Corporation Com. v. . R. R.

117 S.E. 563, 185 N.C. 435, 1923 N.C. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 117 S.E. 563 (Corporation Com. v. . R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corporation Com. v. . R. R., 117 S.E. 563, 185 N.C. 435, 1923 N.C. LEXIS 99 (N.C. 1923).

Opinion

On 11 September, 1914, the Corporation Commission of this State made an order requiring the Southern Railway Company and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company to jointly construct and maintain a depot or station at Selma, North Carolina, for the use and accommodation of the public entitled to use the same and enjoy the facilities thereof. It appears, and is also admitted, that this order, the exact terms of which will hereafter appear, was not appealed from or in any way reversed or modified, though its enforcement, under the statute, was stayed or postponed, for the reason appearing in the record, and as a matter of favor to the respondents, the railroads, until its enforcement was required by *Page 462 the Corporation Commission when the reason for the stay no longer existed.

In order to clearly understand the successive steps taken in the course of this proceeding from the including 10 September, 1914, to the present time, it will be well to state, at least substantially, the proceedings in the matter as they will hereafter appear, and which are extracted from the record, pages 6 to 18, both inclusive.

BETTER DEPOT FACILITIES.

(439) Town Officers and Citizens of Selma v. The Southern Railway Company and Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company.

Ordered, that the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and the Southern Railway Company proceed with the construction of a union passenger station at Selma, N.C. in accordance with plans submitted by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, 9 January, 1917, and substantially on the site of the present passenger depot at Selma, and that the construction of same be completed within six months from this date.

ORDER OVERRULING EXCEPTIONS.

In re Passenger Stations for Kinston, Selma, Newton, and Plymouth, N.C. Commissioner's Order of 11 April, 1922.

Upon consideration of the exceptions filed in the above cause by the Carolina and Northwestern Railway Company, as to Newton; the Southern Railway Company, as to Newton and Selma; the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, as to Kinston and Plymouth, and the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company, as to Kinston and Plymouth, it is ordered that the exceptions in each case be and they are hereby overruled.

By order of the Commission, this 20 May, 1922.

R. O. SELF, Clerk.

IN RE UNION PASSENGER DEPOT.

Citizens of Selma, North Carolina, v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and Southern Railway Company.

By the Commission: Upon consideration of the record in this cause, we find that formal petition was filed with the Corporation Commission 1 July, 1913, alleging inadequacy of passenger depot accommodations maintained by Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and Southern Railway Company at Selma, N.C.; that after due notice to defendant *Page 463 railroad companies, formal hearing was held by the Corporation Commission at Selma, N.C. on 9 April, 1914, at which hearing both of the defendant railroad companies were represented by counsel, and that, based upon the evidence produced at said hearing, the Commission made its order of 10 September, 1914, directed to the Southern Railway Company and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, finding that the said passenger depot accommodations were inadequate, and ordering that the defendant railroad companies erect at Selma, at the junction point, a station adequate for their future needs, and that the plans for the proposed station be submitted to the Corporation Commission by 15 October, 1914, for its approval. Copies of said order were served upon each of the defendant railroad companies, and no exceptions (440) to the said order were filed by either of them, but on 6 October, 1914, nine days before expiration of the term for filing the said plans, an officer of the Southern Railway Company appeared before the Corporation Commission and presented the extraordinary financial difficulties confronting the carriers at that time by reason of conditions produced by the European War, and presented the plea that because of such conditions the carriers be granted indulgence with respect to expenditures for improved facilities until such time as their financial conditions should improve. The following response was made to this plea for indulgence:

NORTH CAROLINA CORPORATION COMMISSION.

RALEIGH, N.C. 7 October, 1914.

DEAR SIR: — The Corporation Commission has given very careful consideration to your request, made on behalf of the Southern Railway Company, that this Commission extend to the company such consideration and leniency as it properly could during the continuance of the present depressed conditions, and especially that your company be relieved as far as possible from making improvements in facilities, stations, etc., until its greatly decreased earnings again become normal.

We are convinced from the full and frank statements made to us of your financial condition and your earnings for the last three months, which show increased losses from week to week, that the earnings of the company are not more than enough to meet its actual operation expenses, and that in order to do this the company will have to practice economy and retrenchment.

Under these circumstances it appears to us that it would be unreasonable, and not expected by the public, that you should be required to make improvements which could reasonably be postponed. *Page 464

We therefore advise that until there is an improvement in conditions we will not require the company to make improvements in facilities, stations, etc., except where there is some peculiar necessity for immediate action.

In respect to applications for improved service and facilities pending before us, we will probably proceed to hear them and determine what improvements will be ultimately required so that the public may know what to expect, but these improvements will not be required to be made until there is an improvement in present conditions, except in cases of urgent necessity.

The foregoing letter was not in any sense a revocation of the order of 10, September, 1914, but merely a concession that further time would be permitted for its observance.

The indulgent policy of cooperation with the carriers indicated (441) in this letter was continued until after the war period, when from time to time the matter of urgent need for better passenger depot accommodations at Selma was urged upon these defendant companies without adequate response, and on 2 March, 1922, notice was given each of these defendant companies that the matter of station facilities at Selma would be further heard. The Southern Railway Company was not represented at that hearing, and after the said hearing the Commission made its order of 11 April, 1922, reviewing conditions under which there had been delay in compliance with the Commission's order of 10 September, 1914, and an order was made that the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company and the Southern Railway Company proceed with the construction of the union passenger station at Selma in accordance with plans which have been submitted and approved, and that the construction of same be completed within six months from 11 April, 1922. No exception to this order was filed by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, and that company announced its readiness to proceed with its part of compliance with the said order.

The defendant Southern Railway Company did, on 8 May, 1922, file exceptions to the said order, which said exceptions were overruled, whereupon the Southern Railway Company filed notice of appeal, without bond for cost, and requested that the record and exceptions thereto be transmitted to the Superior Court, in term, of the county as authorized by law.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.E. 563, 185 N.C. 435, 1923 N.C. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corporation-com-v-r-r-nc-1923.