Milne Truck Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission

720 P.2d 1373, 36 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1986 Utah LEXIS 814
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1986
Docket19237
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 720 P.2d 1373 (Milne Truck Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milne Truck Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission, 720 P.2d 1373, 36 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1986 Utah LEXIS 814 (Utah 1986).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice:

The plaintiff, Milne Truck Lines, Inc., contends on this petition for review that the Public Service Commission (PSC) erred *1375 in denying it common carrier authority to haul general commodities over irregular routes between points within the Salt Lake-Utah County area.

The PSC denied Milne’s application on the ground that (1) Milne failed to prove “either an inadequacy in the existing service or potential market growth justifying new service” and (2) even if inadequacy of existing service were assumed, additional competition from Milne in the market area was not in the public interest because it might seriously weaken the protestant PBI Freight Service Inc. (PBI) and result in a loss of motor common carriage of general commodities to remote areas of Utah outside the Salt Lake-Utah County area.

Rio Grande Motor Way, Inc., held the same intrastate authority as that sought by Milne until May 26,1982, when Rio Grande abandoned its authority. The next day Milne was granted the same authority on a temporary basis. PBI, a motor common carrier which has general commodity authority over irregular routes in the same area, protested Milne’s application on the alleged ground that competition from Milne would put PBI out of business. PBI is the only other carrier that has such authority in that area.

Milne contends that the Commission erred in four respects. It asserts that (1) the Commission applied an erroneous legal standard in requiring Milne to prove either inadequacy of existing service in the market area or potential market growth which would justify new service; (2) the Commission’s finding that competition between Milne and PBI would be detrimental to the best interests of the state was not supported by substantial evidence; (3) Milne is entitled to a certificate as. a matter of law because of unrebutted evidence which established a potential need for future service in the market area; and (4) Milne’s application should have been judged under the standards which govern the transfer of existing authority rather than those that govern the grant of new authority because Milne sought the same authority that Rio Grande Motor Way had abandoned.

I. THE FACTS

The applicant, Milne Truck Lines, is a subsidiary of Sun Oil Company and has intrastate authority in Arizona, California, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming, as well as interstate authority. The intrastate authority sought by Milne in Salt Lake and Utah Counties was held by Rio Grande Motor Way from approximately 1970 until May 26, 1982. When Milne submitted its application to the Commission on May 27 for the same authority as that abandoned by Rio Grande, it was granted temporary intrastate authority in the Salt Lake-Utah County area, pursuant to which it has served approximately 220 shippers in that area. Following the hearing on Milne’s application for permanent authority, the PSC found that Milne had run a system-wide deficit over the previous two years, but found it financially fit and operationally able to serve the area.

PBI Freight Service, Inc., has intrastate common carrier authority in Utah, roughly from Salt Lake County south, including points in Utah, Grand, Kane, Millard, Sevier, and San Juan counties. PBI also has interstate authority into Arizona, California, and Nevada. With the withdrawal of Rio Grande, PBI became the only permanently authorized intrastate general commodity carrier between Salt Lake and Utah counties, although specialized carriers compete in the market area to some extent. PBI has, according to the Commission’s findings, a reasonably sizeable net worth, but was experiencing a cash flow problem at the time of the hearing. For the period January 1 through October 1, 1982, D and H Investment Co., PBI’s parent company, had gross revenue of $2,824,758, which included operating revenue of $1,347,185, interstate truckload revenue of $414,468, contract revenue of $1,046,941, and other revenue of $16,164. For the same period, it earned a net income of $22,660, of which approximately $8,000 was from operations. The Commission’s finding that PBI suffered an $80,000 deficit is simply in error. The Commission also found that PBI has *1376 idle equipment and can “easily provide the proposed service at present levels or substantially increased levels.”

In denying Milne’s application, the Commission found that PBI’s traffic into Utah County had been “steadily declining” over the preceding three years as a result of the “generally poor economy, federal deregulation which had allowed an increase in the number of interstate carriers hauling into Utah County, and increased specialized carrier competition.” The Commission also found that the traffic “over the past two to three years had been at best marginal for the support of two general commodity common carriers.”

The Commission ruled that since Milne was applying for the same authority that an existing carrier already had, Milne had the burden of proving either inadequacy of existing service or a future need for additional service and that Milne had failed to meet its burden. The Commission held that even if PBI’s service were deficient, the public interest nevertheless required a denial of the application because of the potential impact of the loss of PBI service to areas outside the Salt Lake-Utah County market area.

II. INADEQUACY OF SERVICE AS PREREQUISITE TO AUTHORIZATION OF NEW AUTHORITY

The Commission erred in ruling that Milne had to prove an inadequacy of existing service or a future need for expanded service as a prerequisite to obtaining the authority sought. It is decidedly not the law that established motor common carriers should be protected by the Commission from new competition as long as they provide a reasonably adequate service and can meet growing demands for common carrier service. Big K Corp. v. Public Service Commission, 689 P.2d 1849 (Utah 1984); Ashworth Transfer Co. v. Public Service Commission, 2 Utah 2d 23, 268 P.2d 990 (1954). Utah law does not grant certificated common carriers a vested interest in the market areas they serve; their certificates of authority do not confer the right to exclude competition simply to protect their own self-interest. On the contrary, it is the policy of the act to foster competition, unless the public convenience and necessity dictates otherwise, because competition in most cases stimulates better service and lower rates far more effectively and efficiently than the Commission can by regulation.

As this Court stated in Big K, supra:

In determining whether the public interest and necessity are served by additional service, the Commission must consider numerous factors. It must weigh the benefits to be derived from increased competition, such as the potential beneficial effect upon rates, customer service, the acquisition of equipment more suitable to customer needs, the efficient use of equipment, greater responsiveness in meeting future shipper needs, and greater efficiency in the use of route structures and interlining arrangements. In Union Pacific Railroad Co. v. Public Service Commission, 103 Utah 459, 466,

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Bluebook (online)
720 P.2d 1373, 36 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1986 Utah LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milne-truck-lines-inc-v-public-service-commission-utah-1986.