"T' V V- SpSJ , T MAY, 1917 Tk Commoner . t y K. --r- Why Railroads Demand Federal ; Incorporation By Laurence B. Finn, Chairman Kentucky Railroad Commission, President National Asso ciation Railway Commissioners (1914). Railroads generally speaking are the crea tures of the states. Their charters declare that they are public highways and they exercise gov ernmental functions, being endowed with the right of eminent domain. Railroads, like other public highways, can be operated in two ways. First. By general taxation; providing a fund to acquire the highway and collecting tolls or taxes for proper maintenance and operation. Second. By granting to individuals charters which privilege them to collect sufficient tolls from those who use the public highway to maintain and operate the road and to pay a fair return on the private capital, invested in the construction of the highway. This is commonly known as the tollvgate system which is analyg ous to the present plan of operating railroad companies. ' Under a joint resolution of congress a gen eral investigation is being conducted on the subject of railroads by a special committee of the senate and house. Before this committee the plans of common carriers have been dis closed. Their paramount desire is a federal in corporation act supposedly a general federal statute under which all railroad corporations shall be recreated thus surrendering their state charters and thereby being relieved of whatever duties or restrictions contained in the constitutions and laws of the several states that are not acceptable to the carriers. The real object of the carriers in making this demand is seldom mentioned and Jiot gen erally known. This' article proposes to disclose the motive. The representatives of carriers claim that the purpose of the plan is to be relieved of con flicting state laws as well as the conflict, which they allege exists between the state and federal governments; the catch phrase coined for the occasion being, "We live under 48 different masters, we need only one." ARGUMENTS OP RAILROADS In an article of reasonable length it will bo impossible to expose all the fallacies of rail road representatives advanced in support of their plan. Naturally our attention should be directed largely to the arguments advanced by Col. Alfred P. Thom, the eminent lawyer rep resenting the railway executives' advisory com mittee, which In turn represents the railroads constituting 84 per cent of all railroad mileage in the nation. To this affable and persuasivo gen tleman, personally known to practically all of the representatives and senators and departments of the federal government, the railroads as signed the task of presenting their plans and pleas to the senate and house committee. Stenographic reports of the hearings before the joint-committee on interstate and foreign commerce have been printed by the department at Washington; and a synopsis of all the testi mony given before this ttommittee has been is sued in bulletins compiled by the railway ex ecutives' advisory committee. From these printed documents the plans of the carriers are accurately obtained and form the basis for this discussion. To justify the demands of common carriers for a federal incorporation act many imaginary ills are alleged from which the carriers claim they should be relieved. The public also are told that car shortage, inadequate service and facilities and lack of railroad construction are all due to "the dual system of regulation"; and like the patent medicine vendor, who guaran tees his drug as a panacea for all ills, railroad representatives offer "Federal Incorporation" as a remedy for all complaints registered by the general public, and a guarantee to railroad cap italists for increased revenues and lower taxes. From the wide spread nature of the business conducted by railroads, together with their en tangling alliances with banks, Insurance com paniee and great Industrial corporations, assist ed by a well organized press, it is witMn the power of those who control railroad policies to create conditions affecting the welfare of the nation and then use the resulting effect as a basis for demanding coveted concessions from the public. Professor Elliott says that those whom the carriers business affects, counting employees, stockholders, policy holders In com panies whose assets consist of railroad securi ties, etc., together with other allied interests, comprise about sixty million people. Mr. County, vice-president of the Pennsylvania railway sys tem estimates the number at fifty millions. In fact 100 millions of people are vitally affected by the conduct and business of tho railroads of this country. The truth is the necessity of railroads to the happiness, convenience and commerce of tho country has not yet been fully realized and their relationship to tho public is frequently mis stated. "The prosperity of the railroads and the prosperity of tho country," said President Wilson, "are inseparably connected." Properly interpreted this statement is true; but, when misconstrued, it ascribes to railroads the orig1 inators of prosperity. Prosperity does not be gin or end with tho prosperity of common car riers. They are simply tho thermometers regis tering tho activity of business. High freight rates, which create a great surplus for railroads, do not create, prosperity for the nation. Tho exchange of commodities creates business. As this exchange is performed through the service of railroads, the railroads' business measures the prosperity of the country. FOUNDATIONS OF PROSPERITY The source and origin of prosperity should always be kept in mind. Like all things con structed it must have a foundation and no structure is complete without a superstructure. The toiling masses are the foundation of pros perity. Capital assembled or concentrated in the development of enterprises is the super structure. Capital and labor both have their proper services to perform, and if properly ap plied work together for the good of all mankind; but a wise builder considers first tho foundation. Labor, the foundation of prosperity, produces the commodities. By the exchange of these com modities labor receives its reward. Any un necessary burden placed upon tho exchange de prives labor of its just reward and destroys the foundation of prosperity. The functions of railroads are of such public necessity and prime importance that business adversity, labor disputes, strikes, wars and famines should no more retard the wheels of transportation than should such calamities re tard the wheels of the government. A very subtle argument was made by Col. Alfred P. Thom before the senate and house committees: "The first consideration of the public," said he, "is to obtain transportation facilities. What the cost is, is in reality a secondary considera tion. This is illustrated by the sentiment of the country last summer when it was menaced by the prospect of an entire suspension of transportation when business men would have been willing to pay almost anything to get their goods to market." Thus the railroad representatives would have the public consider the cost paid for transporta tion from the same standpoint that a drowning man would estimate the price of a floating log. Upon such an occasion the value of the log could not be estimated; but tho circumstance should neither fix the customary price for logs, nor necessitate the conclusion that the cost of lumber was of no consequence to the public. But If the carriers can once Impress the pub lic that transportation charges are of no con sequence to the public they have won their cue. In fact a few large shippers declare that the freight rate is of no consequence to -4hem so long as they are placed upon an equality with (Mr oomUtorj frit Umt t mUk U ttslea from Um broader etaadpelmt ft Um Le gerested publie. A Urge majority t tke fuekfe neither owm railroad securities mcr coatraet di rectly for transporutiom; yet their Utereet 1 freight rates is the all important feature coin nected with this great question. The publio bays from some one who pays the freight. The public sells to some one who pays the freight. When the public buys from the man who pays the freight, the freight is added; whon the public sells to the man who pays the freight, the freight is deducted. While the freight rato is small when itomlzed into in dividual contributions, it must be romomborcd that 100 million people aro contributing tholr mite to tho success of various Industries and publio undertakings and unless theso mites are justily distributed tho stream of wealth will be diverted from its natural flow. Tho coffors of somo industries will ovorflow while others will bo empty. As drops of water make tho ocean so do theao mites contributed by millions of people creato a sea of wealth and tho incqul-' able distribution of profits is the source of all our economic ills. Just prior to tho European war railroad securities had absorbed almost one-sixth of tho accumulated wealth of tho na tion. CONFLICTING LAWS Characteristic of tho inaccurate information upon which tho public 1 aBked to mako up its mind on transportation problems, I quoto an extract from an article in tho Reviews of Re views, of September, 1914, written by Mr. Han rington Emerson. Tho editor of tho Rovlow of Roviows qualifies Mr. Emerson as authority on tho subject, by stating that "his convictions concerning tho possibility of olllclent organiza tion of railroad operations have been given the Widest publicity by Mr. Brandies (Now Justice Brandeis of tho supremo court of tho United' States). "Tho question as to tho necessity or desir ability of all tho Hood of restrictive measures that have become laws is not involved. The burden remains. It adds to tho expenses when locomotives can not cross a state lino or when tho equipment of a passenger car differs In ovory state through which tho car runs. These mul titudinous restrictions have tho same general effect upon railroad finances that tho hookworm parasite has on human beings. Ono hookworm would not count, a hundred thousand aro de pleting." As chairman of tho committee on stato and federal legislation of the national association of railway commissioners I have concluded a thor ' ough Investigation of all the stato laws relating to transportation companies, and such a condi tion as is assumed by the statement of Mr. Em- erson does not exist. In fact the supremo court of the United States In the case of the South Covington Street and Cincinnati Street Railway Company, plaintiffs In er ror, against the city of Covington, decided January 5th, 1915, expressly enunciates prin ciples positivelyprohibitlng such a condition as is described by Mr. Emerson. Note this extract from the opinion In speaking of a city ordinance attempting to regulate tho equipment of a street car company which served both Cincinnati, Ohio, and Covington, Kentucky. "If Covington can regulate these matters Cin cinnati certainly can and interstate business might bo impeded by conflicting and varying regulations in this respect with which it might be impossible to comply. On one side of tho river one set of regulations might be enforced and on the other side quite a different set and Doth seeking to control a practically continuous movement of cars." As was said In Hall vs. Decuir, 95 U. S., 485: "Commerce can not flourish in the midst of such embarrassments." As the supreme court has held that state laws can not interfere with interstate commerce by unreasonable rules relating to the physical equipment of transportation companies; so tho phantom, "that locomotives can not cross state lines" and that "passenger coaches differ in every state through which the car runs," van- ishes. We will next investigate to what extent state regulation of rates affects the revenues of car riers. STATE REGULATION OF INTRASTATE RATE It must be borne in mind that the rates, subt ject to the unrestricted regulation of the several ... v r , ' . v '.