Alabama Cent. R. v. Alabama Public Service Commission

76 So. 862, 200 Ala. 536, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 514
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
Docket3 Div. 306.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 76 So. 862 (Alabama Cent. R. v. Alabama Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama Cent. R. v. Alabama Public Service Commission, 76 So. 862, 200 Ala. 536, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 514 (Ala. 1917).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

(after stating the facts as above). [1, 2] If it be conceded that the contract between appellant and the Sawmill Company, for the use of the logging track of the latter by the former as a common carrier, is void by reason of the stipulation that the carrier should not haul pine logs or pine lumber over the logging road, or for other reasons, this would not authorize the Public Service Commission to require appellant to violate its void agreement, or to trespass upon, or use without authority, the property of the logging company. The only right, title, or interest which appellant has in or to the logging road depends solely upon contract, and if the contract is void then appellant has no rights whatever — has no right to the use of the logging road for any purpose. While the contract authorizes appellant to purchase the logging road, appellant has never exercised this option; and neither' the Commission nor the courts can compel it to exercise the option. Neither the Commission nor the courts have the power to make or alter contracts between parties. If the carrier owned or controlled the logging road under a valid lease, then the Commission could compel it to serve all the public of the same class alike, and to provide facilities reasonably adequate to accommodate shippers desiring service of the carrier. In such cases, where the carrier owns, or, by lease or otherwise, has the control of, the tracks and lines over which it operates its trains, it can be required to serve all customers of the same class on equal terms, and thus avoid discriminations; and the carrier cannot, by contract with some of its customers or with third parties, exempt or excuse itself from thus treating all alike, and thus discharging its duties as common carrier to the public. But where the carrier does not own or control the track which it uses, but uses the same as a mere licensee, or under an agreement such as is found in this case, the Commission nor the courts cannot authorize, much less compel, the carrier, thus operating under a mere license, to improve or change the main lines, side tracks, or the loading facilities of the line over which it is so operating, without right pf control, but with the mere right to repair and keep up the lines, as in this case.

This distinction is well pointed out by the courts, state and federal, in the eases of Bedford-Bowling Green Co. v. Oman, 134 Fed. 64, 67 C. C. A. 190, and (C. C.) 134 Fed. 441, and 115 Ky. 369, 73 S. W. 1038. The holdings in these cases, which are here applicable, are well stated in headnotes in the report of the cases, as follows:

“2. Railroads Private Switches Use for Public Business. Persons who have no property rights in a private switch over another’s land cannot compel the latter to permit the railroad to receive and ship their freight over the switch to the railroad’s own track.
“3. Same — Sale of Switch — Right of Stranger to Complain. A contract by which a railroad operates, in its capacity as common carrier, a switch over private property, may be abrogated at will by the railroad and the owner of the property, and the switch may be sold to the latter, regardless of the motives of the parties to the contract in so doing; and a stranger to the contract, who is interested in the maintenance of the switch by the railroad as a carrier, cannot complain of the contract as fraudulent merely because the purchase price was not paid in cash, but promissory notes were given therefoi.”
“5. Carriers — Duty to Receive Freight — Pri vate Switches. A common carrier cannot be required to receive freight on or along a private switch, but its duty in that regard is confined and limited to its own depots or shipping and receiving points.”
(C. C.) 134 Fed. 441.

[3] If the logging road in question were’a public highway, or a railroad in which the public had acquired rights by condemnation proceedings or by dedication to a public use, and its owners or those who had acquired control of it were common carriers, or were engaged in the business of a public service, then the Public Service Commission or the courts, when authorized by the Legislature, could regulate and control the use of the railroad so as to serve the public, and do so without discrimination. Here, however, the road involved is a private road and not a public one, and those who own, and have the exclusive control of it, are private individuals or corporations, who have merely consented or agreed that appellant, a public service corporation, may use it under certain restrictions and regulations. It may be, as we have said, that this contract or agreement is void, because against public policy; I but, if so, it cannot be relieved against by *538 compelling the parties to make a new contract, nor by compelling them to so modify ■it as to make it legal and binding on both parties. Neither the Public Service Commission nor the courts possess such powers. While the common carrier is so using this private road under a void contract, it may be liable as for damages for unwarranted discriminations, and its illegal contract might not excuse or justify for such discriminations ; yet the common carrier has no right to put in switches or side tracks on this logging road without the consent of its owners, and, if such were placed, the owners would have the absolute right to remove them, and even the main line, and to wholly prevent the use of the road by appellant or by the public. Surely the Public Service Commission nor the courts ought to compel a common carrier to use or improve private property in a way or manner in which it has no right so to use it, and could not voluntarily use it.

It may be (but as to this we do not decide) that, if the proceeding to require, the construction of the side track were against the logging company, this decision would be different — that the use to which the logging company has put its private road, or allowed it to be put, in virtue of our Constitution and statutes, would be held to have converted the private road into a public one, and brought it within the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission. But this question is not before us; there has been no proceeding against the logging company; it has had no opportunity of being heard and is not even a party to this bill.

[4] Here, however, the only party who would have a right to voluntarily construct, or authorize the construction of, the side track, is not before the court, and was not before the Commission. Conceding that the facts stated in the bill are true — and on demurrer the court must treat them so to be— appellant not only has no right to do what the Commission has ordered it to do but is under contract or agreement not to do that identical thing; and, should it obey the Commission’s order, it would forfeit all right to use any part of the logging road, and be subject to suit for damages by the owners of the road, and if it built the side track voluntarily it would be a trespasser. Unquestionably, the Commission has no power to compel appellant to be a trespasser nor to exe.mpt appellant from liability, should it build the side track, as for a trespass.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 So. 862, 200 Ala. 536, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-cent-r-v-alabama-public-service-commission-ala-1917.