Chemical Tank Lines, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

165 A.2d 668, 193 Pa. Super. 607
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 1960
DocketAppeals, Nos. 193, 194, 195, and 196
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 165 A.2d 668 (Chemical Tank Lines, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chemical Tank Lines, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 165 A.2d 668, 193 Pa. Super. 607 (Pa. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, P. J.,

These appeals are from the order, of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission dated April 4, 1960, refusing and dismissing the applications of four common carriers, Chemical Tank Lines, Inc., Top Transport, Inc., E. Brooke Matlaek, Inc., and. Modern Transfer Co., Inc., inter alia, and one contract carrier, Schwerman Company of Pennsylvania, Inc., seeking authority to transport cement in bulk and in bags by motor truck from cement plants in eastern Pennsylvania to intrastate points in Pennsylvania. The end result of this order of the commission is to limit the cement industry in eastern Pennsylvania to intrastate shipment of their products wholly by rail except for existing rights given to three motor truck carriers, to wit, Harold C. Gabler, Coastal Tank Lines, Inc., and Seaboard Tank Lines, Inc. The rights granted to Gabler, Coastal, and Seaboard were limited to transportation by truck of cement in bulk, and included only off-rail delivery points, that is, places where no rail siding, existed. The services of the three.common carriers authorized to render bulk transportation to off-fail points in eastern Pennsylvania are not utilized by the industry.

•. The commission refused the applications on the-grounds that the need for the proposed service and the inadequacy of existing rail and motor carrier service were not shown, especially since. the ..existing motor [612]*612carrier service has not been utilized; The applicant motor carriers who have appealed, and the cement producers who supported the applications and participate in these appeals question the commission’s action, contending that the need for the proposed service and the inadequacy of the existing service are clear.

As the commission’s order of April. 4, 1960, observes, this case presents “issues of great economic importance to the cement industry in Pennsylvania, to the carriers by whom their product has been or is sought to be transported, and to the public at large.”

In the proceedings before the commission a greater number of applicants requested authority to serve the cement industry and its customers than are involved in the present appeals. There were thirteen applicants to the commission who filed twenty-seven separate applications seeking authority as motor carriers, common or contract, to transport dry bulk cement in tank or hopper-type vehicles and dry cement in bags or containers.

The applications fell into three groups. The first group, of which most are presently transporters of other commodities by motor vehicle in bulk, sought authority to transport cement both in bulk and in packages to all points in Pennsylvania from twenty specifically designated plants and plant sites of cement manufacturers located in eastern Pennsylvania. This first group includes appellants Chemical Tank Lines, Inc., Top Transport, Inc., E. Brooke Matlack, Inc., and Modern Transfer Co., Inc., who sought the authority as common carriers. - Also in the first group were appellant Schwerman Company of Pennsylvania, Inc., and Cement Express, Inc., who sought authority as contract carriers. With one exception, the applications proposed that only one carrier would serve each cement producing company or plant. The exception [613]*613was that Universal Atlas Cement Division, United States Steel Corporation, sought the services of both Modern and Schwerman. This first group of applicants had the support of the cement industry before the commission as well as on these appeals. All of this group except Cement Express, Inc., have appealed and constitute the appellants before this Court.

Four additional applications were filed asking for authority to transport, as common carriers, cement in bulk or in packages from the counties of Lehigh, Northampton, and York to points in Pennsylvania. These applications are referred to in the commission’s order as the second group. The scope of these applications was substantially broader than that of any single member of the first group of applicants because the rights requested included authorization to transport for any shipper. These applications were supported by consignees but not by the cement industry, the shippers. None of this group appealed from the refusal of their applications.

The third group of applicants consisted of the wholly owned motor carrier subsidiaries of three of the rail carriers who protested the applications of the first and second group. These carriers sought authority to transport cement in bulk or in packages to points in Pennsylvania from or to various enumerated plants. These applications were • favored by some consignees but not by the cement industry, the shippers. There has been no appeal by any of this group from the refusal of the applications.1

[614]*614The applicants in the first and third groups also filed applications with the Interstate Commerce Commission for interstate authority to transport cement from all of the points of origin here involved. Most of these interstate applications requested authority to serve.as contract carriers to various cement consignors, including the eastern Pennsylvania producers. If the applications were granted, both interstate and intrastate, the applicants of the first group propose to conduct for the eastern Pennsylvania cement industry a combined interstate and intrastate loading and carrying operation using the same personnel, vehicles, and facilities simultaneously and interchangeably for each shipper. There does not appear to have been a final disposition of the interstate applications.

Although the record and the briefs are voluminous, there is actually no real dispute as to certain basic facts. The cement producers here involved constitute the entire Portland Cement manufacturing industry in eastern Pennsylvania, most plants being located in what is known as the Lehigh Cement District. 2

The eastern Pennsylvania cement plants have a production capacity of approximately 44,000,000 bar[615]*615rels of finished cement a year or about 8.3 million tons. As found by the commission, the annual rate of sales and shipments based upon the 1958 record appears to be approximately 6.5 million tons. Approximately three quarters of the total production is shipped in bulk, the balance generally being shipped in paper bags. The proportion of package to bulk shipments varies from plant to plant, depending largely upon the type of cement produced. For example, Universal Atlas, which has a great diversity of product, markets 4:5 per cent of its product in packages; on the other hand, Whitehall Cement Manufacturing Company and National Portland Cement Company market all except 15 per cent of their production in bulk. The amount which is sold in intrastate commerce varies from plant to plant, but on the whole the intrastate traffic appears to be approximately one fourth of the total production of the eastern plants.

Except for one plant situated in York County which has utilized motor transportation of its product under a leasing arrangement, virtually all finished cement produced in eastern Pennsylvania has moved by rail. On March 9, 1959, the commission granted authority to the three motor carriers, the intervening appellees, Harold C. Gabler, Coastal Tank Lines, Inc., and Seaboard Tank Lines, Inc., to transport cement in bulk in motor tank vehicles throughout eastern Pennsylvania to consignees lacking rail connections at point of use. As stated, the eastern Pennsylvania cement producers do not utilize the services of these motor carriers.

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165 A.2d 668, 193 Pa. Super. 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chemical-tank-lines-inc-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1960.