Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Kansas Ex Rel. Railroad Commissioners

216 U.S. 262, 30 S. Ct. 330, 54 L. Ed. 472, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1890
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1910
Docket38
StatusPublished
Cited by162 cases

This text of 216 U.S. 262 (Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Kansas Ex Rel. Railroad Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Kansas Ex Rel. Railroad Commissioners, 216 U.S. 262, 30 S. Ct. 330, 54 L. Ed. 472, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1890 (1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Kansas ordering a peremptory mandamus commanding the Missouri Pacific Railway Company to obey an order of the state board of railroad commissioners. The order directed the putting in operation of a passenger train service between Madison, Kansas, and the Missouri-Kansas state line, on what is known as the Madison branch of the Missouri Pacific ■ Railway Company.

, The branch road in question lies between Madison, Kansas, and Monteith Junction, Missouri. From Madison to the state line is 89 miles and from the state line to Monteith Junction is 19 miles, the total distance between the two terminal points being 108 miles. At Monteith Junction the Madison branch intersects with the Joplin line of the Missouri Pacific, by means of which connection is made with Kansas City and other points. There being no terminal facilities at Monteith' Junction, the trains ■ operated on the Madison branch do not. remain over at the junction, but run aa far as Butler station, three miles distant on the -Joplin line, where terminal facilities' exist!

There are no large'towns-On the Madison branch, either fin Kansas or Missouri, and the country which-that branch serves is largely agricultural, Kansas City being the nearest and *267 most natural market'for the .products of the territory. The greater volume of the passenger travel, however, originating on .the. Madison branch does not move to Kansas City by going to Monteith Junction, but leaves the branch at various points between Madison and the state line, at which points -the branch crosses various roads, which, generally speaking, run in g, northerly or northeasterly direction, affording a means of reaching Kansas City more directly than by going to Monteith and thence via the Joplin line to that city. Three of these intersecting roads are operated by the Atchison and Topeka, two by' the Missoüri, Kansas and Texas, one by the St. Louis and San Francisco; one by the Kansas and Colorado Pacific, and one by the Missouri Pacific. _ Pleasanton is the last station on the branch in Kansas and is six miles distant, from the state line'.

Without clearing up some confusion in the record upon the subject, we take the fact to be as stated by the court below, that the branch between Madison and Monteith Junction, at least so far as it Was constructed within the State of Kansas, ■ was built by a Kansas corporation chartered in 1885, known as the Interstate Railroad Company, and that to aid in the building of the road within the State of Kansas about "two hundred thousand dollars.was contributed by counties through which the road passed. A construction company did the work, at the contract cost of $1,095,000, and this sum was paid by the railway company by delivering to the ^contractors an issue of $1,622,000 of six per cent mortgage bonds. -The Interstate Railroad Company, in July, 1890, consolidated with another Kansas corporation known as the St. Louis and Emporia Railroad Company, the consolidated company being, designated as the Interstate Railway Company. Subsequently, in December, 1890, by authority of a statute of. Kansas, the Interstate Railway Company and eleven other Kansas railway corporations wore, consolidated, the consolidated company-being designated as the Kansas and Colorado Pacific Railway Company.

*268 ' The Missouri Pacific Railway Company is a corporation chartered in Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska. It owns virtually all the mortgage bonds issued by the Interstate Railroad Company for the. construction of the Madison branch and 'a majority of the stock of that company. Indeed, it is the owner of'a majority of the stock and mortgage bonds of all the constituent companies which united in forming the consolidated company known as the. Kansas and Colorado Pacific Railway Company, and, as the lessee of the latter company, operates its lines of road, including, of course, the Madison branch. It is not questioned that substantially all the equipment used in operating the roads covered by the biases is owned by the Missouri Pacific Railway Company.

In September, .1905, residents along the Madison branch within the State of Kansas filed a petition with the board of railroad commissioners, alleging, in substance, that only a mixed train was furnished for passenger service on the branch, that such service, subjected the public to great inconvenience, prevented anjdhing like a regular and timely passenger service, and, besides, was dangerous to those traveling over the road. An order was prayed requiring the Missouri Pacific to operate a regular passenger train over the branch road between Madison and the state line. The evidence introduced before the board is not in the record. After a hearing, the" following finding and order was made (76 Kansas, 490):

“Now, on this seventh day of December, 1905, after hearing the evidence and argument of counsel, in the above-entitled action, the board finds that during the years 1902 and 1903, when the respondent railway company operated a passenger train on said Madison branch of its line, that the said passenger train was operated at a loss, and there was no testimony introduced at this hearing that the train, if put on as asked for by the petitioners,' could be operated at a profit to the respondent company. The board believes that the people along the lino of the Madison branch of said company are entitled to better passenger train service than they are *269 now receiving, and it has been represented to the board by officers of said company that the respondent is constructing motor cars for establishment on its branch lines that can be operated at a much less expense than steam service.
“It is therefore ordered by the board that on or before the first day of May, 1906, a motor passenger car service be put on and operated on said Madison branch, from Madison, Kansas, to the Kansas and Missouri state .line, and in the event sai(í railroad company is unable at that time to put on a motor car passenger service, a regular steam passenger train service be forthwith put on and operated.” ■

The road not having obeyed, this proceeding by mandamus was commenced to compel eompliapce.

Three special defenses were set up in the return to the alternative writ. In the first it was insisted that the branch road was an interstate roacl and could only be operated as such, and, therefore, was not subject to the jurisdiction of the railroad commission or the courts of the State of Kansas, and in the second it w^s claimed that the burden which would be.occasioned bjr compelling the operation of a passenger train service -would be confiscatory and in violation of rights protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. The court below, in its opinion, thus, we think, accurately summarized the daborate averments relating to the two defense's just referred to (76 Kansas, 470'):

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Bluebook (online)
216 U.S. 262, 30 S. Ct. 330, 54 L. Ed. 472, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-railway-co-v-kansas-ex-rel-railroad-commissioners-scotus-1910.