Central Northwest Business Men's Ass'n v. Commerce Commission

168 N.E. 890, 337 Ill. 149
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1929
DocketNo. 19706. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 168 N.E. 890 (Central Northwest Business Men's Ass'n v. Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Northwest Business Men's Ass'n v. Commerce Commission, 168 N.E. 890, 337 Ill. 149 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county setting aside as unlawful and unreasonable an order of the Illinois Commerce Commission entered September 19, 1928, which rescinded a previous order of said commission entered January 26, 1928, authorizing and directing appellee Chicago Railways Company, and the receivers thereof, to install and operate motor bus street railway extension lines on portions of two specified streets in the city of Chicago as a part of the existing street railway system of that company, and denied a petition of the railways company to finance such motor bus operation.

On October 18, 1927, the Central Northwest Business Men’s Association filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission a complaint against appellee Chicago Railways Company and its receivers charging that the street railway service in a certain section of the northwest part of the city of Chicago was inadequate and prayed for an order directing the Chicago Railways Company to install and operate motor bus street railway extension lines on the following streets: Diversey avenue from Milwaukee avenue to North Crawford avenue; Diversey avenue from North Laramie avenue to the western city limits; Belmont avenue from North Central avenue to the western city limits; North Central avenue from Grand avenue to Irving Park boulevard, and North Narragansett avenue from Grand avenue to Irving Park boulevard. The petition showed that the Chicago Railways Company had street car tracks on Belmont avenue, terminating at North Central avenue, and on Diversey avenue between Milwaukee avenue and North Crawford avenue; that it had, pursuant to an order of the commission entered November 18, 1926, installed and was operating a motor bus extension of its Diversey avenue street railway from North Crawford avenue to North Laramie avenue. Hearings were had on the complaint from time to time until January 10, 1928. In the course of these hearings appellant, Chicago Motor Coach Company, was permitted to intervene as a party but it offered no evidence, and the commission on January 26, 1928, entered the following findings of fact: “That the existing transportation facilities in that part of the city of Chicago along and adjacent to Diversey avenue between North Laramie avenue and North Harlem avenue, and along and adjacent to Belmont avenue between North Central avenue and North Harlem avenue, are inadequate and insufficient and that public necessity and convenience require an extension of these facilities into each of these districts, and that the most practicable and effective way of making this extension and supplying the needed additional facilities is (a) by an extension of the existing auxiliary motor bus line on Diversey avenue from North Laramie avenue to North Narragansett avenue and from North Crawford avenue to Milwaukee avenue; (&) by a motor bus line on Belmont avenue from North Central avenue to North Narragansett avenue, both of said motor bus lines to be operated as extensions of and supplementary and auxiliary to and as a part of the existing street railway lines of the Chicago Railways Company.” On these findings the commission entered an order that appellee Chicago Railways Company, and the receivers thereof, be authorized and directed (a) to extend the existing street railway motor bus line on Diversey avenue from North Laramie avenue to North Narragansett avenue and from North Crawford avenue to Milwaukee avenue, and to maintain and operate said motor bus lines, together with the existing motor bus line on Diversey avenue, so as to form a continuous line from Milwaukee avenue to North Narragansett avenue; and also (b) to install, maintain and operate a motor bus line on Belmont avenue from North Central avenue to North Narragansett avenue; and that these motor bus lines be installed, maintained and operated as extensions of and auxiliary and supplementary to the existing street railway system of the Chicago Railways Company and as a part of such system and of the unified system known as the Chicago Surface Lines, and subject to the same rates of fare and the issuance and exchange of transfers between motor busses and street cars as now or shall hereafter prevail on the Chicago Surface Lines. The order recited that the commission retained general jurisdiction of the cause, especially for the purpose of receiving and acting upon any application or petition by the Chicago Railways Company, or the receivers thereof, for any supplemental order, authority or direction relative to the procurement of the necessary funds to pay the cost of the installation of the auxiliary and supplementary bus operation authorized by said order or as to any other matter relating to such installation.

On February 3, 1928, appellant, Chicago Motor Coach Company, filed a petition for a rehearing and to set aside the order of January 26 and grant a certificate to it to put in motor bus lines on the two streets in question as a part of its motor coach system in lieu of the street railway extensions. This petition was withdrawn and re-filed on February 25, 1928, and on March 19, 1928, the commission denied the same and the coach company appealed to the superior court of Cook county, which appeal ,is still pending and undetermined.

On May 15, 1928, appellee Chicago Railways Company filed a petition with the commission for leave to pay from a certain fund accumulating from the revenues of the company and known in this record as the special equipment fund, the cost of installing the motor bus street railway extension lines authorized and directed by the order of January 26. Hearings were had on this petition on June 12 and 13, 1928, at which evidence was introduced on behalf of the Chicago Railways Company as to the number and estimated cost of the motor busses to be purchased and the current growth of the special equipment fund. The matter was taken under advisement by the commission. On June 23, while the matter was still under advisement, the commission gave notice that on Jufy 12, 1928, it would hold a hearing for the purpose of determining whether to rescind, alter or amend the order entered on January 26, and also to reconsider the action taken by the commission on March 19, 1928, denying the petition for rehearing filed by appellant. This notice also directed that the order of January 26 be stayed and suspended pending the further order of the commission. On July 12 a discussion took place between the commissioners present and counsel representing the utilities interested, but no evidence was introduced or called for by the commission. The matter was taken under advisement by the commission, and pending its decision a delegation of the people in the northwest section of the city appeared before the commission and urged it, in the public interest, to allow the order of January 26, 1928, to stand. No further hearing was had, and on September 19, 1928, the commission entered an order which, after preliminar discussion, first rescinded and set aside the order of January 26, 1928, on the ground that the commission deemed the operation of motor bus street railway extensions not desirable and as a matter of policy not to be permitted; second, denied the original complaint of Central Northwest Business Men’s Association; and third, denied the petition of appellee Chicago Railways Company for leai^e to expend money from its special equipment fund for the acquisition, maintenance and operation of auxiliary or supplementary motor busses. Appellee Chicago Railways Company filed with the commission a petition for rehearing.

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Bluebook (online)
168 N.E. 890, 337 Ill. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-northwest-business-mens-assn-v-commerce-commission-ill-1929.