Braswell v. United States

49 F. Supp. 940, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2765
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1943
DocketCiv. No. 244
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 F. Supp. 940 (Braswell v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braswell v. United States, 49 F. Supp. 940, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2765 (W.D. Tex. 1943).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

The suit was to enjoin and set aside orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission to the extent that they limited and thereby in part denied the “grandfather” certificate complainant had applied for. The claim was that in limiting the common carrier certificate, the commission granted, to the movement of edible nuts westbound from San Antonio, Texas, to Los Angeles, California, and general commodities, with certain exceptions, eastbound from Los Angeles to San Antonio, but not serving any intermediate points, and thereby denying applicant the right to carry general commodities eastbound and to serve the intermediate points of El Paso, Tucson, Phoenix and Yuma, the commission had failed and refused to follow the evidence and had acted arbitrarily in refusing.

The defense was a general denial and an insistence that in making the reports and orders in the proceeding before it, the commission had considered and weighed carefully, in the light of its own knowledge and experience, each fact, circumstance, and condition called to its attention on behalf of the parties, and that its order instead of being arbitrary and without support in the evidence was fully supported and reasonable.

On allegations that for some years before, and continuously since, June 1, 1935, the applicant had been engaged in operations as a motor carrier carrying general commodities between San Antonia, Texas, and Los Angeles, California, including the intermediate points of El Paso, Tucson, Phoenix and Yuma, over regular routes, complainant, as applicant, applied to the commission, under the “grandfather” clauses, Sections 206(a) and 209(a) of the Motor Carrier Act of 1935,1 for a certificate of public convenience and necessity or a permit authorizing continuance of his operation as a common or contract carrier by motor vehicle in interstate or foreign commerce of general commodities except explosives, produce, live stock and farm products, between those points. The application was vigorously protested by the principal Texas railroads, Pacific Southwest Railroad Association, State Corporation Commission of New Mexico, Interstate Freight Carriers’ Conference, In.*, and certain motor carriers operating in the territory. There was a full hearing in which a great deal of evidence, both oral and documentary, was taken on whether the applicant was in fact in bona fide operation as a common carrier on June 1, 1935, and on whether, if the operation of the applicant were bona fide, they were those not of a common carrier of general commodities but of a contract carrier of shelled pecans westward and of a few commodities eastward between San Antonio and Pacific coast points. The hearing concluded on October 26, 1939, and division five of the commission filed its report,2 apparently rejecting or at least paying little' attention to the oral uncontradicted testimony, and purporting to base its findings and order entered on the written and documentary evidence introduced. Finding: that applicant, a common rather than a contract carrier, had not sufficiently shown, to entitle it to a common carrier [942]*942certificate as a carrier of general commodities, that it was on June 1, 1935, engaged in hauling general commodities, but had shown only a hauling of special commodities, principally pecans, westward, and automobile parts and accessories, janitor supplies, wines, liquors, plumbers’ goods and water heaters eastward; that it was entitled to a limited grandfather certificate of public convenience and necessity, authorizing the continuance of such operations; but that in all other respects its application should be denied; the commission entered its order limiting applicant’s certificate accordingly.

Applicant complaining that the findings and order arbitrarily disregarded the evidence and its effect, and unreasonably restricted applicant’s certificate, secured a reconsideration. On December 8, 1942, the full commission handed down a report modifying the findings in its prior report. Still denying the full certificate applied for, it enlarged the certificate granted so as to authorize the westbound carriage of edible nuts from San Antonio, Texas, to Los Angeles, California, and the eastward carriage of general commodities with certain exceptions from Los Angeles to San Antonio,3 but not permitting service to and from intermediate points. An order was therefore entered directing the issuance of an appropriate amended certificate in accordance with the amended findings and denying the application except to the extent granted. Plaintiff is here attacking the findings on which this order is based, as arrived at by the arbitrary rejection and disregard of positive and uncontradicted testimony, and the order as the result of an effort to microscopically pare down and whittle away in disregard of statutory standards a right which under the undisputed facts the statute has given him. Pointing to the documentary evidence as to the numerous and various commodities handled westbound from San Antonio to Los Angeles, and to the oral evidence which without contradiction shows that he both held himself out to carry and carried general commodities both east and west, plaintiff insists that the findings are without support in the evidence and the order is an arbitrary one. Conceding that though the statute does not in terms provide for limiting grandfather certificates to particular commodities, the commission may rightfully limit such a certificate to the carriage of special commodities when the facts examined and determined in the light of the statutory standards show that the carriage, which is the basis of the right claimed, was in fact so limited, plaintiff insists that no such case is made out here. Conceding, too, that the record supports the conclusion that plaintiff during the critical time did actually carry a larger assortment of general commodities from west to east than he did from east to west and that in that period he carried west more nuts than he did any other commodity, plaintiff, pointing to the undisputed proof that he held himself out to carry and did carry general commodities east to west, as well as west to east, insists that there is no legal basis in the evidence for limiting his certificate as a carrier westbound to the one commodity, edible nuts. As to the service to and from intermediate points, admitting that the actual carriage to and from them was nowhere near as large as that carried through, plaintiff yet insists that the undisputed evidence shows that on and after the critical date he was a common carrier between those points of the same general commodities that he was holding himself out to carry and did carry through. Urging that the record standing thus, the commission’s order has unlawfully deprived him of a right he is entitled to and must have to live, he invokes the language of the Supreme Court in United States v. Carolina [943]*943Freight Carriers Corporation, 315 U.S. 475, 62 S.Ct. 722, 729, 86 L.Ed. 971: “To appellee such matters involve life or death. Empty or partially loaded trucks on return trips may well drive the enterprise to the wall. A restriction in this case of the commodities which may be carried from any one point on southbound trips is a patent denial to appellee of that ‘substantial parity between future operations and prior bona fide operations’ which the Act contemplates. * * * Its prior opportunity should not be restricted beyond the clear requirements of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F. Supp. 940, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braswell-v-united-states-txwd-1943.