Floyd & Beasley Transfer Co. v. United States

336 F. Supp. 74
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedOctober 21, 1971
DocketNo. 71-444
StatusPublished

This text of 336 F. Supp. 74 (Floyd & Beasley Transfer Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd & Beasley Transfer Co. v. United States, 336 F. Supp. 74 (M.D. Ala. 1971).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an action seeking to enjoin, annul, suspend, and set aside the final order of the defendant Interstate Commerce Commission in its Docket No. MC-18088 (Sub. 47), captioned Floyd & Beasley Transfer Company, Inc., Extension — Decatur, Ala., and Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Fla. (Sycamore, Alabama), denying Floyd & Beasley’s application to render a regular route motor carrier service to and from the Decatur, Alabama, and Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida, points. Plaintiff has invoked the jurisdiction and venue of this Court under the provisions of 49 U.S.C.A. §§ 305(g), 306(a), and 307(a), 5 U.S.C.A. § 1009, and 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1336, 1398, 2284 and 2321 to 2325.

On April 30, 1968, Floyd & Beasley filed an application with the Commission under § 207(a) of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C.A. § 307(a), for authority to operate as a common carrier by motor vehicle transporting, over irregular routes, general commodities “between Decatur, Alabama, on the one hand and, on the other, points in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, limited to traffic originating at or destined to the plant site or warehouse of Monsanto Company, Decatur, Alabama, and between points in Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida, on the one hand and, on the other, points in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.” Protests were filed by various competing carriers, including intervening defendants Bowman Transportation, Inc., Georgia-Florida-Alabama Transportation Company, Howard Hall Company, Inc., Malone Freight Lines, Inc., Mercury Freight Lines, Inc., and Thurston Motor Lines, Inc. The application was initially designated for processing under the Commission’s modified proceedings. Thereafter, it was referred to a Commission Examiner, who conducted hearings during February 24 through 26 and April 1 through 4, 1969. At the hearing on February 24, 1969, Floyd & Beasley proposed that the authority it sought be limited by adding a plant site restriction with respect to the traffic originating in Decatur, Alabama. The Examiner accepted the proposed restriction but at the close of the hearing found that Floyd & Beasley had failed to prove that its proposed operations were required by the public convenience and necessity, and by a report and order served December 1, 1969, he denied plaintiff’s application.

In separate proceedings, other trial examiners heard the applications of Watkins-Carolina Express, Inc., filed April 4, 1968, and Baggett Transportation Company, Inc., filed May 13, 1968, seeking authority to haul textiles, chemicals and related products over irregular routes between Deeatur-Huntsville, Alabama, on the one hand, and points in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, on the other. The Baggett application also sought authority to haul these same products between Gonzales and Pensacola, Florida, and points in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. These two applications were referred to separate examiners, neither of whom was the examiner assigned to Floyd & Beasley’s application. In each of the three proceedings, the principal supporting shipper was the same, Monsanto Chemical Company. Monsanto’s prepared testimony in each proceeding was essentially the same with respect to its need for additional transportation services. The examiner in the Watkins-Carolina proceeding served his report and order on January 15, 1969, recommending that a certificate of pub-[77]*77lie convenience and public necessity be issued to Watkins-Carolina. A grant of authority was also recommended by the examiner’s report and order served July 29, 1969, in the Baggett proceeding. The latter examiner made the further recommendation that all three applications be consolidated for consideration by the Commission. The examiner’s recommendation of denial of the Floyd & Beasley application was served December 1, 1969. In the meantime, Floyd & Beasley had filed exceptions to the examiners’ reports in the other two proceedings.

The record in the Watkins-Carolina Express, Inc., proceeding reached the Commission first. On June 10, 1969, the Commission denied rehearing in the proceeding, and the recommended grant of certification to Watkins-Carolina Express, Inc., became final. The Commission, Division 1, next considered the examiner’s report on the Baggett application, which, on December 16, 1969, it approved with respect to the service requested between the plant and warehouse facilities of the supporting shipper at Decatur-Huntsville, Alabama, and Gonzales and Pensacola, Florida. Baggett’s grant of authority became final on March 19, 1970, when a protestant’s petition for reconsideration was denied.

Floyd & Beasley filed exceptions to the examiner’s denial of its application, and included in its exceptions an offer of a further amendment limiting its proposed Florida service by imposing a plant site restriction on the traffic originating in Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties. This proposed restriction was accepted by the Commission, Division 1, which nevertheless entered an order on September 16, 1970, affirming the examiner’s conclusions that the public convenience and necessity was not shown to require operation of the proposed service. Plaintiff, joined by the intervening supporting shipper, Monsanto Company, thereafter filed a petition for rehearing and/or reconsideration, which embraced a further proposal to restrict the scope of the application, this time with respect to commodities. In lieu of general commodities, the applicant now proposed to limit its authority substantially to carry textiles and textile related products in paper and paper-making related products.

Division 1, acting as an appellate division, held in an order dated March 8, 1971, that the report printed at 112 M. C.C. 124 was in accord with the evidence and the applicable law and that the acceptance of this last proposed restriction would not affect the result nor change the Commission’s findings. The applicant thereupon brought a Petition for a Finding of General Transportation Importance, which the Commission, at a General Session held on April 19, 1971, denied. Plaintiff then instituted this court action and obtained a temporary restraining order preventing the lapse of the temporary authority to operate between the Florida plant of Monsanto Chemical Company and points in Georgia and South Carolina. A three-judge panel was convened pursuant to the provisions of 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 2325 and 2284(1), and a full hearing was given plaintiff’s petition on July 26,1971.

Plaintiff argued before the Court three principal issues:

(1) Whether the Commission acted within its discretion in deciding plaintiff’s application upon the basis of evidence adduced in the record in this proceeding without consolidating it with the applications filed by Watkins-Carolina Express, Inc., and Baggett Transportation Company, Inc., or without applying the same procedural and substantive standards in passing on plaintiff’s application as were applied in the other two proceedings;

(2) Whether the Commission’s conclusion that the plaintiff’s proposed operations are not required by the public convenience and necessity is based upon adequate findings and supported by substantial evidence of record;

(3) Whether certain evidentiary rulings of the hearing examiner were within the discretion of the examiner or [78]*78whether they denied plaintiff due process of law.

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Bluebook (online)
336 F. Supp. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-beasley-transfer-co-v-united-states-almd-1971.