Inman v. Railroad Commission

464 S.W.2d 895, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2769, 1971 WL 217789
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 1971
DocketNo. 11820
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 464 S.W.2d 895 (Inman 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
Inman v. Railroad Commission, 464 S.W.2d 895, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2769, 1971 WL 217789 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

Burke W. Inman and eight other special motor carriers for hire filed separate suits in district court of Travis County to enjoin the conduct of trucking operations pursuant to certain orders of the Railroad Commission of Texas and for judgment declaring the orders invalid.

The suits arose from action of the Railroad Commission granting authority to nine of twenty-eight applicants to transport agricultural products in their natural state between various points in Texas. All plaintiffs filed protests with respect to the applications and participated in the consolidated hearings conducted before the examiner for the Commission.

On appeal the nine plaintiffs are appellants, and the Railroad Commission, together with the nine motor carriers obtaining authority for such trucking privileges, are appellees.

The trial court, upon findings that plaintiffs had not exhausted their administrative remedies and that the Commission orders complained of were not final, sustained pleas in abatement, filed by the Commission and the motor carrier appel-lees, and ordered dismissal of plaintiffs’ suits.

The court provided in the judgment that “This dismissal is without prejudice to Plaintiffs’ right to file suit with respect to any order hereafter issued by Defendant Railroad Commission with respect to the matters involved herein.” In addition, the trial court ordered that “ * * * pending further action by * * * [the.] Commission causing said orders to become final, that said Commission recall and recollect all operating certificates, vehicle cab cards and plates and other operating papers issued to * * * ” the nine motor carrier appel-lees.

The nine motor carrier appellees and nineteen other applicants initially applied to the Railroad Commission for the same type of trucking authority. The nine appellants and other interested carriers filed protests with the Commission, and the applications were then consolidated for hearing over the objection of appellants.

Following completion of the hearing the Hearing Examiner for the Commission prepared and issued a report dated March 20, 1970. The examiner found inadequacies of services offered by appellants and other protesting carriers and recommended that certain named applicants, who are the nine motor carrier appellees on appeal, be granted authority to transport agricultural products in their natural state, limited “to fresh fruits, fresh vegetables and melons,” but restricted from transporting cooked, bottled, hermetically sealed or frozen products. The examiner further recommended that all authority not expressly granted be expressly denied. Attached to the report was a recommended order, naming each of the nine [897]*897motor carrier appellees as recipients of the indicated authority, for adoption or rejection by the Commission.

Appellants timely filed with the Commission their “Exceptions to the Examiner’s Recommended Report and Order * * * ” in which were specified in detail eight objections and exceptions to matters contained in the report.

Exceptions were also filed with the Commission by sixteen applicants whose applications the examiner had recommended be denied, urging the Commission to grant all applications. These applicants also requested the Commission to “ * * * adopt and accept the Examiner’s Report in its entirety * * * [and] to grant, in addition to the nine applicants recommended by the Examiner, all applications as filed.”

The Commission on May 25, 1970, issued separate final orders granting each of the nine motor carrier appellees the authority recommended by the examiner, and in the form of order recommended by the examiner, except for the additional provision that, “All exceptions are hereby overruled, except that all transportation granted shall be conducted in accordance with Sec. 2.9 motor carrier regulations, limiting points of origin to points of production, packing sheds, processing plants and concentration points.”

That portion of the Commission’s order limiting points of origin was in effect a grant of appellants’ exception Number I filed with the Commission.

Upon publication of its final orders, the Commission began issuing the papers necessary for the nine motor carrier appellees to commence operations pursuant to the grants of authority contained in the orders. As each applicant qualified, by filing the required insurance and paying prescribed fees, the Commission caused a certificate, cab cards, and plates to be furnished so that actual operations could be commenced by the motor carrier.

Appellants then filed their lawsuits m district court of Travis County seeking to enjoin the Commission and the nine motor carrier appellees and to have the order of the Commission declared invalid.

Appellees take the position that each of the nine recommended orders accompanying the report of the examiner contained a vital error. These orders, appellees urge, “ * * did not contain legally acceptable findings of fact as required by Section 5a (d), Article 911b, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St, as enunciated by the Supreme Court in Miller v. Railroad Commission, 363 S.W.2d 244 (Tex.Sup.1962).” Appellees assert: “The error was correctable through the incorporation of the recommended report into the orders as is required by Commission’s Rules 48 and 49.”

Because the defect of the examiner’s recommended orders was carried over into the Commission’s final orders, without objection by appellants to bring the fault to the attention of the Commission, it is urged that appellants failed to exhaust their administrative remedies before filing suit.

Appellees seek affirmance of the trial court’s action sustaining pleas in abatement and dismissing the suits on two grounds: (1) appellants failed to exhaust their administrative remedies before the Commission by not objecting to the form of the orders and (2) the orders of the Commission were not final as defined by the Commission’s rules.

Appellees rely upon the decision of this Court in Greer v. Railroad Commission, 117 S.W.2d 142 (Tex.Civ.App.1938, writ dism.) in urging that appellants failed to exhaust their administrative remedies before the Commission. In that case the order under attack was a general order of the Commission issued without notice or hearing. This Court held that “notice or hearing were not essential to the validity of the order * * Greer, holder of a special commodity carrier permit, after finding that the general order placed limita[898]*898tions on his operations, brought suit without applying to the Commission for redress. This Court held that “ * * * Art. 911b, sec. 20, specifically accords judicial review to any interested aggrieved party ‘after failing to get relief from the Commission.’ By this language application to the Commission for such relief is manifestly made a prerequisite to such review.” Greer’s suit was dismissed without prejudice.

We are unable to agree with appellees that the holding in Greer is controlling in the case before us.

The opinion in Greer was written by Chief Justice McClendon who in two subsequent cases had occasion to state succinctly the rule of that case.

In Highway Transp. Co. v. Southwestern Greyhound, 124 S.W.2d 433

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Bluebook (online)
464 S.W.2d 895, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2769, 1971 WL 217789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inman-v-railroad-commission-texapp-1971.