Illinois Central Railroad v. Town of Goodman

173 So. 2d 116, 252 Miss. 297, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 1102
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1965
DocketNo. 43425
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 So. 2d 116 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Town of Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Central Railroad v. Town of Goodman, 173 So. 2d 116, 252 Miss. 297, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 1102 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Brady, Tom P., J.

Appellant, Illinois Central Railroad Company, hereinafter called Railroad, appeals from an order of the [301]*301Circuit Court of the First District of Hinds County, Mississippi affirming an order of the Mississippi Public Service Commission, hereinafter called Commission. Appellant, on May 16, 1963, had filed its application seeking authority to discontinue its agency station at Goodman, Mississippi and to substitute in lieu thereof a prepay station. The application set out the basic jurisdictional facts and met the statutory requirements relating to the proper filing of an application. It alleged that the agency station situated at Goodman is located in close proximity to other agency stations which are easily accessible by an all-weather highway, and that such points are connected by toll free telephone service; that the handling of mail and passenger service are not involved; that the train and over-the-road truck services will continue as before; that Goodman is a small community and that the patronage of the railroad services has declined to such an extent that the cost of agency services exceeds the revenue therefrom; that the public necessity and convenience no longer require or justify the continuance of agency service; that the petitioner proposes to discontinue agency service and substitute prepay service in the usual manner.

There was attached to the application the prerequisite statistical data required by the rules of the Commission, namely, (1) the number of shipments received and forwarded, (2) the amount of freight originating and terminating, (3) the Railroad’s proportion of freight charges, (4) the Railroad’s proportion of gross revenue, and (5) the total revenue, total expenses, and net profit or loss.

On May 17, 1963 the Commission published its regular notice. On June 25, 1963 a letter of protest was filed by the clerk and mayor of the town of Goodman. On August 15, 1963 a resolution, which was adopted by the Board of Trustees of Holmes Junior College on June 26, 1963, was filed with the Commission. On August 19, 1963 the cause came on for hearing before the Com[302]*302mission, at which time oral testimony and other evidence were introduced by both applicant and protestants. At the conclusion of the hearing the matter was taken under advisement, and on October 1 the Commission entered its order denying the Railroad’s application. On October 9 notice was given, and on October 14, 1963 the appeal was perfected.

Ultimately, on August 6, 1964, the cause came on for hearing in the Circuit Court of Hinds County, where the ruling of the Commission was affirmed, the circuit judge entering a written ruling. On August 19, 1964 the circuit court entered an order affirming- the Commission’s order. On August 24, 1964 an appeal was taken from the judgment of the circuit court, which was perfected on September 17, 1964.

The record discloses the following dominant facts which relate to the type of business, and which are not contravened by the appellee: (1) There is no passenger service involved at the station at Goodman. (2) The mail is handled by United States postal trucks and there is no mail service involved. (3) The express business handled at Goodman is negligible, the largest amount being only $322.17 in 1961. (4) There are no milk and cream shipments. (5) Western Union services were discontinued in 1961. (6) The only type of business, of any consequence, handled by the Goodman station is freight.

Insofar as the freight revenue is concerned it is undisputed that:

(1) The freight consisted of agricultural and forest products.

(2) During the twenty-six month period covered by the evidence, all outbound carload shipments consisted of 264 cars of logs, 378 cars of pulpwood, and 207 cars of cotton, making a total of 849 cars.

.(3) All inbound carload shipments for the same period of time consisted of 60 cars of limestone, 30 cars [303]*303of gravel, 4 cars of coal, 2 cars of cottonseed hulls, and 1 car each of fertilizer, furniture, and tile, making a total of 97 cars.

(4) The nature of the freight business involves very few people who patronize the station. Of the 136 cars of pulpwood shipped in 1961, 132 were shipped by one person only, Mr. Arthur L. Land. In' 1962 there were 182 cars of pulpwood, all shipped by Mr. Land. In 1961, 87 cars of cotton were shipped, and in 1962, 120 cars of cotton were shipped. Witness E. H. Stretton testified that his company, Flora Compress and Warehouse, handled, on the average, 3500 bales of cotton per year, which is approximately 100 cars. It follows, therefore, that almost all of the carload cotton shipments are made by one concern. The only other witness testifying in this regard was Mr. J. D. Neaves, who testified that he shipped cotton and that ninety to ninety-five percent of all his business went to the Flora Compress.

(5) The only other outbound shipment, that of logs, was made by E. L. Bruce Company.

It is likewise uncontradicted that:

(1) Goodman is situated on U. S. Highway 51, an all-weather, hard-surface road.

(2) Goodman is 9.6 miles from Durant by said highway, and 7.9 miles by rail; Goodman is 7.6 miles from Pickens by this highway, and 7 miles by rail.

(3) The agency at Durant never closes its doors and the Pickens station is an open station.

(4) Telephone service from Goodman to Durant or Pickens is toll free.

(5) Daily mail is carried from Goodman to both Pickens and Durant.

(6) Bus lines operate daily between the three towns.

(7) Less than carload shipments with the Railroad are operated by road trucks which service the Goodman station five days each week, with one northbound and one southbound truck each day.

[304]*304(8) Braswell Truck Lines and Delta Truck Lines also serve the three towns.

The cost of furnishing the agency service is likewise undisputed, though the appellee, through the rulings of the Commission and the circuit court, contests the method or formula utilized by the Railroad in determining its operative costs in furnishing the Goodman agency. Appellant’s evidence is not contested as to the following:

(1) The wages and allowances of the agent at Goodman were over $6,300 for the year 1962.

(2) The total of all of the other expenses of the agency, including the cost of transporting the freight, was $10,839.87.

(3) Not considering the other expenses of maintaining the open agency at Goodman, such as water, heat, electricity, furniture, fixtures and supplies, the agent’s salary and requisite allowances alone add more than sixty percent of the total cost of all other expenses assignable to the Goodman station, including the cost of transporting the freight.

Considering the volume of business handled by the Goodman station, the record discloses from the statement introduced by the appellant as Exhibit 9, showing profit or loss incurred on business handled at Goodman, Mississippi for the years 1961, 1962 and the months of January and February, 1963, the following irrefutable facts:

Jan.-Feb.
1963 Year 1962 Year 1961
5. Percent of system freight expenses, rents and taxes (excluding station freight expenses) to system freight revenues.
(Item 4 -s- Item 1).

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Related

Mississippi Public Service Commission v. Illinois Central Railroad
236 So. 2d 425 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1970)
New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad v. Town of Heidelberg
194 So. 2d 866 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 So. 2d 116, 252 Miss. 297, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 1102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-town-of-goodman-miss-1965.