City of Caraway v. Arkansas Commerce Comm'n

453 S.W.2d 722, 248 Ark. 765, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1291
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 18, 1970
Docket5-5251
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 453 S.W.2d 722 (City of Caraway v. Arkansas Commerce Comm'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Caraway v. Arkansas Commerce Comm'n, 453 S.W.2d 722, 248 Ark. 765, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1291 (Ark. 1970).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

This is an appeal by a number of citizens of the City of Caraway, Arkansas, from, a judgment of the Pulaski County Circuit Court reversing the findings and order of the Arkansas Commerce Commission and directing the Commission to issue an order granting the railroad the authority to discontinue its agency station at Caraway, Arkansas. The original petitioners have appealed under the style of City of Caraway, and the Arkansas Commerce Commission has joined in the notice of appeal and designation of record. The appellant relies on the following point for reversal:

“The judgment of the Pulaski Court in reversing the Arkansas Commerce Commission’s order is contrary to the law, contrary to the evidence and contrary to the law and evidence in finding that the station should be closed at Caraway, Arkansas.”

The facts appear as follows: On March 20, 1968, the appellee railroad company filed notice with the Arkansas Commerce Commission of its intention to discontinue its agency station at Caraway, Arkansas, such discontinuance to become effective June 24, 1968. The notice was filed under authority of Ark. Stat. Ann. § 73-809 b (Supp. 1969), which reads as follows:

“Any railroad operating in this State may file with the Arkansas Commerce Commission a notice of discontinuance, dualization or modification of any of its agency stations together with a statement certified by a proper officer of the railroad to the effect that such agency station had been operating at a financial loss according to standard accounting procedures for not less than one [1] year immediately preceding, or that operating economies would result consistent with public convenience and necessity; and such agency station may thereupon be closed or modified ninety [90] days after date of filing of such notice unless a petition for the re-establishment of such discontinued, dualized or modified agency station, signed by at least twenty-five [25] qualified electors residing in the city, town or political subdivision where the same is located, is filed with the Arkansas Commerce Commission within sixty [60] days after date of filing of the notice aforesaid. The Arkansas Commerce Commission is authorized, empowered and required to hear and consider all petitions for the re-establishment of any agency station discontinued, dualized or modified by the railroad under authority of this Act [section], which hearing shall be held within sixty [60] days following filing of petition for re-establishment and following thirty [30] days written notice of such hearing to the railroad and petitioners. In determining whether an agency station should be discontinued, dualized or modified, the standard to be employed is whether the railroad has operated the agency station at a financial loss according to standard accounting procedures for not less than one [1] year immediately preceding the filing of the notice of discontinuance, dualization or modification, or whether operating economies would result therefrom.”

The question before the Commission was whether or not the agency station at Caraway had been operating at a financial loss, according to standard accounting procedures, for more than one year preceding the filing of the notice of discontinuance, or that operating economies would result, consistent with public convenience and necessity.

The evidence pertaining to the “financial loss according to standard accounting procedures” is not as clear in the record as it might have been, but Mr. Wade Ellis, assistant special accountant for the appellee railroad company, testified that according to standard accounting procedures used by all the railroads and accepted and approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission as well as other agencies, including the Commerce Commission and courts of Arkansas, the railroad company had sustained a loss on the Caraway station for a twelve month period in the amount of $1,585.99.

Considerable testimony was directed to the specific figures of income and expenses chargable to the Caraway station. Mr. Ellis testified that in arriving at whether or not a particular station is operating at a financial gain or loss, under the standard accounting procedure adopted by the railroads and used by the appellee, the revenues chargable to the particular station include 50% of the local business and also 100% of the particular station’s proportionate share of the revenues on interline shipments received and forwarded. Mr. Ellis attempted to explain that in the case at bar, local business is defined as business or freight shipments originating at one point on the Cotton Belt and terminating at another point on the Cotton Belt. This means, as we interpret it, that when a carload of freight is shipped from Caraway to another station on the appellee’s line, or from another station on the appellee’s line to Caraway, 50% of the revenue received for that shipment is allocated to the Caraway station and 50% to the other station on the line from which the shipment originated or at which it terminated.

Mr. Ellis testified that “interline business” means what the phrase implies, i. <?., shipments originating at a station on the appellee’s line and terminating at a station on some other railroad company’s line; or, originating at a station on the line of another carrier and terminating at a station on the appellee’s line. As we interpret Mr. Ellis’ testimony in this connection, the Caraway station would receive, in addition to the 50% of the local business, 100% of the revenue received by the appellee on shipments originating on some other railroad system and terminating at the Caraway station, and would likewise receive 100% of the revenue received by the appellee for shipments from Caraway to a station on some other railroad system. Mr. Ellis testified that from these two sources for the twelvemonth period involved, there was $18,417.49 in the railroad revenues assigned to the Caraway station. He says that there was also a total of $107.58 in miscellaneous revenues credited to the Caraway station for the same period.

It thus appears that the standard accounting procedure used for the allocation of the revenues or income between the stations is a fairly simple one. The difficulty arises in the allocation of the railroad expenses between the stations in arriving at the profit or loss to be credited or charged to a particular station, and it is in this area that the accounting procedure is questioned. According to Mr. Ellis the cost item, in arriving at financial profit or loss, is figured on two bases. One is the cost of handling exclusive of station operations, and the other is the actual cost of station operations. Mr. Ellis’ testimony is not perfectly clear on this point, but it appears that the company’s cost of handling exclusive of station operations, includes such items as the cost of locomotive and rolling stock maintenance and operation, as well as such items as roadbed and track maintenance. He testified that under the standard accounting procedures used by the appellee railroad, the amount of this cost to be charged to a given station is determined by the use of a so-called transportation ratio which is 60.42%. According to Mr. Ellis the transportation ratio of 60.42% is simply the ratio of the operating expenses, exclusive of expenses peculiar to the individual stations such as utilities and station agent and employee wages, to the revenue received over the entire transportation system.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
453 S.W.2d 722, 248 Ark. 765, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-caraway-v-arkansas-commerce-commn-ark-1970.