Atlantic Greyhound Corp. v. North Carolina Utilities Commission

47 S.E.2d 473, 229 N.C. 31, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 406
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 28, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 S.E.2d 473 (Atlantic Greyhound Corp. v. North Carolina Utilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Greyhound Corp. v. North Carolina Utilities Commission, 47 S.E.2d 473, 229 N.C. 31, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 406 (N.C. 1948).

Opinion

Seawell, J.

These appeals, embracing much the same subject matter, were argued together, and will be here discussed as companion cases, avoiding, as far as possible, repetition in factual statement and history of the cases.

The controversy resulting in the appeals grew out of an application of the Seashore Company for a franchise that would permit it to operate a through bus service from coastal communities to Raleigh, beginning at Atlantic and Beaufort via Goldsboro, its western terminus, without the necessity of transfer to busses operated under franchise by the Greyhound Company or other franchise carriers at that point or resort to other means of transportation. Since portions of the route designated in the application were being used in bus service by Greyhound and the Coach Company under State franchises, and covered towns or communities served by these carriers, both were made parties to the proceeding, protested and resisted the application, were present and participated in the hearing in Dockets 3809 and 4072, in which applications were made, and excepted to the orders granting the Seashore Company certificate of convenience and necessity, and restricting Seashore to closed door operation at such points and between such points as was deemed best to serve the public interest, protect the existing franchises, and to hold the Seashore Company to through transportation in such territory. The orders also fixed schedules and limited operation to tw7o return trips daily.

Later the Seashore Company applied for a temporary detour permit to operate over a portion of the highway in use by Greyhound and the Coach Company, in order to avoid travel over a part of its route, known as the Brogden road, which was being prepared for hard surfacing; and this was allowed, the plaintiffs claim, without notice to them.

Both Greyhound Corporation and the Coach Company requested the Commission not to put its order into operation or issue the certificate of convenience and necessity, or franchise, until their appeals upon the orders granting the franchise could be heard. It does not appear from the record whether the appeals were perfected; but both companies con *34 tend that the orders were put into effect before the time to allow them to file exceptions, and the overruling thereof, which, as they construe the statute, must occur before appeal can be taken. The orders were put into effect and the Seashore Company began to exercise the franchise privileges and continues to do so.

The Greyhound Corporation and the Coach Company, jointly, brought two separate actions, one against the Utilities Commission and one against the Seashore Company, for injunctive relief.

Since the appellants, which are the same in both cases appealed, do not admit the pending of an appeal from the Commission, and the time to perfect such appeal has long expired, we must consider the actions in which the appeals under review are taken as proceedings for independent relief.

No. 449. Greyhound Corporation and Coach Company v. Utilities Commission.

The appellants, basing their right to the remedy on the theory that the Commission acted entirely beyond its jurisdiction and the power given it under the creative statute, seek, in this action, to subject the Commission to a mandatory injunction, compelling it to expunge from its records the orders made as “amendments” to the certificate, or franchise of the Seashore Transportation Company, the detour permission thereafter granted, the tariff and schedules approved for operation under the certificate given it under Dockets Nos. 3809 and 4072, “and all other attempted implementations thereof; and that the Commission be restrained from any additional acts in furtherance of said void orders, certificates, and permits of the Commission or in the violation of the statutes of the State until, under the laws of the State the right to issue certificate and make other orders shall be approved as by law directed.”

If, as alleged, the acts of the Commission in the premises were entirely beyond the power and jurisdiction given it by the statute, and as contended, utterly void, no injunctive relief is required to protect the plaintiffs’ right against a mere interloper, and no mandatory writ to wipe the questioned orders from the docket is needed, since, in that event, the status quo had not been changed. It is not necessary to say what might be applicable procedure, assuming the Commission acted arbitrarily, capriciously or corruptly,' since that is not suggested. The thing against which the injunction is concerned is an accomplished fact, and moot.

If it is sought to preclude a company from the exercise of franchise rights which it holds under orders of the Commission, which are color-able or otherwise, the approach to that end must be made through other adequate procedure available to the objector in which the holder of the challenged certificate may have an opportunity to defend, rather than by attempting to turn back the clock, or cut off at the source wrater already *35 over the dam. The appellants seem to have recognized this in bringing the companion suit.

The Utilities Commission is an administrative agency of the State with yuasi-judicial powers; it is made a court of record, primarily for the purpose of preserving its records and facilitating review. It is not a court in the judicial sense, but its judicial determinations are subject to review on appeal. Injunction, as a substitute for appeal, cannot be made an instrument for review. Nor will the courts take original jurisdiction of matters confided to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Utilities Commission. Coach Co. v. Transit Co., 227 N. C., 391, 42 S. E. (2d), 398.

While the suit, as brought, may be regarded as a suit against the State, since the relief sought directly affects the exercise of governmental powers exclusively within its sovereignty, and without constitutional or statutory consent (Rotan v. State, 195 N. C., 291, 141 S. E., 733; Carpenter v. R. R., 184 N. C., 400, 114 S. E., 693; Moody v. State Prison, 128 N. C., 12, 38 S. E., 131; U. S. v. Lee, 106 U. S., 196, 25 R. C. L., 412), it is not necessary to enter a discussion of that matter. Review of (lie matters complained of come within the purview of the appeal procedure provided in the statute, which is adequate in law.

The propriety of requiring at least first resort to the remedies provided in the statute is bottomed on the nature of the rights with which we are dealing and the primary purpose of the law. The Utilities Commission is not empowered to give an applicant any interest in the highways of the State for commercial transportation of freight or passengers, but only to permit their use; the franchise may be sole, never exclusive, except in the sense that the privilege has not, as yet, been extended to another concern. When the public convenience or necessity requires, the privilege may be recaptured, modified or restricted, or the like privilege extended to another carrier. And this is expressly reserved in the statute or implied in the franchise transaction viewed as a contract, if it is ever of that nature.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E.2d 473, 229 N.C. 31, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-greyhound-corp-v-north-carolina-utilities-commission-nc-1948.