The Regulation of Commerce Through a Dispensing Power. Efforts of the Interstate Commerce Commission to Gain Autocratic Control of the Internal Commerce of the United States. the Political Aspects of the Question
The Regulation of Commerce Through a Dispensing Power. Efforts of the Interstate Commerce Commission to Gain Autocratic Control of the Internal Commerce of the United States. the Political Aspects of the Question
Ya Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress) Dlc [from Old Catalog]
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The bill failed to secure serious atten- tion in either branch of Congress, and apparently produced no other effect upon the legislative mind than of aston- ishment. The Commission, however, refused to abandon its purpose to acquire dispensing power. Again in the 56th Congress, March 2, 1899, to March, 1901, it approached Congress, but this time with a bill intended to evade the rule of govern- mental policy announced by the Supreme Court in the Maximum Rate Case, and thus to circumvent the jud...iciary. This bill was introduced December 12, 1899, as Senate Bill 1439, 56th Congress, ist Session. It provided that the companies shall first make their rate sheets, which, having been made, the Commission shall, upon complaint made either by itself or any other competent complainant, have power to revise and change the rates which have been made, thus conferring upon the Commission the right to recast every sheet in the country. The fallacy and artifice in- volved in this provision consisted in the pretense that it II I avoided the objection of the courts that rates made iu ad- vance of being charged and collectedj even if authorized by statute, are not reviewable in the courtSj as to their reasonableness, from the fact that they are legislative rates.
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