King Van Lines, Inc. v. United States

220 F. Supp. 551, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8007, 1963 WL 110868
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJuly 18, 1963
DocketCiv. No. W-2513
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 220 F. Supp. 551 (King Van Lines, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King Van Lines, Inc. v. United States, 220 F. Supp. 551, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8007, 1963 WL 110868 (D. Kan. 1963).

Opinion

DAUGHERTY, District Judge.

This statutory three-judge case is an action under Title 28, United States Code, Sections 1336, 1398, 2284 and 2321 through 2325, in which the plaintiff seeks to annul and set aside the report and orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission entered on January 11th, June 14th, and October 6th, 1961, in Consolidated Dockets No. MC-C-2399, King Van Lines, Inc., Investigation and Revocation of Certificate, and No. MC-70272 (Sub-No. 18), King Van Lines, Inc., Extension-El Paso, Texas, in which the Commission found that the plaintiff was engaged in the transportation of household goods not authorized by its certificate, and that it had failed to establish that the present or future public convenience and necessity required a grant of authority which would validate such operations.

The plaintiff is a motor carrier of household goods with the following Interstate Commerce Commission certificate of authority:

“Between Bisbee, Arizona, and points in Arizona within fifty miles of Bisbee, on the one hand, and, on the other, El Paso, Texas, all points in Arizona and New Mexico, and those in California on and south of a line extending from Needles along U. S. Highway 66 to Los Angeles, and points in the Los Angeles Commercial Zone as defined by the Commission north of U. S. Highway 66.”

The Examiner and the Interstate Commerce Commission at their respective hearings held that such authority was a radial authority which allowed the origination of shipments at the base point (Bisbee or points in Arizona within 50 miles of Bisbee), and their termination at a point within the destination territory (El Paso, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and Southern California), or vice versa. Further, the Examiner and Commission held that such radial authority does not allow cross-hauling, that is, [553]*553movements from one point in the destination territory to another point in the destination territory even though the route is through the base point.

' The plaintiff at the hearings before the Examiner and Commission, took the position that the above authority was a non-radial authority which allowed operations from, to and between any point in the destination territory without regard to a base point.

Apparently based on complaints that the plaintiff was operating in excess of its authority, Division 1 of the Commission on October 7, 1958, instituted an investigation into the legality of the operations being conducted by plaintiff within its area.

Plaintiff thereupon promptly filed an application with the Commission for non-radial authority to transport household goods between El Paso, Texas, and points in Arizona, New Mexico and California.

These two matters were consolidated and heard by an Examiner on January 28, 29 and 30, 1959, after the Commission’s Bureau of Inquiry and Compliance and several motor carriers of household goods had intervened.

The Examiner found that plaintiff had been conducting non-radial operations not authorized by its certificate and that a cease and desist order should issue. The Examiner further concluded that this non-authorized operation had not been wilful and that the evidence of its past operations indicated that there was a continuing need for its services which need should be met by a grant of the non-radial authority for which the plaintiff had applied.

No one filed exceptions to the Examiner’s findings that the plaintiff’s certificate was a radial one and not a non-radial one, but the motor carrier protestants did except to the Examiner’s finding that the plaintiff’s violation of the Act had not been wilful and that the public convenience and necessity required plaintiff’s grant of non-radial authority.

Division 1 of the Commission in its report following the report and recommended order of the Examiner and which Commission report was filed on January 11,. 1961, made the following significant finding:

“There is no question but that applicant’s past operations other than those between the Bisbee 50-mile area, on the one hand, and on the other, El Paso, and points in Arizona, New Mexico, and California were unauthorized. We must, however, disagree with the examiner in other respects. Applicant’s strained construction of the ‘Bisbee’ certificate heretofore described is untenable. It has been recognized consistently since the regulation of motor carriers that the words ‘on the one hand,’ and ‘on the other’ are words of extremity, and that they are used for the sole purpose of identifying the operations authorized as radial operations between a base point and other points in a described area, as distinguished from an unlimited non-radial operation between described points or all points within described areas. See Classification of Motor Carriers of Property, 2 M.C.C. 703, and Gay’s Exp., Inc. v. Haigis and Nichols, 43 M.C.C. 277. It also has been well established that the holder of a certificate authorizing radial irregular-route operations alone is not authorized to perform crosshaui operations between points in a radial origin or destination territory even though the service is performed! through the base point. Compare Akers Motor Lines, Inc., v. Malone Freight Lines, Inc., 53 M.C.C. 353 (356). In the light of these long and well established principles, we agree with protestants that no credence can be taken of applicant’s justification of its unlawful operations. A carrier which holds operating authority from this Commission reasonably may be expected to familiarize itself with such of our decisions as established the principles governing the scope of that authority; particularly so, as here, when [554]*554the propriety of its operation is questioned. The record is clear that after 1953 the question of the lawfulness of the considered operations was brought to applicant’s attention, and it was advised in 1957 by a field representative of the Commission that the considered operations under the ‘Bisbee’ authority were unlawful. In the circumstances such of the evidence with respect to a need for service as is predicated upon past operations beyond the scope of applicant’s operating authority under the ‘Bis-bee’ certificate will be afforded no consideration. See McBride’s Exp., Inc., Extension — Illinois, 72 M.C.C. 32.
“The remaining evidence is wholly insufficient to justify a grant of the application. Ample services admittedly, are available to shippers in the considered territory, and the general statements by the supporting carriers and applicant’s booking agents that a continuation of applicant’s service is important to their businesses, or that applicant’s operation provides satisfactory interline service do not constitute a showing that present services are inadequate. In the absence of such showing, the application will be denied.” (See 84 M.C.C., 269, 275-6).

Plaintiff’s petition for reconsideration was denied as was its petition for leave to file a second petition for reconsideration. Upon this action being filed with this court, the Commission postponed the effective date of its order of January 11, 1961, until the further order of the Commission.

With the foregoing background it appears that the Court is concerned with three matters, as follows:

First: Whether or not the plaintiff was operating in excess of its authority.

Second: Has the plaintiff established a present or future public convenience and necessity to support its application for non-radial authority, and,

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220 F. Supp. 551, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8007, 1963 WL 110868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-van-lines-inc-v-united-states-ksd-1963.