The Law of Interstate Commerce and Its Federal Regulation

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T.H. Flood, 1912 - 805 lappuses

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What are the subjects of commerce
17
Wild game and fish as subjects of commerce
20
Natural oil and gas as subjects of commerce
22
The commerce clause and the admiralty jurisdiction 14 Erie Canal subject to admiralty jurisdiction
25
Jurisdiction of federal courts in admiralty cases 16 State corporations in interstate commerce
26
3
29
16
30
When transit ends the original package in interstate com merce 18 The Wilson Bill of 1890
32
Limitations of state control of liquor traffic 20 A state cannot tax interstate commerce
34
228 30
35
But a state can tax the property employed in interstate com 35 37 merce 22 State power of taxation of corporations engaged in interstate commerce s...
37
CHAPTER II
38
37
54
SECTION 4
58
CHAPTER III
63
Genesis of the Interstate Commerce
75
Enlarged powers and jurisdiction of the Interstate Com
81
60 No judicial formulation of extent of power
100
The supremacy of federal regulation
101
Federal regulation of employes performing both intrastate and interstate service
102
The federal regulatin power and state corporations
103
Limitations upon the federal authority in interstate com merce
105
Prohibition as a means of regulation
106
Regulation of commerce through the taxing power
107
The federal power of granting corporate charters
108
Federal incorporation as a means in the exercise of the com merce power
110
Relation of the states to federal corporations
111
The requirement of federal franchise for business corpora tions in interstate commerce
113
The development of the latent federal power in the regula tion of commerce
115
CHAPTER V
116
BUSINESS COMBINATIONS IN INTERSTATE COMMERCE 72 The demand for federal regulation of business combinations
117
The AntiTrust Act of 1890 119
119
Restraint of trade in interstate commerce under the common JaW
120
Constitutionality of the act
121
Railroads included in the act
122
A reasonable construction and reasonable restraints of trade distinguished
123
Direct and incidental restraint of trade
125
Suppression of competition must be substantial to be a re straint of trade
128
The modern law of restraint of trade
129
Illegal combinations in interstate commerce
130
Complete suppression of competition not essential
131
No application to commerce within a state
132
State holding companies
135
Restrictive sales in interstate commerce
137
88
142
93
148
Interstate commerce in relation to employes therein
155
Injunction in interstate commerce
161
104
169
SECTION 12
177
112
178
118
185
Temporary injunction under act of 1910
186
Reasonableness and confiscation in regulation of rates
187
State rates determined without reference to interstate traffic
189
The supreme court on state regulation
190
Schedules of rates and special rates
191
The valuation of railroad property in state regulation
193
The apportionment of railroad property in state regulation
195
Confiscation in state regulation how proved
196
Rate of profit necessary to avoid charge of confiscation
199
Protection of the carrier against discriminating state regu lation
200
The state power of regulation not limited to rates
202
The state antitrust laws and the fourteenth amendment
205
Classification in state railroad legislation
207
PART II
211
132 Section 1 of the Act of 1887
212
Section 1 as amended by Act of June 18 1910
213
Amendments to the section
217
All of interstate commerce not included
218
Parties subject to the act
220
Express companies under the act
222
Sleeping car companies
223
Under common control management or arrangement for a continuous carriage
224
Transportation through a state
226
Interstate electric railroads
227
Receivers lessees and purchasers pendente lite
228
The intention of interstate shipment not sufficient
230
All instrumentalities of shipment or carriage
231
Commerce court on terminal facilities and plant facilities
233
Bulk grain storage as part of transportation
234
The amendments of section as to accessory charges
235
Refrigeration in transit
238
Private cars
240
Prohibition of passes
241
The commodities clause
242
Switch connections
244
The establishment of through routes
246
Practical difficulties in the enforcement of reasonableness in rates
247
Standard of reasonableness under state statutes
249
The power of the commission in fixing rates
250
No power in the courts to fix rates
251
The federal courts on reasonableness of railroad rates
252
The value of railroad property as a basis for rate regulation
254
The unearned increment in valuation of railroad property in rate regulation
255
The relation of railroad rate to investment of earnings in property
256
Consideration of reasonableness in the courts
257
Rulings of the commission upon the reasonableness of rates
258
Limitation of the commissions power in fixing rates
259
Presumptions of reasonableness from established rates
260
Burden of proof
261
What is a reasonable rate
262
Res judicata with respect to rates
263
Through rates and local rates
264
Reasonableness in commutation rates
265
Relation of interstate to state rates
266
Rates as affected by development of country
267
The commerce court on interdependence of rates
268
Reasonableness of rates as dependent on character of traffic
269
Distance as a factor in rates
270
The commission on comparison of rates
271
Reasonableness and proportion
273
The commission on rate wars and reasonableness of rates
274
SECTION 2
275
Origin of the section
276
Purpose of the section
277
Effectiveness of the section The Act of February 19 1903
278
Common law as to discriminations
279
Just and unjust discrimination at common law
281
Discrimination in charge based upon differences in service not discriminative
284
Circumstances and conditions of through traffic and local traffic are dissimilar
285
The party rate case
287
Wholesale rates in freight and passenger traffic distin guished
289
Discrimination not unjust when based on special service
290
Carload and less than carload rates
291
Discrimination in application of carload rates
292
The supreme court on forwarding agents in carload rates
293
Discrimination in carload rates
294
Different forms of discrimination
295
Discrimination in restricted rates
296
Discrimination through industrial tap lines and plant fa cilities
297
Discrimination through interest in connecting company
299
Discrimination in storage of goods etc
301
Stoppage in transit privileges
302
Unjust discrimination through abuse of stoppage in transit privileges
303
Unjust discrimination in passenger service
304
Giving passes to shippers prohibited
305
Unjust discrimination in telephone service
306
Retention of overcharge
308
Connecting carrier not responsible for discrimination by initial carrier
310
Discrimination in allowance to private transfer companies
311
SECTION 3
312
Section 3 Undue or unreasonable preference or advantage forbidden
313
Origin of the section
314
Relation to sections 1 and 2
315
Preferences of localities enforced by competition are not unjust
316
Application of the competition rule
318
Whether competition is controlling is a question of fact
319
Milling in transit and export trade
322
240
329
244
335
250
341
343 General investigating powers of commission
343
254
348
Undue preference in denying shippers the choice of route
355
The commission not concluded by ruling of state commis
362
Classification
364
Consultation of carriers in classification not illegal com bination
366
Power of commission in correcting classification
368
Reasonable regulations in classifications
369
SECTION 4
379
Construction of the section prior to the amendment of 1910
381
Over the same line
382
Application to the commission
383
Construction of section by commission and application to different classes of rates
384
Ruling of commission as to export and import rates under section
385
The commission on application for relief under the fourth section
386
The five trade zones for transcontinental traffic
387
SECTION 5
390
Controlling through routing by initial carrier is not pooling
391
Agreements not within the prohibition
392
The relation of the section to the AntiTrust Law of 1890
393
Pooling as a defense to action of the carrier
394
SECTION 6
395
History and amendment of the section
398
Effect of publication
399
The published rate conclusive
401
Failure to post rate in stations
402
Claims for misrouting
403
Status of carriers as shippers or consignees
405
What is included in schedules
406
What is sufficient publication and filing
407
Joint tariffs and through rates
408
Responsibility for through rates
409
Published joint rates must be duly authorized
410
The commissions power of modification as to filing of tar iffs
411
SECTION 7
413
SECTION 8
414
Plaintiff must show injury
415
Allowance of attorneys fee as costs
416
Assignability of claims
417
Jurisdiction of the federal courts in equity under the act
418
Jurisdiction in equity for protection of interstate commerce
420
SECTION 9
421
Jurisdiction in equity under the act as amended
423
Action for damages on account of discrimination
426
Judicial application of section
428
SECTION 10
430
Amendments to the section
432
Illegal combinations under section 10
433
The incidental interference with commerce by a peaceable strike not a violation of the section
434
Construction of the statute
435
Removal of indicted persons to other districts for trial
436
Limitation of criminal prosecution under the act
437
Relevancy of testimony before the commission
450
SECTION 14
461
Section 15 as amended in 1910
466
The amendments of 1906 and of 1910
470
The constitutionality of the amendment of 1906 sustained
471
The enlarged powers of the commission under section
472
The establishment of through routes
473
Switch connections and through routing between steam and electric railway
474
The two year limitation of commissions orders
475
Selection of the route by the shipper
477
Jurisdiction over contracts of carriers
478
Allowances by carriers for shippers services must not in volve undue preference
479
The powers of the commission construed 480
480
SECTION 16
482
The amendments of 1906 and 1910
485
The saving of the right of trial by jury
486
The time limitations of actions for reparation
487
Jurisdiction of commission in awarding reparation
488
The jurisdiction of the commission in awarding general damages
489
Jurisdiction of federal and state courts in reparation actions
491
Prima facie effect of commissions orders in reparation
492
The procedure in actions in court
493
The judicial review of the commissions orders
494
The jurisdiction of the circuit courts
495
The commerce court on parties entitled to appeal from com missions orders
497
The finality of the order of the commission
498
SECTION 16A 397 Section 16a
499
SECTION 17
500
Salaries of commissioners sccretary etc
501
SECTION 21
512
SECTION 23
519
The Elkins Act as amended
522
The enactment and amendments to the act
526
The repealing clause of the Hepburn Act did not bar prior offenses
527
The validity and enforcibility of the act
528
The unit of offenses under the act The Standard Oil Com pany of Indiana case
529
Prior contracts and want of criminal intent no defenses
530
Conspiracy in rebating
531
What are rebates
532
Requisites of indictment under the act
533
THE ANTITRUST ACT OF 1890
535
Interstate transportation is subject to the act
536
Unlawful combinations in commerce other than transporta tion
537
The California Tile Trust case
538
The Chicago Meat Trust case
539
81
540
The Chicago Board of Trade Bucket Shop case
542
Combinations held to be within the act
543
Agreements held not within the act
544
The Standard Oil case
545
The American Tobacco case
546
The Powder Trust case
547
Labor combinations
548
Employment of common agency not necessarily within the act
549
Patent monopoly not within the act
550
Secret formula contracts under the act
551
SECTION 2
553
SECTION 3
560
53
575
Limitations
577
SECTION 8
578
THE EXPEDITION ACT 490 The Expedition Act
579
The amendment of 1910
581
The construction of the statute
582
THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR 494 The department of commerce and labor
583
Section 6 of the act
584
The remaining sections of the act
585
THE SAFETY ACT OF 1893 AMENDED 1896
586
appliances
588
Petition and procedure under the act
589
The act in the state courts
590
SECTION 2
591
Automatic couplers of different makes
592
An absolute duty imposed upon carriers by the act to pro vide and maintain automatic equipment
593
When cars are in interstate commerce
594
SECTION 3
596
Section 4 of the act
597
SECTION 5
598
SECTION 6
600
The supreme court on prosecution for penalty under the act
601
SECTION 7
602
SECTION 8
603
risk
605
Responsibility of carrier for cars out of condition
606
AMENDMENT OF 1903 TO SAFETY ACT 525 Amendment of 1903
607
SAFETY ACT OF 1910
609
THE EMPLOYERS LIABILITY ACT 527 The Employers Liability Act of 1906
612
The act of 1906 invalid as to interstate carriers
613
The act of 1906 valid as to the District of Columbia and the territories
614
The amendatory act of April 5 1910
616
the Safety Appliance Act
617
The amendment of 1910
618
What is employment in interstate commerce
619
Concurrent jurisdiction of the state courts
620
The prohibition of contracting out of the act
621
THE HOURS OF SERVICE ACT OF 1907
622
The constitutionality of the act sustained
624
The Interstate Commerce Commission had authority to re quire report
625
THE TWENTYEIGHT HOUR LIVE STOCK TRANSPOR TATION LAW 546 The twentyeight hour act
626
Delivery to connecting carrier
628
Press of business
629
Wilfully construed
630
The commerce court
631
National Trade Union Incorporation Act
641
Arbitration Act
642
Interlocking Act
649
Ash Pan Act
650
Report of Accidents Act
651
Rules of practice before the com nission
653
Forms of procedure of the commission
655
Rules of practice of the commerce court
670
Report of the National Securities Commission
675
54
710
57
728
No distinction as to commodities subject of contract 139
738
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