Illinois Commerce Commission Ex Rel. East St. Louis, Columbia & Waterloo Railway v. East St. Louis & Carondelet Railway Co.

198 N.E. 716, 361 Ill. 606
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1935
DocketNo. 22966. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 716 (Illinois Commerce Commission Ex Rel. East St. Louis, Columbia & Waterloo Railway v. East St. Louis & Carondelet Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Commerce Commission Ex Rel. East St. Louis, Columbia & Waterloo Railway v. East St. Louis & Carondelet Railway Co., 198 N.E. 716, 361 Ill. 606 (Ill. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal to review the judgment of the circuit court of St. Clair county setting aside an order of the Illinois Commerce Commission which annulled and set aside a contract entered into June 13, 1913, by the appellant, the East St. Louis, Columbia and Waterloo Railway, and the appellees, the East St. Louis and Carondelet Railway-Company and the Illinois Central Railroad Company, fixing the apportionment of the cost of operating and maintaining an interlocking plant at a crossing of these lines of railroad at North Dupo, Illinois, and re-apportioning the cost of operating and maintaining that plant among those railroads.

The facts are not in dispute and are these: The Illinois Central Railroad Company, (herein called the Illinois Central,) the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, (called the Missouri Pacific,) the East St. Louis and Carondelet Railway Company, (known as the Terminal,) and the East St. Louis, Columbia and Waterloo Railway, (known as the Waterloo,) on June 13, 1913, entered into a contract, approved by the Railroad and Warehouse Commission, predecessor to the Illinois Commerce Commission, by which it was agreed among the parties thereto that an interlocking plant be constructed and that the cost of construction, maintenance and operation thereof be apportioned, the maintenance and operation cost to be apportioned as follows: Waterloo, 55.13 per cent; Missouri Pacific, 40.38 per cent; Terminal, 4.49 per cent, with no cost to the Illinois Central. The interlocking plant consists of 78 units, the Waterloo and the Illinois Central each having 13 units, the Missouri Pacific 35 units and the Terminal 17 units. It is now in operation, and has been, under this contract, since its construction. No question is raised as to the efficiency of the interlocking plant.

The Waterloo, filed a petition with the Illinois Commerce Commission by which it alleged that for many years after making this contract petitioner was operating a large number of passenger cars over its line and had a large income; that pursuant to an order of the Commerce Commission effective June 1, 1932, its passenger service was discontinued, since which time it operates no passenger cars through the interlocking plant but its use of the plant is limited to movement of freight cars; that by reason of its discontinuance of passenger service its revenue became materially decreased; that its proportion of the cost of maintenance and operation of the interlocking plant is approximately $300 or $400 per month, which amount is so excessive and burdensome and so disproportionate to the use made by it of the plant that to require it to continue to pay such proportion will ultimately make it impossible for it to carry on the services now performed by it as a public carrier; that by reason of this changed condition and reduction in income it requested the Illinois Central and the Terminal to consent to a modification of the contract, but that they have each refused to consent thereto. The petition further represents that the public interest requires that the contract be modified to the extent that petitioner be not required to pay a greater proportion of the operation of the plant than is consistent with its continuance in operation as a common carrier and the facilities used by it will warrant. The petition also alleges that the Illinois Central and Terminal are financially able to pay the greater proportion of the cost of maintenance and operation, and prays that the commission fix the percentage which each railroad should thereafter pay and that it annul and modify the contract of June 13, 1913.

The Terminal in its answer denied appellant was entitled to the relief prayed for, for the reason that (1) the cost of construction, maintenance and operation of the plant were agreed upon and reduced to writing by all the parties at the time the plant was constructed, which contract was made under the approval of the commission’s predecessor; and (2) the commission had no power or authority to modify or change the terms of the contract. The Illinois Central by its answer also set up that the commission has no jurisdiction of the subject matter and is without jurisdiction .to modify the contract or to grant the relief prayed; that to so abrogate, qualify or reform the terms of the contract would be in violation of contractual obligations and amount to taking its property without due process of law.

After a hearing the commission entered an order providing that the interlocking plant be taken out of service and that all roads affected, except the Illinois Central, be required to stop before reaching the crossing and flag their trains across. A rehearing was granted, and the commission thereafter entered an order that from and after April 1, 1934, the contract of June 13, 1913, be annulled, and that the cost of operating and maintaining the interlocking plant at North Dupo be re-apportioned among the parties on the basis of the number of units operated by the several railroads, and on that basis the Waterloo to pay 16.67 per cent, the Terminal 21.79 Per cent, the Missouri Pacific 44.87 per cent and the Illinois Central 16.67 Per cent of such cost. Leave was granted to the parties to present to the commission a new contract covering the maintenance and operation of the plant in accordance with the order. The effect of this order,' as shown by the evidence, is to reduce the Waterloo’s portion of the expense of maintenance and operation of the plant so as to amount to a saving to it of approximately $2400 per year. The circuit court of St. Clair county set aside the order of the commission, and the Waterloo brings the cause here for review.

Counsel have submitted briefs in which numerous cases are cited. In none of them, however, is the question here presented directly decided, nor has such question heretofore been presented to this court. Proceedings before the commission are statutory.- The authority for any order of the commission must be found in the act. It is not claimed that the contract was not fairly or understandingly made or that the public is interested in the method used in the operation of the interlocking plant. The evidence shows the plant to be adequate to insure public safety in the operation of the trains of these railroads across this intersection. The only claimed basis for the order of the commission is, that unless this saving of $200 per month be made to the Waterloo there is reason to fear that it will not be able to continue its service as p common carrier. The record shows that all of the railroads interested in this lawsuit were for the period of 1931 and 1932 operating at a deficit, that of appellant in 1931 amounting to $31,7x3 and in 1932 to $21,518, a reduction of something over $10,000 due to discontinuance of passenger service. The $200 per month saved to the Waterloo by this order amounts to slightly over nine per cent of the total deficit of that road for the year 1932. The Illinois Central showed a deficit in 1931 of $3,500,000 and the first eight months of 1932 $4,600,000. The Missouri Pacific showed a deficit for the first eight months of 1932 of $7,832,000.

The first question to be considered is whether the Commerce Commission had jurisdiction and power to enter an order annulling the contract of June 13, 1913.

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Bluebook (online)
198 N.E. 716, 361 Ill. 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-commerce-commission-ex-rel-east-st-louis-columbia-waterloo-ill-1935.