complained of, it is relieved from all liability to the complainant for the particular violation complained of. If this is not done, or if there shall be reasonable ground for investigating the subject of complaint, it is the duty of the commission to investigate it. The commission may also institute an inquiry upon its own motion in the same manner and to the same effect as though complaint had been made. In the latter case it is clearly implied, as well from the language of iiie act as from the nature of the proceeding, that any order it may make as the result of its inquiry must be upon notice of the particular violation which is charged against the carrier. However the proceeding may be commenced, the commission is required by the fourteenth section, if it makes investigation, to make report of the facts found by it, and its conclusions thereon, and its recommendation in respect, to the reparation which should be made to any injured party, if there be such. By the fifteenth section, if the commission finds the charges to- have been sustained, it is required to give a copy of its report to the carrier, together with a notice that it desist from the violation charged, and make the reparation it has recommended to be made to any injured party. If the carrier complies with this notice, it is thereupon relieved from any further liability or penalty for such particular violation of law. Then, by the sixteenth section, provision is made for an appeal to the courts in case of noncompliance with the notice of its duty <*njoined in respect of the matters charged against the carrier by the commission. If that refusal is in respect to a matter not triable by jury, the commission, or any party interested in the order or requirement it has made, may apply to the circuit court in equity upon petition for such order or process, mandatory or otherwise, as shall be necessaiy and appropriate to compel obedience to the order of the commission; and if, upon due hearing, the court shall find that the carrier has been guilty of the matter charged, and the order or requirement of the commission was such as the law required in such case, it will enforce obedience accordingly. It is to be observed that the whole scope of the duty thus imposed upon the court is the trial of the questions of fact and law involved in the inquiry as to whether the respondent was by the particular order of the commission required to execute a duty enjoined upon common carriers by the statute in the circumstances as they are found by the court to hav-e existed; and, if that inquiry results in- such a finding, then, also, in awarding the proper process for compulsion. The court is not authorized to make any general order or decree upon the matters at large as they shall appear before it, but is *1014given power simply to award its process if it judicially approves the order of the commission. If it does not find it to have been warranted by law, its power and duty are at an end.
In this case the record indicates that the complaint was made by parties residing at Ionia. After setting forth the facts upon which it was based, it summarizes the grounds thereof by alleging that the respondent was by its practice violating the second, third, and fourth sections of the act, and prayed that the respondent should be ordered to discontinue free cartage of freight for the merchants of Grand Eapids, or to render like service to the merchants of Ionia, or for other appropriate relief. The commission, after finding the facts, and giving its reasons for its conclusion, held that it followed therefrom that the defendant was guilty of violating the long and short haul clause of the fourth section, and that consignees at Ionia were overcharged to the extent indicated. The complaint was sustained on that ground, and the commission declared its purpose to order accordingly, without passing on the other points. The inhibition of the long and short haul clause is against the charging “any greater compensation in the aggregate for the transportation of passengers or the like kind of property under substantially similar circumstances and conditions for a shorter than for a longer distance,” etc. The offense is made to consist in charging the greater compensation for the shorter distance, and this is what the commission concluded the respondent had done. It would seem that the due order for the correction of such offending -would be to require the carrier to desist from charging the merchants of Ionia the greater compensation, and to fix a rate to correspond with its Grand Eapids rate, or accord some equivalent advantage to them, such as free cartage. Such correction would result in advancing the interests of the public at Ionia, and in leaving the public at Grand Eapids in the enjoyment of the facilities which have been afforded them by a practice which the commission rightly declares was perfectly lawful in itself. The effect of such. an order might be somewhat disadvantageous to the competing railroad there, which is also one of its competitors at Grand Eapids, but it would furnish no lawful ground of com-’ plaint to such competitor. Instead of doing this, the commission made an order -which raises the compensation which the public at Grand Eapids must pay for the service they have enjoyed, and the benefit of their loss does not come to any other portion of the general public, but falls into the hands of the competing railroads, by crowding their, rival out. It seems to me the commission could not have sufficiently considered the results of their order. If they did, I am at a loss to understand how they could reconcile it with the spirit and policy of the law. If, as is claimed, (and I think it must be conceded, properly,) we cannot look back of the proceedings of the commission to inquire into the motive of the parties who set them in motion, we are yet bound to recognize the obvious consequences, and give their consideration due -weight, in determining whether as matter of law the order we are asked to enforce was such as was warranted by the assumed facts. I cannot but think *1015that the express language of the long and short haul clause, the ■well-known general purpose of the act, and the argument drawn from results incongruous with that purpose, all concur to repel {he approval of the order of- the commission upon the ground assumed by it in its opinion. However, if the facts as they are here found to exist are such as to have warranted the order, probably the conclusions of the commission as to matters of la w are not material.
Hut I am also of the opinion that there was nothing in the facts which justified the conclusion that any provision of the statute had been violated. Having, in the closing paragraph of the first section, indicated the general purpose, the act proceeds in sections 2, ■>, 4, and 5 to lay down certain rules by which that object is to be attained. By the second section it prohibits all kinds of discrimination in the imposition of charges upon different person's for the like service rendered under similar conditions. By the third it prohibits all undue preference by the carrier to any person or locality or kind of traille, or the subjecting of any person or locality to any undue or unreasonable disadvantage, and then proceeds to «'quire the carrier t.o afford reasonable and equal facilities to connecting lines for the interchange- of iraffle, without discrimination of rail's between such connecting lines. The fourth section prohibits the charging a greater rate for transportation, under similar conditions, for a shorter than for a longer distance over the same line, in the same direction; the shorter being included within the longer distance. The fifth prohibits the pooling of freights between competing earners. Subsequent sections contain subordinate regulations designed to facilitate the operation of the provisions of the sections above enumerated, especially the second, third, and fourth.
What is there in these provisions which, justly interpreted, renders the respondent's course of business, otherwise lawful, obnoxious to the prohibitory order of the commission? Surely there is nothing in it which contravenes its general purpose. But it is attempted by argument to show that this course of business is in conflict with some of the provisions which are designed to accomplish that purpose. The argument appears to me to rest upon unsubstantial grounds which have been swept away by the rulings of the commission itself upon constructions of the law which have been acquiesced in as just and reasonable. When it was held that it was consistent with the spirit of the law for the common carrier to group stations which were 75 or 100 miles apart, and charge a common rate to each, the strict construction of the act was abandoned for what was thought to be a more rational one. And when it was further conceded that, for reasons founded on public necessity or convenience, ¡.he carrier might carry freight beyond its terminal sfation, and deliver it to its patrons along spur tracks and belt lines, another broad eons traction was adopted in the genuine spirit of the law. The differing conditions and circumstances in large cities and small villages are rightly held to justify it. The facts in the present case illustrate this. The average distance from the station at Ionia to the merchants there is short, the place being *1016small. The distance at Grand Rapids is five times as great, and the business ten times as large. These differing circumstances and conditions are of a local character, and do not pertain to the transportation by the carrier. If they are not in terms those mentioned in the statute, they are at least relied upon in construction as elements to be taken into account in determining what is a reasonable discrimination. With these concessions in view, it is difficult to be very seriously impressed by the suggestion that one object of the law was to prevent the blighting effect upon smaller towns by the discrimination which had been given to larger ones, if by discrimination is meant the giving the facilities above mentioned. If that was an abuse, the law has passed it by. But it was not an abuse. It is absurd to say that a common carrier is bound to supply to every little hamlet the same advantages for the transmission and reception of freight that it does to large cities. The similar circumstances and conditions to which the statute refers are those which are found in the different localities to be served as well as those which pertain to the transportation. Whether the dissimilarity arises from one cause or the other, if it affects the service, it is within the language and the reason of the statute.
It is found by the commission that similar cartage is practiced by other common carriers at exceptional stations in Michigan, and is more or less extensively practiced by companies in other states at exceptional stations. By “exceptional” it is presumed to be understood that the conditions are similar to those at Grand Rapids, or otherwise the fact is irrelevant. Thus it happens that at. one place, where the pub-lie necessity or convenience requires it, it is met by the projection of branches and belt lines beyond the terminal station of transportation at that locality, and from them delivering freight to their customers, and at another by rendering substantially the same service by cartage, at another by lighterage, a “business in which railroads are not usually employed.” The only difference is in the means employed by the carrier, using that term in its strict sense, to accomplish the same end. But of what real significance is that? It is the service, the actual benefit given, which makes such discrimination as there is, and not the particular instrumentality by which it is effected. It is transportation, and that by a common carrier, in the one case as much as the other. So far as the public are concerned, the particular way in which the thing is done is matter of indifference, and no- possible reason is perceived why that may not be left to be determined by the economy of the carrier. To say that it must be done on raüs, and by steam, instead of on wagons, and by horse power, is purely arbitrary. The law is leveled at the carrier , as such, and only at the railroad company in its character of a carrier. Conceding it to be permissible to build belt lines and spur tracks to reach many customers, and thereby obtain more business, it is yet said that this is so because it is a part of railroad business, and the means of delivery is by railroad; that cartage is not usual railroad business; that it is as foreign -to ordinary freight business as it would be to do the packing for *1017shippers free of cost. This does not appear to me to state the situation correctly. Packing for the shippers is not only never done, hut it is not transportation, or delivery or reception of goods. The cartage of goods, though not, usual, is sometimes resorted to as a substitute lor delivery on rails, and is generally resorted to when it is the most convenient method in the circumstances. And the suggestion also appears to me to he at fault in assuming that the statute makes any distinction between carrying wholly by rail and partly by rail and partly by other means, with any purpose to make the latter, when equivalent to the former, unlawful. I cannot think that any language in the act, or any postulate of reason, can he invoked upon which to say to the common carrier that the transportation which it may fairly do by the usual methods it employs it shall not do by any method not usually adopted, even though it is a perfectly lawful method for a common carrier, and is more economical for it in the special circumstances, and equally convenient to the public. The rate schedules of the carrier ordinarily, and probably almost, universally, and the hills of lading issued thereon, in terms con template the station of (he carrier as the locality to which the freight is consigned as the terminus of transportation, and the place of delivery. If we are to regard a service beyond that at one locality as per se a discrimination against; a locality which does not receive it, it must be upon some principle; and, if there hi; such a principle, it must he equally efficacious to defeat; the diserimination however produced. Calculation is made to show that. It costs two cents per hundred to render the delivery service at Grand Rapids. How much it costs carriers to deliver freight by side tracks does not appear, hut it must cost something, even if the track is laid for them; and of that the customer gets the benefit. It can make no difference in the principle how many get that benefit. Whether one or all, it is the same discrimination as to the public at Ionia. It would be allowable, it is said, for the respondent to extend brandies through the city, and accommodate The public by delivery to them on those lines. If the situation were so fortunate that all or the great majority could he thus accomodated, it would not make the practice more objectionable.
It is charged that the schedule rates are violated. Wha,t do those rates mean? In strictness, as already pointed out, they mean, transportation from and to the stations named. In fact; they mean that, together with the terminal facilities which are afforded by the carrier. The contract of transportation is entered into with those in view. These 'incidental facilities furnished at the locality of (lie station in one form or another are enjoyed by The consignees of a very large proportion of the freight traffic of the country. There is no violation of the schedule of rates in this practice, for the schedule is not, in the general business of The public, construed in so strict a way as the suggestion implies.
It is said that, the defraying the expense of cartage delivery is generally exactly equivalent to the railway company’s reducing the freight by as much as the cartage would cost the consignee, and That this latter would he a violation of the long and short; haul *1018clause if the reduction were made at Grand Rapids and not at Ionia. This- argument proves too much, and cannot be sound. It would overturn much wholesome doctrine which is already well settled. By the same reasoning, any advantage of any value given by the terminal facilities of the carrier to customers at one place is exactly equivalent to a reduction to the same extent as that value from the freight charge to that place, and is an unlawful discrimination against others, in that group. The fault in the argument is, I think, in assuming the false premise that a carrier may not do more at one place than he does at another for the same price, — a proposition that is refuted in every day’s transactions in the carriage of freight. In this case it is shown that freight is carried by Ionia, 84 miles, to Grand Rapids, and nothing is charged for the carriage for that distance. It costs the carrier something to do this. It would cost the Grand Rapids merchant some money to. bring the goods from the place, where the Ionia merchant takes Ms. Is it permissible to sa.y that by the amount of that cost, either to the carrier or the Grand Rapids merchant, the rate common to both places is lessened to the Grand Rapids merchant, and the Ionia merchant is discriminated against?
It is also said that because the respondent has grouped Grand Rapids and Ionia together it conclusively admits that, so far as transportation from the east to the warehouse of the company at the two places is concerned, it is under substantially similar circumstances and conditions. I do not understand the admission to be as stated. The warehouse at Grand Rapids is not in fact the terminus of transportation which the respondent had in mind when it made the grouping, nor does the fact that places are grouped make it necessary to assume that they shall all have the same accommodations. It might as well be said that, having regard to the long and short haul clause, such grouping is a conclusive admission that the distance from the east to Grand Rapids is not greater than that to Ionia, whereas nobody supposes that to be admitted. So far as there is any admission, it is only that the distances are nearly the same, — practically the same in the large view of the subject. It seems to me that we are not to allow our vision to be suddenly and capriciously narrowed, but should continue to see the subject on the same wide field in all its relations.
Tied to this erroneous assumption is another proposition, which, standing by itself, may be quite true, namely, that any benefit in relation to the , shipment of goods, having a definite money value, conferred gratis by the carrier upon one shipper which is not conferred upon another where the service is admittedly under similar conditions, is an undue reduction in the price of carriage to the former, and therefore illegal. But this proposition, and the conclusion, as applied to such facts as we have in the present case, depend upon the assumption that there is any money value conferred gratis. If the incidents of delivery at the terminus, whether by the usage there it be by one means or another, are included in the contract and price for carriage, the costs of those incidents cannot be scaled off and carried back upon the whole price in order to re*1019duce the price of the mere carriage between station houses. Nor do the similar conditions exist if one place is out of all proportion with another, and the station at the small place is located close to the local business, and at the large one it is a long distance off. The exact dissimilarity is not overcome until this disadvantage at the larger place is measurably reduced. It is impossible to make the adjustment nicely. If it he said that free cartage, as it is erroneously called, more' than makes up for the inequality of conditions, and that to the extent of the excess it is a gratuity, one answer is that the excess thus afforded is not greater than the deficit or disadvantage which would exist without it. It is the mere oscillation of the pendulum swinging within lawful limits. Pertinent to. this is the suggestion that it would, of course, not he a discrimination that could be complained of that the company puts its station at one town nearer the business center than at another, and, if free cartage could he said to properly make up for the longer distance of respondent’s station from the business center of Grand Rapids, and in this respect to put the Grand Rapids merchants on the same footing as Ionia merchants with their proximity to the station, then it would seem to be unobjectionable, because justified by the dissimilar circumstances. But it is asked, can this he said? And the argument in support of a negative answer is that, if the defendant’s station at Grand Rapids were moved into the business center, the shippers would still have to pay foi* the cartage. It may be that it would he a less price, hut still they would have to pay. The equalizing of the conditions between the two places in this respect would he complete by a charge for cartage by the railway company at the lower rate which would be charged for cartage were the station in the city. The proposition admits that the practice would he unobjectionable, because justified by the dissimilar circumstances, if only the disadvantage were overcome; but the gravamen of the mischief consists, it is urged, in the remedy being overdone. Bat, as the overdoing is not greater than the mischief overcome, and the result is not injurious to the public, but beneficial, raiher, I can see no reason for condemning the practice as a whole.
And even if the argument above quoted were sound, it would not justify the order made by the commission, which not only forbids the alleged mischief, but the remedy to the public for an acknowledged disadvantage. Upon the theory suggested, the real unlawfulness of the practice is in the excess referred to, and the order should have been appropriate to its correction, and stopped there, instead of utterly depriving the public of a remedy “justified by the dissimilar circumstances.” But, as already said, the court can make no new order. The order of the commission stands or falls as made. The theory last mentioned, and the argument in its support, proceed upon too nice distinctions. Such close balancing is impracticable, and is not attempted in the administration of the statute generally.
In answer to the claim that on account of its greatly larger size and business Grand Rapids is entitled to greater facilities than a *1020small place, it is said that, in so far as the greater amount of business enables the railway company to do carting at a cheaper rate at Grand. Eapids than at Ionia, by so much may the carrier reduce the cartage cost to the shipper at the former place, because this is a legitimate and actual dissimilarity in conditions between the two places. The dissimilarity of conditions which is thus admitted to be legitimate ground for different rates of cartage prices at the two places, consists primarily in the greater amount of . business at Grand Eapids, and consequentially in the fact that therefore it can be more cheaply done. But the cartage is parcel only of the whole transportation. It is done to augment the bulk of that business. And no reason is perceived why the discrimination which would justify a larger cartage for the same money would not justify a larger service in the whole transportation, the business being so much larger as to make it an object on ordinary business principles for the carrier to render that service in order to gain the profits accruing from its greater volume. The public at Grand Eapids are entitled to enjoy the corresponding advantage which results from the aggregation of their business, and, if that aggregation justifies their superior accommodation on business principles, there is nothing in the interstate commerce law, fairly interpreted, which prevents their enjoyment of it. The breeding of artificial distinctions in this law is, in my opinion, very objectionable, and very likely to impair its utility to the public, who are the parties most likely to suffer on every occasion, when, losing sight of its main object, the commission or the courts listen to the ingenious weaving of unsubstantial fabrics among the branches of the statute by interested parties.
In this opinion the result is reached upon considerations which do not depend upon any supposed right of the respondent to be protected in the privilege of putting itself upon a footing of equality in competition for the business at Grand Eapids. The commission has, in many instances, recognized such a right, and incidentally, at least, sought to protect it. The circuit courts in the fifth and ninth circuits have held that the competition of other roads might produce such dissimilarity in conditions as the statute recognizes in permitting the rendition of greater service for the same compensation. To what extent this may be carried it has not been deemed necessary here to say. For the reasons given, and with great respect to the commission, I cannot bring myself to the conclusion that their order is right, and I feel bound to withhold my assent from it. My conviction is that it would establish a precedent, the principle of which, carried to its logical conclusion, would reach far into existing usages, and bev extremely injurious to the interests of the public in many localities, without any corresponding advantages to the public anywhere else.