Crosbyton-Southplains R. v. Railroad Commission

169 S.W. 1038, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 828
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1914
DocketNo. 5409.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 1038 (Crosbyton-Southplains R. v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosbyton-Southplains R. v. Railroad Commission, 169 S.W. 1038, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 828 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

JENKINS, J.

This suit was instituted by appellant against appellee the Railroad Commission on December 18, 1913, praying for an injunction to restrain said appellee from enforcing the following order, to wit:

“Railroad Commission of Texas.
“Austin, Texas, December 3, 1913.
“Hearing No. 1419. Ralls on Crosbyton-South-plains Railroad. Petition for Depot and Station Facilities.
“The above numbered and entitled cause having been called for hearing by the Commission at its November term, 1913, in .pursuance of notice duly given herein under date of June 9, 1913, and the Commission having heard the evidence offered and facts presented by both the petitioners and the respondent railway company herein, and having duly considered the same., is of the opinion that the prayer of the petition herein should be granted. It is therefore hereby ordered by the Railroad Commission of Texas that the Crosbyton-Southplains Raii-road Company be and it is hereby ordered and required to provide and thereafter to maintain, at the point on its line of railroad where the town of Ralls is located, an adequate and sufficient spur or side track for the accommodation of cars to be loaded with such car load ship- *1040 meets of freight as it may be the desire of shippers to load at that point, and for the unloading of cars containing car load shipments of freight to be unloaded at that point. It is further ordered that said above-named railroad company be and it is hereby required to place on said spur or side track all empty cars demanded by shippers for the loading of car load shipments of freight thereon, as well as all cars containing car load shipments of freight where the unloading of same is demanded at that point. It is further ordered that, within 20 days from this date, this Commission be advised in writing by said above-named railroad company of the exact location in said town of Ralls, and the length of the spur or side track proposed by it to be provided in pursuance with the requirements of this order, in order that it may judge of the suitableness and adequacy thereof and for its approval, and that said spur or side track be completed and ready for use on or before 60 days from this date.
“[Signed] William D. Williams,
“Earle B. Mayfield,
“Commissioners.”

A temporary injunction was granted. On January 29, 1914, after trial on the merits before the court without a jury, judgment was rendered denying the relief prayed for by appellant, and ordering appellant to carry out the order of appellee.

Appellant alleged in its petition, as grounds of relief against the order of appel-lee above set out: That, if appellee has any power to order sidings and spurs, it can do so only when such sidings and spurs are for public use, and then only at (1) places of starting; (2) junctions of other roads; and (3) sidings and stopping places already established. That appellant was incorporated April, 1910, to build a railroad from Crosby-ton to Lubbock, a distance of 39 miles, and immediately thereafter located its right of way and its depots as follows: Crosbyton; Cedric, 11% miles west of Crosbyton;' Lorenzo, 18i/i0 miles west of Crosbyton; Ida-lou, 26Vio miles west of Crosbyton; and at Lubbock. Thát the country at that time was sparsely settled. That Cedric is conveniently located to transact all business offered the railroad in- the territory immediately east and west and north and south for 20' miles, being the same territory that is adjacent to Ralls, and that it has supplied all necessary facilities at Cedric for the transaction of such business. That there was no town at Ralls at the time it located its depot at Cedric, and that the people who moved to Ralls did so spitefully and maliciously, with the intention of forcing appellant to abandon its station facilities at Cedric and establish others at Ralls. That said order is unjust and unreasonable as to appellant for reasons set out in appellant’s petition.

The Railroad Commission answered by general demurrer and general exception, and alleged that the appellant was guilty of gross abuse of its discretion in locating its railway station, and that its action was an intentional effort and purpose to promote the financial interest of one locality as against another, and to discriminate against the people and locality of Ralls in favor of the locality and owners of Cedric, and alleged facts intended to show the reasonableness of said order.

After the answer of the ’Commission had been filed, the state of Texas, through its Attorney General, filed by permission of tha court a plea of intervention, adopting the plea of the Commission and alleged facts intended to show a public necessity for a station at Ralls, and prayed for a mandamus requiring the appellant to put in such spur track, and in the event such relief should not be granted, and it should be held that the Railroad Commission was without authority to require appellant to put in the spun track at Ralls, that it be granted a mandamus or mandatory injunction, requiring appellant to put in a station with all necessary facilities.

After the evidence had all been heard, the court sustained appellant’s exception to the state’s plea of intervention, to which the state excepted,' and rendered judgment against appellant, dissolving the temporary injunction against the Commission theretofore granted.

The case was tried before the court without a jury, and, upon request of appellant, the court filed findings of fact, which we adopt as follows:

“(1) In the early part of the year 1910 the plaintiff railroad company caused a survey to be made of a line of railroad beginning at Cros-byton and extending west. According to this survey and the plats thereof, a station was to be maintained at Crosbyton; another at a place designated as Cedric, ll2/io miles west of Crosbyton; another at Lorenzo, 182/10 miles west of Crosbyton; and another at Idalou, 27 miles west of Crosbyton. -After the survey of said road and designation of stations as aforesaid, construction work was begun on same, and .the railroad began operations on April 10, 1911. A station was first built at Crosbyton, and upon the completion of same early in August, 1911, the plaintiff company began the construction of stock pens, etc., at Cedric, and completed its improvements, including a depot building, by September 25, 1911.
“(2) At the time said railroad was first surveyed; and began operations, the surrounding country was sparsely settled, and no persons then lived at the place designated as Cedric nor at the place now occupied by the town of Ralls. The nearest post office and town was a small town known as Emma, located about 3% miles south of the station of Cedric. At the time the site now known as Cedric was located as a station, and at the time the railroad company’s improvements were erected there, it was well and centrally located with reference to the surrounding territory and reasonably convenient for the people to be served by said station. No station,agent was maintained at Cedric until February, 1913, since which date the railroad company has maintained a station agent at said point.

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 1038, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosbyton-southplains-r-v-railroad-commission-texapp-1914.