City of Wichita v. Hussey

271 P. 403, 126 Kan. 677, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 3, 1928
DocketNo. 27,970
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 271 P. 403 (City of Wichita v. Hussey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Wichita v. Hussey, 271 P. 403, 126 Kan. 677, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 172 (kan 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The city of Wichita brought this action in the district court of Shawnee county against the public service commission to enjoin and set aside an order of that official body prescribing rates for the transportation of passengers on motor busses operating in Wichita and vicinity.

The order of the commission was made on the applications of two bus operators in Wichita upon a showing that the five-cent fare [678]*678they were permitted to charge was insufficient to earn a reasonable return on their respective investments and to furnish proper equipment and provide efficient service. The city of Wichita contested the proposed advance in rates before the commission; a number of other bus operators participated in the hearings, as well as the managing officers of a bus line operated by the local street-car company; and it was understood by the commission and by all concerned that if a substantial increase in rates were sanctioned a new motor bus company would be organized consolidating all the existing lines and make the necessary investment and expenditures to give the Wichita public an efficient motor omnibus transportation system.

The order of the commission gave authority to the bus operators to advance their five-cent rates to the following schedule:

Single fare........................................... $0.08
Two tokens...........................................15
Tickets, five rides — sold only at office of applicant and other'convenient places designated by applicant.....35
Tickets, twenty-four rides — sold only at office of applicant and other convenient places designated by applicant ........................................... 1.50

Following the order increasing the rates, the Wichita Motor Bus Company was organized, and by various negotiations it bought out the several independent- and competing lines, and set about the business of systematizing and improving the service and equipment.

The city brought this action to test the validity of the order on the alleged ground that the rates authorized by the commission were excessive and unreasonable. The public service commission joined issue. The Wichita Motor Bus Company was permitted to intervene. Its contentions were that even the new rates were inadequate, and that the city of Wichita was not a patron of the bus lines and had no financial or other concern with the bus rates sufficient to justify it to maintain the action.

After a full hearing the trial court made certain findings and conclusions, which in part read:

“1. The court is not disposed to hold that the city of-Wichita has no standing to maintain this action. . . .
“2. . . . The cross-petition of the intervener will be denied for the reason that the commission fixed the rates asked for by the predecessors of the intervener, and for the further reason that the rates are, in a measure experimental for reasons that will be stated later in this memorandum, and it can[679]*679not well be determined, at the present time that the rates are not sufficient. On the contrary, I am inclined to think that they will be found to be adequate.
“3. On the issues made in this case, and under the evidence, a peculiar gituation is presented, unlike that' usually arising in a rate case. The rates fixed by the commission are, to some extent, conditional. It appears and the rates were allowed largely on condition that the intervener was to spend $120,000 for fifteen new motor busses, and build a bus garage to cost', with the site and equipment, nearly $150,000. The investment for these purposes would constitute nearly half of what is included in the assets making up the rate base. If these expenditures are not made, a different question would be presented, but the court would have no right to assume at this time that the representations made to the commission in this behalf were not in good faith or that they will not be substantially carried out. On the assumption that these expenditures are to be made, the court is not able to find that the rates fixed are unlawful, unreasonable or excessive."
“It must be true that the bus business is, to some extent, in an experimental stage. So far as experience has gone in other localities, it appears from the evidence of John L. Fennell before the commission, the record of which was introduced in this case, that the average fare charged in railway operation of motor busses is 8.9 cents. The rate in Kansas City is 10 cents. While rates in other cities where conditions may be different do not set a standard here, they are informing.
“In my opinion, the returns of the bus company for the first three months of 1927 do not furnish a fair standard to measure future receipts by. Doubtless the increased fare has reduced the number of actual passengers, and the transfer system is also responsible for a falling off in the revenue. It seems probable that as soon as the business is better established, and the riding public becomes more accustomed to the new rates, a better showing will be made. The evidence given on behalf of the bus company is to the effect that the falling off because of inoreased fares should be about nine per cent, and that from the change in the transfer system about ten per cent. The nine per cent decrease in passengers carried, where the increase in rates is as much as in this case, about fifty per cent, would not, in my judgment, be a sufficient allowance, especially where a competing electric line carries passengers for six cents. The falling off of traffic would depend quite largely on the extent of the increase in fare. For example, an increase of 100 per cent might drive away a large part of the traffic, especially where there was a competing transportation system which was available. The decrease in business done by the motor bus company during the first three months of 1927 is perhaps the strongest point in favor of the position of the plaintiff in this case. However, under all the evidence, it does not seem to me that a maximum fare of 8 cents, with three options to buy tokens at lesser rates, the minimum being 24 tokens for $1.50, or 6% cents each, should be held to be unreasonable or excessive at the present time.”

Judgment was accordingly entered for plaintiff, and the city appeals, urging, in effect, that the trial court should have found that the [680]*680rates authorized by the commission were excessive and unreasonable. In its argument in support of this contention, counsel for the city seem to shut their eyes to the limitations of an appellate review, the most elementary of which is that the supreme court cannot serve as a fact-finding tribunal. This elementary rule not only applies in ordinary litigation between private parties but to controversies over utility rate cases as well. Thus in State, ex rel., v. Telephone Co., 115 Kan. 236, 223 Pac. 771, where a schedule of telephone rates promulgated by the public utilities commission had been enjoined by the district court after a lengthy hearing before a referee, the cause was brought to this court for review, and we were constrained to say:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Holton Creamery Co. v. Brown
44 P.2d 262 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)
Barton v. Mercantile Insurance
273 P. 408 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 P. 403, 126 Kan. 677, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-wichita-v-hussey-kan-1928.