Citizens of Stringer v. Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad

90 So. 2d 25, 229 Miss. 1, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 580
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1956
Docket40226
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 90 So. 2d 25 (Citizens of Stringer v. Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens of Stringer v. Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad, 90 So. 2d 25, 229 Miss. 1, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 580 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

*4 Holmes, J.

The appellee, G-ulf, Mobile & Ohio Bailroad Company, presented its petition to the Mississippi Public Service Commission seeking the authority of the Commission to discontinue its agency at Stringer, Jasper County, Mississippi, and establish in lieu thereof a prepay station.

The petition alleged that the revenue received by the petitioner through its agency at Stringer is derived from the handling of carload freight and less-than-carload freight, and that such freight may be handled with substantially the same dispatch and efficiency without the services of an agent and that the public will suffer no material inconvenience as the result of the proposed change. The petition further alleged that the expenses of conducting the operations through the agency at Stringer exceeds the revenue derived therefrom by a substantial sum, and that economic waste will result unless the change is permitted. It was further alleged in the petition that the public convenience and necessity no longer require the maintenance of an agency station at Stringer.

The granting of the petition was protested by some of the citizens of Stringer, and after hearing the evidence the Commission found that the handling of incoming and outgoing shipments of carload traffic and less-than-carload traffic will not be handled with substantially the same dispatch and efficiency if the petitioner were allowed to discontinue its agency and substitute in lieu thereof a prepay station, and that the public would in the event of such substitution suffer material inconvenience. The Commission further found that in the event a prepay station were permitted to be substituted in lieu of the present agency, a greater inconvenience would re- *5 suit to the public. The Commission further found that the petioner furnished for the year 1954 not more than 90.6% of the carload shipping facilities requested by the citizens of Stringer, and that the number of shipments could he and would be materially increased if additional facilities for shipping* were made available at Stringer, and that, therefore, if the petitioner lost money at Stringer during the year 1954 it was not as the result of shipments being unavailable or of the unwillingness of shippers at said point to use the facilities of petitioner if made available. The Commission further found that the public convenience and necessity would not be met by the substitution of a prepay station at Stringer in lieu of the present agency station.

In accordance with these findings, the Commission entered an order denying the petition. On an appeal by the petitioner to the circuit court judgment was entered reversing the order of the Commission and directing the Commission to enter an order granting the prayer of the petition, the court holding that there was no evidence to support the findings and order of the Commission. From this judgment of the circuit court the protestants prosecute this appeal.

The paramount questions presented on this appeal are whether the public convenience and necessity would be reasonably met by the substitution of a prepay station in lieu of an agency station at Stringer, and whether the findings and order of the Commission to the contrary are supported by substantial evidence or are purely arbitrary and capricious.

Of course the power of a court of competent jurisdiction to review the order of the Commission to determine whether it is supported by substantial evidence or is purely arbitrary and capricious is beyond question. Dixie Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Mississippi Public Service Commission, et al, 190 Miss. 704, 200 So. 579.

*6 The further question is presented as to whether the requirement as to public convenience and necessity is such as to impose upon the appellee the duty of maintaining the agency station even though to do so would result in financial loss to the appellee. We recognize the well settled rule as announced in the case of Tri-State Transit Company of La., Inc. v. Dixie Greyhound Lines, Inc., 197 Miss. 37, 19 So. 2d 441, that the findings of the Commission under Section 7815 of the Mississippi Code of 1942 are prima facie correct and that the reviewing court can not substitute its judgment for that of the Commission and disturb its findings where there is any substantial basis in the evidence for such findings, or where the ruling of the commission is not capricious or arbitrary.

The rule is equally well settled, however, that where the essential facts are not contradicted, the reviewing court may determine as a matter of law whether the same are sufficient to support the order of the Commission.

We think this is a case in which the essential facts are uncontradicted and we relate them in determining their sufficiency to support the order of the Commission. In considering the facts it is to be borne in mind that it is not proposed by the appellee to abandon all service at Stringer, but it is proposed to provide a substitute service which it is claimed will adequately meet the requirements of public convenience and necessity at that point.

Stringer is an unincorporated community in Jasper County, Mississippi, located on appellee’s line of railroad and situated 8.5 miles south of Bay Springs and 16 miles north of Laurel. It is situated on paved Highway No. 15, which connects Stringer with both Bay Springs and Laurel and runs parrallel with the appellee’s line of railroad. The population of Stringer within a radius of one mile from its center is variously estimated to be from 200 to 450 persons. The trade territory served by *7 the present agency at Stringer covers abont 9 square miles. The agent at Stringer has nothing to do with the operation of the telegraph or the operation of appellee’s trains. The agent’s working hours are 8 hours a day for 5 days a week. So small is the volume of business at Stringer that it requires the agent only about 30 minutes each day to perform his necessary duties. He is paid a salary of $3200 per year and the total expenses incurred in maintaining the agency at Stringer, including the salary of the agent, amounted for the year 1954 to $3575.19. The appellee serves Stringer with two freight trains per day, one northbound arriving in Stringer between 8:30 and 9:30 A.M., and the other southbound arriving in Stringer between 6:30 and 8:00 P.M. In the event the agency service is discontinued and a prepay station service substituted, no change would be made in the number of trains serving Stringer.

In addition to the train service, Stringer is also served by the Gulf Transport Company, which is a subsidiary of the appellee and owned by the appellee and which presently handles substantially all of the less-than-carload shipments into and out of Stringer. This truck line service delivers less-than-carload shipments to the places of business of consignees and also picks up for outbound shipment less-than-carload freight at the place of business of the shipper. Stringer is also served by two other truck lines, namely, the Stevens Truck Line and West Bros. Truck Line.

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 2d 25, 229 Miss. 1, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-of-stringer-v-gulf-mobile-ohio-railroad-miss-1956.