Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Co. v. Fowler

290 S.W.2d 922, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2297
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 1956
Docket10385
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 290 S.W.2d 922 (Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Co. v. Fowler) 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
Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Co. v. Fowler, 290 S.W.2d 922, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2297 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinions

HUGHES, Justice.

Pessell Fowler and nine other residents of the Pflugerville area in Travis County sued the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company of Texas, hereinafter called Katy, the Railroad Commission of Texas and its members to vacate an order of the Commission authorizing the Katy to discontinue its agency at the station at Pflugerville except for a period of not less than'three months during the cotton shipping season and for appropriate injunctive relief.

A jury heard the case but was dismissed after the evidence was closed the court ruling that there were no disputed material fact issues.

This ruling was preceded by the court’s action in severing from and dismissing for want of jurisdiction that portion of the suit in which plaintiffs’ alleged and sought relief based on a contractual obligation binding the Katy to build and permanently maintain a depot and agent at Pflugerville.

The trial court rendered judgment decreeing the order of the Commission void and enjoining its enforcement.

[925]*925All parties have appealed, Fowler et al. complaining' only of the order of severance and dismissal.

The court below made these fact findings:

“(1) As a matter of fact, as well as law as hereinafter stated, the order of the Railroad Commission has no support in any evidence.
“(2) The station at Pflugerville is operating profitably; the agency at such station is profitable.
“(3) Public convenience and necessity require the maintenance of the agency twelve months out of the year.
“(4) It will not unduly or unreasonably burden the railroad to continue the agency.”

Consistent conclusions of law were made and filed.

The Katy, whose brief has been adopted by the Commission, has made fifteen separate points the basis of its appeal but inasmuch as they are grouped for briefing they will not be stated or treated separately.

Katy operates a railroad line through the unincorporated town of Pflugerville in Travis County, Texas, and has maintained a station and an agent at that place since early in this century. Since and for some time prior to 1951 the agent at Pflugerville has been on duty eight hours a day, Monday through Friday of each week, throughout the entire year (except for holidays). In 1951 the Katy applied to the Commission for permission to discontinue the agency for at least the period of the year not included in what is known as the cotton shipping season, a period in the late summer and fall of the year during which most of the cotton is shipped. After the first hearing, permission was denied by the Commission.

A second application of the same type was made in 1953, the result of which was the order complained of in this suit.'

The community of Pflugerville has been established for many years. It has schools, churches, drug stores, grocery stores, hardware stores, cafes,’ lumber yards, a bank and the other kinds of commercial establishments commonly found in a thriving community. In the town proper there are 450-500 people. In the trade area of Pflugerville, there are approximately 2500 persons. The high school and elementary schools combined have 350 scholastics.

The depot receives and discharges at Pflugerville all of the necessities of life, including food-stuffs, medicines, lumber, livestock, feed cotton, oil products, iron and steel, cream, chickens, turkeys, hardware, etc.

There is no regular freight service in and out of Pflugerville except on the railroad operated by the Katy. This service includes six trains per day. No truck or bus lines are operated on any regular schedule in or out of Pflugerville.

The nearest station from Pflugerville on the north is Georgetown, and on the south, the nearest station is Austin. Georgetown and Austin are more than twenty five miles apart on the Katy lines.

There is also evidence that a full time agent at Pflugerville is needed in order to issue bills of lading, sell tickets, give information, receive complaints, send telegrams, care for chickens and livestock and to perform other services usually performed by a station agent.

There is evidence, too, that Pflugerville would suffer economically if the services of the agent are curtailed as the order of the Commission authorizes.

The primary contention of Katy is that it is under no legal duty to maintain an all year round agency 1 at Pflugerville.

Fowler et al. counter with.the assertion that a service once undertaken or assumed by a railroad cannot be discontinued saying “This is a fundamental common law rule.” [926]*926We will discuss the authorities cited to support this statement.

Vol. 34 Tex.Jur. p. 714 — 716 is cited and the only authority in support of the text is the opinion of this Court in State v. Sugarland Railway, Tex.Civ.App., 163 S.W. 1047, 1048, writ refused. This case holds that a railroad cannot abandon any of its lines without statutory authority and construed our statutes “to indicate that no such power was ever contemplated,”

To the same effect is State v. Enid, O. & W. Ry. Co., 108 Tex. 239, 191 S.W. 560, reliance being placed upon a statute in existence when the railroad was chartered prohibiting removal of main lines once constructed.

Crosbyton-Southplains R. Co. v. Railroad Commission, Tex.Civ.App., Austin, 169 S.W. 1038, writ refused, upholds the validity of a statute requiring railroads to build sidings and spur tracks sufficient to handle the business tendered such railroads, when ordered to do so by the Railroad Commission.

In Angelina & N. R. R. Co. v. Railroad Commission, Tex.Civ.App., San Antonio, 212 S.W. 703, 707, writ refused, the Court held that an order of the Railroad Commission requiring a railroad to provide and maintain at a station on its lines adequate depot facilities and to place an agent in charge thereof was sustained, the Court saying:

“All that appellee sought to do was to compel obedience to a mandatory statute which commanded appellant to build a suitable house to accommodate its passenger and freight traffic at Etoile. There was nothing unreasonable or unjust in a request that appellant should obey the laws of the state which created it; such laws being read into and becoming a part of the instrument that gave it existence — its charter.”
“While the statutes bearing on railroads do not in terms require agents to be furnished at railway stations and do' not in terms authorize the Railroad Commission to make such appointment, it becomes a duty, and such authority arises by imperative implication from the many duties placed upon railway companies and the authority given the Railroad Commission to enforce compliance with such duties. The statutes require that freight shall be delivered to the owner, agent, or consignee, that baggage shall be checked when taken for transportation ‘by the agent or servant of such corporation’; that they shall erect suitable buildings at stations for the protection of passengers and freight, and shall keep depots or passenger houses lighted and warmed and open to egress and ingress of all passengers for an hour before the arrival and after the departure of trains, and other duties which cannot be performed without the presence of an agent or servant.

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W.2d 922, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-kansas-texas-railroad-co-v-fowler-texapp-1956.