Illinois Highway Transportation Co. v. Commerce Commission

90 N.E.2d 86, 404 Ill. 610, 1950 Ill. LEXIS 254
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1950
Docket31172
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 N.E.2d 86 (Illinois Highway Transportation Co. v. Commerce Commission) 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 Highway Transportation Co. v. Commerce Commission, 90 N.E.2d 86, 404 Ill. 610, 1950 Ill. LEXIS 254 (Ill. 1950).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Logan County confirming three orders of the Commerce Commission involving the separate applications of three motor carriers for certificates of convenience and necessity to operate between Peoria and Lincoln via Morton. The several applications were made by Illinois Highway Transportation Company, hereafter called Highway, Illini Coach Company, Inc., hereafter called Illini, and the Black Hawk Motor Transit Company. Subsequently, Illinois Greyhound Lines, Inc., hereafter referred to as Greyhound, was substituted for the Black Hawk Motor Transit Company. The Illinois Terminal Railroad Company, hereafter called Terminal, entered its appearance and participated in each case. Although the cases were consolidated for hearing, the commission entered separate orders (1) granting a certificate to Illini and denying the applications of (2) Highway and (3) Greyhound. Appeals from each order of the commission were eventually consolidated in a single cause in the circuit court of Logan County. The present appeal was perfected by Highway under section 69 of the Public Utilities Act. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1949, chap. 111½, par. 73.) Highway appeals from the part of the judgment confirming the orders denying its application and granting the application of Illini. Terminal has joined in the appeal but only with respect to the confirmation of the commission’s order granting a certificate to Illini. No appeal has been prosecuted by Greyhound, and the denial of its application need not be further considered.

The present proceeding originated in the filing by Highway with the commission, on October 18, 1946, of an application for a certificate to operate between East Peoria and the junction of State highways No. 121 and No. 122, commonly known as Delavan Junction, via Morton, as an alternate route to its existing route between East Peoria and Delavan Junction, via Pekin and Delavan. Five days later, Illini made application to extend its Peoria to Morton service from Morton to Lincoln. Greyhound, by its application filed on November 6, 1946, sought an alternate route between Peoria and Springfield via Lincoln, but did not propose to offer any local service between Morton and Lincoln.

Two routes are available to motor carriers between Peoria and Lincoln. The shorter and more direct route is from Peoria ten miles southeast to Morton on U. S. highway No. 150, and then south thirty-two miles on State highway No. 121 to Lincoln, a total distance of forty-two miles. Delavan Junction, an uninhabited intersection, lies midway between Morton and Lincoln. By their applications, both Highway and Illini sought to utilize this route between Peoria and Lincoln. The only other practical route is from Peoria southwest on State highway No. 29 ten miles to Pekin, continuing on highway No. 29 fifteen miles south to the junction with route No. 122, thence directly east on highway No. 122 ten miles, through Delavan, to Delavan Junction, and then south on highway No. 121 to Lincoln, a total distance of fifty-one miles. In short, both routes leave Peoria together and diverge in East Peoria. One proceeds southeast from East Peoria to Morton; the other, southwest to Pekin. Both then run south for a distance of sixteen miles, parallel with each other and about ten miles apart, to their respective intersections with highway No. 122. The longer route then runs directly east on highway No. 122, joins the other at Delavan Junction and both follow highway No. 121 into Lincoln.

Peoria and Lincoln are also connected by railroad. Peoria is the northern terminus of the main passenger line of Terminal. This railroad company offers passenger service from Peoria and East Peoria through Morton to Lincoln and on southwest to Springfield and St. Louis, Missouri. Between Morton and Peoria, Terminal’s main line runs parallel with and approximately five miles east of highway No. 121.

With respect to transportation between Peoria and Lincoln, Terminal was the original carrier in the field. It commenced serving this area in 1906. At the present time, Terminal offers forty passenger stops between Morton and Lincoln and operates six trains daily each way between Peoria and Lincoln, with an average scheduled time of one hour and five minutes. Terminal also operates a branch line from Mackinaw Junction, a few miles southeast of Morton, to Decatur, thus providing direct service from Peoria to Decatur. At the hearing before the commission, Terminal introduced evidence that its tracks, right of way, and the bodies and trucks of its passenger equipment are in very good condition; that it has instituted a program of renovating the interiors of its old passenger cars and has three new trains on order; that its trains operate substantially on schedule and are rarely crowded, and that, commencing in 1946, passenger traffic and revenue had showed a steady decline.

Highway’s principal station and offices are in East Peoria. In 1941, it obtained a certificate of public convenience and necessity to operate as a motor carrier from Peoria to Lincoln to Decatur. Highway maintains a daily schedule of three buses each way between Peoria and Decatur and has an operating time of one hour and forty minutes between Peoria and Lincoln. By restrictions contained in its existing certificate, Highway cannot carry persons whose point of origin is Peoria and whose destination is either Lincoln or Decatur, nor any person whose point of origin is either Decatur or Lincoln and whose destination is Peoria. These restrictions were imposed to prevent Highway from competing with Terminal’s operations between Peoria and Lincoln and between Peoria and Decatur via Mackinaw Junction. Between East Peoria and Lincoln, Highway operates over State route No. 29, through Pekin, to the junction with highway No. 122, then on highway No. 122, through Delavan, to the junction with highway No. 121, otherwise known as Delavan Junction, and on highway No. 121 to Lincoln. Although, except for restrictions noted, Highway furnishes local service between all intermediate points, its revenue from this source is small and wholly insufficient to sustain the service. Its principal sources of income are from its more frequent local service between Peoria and Pekin and from through traffic originating or destined for points beyond Peoria, or originating or destined for points beyond Decatur. Highway meets connecting carriers at both Peoria and Decatur.

The application of Highway for authority to use the shorter alternate route from East Peoria to Morton to Delavan Junction was made for the purpose of adding a single additional and faster bus daily each way between Peoria and Decatur. By using the alternate route, Highway expected to reduce its running time from Peoria to Decatur by thirty-five minutes. Highway was particularly interested in inaugurating an additional bus from Peoria to Decatur, which, by operating over the shorter route through Morton, could depart from Peoria at 6:4o A.M., instead of the less attractive time of 6 ¡05 A.M., and still make connections with interline carriers at Decatur. In order not to compete with Terminal between Peoria and Lincoln, and Peoria and Decatur, Highway agreed to accept the same restrictions on traffic between Peoria, Lincoln and Decatur as imposed by the terms of its existing certificate. In order not to compete with either Terminal or Illini between Peoria and Morton, Highway specified that it did not intend to offer transportation between Peoria and Morton or intermediate points.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.E.2d 86, 404 Ill. 610, 1950 Ill. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-highway-transportation-co-v-commerce-commission-ill-1950.