Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. State

1911 OK 34, 117 P. 207, 27 Okla. 806, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 10, 1911
Docket1978
StatusPublished

This text of 1911 OK 34 (Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. State, 1911 OK 34, 117 P. 207, 27 Okla. 806, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 59 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

This appeal is from an order of the Corporation Commission that- appellant “maintain a telegraph operator at its station at Gans for the purpose of bulletining its trains and performing all other duties usually performed by telegraph operators and station agents in the conduct of its business as a transportation company.”

In C., R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. State, 24 Okla. 370, 103 Pac. 617, and St. L. & S. F. R. Co. v. Newell, 25 Okla. 502, 106 Pac. 818, we held, in effect, that a railway company cannot be reasonably and justly required to install and maintain a telegraph operator at one of its stations unless it appears that the safety and expedition of the train service, both freight and passenger, or either, require it, or that the convenience to be afforded to the public by the -railway company in the conduct of its freight and *807 passenger service, or either, demands it. As a test to ascertain whether such an order is reasonable and just, in the former case we said:

“If a sufficient number of persons take passage at a station during the year, so that the passenger receipts will justify the additional expenditure of having a telegraph office installed for the bulletining of trains, and such is reasonably necessary, it would then be reasonable and just to so require it. If the freight receipts at such office are sufficiently large to pay for the maintenance of the station and its agent, and contribute a reasonable pro rata towards the maintenance and operation of the line, and in addition thereto to pay the additional expense, either solely or in connection with the passenger receipts, to install and maintain a telegraph office for the convenience of the patrons of said station, when reasonably necessary, it would be reasonable and just, otherwise not.”

The facts found by the commission upon which this order is based were derived solely from the testimony of Y. H. Tony, on behalf of petitioners, and C. C. Eiley, appellants’ superintendent of transportation, and are:

“The commission finds from the evidence that the town of Gans has between three and four hundred people; one cotton gin in operation and one in course of .construction; that Gans is about seven miles north of Eedland and eight miles south of Sal-lisaw in Haskell county, which are the nearest telegraph stations. During the months of January and February .there were twenty cars of freight shipped in and out of the station at Gans, besides the local shipments. This appears to be substantially all the evidence upon this point.
“The superintendent of transportation testified that the commercial telegeraph service amounted to about 50 cents per month. The telegraph office was open during the cotton season a,nd closed when business dropped off.
“It fuither appears from the evidence of the superintendent that it would cost about $27 per month additional to maintain an operator to perform telegraph seviee. The superintendent did not testify as to the freight and passenger receipts of this office, although this is usually a part of the defense in every ease where the receipts of the office do not justify the maintenance of an *808 agent, and this information is in the possession of the defendant, and is a matter of defense. If the business of the office for two months, as testified to by the witness, is correct, there would be 120 cars of freight shipped in and out during the year, besides the local freight, passenger and express business.
“The commission finds from the evidence that the arrival of trains at this station are not bulletined and cannot be bulletined, without the maintenance of a telegraph operator. The commission further finds from the evidence that reasonable service cannot be rendered the people at Gans and vicinity without the maintenance of a telegraph operator in the conduct of its business.”

Applying the test to the facts thus found, it is obvious that the same were insufficient to support the order, in that no attempt is made to find the extent of the passenger traffic from that office in order to show that the passenger receipts therefrom would justify the additional expense of having a telegraph office installed there for the bulletining of trains; neither were the freight receipts at such office attempted to be found in order to show the same to be sufficient to pay for the maintenance of the station and its agent and contribute a reasonable pro raid towards the maintenance and operation of the line and the additional expense, alone or in connection with the passenger receipts, to install and maintain the office for the convenience of the patrons of that station. In the absence of such facts, the facts found by the commission are insufficient to support the order, and, hence, the attendant presumption that the same is just and reasonable is overcome and the order must fall;- that is, unless sufficient material facts lacking in the findings of the commission may be found by us in the evidence to supplement said findings and maintain said presumption. And such. we fail to find. The sole additional facts disclosed by the evidence are that, in the opinion of the witness Tony, appellant maintained a telegraph office at Gans when there was not more than one-third of the business done there that was done when the same was discontinued, at which time there were eight stores, some carrying a stock of $10,000, and business done there to the extent of some $50,000, to $100,- *809 000, per year; that from one to two cars of timber go out of Gans every clay; that the telephone service was so bad that persons desiring to telephone were required to go to Sallisaw; that appellant maintained an agent' at Gans and a bulletin board in the depot, but did not bulletin trains; that traveling men had been known to fail to make the town because of their inability to 'learn when they could get in and out; that the country tributary was agricultural, where cotton, beans,, potatoes, radishes, corn, hogs, etc., are raised and shipped; that there is an express office there with the railroad agent as express agent, and who was a telegraph operator;, that telegraph service was a necessity, and the lack of it a great injury and inconvenience to the people, and that Gans was the only town of its size on appellant’s line of road in the state without such service.

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Related

Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. State
1909 OK 157 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1909)
St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v. Newell
1910 OK 32 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 34, 117 P. 207, 27 Okla. 806, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-southern-ry-co-v-state-okla-1911.