Mistletoe Express Serv. v. Corporation Commission

1957 OK 164, 316 P.2d 865, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 548
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 25, 1957
Docket37397
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1957 OK 164 (Mistletoe Express Serv. v. Corporation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mistletoe Express Serv. v. Corporation Commission, 1957 OK 164, 316 P.2d 865, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 548 (Okla. 1957).

Opinions

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This is an appeal from Order No. 31939, entered by this State's Corporation Commission on March 20, 1956, issuing to the Magic Empire Express of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Certificate No. A-812 authorizing it to operate a class “A” Interstate and Intrastate Motor Carrier Service between certain cities and towns and over certain roads and/or highway routes specified therein. This certificate in effect supersedes said Carrier’s previous certificate No. A-23 and merges the territory already served under it with certain new territory.

Under the old certificate, as amended, the carrier hereafter referred to merely as Magic, was, at the time it applied for the new certificate, serving a territory comprising approximately the northeastern quarter of Oklahoma surrounding its headquarters at Tulsa, Oklahoma, and extending, in some instances, a distance of more than 100 miles from that City. For example, it has been carrying express up U. S. Highway No. 66 to Picher, near the Kansas line on the northeast, to Coweta, Hulbert, Westville and Sallisaw on the east and southeast, and as far south of Tulsa as Holdenville, Sasak-wa, and as far west and northwest of Tulsa as Kaw, Ralston and Stillwater. Between these points and Tulsa, it serves such towns and cities as Wewoka, Seminole, Shawnee, Chandler, Stroud, Depew, Bristow, Cush-ing, Stillwater, Pawnee, Pawhuska, Drum-right, Sapulpa, Dewey, Nowata, Chelsea, Claremore, Broken Arrow, Okemah, Hen-ryetta, Eufaula, Checotah, Stigler, Warner, Gore, Vian, Vinita, Afton and Miami. On their regularly scheduled “main line” trips, Magic’s trucks have always traveled from its terminal in Tulsa to and through such towns and cities and back to the Tulsa terminal. They have never traveled any closer to Oklahoma City than Perkins on the north, and Chandler, Meeker and Shawnee on the northeast, east and southeast of said City.

Another express company, hereinafter referred to as Mistletoe, with headquarters in Oklahoma City, has furnished the same type of express service to towns and cities situated south and west of Oklahoma City. In addition, it serves the towns and cities along U. S. Highway No. 270 southeast to Wilburton and towns and cities along U. S. Highway No. 62 to Muskogee. Out of Muskogee, Mistletoe’s route coincides with one of Magic’s to Wagoner and on northeast to Westville and south to Stillwell. Mistletoe also serves towns southeast of Muskogee, such as Sallisaw and Stigler. Mistletoe also operates non-stop express schedules between Oklahoma City and Tulsa on the Turner Turnpike.

Theoretically, when either Magic or Mistletoe has picked up, or accepted, at any of the towns or cities it serves, express consigned to a town served exclusively by the other company, it could carry said express to a point where it "interlines” with a regularly scheduled line of the other carrier, and transfer it to that other carrier. When the latter delivers the express and collects the shipping charge, then it is supposed to remit a proportionate part of said collection to the other carrier, depending upon what portion of the express’ entire journey the original carrier carried it. Under this plan, express consigned to Stroud and carried by Mistletoe on a schedule it has from Oklahoma City to Chandler, may be turned to Magic at Chandler for the completion of its journey to Stroud, which latter town Magic serves, but Mistletoe does not. Similarly, express Magic picks up at one of the towns or cities it serves, that is consigned to a town or city, such as Oklahoma City, served exclusively by Mistletoe, [867]*867may be “interlined” with Mistletoe either at Tulsa or Chandler, or at certain other points where the lines of the two meet, or intersect.

Since 1939, under a policy adopted by both Magic and Mistletoe, where shipment is to be dispatched in a town or city they both serve, to a city or town served by only one of them, it is referred to the latter for the entire trip. In other words, since Mistletoe has had regular schedules between Oklahoma City and Tulsa, Magic, theoretically has turned all Tulsa express consigned to Oklahoma City over to Mistletoe for hauling. Under these carriers’ past practice, if one of Magic’s agents picked up the consignment at Tulsa, and it was transported to Chandler on a Magic truck and “interlined” there with Mistletoe, the latter would cancel or “void” Magic’s bill of lading, transport the express from Chandler to Oklahoma City under a new bill of lading of its own, and collect the total shipping charge for the entire journey without remitting any part of it to Magic, for the portion of the trip Magic carried it. Until recently the same policy worked to Mistletoe’s detriment on a shipment originating, for instance, at Shawnee (which city both carriers served) and consigned to Miami, which only Magic served.

A few months prior to Magic’s filing of the application involved herein, however, Mistletoe applied for, and was granted, authority under its Class “A” certificate to extend its service from Tulsa along U. S. Highway No. 66 to Miami, serving the principal towns and cities along this highway between those two points. This route, of course, parallels or coincides, as far as Miami, with the route, already traversed and served by Magic, to that city and Picher, Oklahoma. Thus, since this extension was granted, Mistletoe, under the aforedescribed policy, has been collecting the entire revenue for all shipments originating at the points it serves along U. S. Highway No. 66, and consigned to Oklahoma City and other towns and cities it serves exclusively in the central and southwestern parts of the State.

The foregoing indicates some of the factors in the competitive situation existing between the express carriers involved herein as principals, when Magic, by the application to the Commission here involved, sought, among other things, to extend its lines to Oklahoma City where it can participate in the revenue now being earned by Mistletoe on shipments between that large distribution center and the northeastern part of the State, that until recently was a part of Magic’s exclusive territory. In consideration of the justification in “public convenience and necessity” required for extending its authority, Magic introduced, in support of its application, evidence contemplated to show that such an extension was not only needed to give that portion of the public it has been serving, better service to and from Oklahoma City, but also to furnish points which now have no such service, express shipping service to and from Oklahoma City. The application was opposed not only by Mistletoe but also by Railway Express, Inc., and several bus and freight lines, of whom The Santa Fe Trail Transportation Company, Joe Hodges Transportation Co., Inc., and Mid-Continent Freight Lines, Inc., have joined Mistletoe’s present appeal from the Commission’s Order.

In its original brief, Mistletoe contends in its Proposition 1, that the findings and order of the Commission “are not sustained by the law or by any substantial evidence.” To support this, it singles out certain towns, hereinbefore mentioned, that are already being served by Magic under its old certificate, and asserts that the record in this case is devoid of any evidence even tending to justify additional express service between them and Oklahoma City. We will assume that, of the witnesses who testified on behalf of Magic, the testimony of John A. Zoller, circulation manager for Newspaper Printing Corporation, the circulation agent for the Tulsa World and Tulsa Tribune newspapers, and Otis V.

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Mistletoe Express Serv. v. Corporation Commission
1957 OK 164 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1957 OK 164, 316 P.2d 865, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mistletoe-express-serv-v-corporation-commission-okla-1957.