Civic Center Ass'n of Los Angeles v. Railroad Commission

166 P. 351, 175 Cal. 441, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 698
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1917
DocketL. A. No. 5028.
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 166 P. 351 (Civic Center Ass'n of Los Angeles v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Civic Center Ass'n of Los Angeles v. Railroad Commission, 166 P. 351, 175 Cal. 441, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 698 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an application for a writ of mandate against the Railroad Commission to compel it to hear and determine the complaints of the plaintiffs, asking that the several railroads entering the city of Los Angeles be required to abolish grade crossings and establish and use a common union depot within said city.

Sections 60, 61, and 62 of the Public Utilities Act of 1915 provide that any corporation or person, municipal corporation, body politic, or any civic, commercial, or mercantile association may complain in writing to the Railroad Commission, “setting forth any act or thing done or omitted to be done by any public utility, ’ ’ that thereupon said commission shall fix the time for the hearing of such complaint and give notice thereof to the public utility complained of, and that upon such hearing the commission shall render its decision and order concerning the matter complained of. (Stats. 1915, p. 157.) Section 67 of said act provides that the writ of mandamus shall lie from the supreme court to the commission in all proper cases.

In July, 1916, the three plaintiffs herein, in pursuance of these provisions, each filed a complaint with the Railroad Commission against the Southern Pacific Company, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Pe Railway and San Pedro, Los Angeles, and Salt Lake Railroad Company. Each of these companies owns and operates an extensive system of railways, embracing several hundred miles of track in the state of California, each line running from other states into California and passing -through the city of Los Angeles. Each company maintains in said city, on its own track, passenger and freight depots for its own use. The tracks running to each of these depots from outside the city cross numerous streets of the city of Los Angeles on the same level as the streets. These are the grade crossings referred to in the respective complaints made to the commission. The commission fixed the hearing for September 15, 1916, and gave due notice to the three railroad companies complained of. On October 21, 1916, the commission decided that it had no jurisdiction over the streets of the city of Los Angeles, or over *443 said railroads to direct them to cross the same by subways or viaducts below or above the street grades, and refused to proceed further in the matter.

It is proper to say that the members of the commission believed that it had such jurisdiction and that they took this course in order to bring about a speedy and authoritative determination of the question, being advised that the complainants would seek a writ of mandate to compel the commission to hear and determine the matters in controversy. Accordingly, this complaint was filed praying this court to issue a writ of mandate commanding said commission to proceed to hear and determine said 'complaints upon the merits.

The city of Los Angeles was not made a party to this proceeding. The city attorney has been allowed to appear, as amicus curiae, on behalf of said city, however, and has filed briefs in opposition to the writ prayed for, so far as the crossings of the railroads above or below the streets are concerned. He concedes that the. Railroad Commission has jurisdiction and power to order the several railroads above named to establish and maintain a common depot and to cease the use of their respective depots as heretofore established and maintained. He contends that the Railroad Commission has no power to regulate or interfere with the use of public streets within the city of Los Angeles, that the exclusive control of such streets and railroad crossings is vested in said city, and that any order the Railroad Commission may make directing the establishment or maintenance of crossings, on, above, or below grade, of any street in the city of Los Angeles, would be subject to the power of the city to control and regulate the use of such street and crossing and to improve or change the same to promote the public convenience in the use of them. This presents the question involved in the case.

The Public Utilities Act of 1915, in defining the powers of the Railroad Commission, provides that:

“The commission shall have the exclusive power to determine and prescribe the manner, including the particular point of crossing, and the terms of installation, operation, maintenance, use and protection ... of each crossing of a public road or highway by a railroad or street railroad and of a street by a railroad or vice versa, . . . and to alter or abolish any such crossing, and to require where, in its judgment, it would be practicable, a separation of grades at any such cross *444 ing heretofore or hereafter established and to prescribe the terms upon which such separation shall be made and the proportions in which the expense of the alteration or abolition of such crossings or the separation of such grades shall be divided between the railroad or street railroad corporations affected or between such corporations and the state, county, municipality or other public authority in interest.” (Stats. 1915, p. 137, sec. 43 [b].) The Public Utilities Act of 1911, of which the act of 1915 is a revision, contained precisely the same provision. (Spec. Sess. 1911, p. 40, sec. 43 [b].)

There can be no doubt that the above-quoted language is sufficient, in effect, if taken alone, to give to the Railroad Commission the powers over railroad crossings of streets which the plaintiffs herein seek to have the commission exercise. The contention of the city attorney is that the provisions of the city charter give the same powers to the city, and that the charter is paramount and superior to the Public Utilities Act as to the parts of the railroad lines lying within the city.

The conflicting provisions of .the Constitution, the statutes, and the city charter of Los Angeles bearing upon the subject, and the frequency with which they have each been amended, tend to complicate the problem. It will be necessary to give a brief history of these provisions and the amendments thereof from the time of the adoption of the constitutional amendments in October, 1911, amending section 22 and inserting section 23 in article XII thereof.

As the mandate is sought to compel the commission to exercise jurisdiction in the future, and no rights have accrued by reason of a previous exercise thereof over the subject matter, our inquiry should extend to the law in force on the subject at the time of bur decision. If in any respect the law relating thereto has been changed since this proceeding was begun, we should determine the jurisdiction of the commission as it exists under the law in force when our judgment is given. It appears to be necessary to consider at some length the law as it existed when the proceeding was begun, and the effect thereon of certain subsequent amendments of the Los Angeles charter.

At and before the time of "the election on constitutional amendments in October, 1911, section 6 of article XI, as amended in 1896, provided, with respect to cities operating *445 under freeholders’ charters, of which Los Angeles was one, that “all charters thereof framed or adopted by authority of this Constitution, except in municipal affairs,

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Bluebook (online)
166 P. 351, 175 Cal. 441, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/civic-center-assn-of-los-angeles-v-railroad-commission-cal-1917.