Lang v. Railroad Commission

42 P.2d 639, 2 Cal. 2d 550, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 363
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1935
DocketS. F. 15065
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 42 P.2d 639 (Lang v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lang v. Railroad Commission, 42 P.2d 639, 2 Cal. 2d 550, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 363 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

Some time prior to the ninth day of March, 1933, the Southern Pacific Company, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company, the Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad Company, the Pacific Electric Railway Company, the Western Pacific Railroad Company, the Sacramento Northern Railway Company, the- Tidewater Southern Railroad Company, and the Pacific Freight Tariff Bureau filed in the office of the Railroad Commission of the state of California their tariff publications or schedules of rates to be charged by said companies for hauling or transporting petroleum, petroleum products, and kindred commodities named therein to and from various points in the state of California. The rates proposed to be charged for the transportation of said commodities were less than the rates theretofore charged by said companies for like services. On March 9, 1933, the Commission suspended the operation of said rates, and thereafter made further orders of suspension, the last of which carried the period of suspension up to December 10, 1933. The orders of suspension were made for the purpose of permitting an investigation by the Commission of the reasonableness of said proposed rates. This investigation was undertaken in the first instance by the Commission upon its own initiative, and later a large number of tank truck operators, including all of the petitioners herein, protested the approval of said proposed rates, and joined in said investigation in support of their said protest against said schedule of rates as proposed by the railroads. Said protestants, including the fourteen petitioners herein, are private carriers of petroleum products, principally gasoline, from refineries to distributing stations, and from refineries and distributing stations to garages and service stations. In addition to gasoline, various other petroleum products are transported by petitioners, such as smudge oil from refineries *554 to farms and ranches, road oil from refineries to construction jobs, fuel oil from refineries to customer’s tank, and package goods to various destinations. Petitioners, with the other protestants, some time prior to the filing by the railroad companies of their new schedule of rates, had each filed a separate application before the Railroad Commission for a certificate of public convenience and- necessity to operate an auto-truck line for the transportation of petroleum and petroleum refined products' between points in the state of California. These applications and the matter of the suspension of the schedule of rates filed by the rail carrier were consolidated and heard together. The hearing of these matters extended over a number of days, during which a large amount of testimony, both oral and documentary, was laid before the Commission. On final hearing the Commission, by order concurred in by three members of the Commission, denied the applications of the truck tank owners for -certificates of public convenience and necessity, and vacated its several orders suspending the reduced rates on petroleum products, as set forth in the schedule of rates filed by the several railroad companies heretofore referred to. Thereafter the petitioners herein filed their petition for a rehearing of said matters. The Commission thereupon ordered that oral argument on said matters be made and fixed a day for hearing the same. After argument the Commission again made its order vacating its previous orders suspending said rates. The petitioners herein thereupon filed in this court their petition to annul that part of those orders of the Commission which vacated said orders of suspension. No attack is made upon that part of the orders of the Commission denying the applications of the tank truck owners for certificates of public convenience and necessity, so the validity of the orders of the Commission, in so far as they resulted in a denial of said applications, is not questioned in this proceeding.

The sole question, then, presented by the petition now before us concerns the action of the Commission in vacating the orders of suspension of the rates filed by the railroads, which vacating orders had the effect of fixing and establishing said rates as reasonable and valid rates to be charged by said railroad companies for the transportation of petro *555 leum products by said rail carriers throughout the state of California.

As a background to the pending controversy between the rail carriers and the tank truck operators the record before the Commission, which by the order of the court has been brought before us for the purpose of review, discloses that up to the years of 1924 and 1925, the rail carriers enjoyed exclusively the business of transporting gasoline and other petroleum products in this state. Their service was not entirely satisfactory to some of the major oil companies, with the result that the oil companies induced various truck operators to equip themselves with tank trucks and to engage in the transportation of gasoline and other petroleum products. The rates agreed upon by the oil companies and the truck' operators were substantially lower than those then charged by the rail carriers. The service of the truck operators was also more flexible and expeditious than that rendered by the rail carriers. This improved service and reduced rates, as a matter of course, caused a large volume of this business to leave the rail carriers and go to the truck operators, with the result that, at the time of the hearing of the matter before the Commission, the amount of this business enjoyed by the truck operators exceeded that of the rail carriers by at least 55 per cent. The truck operators built up a business representing an investment of over $2,500,000. The railroads, undoubtedly for the purpose of holding this business, improved their service and made sweeping reductions in their rates. This reduction in rates was promptly met by the truck operators. The business of the railroads continued to decrease and that of the truck operators showed a corresponding increase. Continuing their efforts to recover this business, the rail carriers, early in the year 1933, filed with the Railroad Commission the schedule of rates, the order for the suspension of which was vacated by the Commission and which is now before us for review. In the majority opinion of the Commission it is stated that, “The railroads feel that this particular business belongs to them, although they are now enjoying less than half of it. They are determined to regain it, to which end they earnestly seek to justify the lower rail rates under suspension. These rates are based on a scale of 8 cents per 100 miles, minimum 4 cents. According to the testimony presented at consider *556 able length they can be reduced 69 per eént more before causing a burden on other traffic.” On the other hand, the tank truck operators insist that they supplied a real need when rail service was unreasonably high and admittedly inefficient, and that the rail carriers should not.be permitted to cut rates to a point which will practically eliminate the tank truck operators from the business of transporting the gasoline and other petroleum products of the state. The minority opinion supports the position of the tank truck carriers. The members of the Commission joining in that opinion favored the granting of the applications of the tank truck carriers for certificates of public convenience and necessity and adjusting the rates upon some equitable basis which would permit both rail and truck carriers to compete for this business upon terms fair and equal to both parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 P.2d 639, 2 Cal. 2d 550, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lang-v-railroad-commission-cal-1935.