Motor Transport Co. v. Public Service Commission

56 N.W.2d 548, 263 Wis. 31, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 315
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 56 N.W.2d 548 (Motor Transport Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Motor Transport Co. v. Public Service Commission, 56 N.W.2d 548, 263 Wis. 31, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 315 (Wis. 1953).

Opinion

Currie, J.

The appellant, Motor Transport, contends that the Public Service Commission in ordering the issuance of the certificate to Yule to operate as a common motor carrier in intrastate commerce between Milwaukee, Racine, and Kenosha, violated the legislative standards imposed in ch. 194, Stats., under which the commission is granted the authority to regulate the motor transportation of goods. The particular legislative standard, which it is claimed was so transcended, is the alleged rule that no new certificate to operate is to be granted if the service of the carrier already licensed (in this case Motor Transport) is adequate.

It is urged that such rule is to be gathered from certain provisions contained in secs. 194.02, 194.18 (5) and (9), and 194.23 (1), Stats. These statutory provisions are as follows:

Sec. 194.02, Stats., sets forth the legislative intent underlying the enactment of ch. 194, Stats., conferring upon the commission the power to regulate motor transportation of goods and persons, and states that one of the purposes of such enactment is “to carefully preserve, foster, and regulate transportation to the end of developing and preserving each separate type of the transportation system by highway and rail adequate to meet public needs.”

Sec. 194.18, Stats., provides that it is the'duty of the commission in regulating motor carriers (5) to “insure adequate transportation service to the territory traversed” and “prevent unnecessary duplication of service” and (9) “to supervise and regulate such common motor carriers in all matters affecting their relationship with the public and with other common carriers and with each other, to the end that adequate service at reasonable rates shall be afforded.”

*38 Sec. 194.23, Stats., requires that the commission before granting a certificate authorizing a motor carrier to operate “shall take into consideration existing transportation facilities in the territory proposed to be served, including common and contract motor carriers. . . .”

The foregoing statutory provisions make it clear that the paramount goal sought to be attained by the regulation of motor carriers thereby authorized is that of providing adequate motor-transportation service to meet the public needs, and any other objective is secondary. If these provisions do establish a rule, that no new certificate to operate is to be granted to another carrier when the service of the existing licensed facilities is adequate, the same must be spelled out by implication and not by direct statement in the statutes under consideration. Whether or not these statutes are subject to the interpretation of laying down as a legislative standard such rule, the commission appears to have adopted this rule as a matter of commission policy in passing upon applications for motor-carrier certificates. However, we find it unnecessary in this case to decide whether these statutes are to be so construed. This is because of our conclusion that there has been no finding made by the commission that Motor Transport’s existing service is adequate to meet public needs.

The commission in its original opinion filed upon the conclusion of the hearings held on Yule’s application stated that Motor Transport’s service “has been generally satisfactory to its patrons” and that if the proceedings were upon a service complaint a holding that Motor Transport’s “service is reasonably adequate would be warranted.” Motor Transport maintains on this appeal that such statement of the commission is equivalent to a finding that its service was adequate for all purposes under ch. 194, Stats., but such contention is rebutted by the following statements made by the commission in its opinion:

*39 “However, we are dealing with the public interest and public convenience and necessity, in its broader aspects. As the Wisconsin supreme court has said in Clintonville Transfer Line v. Public Service Comm. 248 Wis. 59 — 74, quoting with approval the language of the supreme court of Utah:
“ ‘If a new or enlarged service will enhance the public welfare, increase its opportunities, or stimulate its economic, social, intellectual, or spiritual life to the extent that the patronage received will justify the expense of'rendering it, the old service is not adequate.’
“While perhaps meeting the statutory test of ‘reasonably safe and adequate service’ (sec. 194.29, Stats.), the protestant’s service has failed to meet the test of the public interest and public convenience and necessity in this broader sense recognized by the supreme court. The record is uncontro-verted that shippers located in Racine and Kenosha who purchase merchandise in both Milwaukee and Chicago have purchased a larger percentage in Chicago. Their experience has convinced them that faster and more dependable service is available for movements to and from Chicago. Thus, the certification of an additional competitive service between Kenosha and Racine on the one hand and Milwaukee on the other might well restore to Milwaukee in some measure business which that city has lost, thereby improving the service to the public in the area.”

Appellant severely condemns the quoted language of the Utah court, which received our apparent blessing in Clintonville Transfer Line v. Public Service Comm. (1945), 248 Wis. 59, 21 N. W. (2d) 5. There is justification for such condemnation because certainly the stimulation of the “social, intellectual, or spiritual life” of a community is not one of the legislative standards set forth anywhere in ch. 194, Stats., to be followed by the commission in granting or refusing a common-motor-carrier certificate. However, this criticized portion of the quotation from the Utah decision ( Union Pac. R. Co. v. Public Service Comm. (1943), 103 Utah, 459, 135 Pac. (2d) 915) must be held to be harmless surplusage in *40 the instant case because the commission makes no reference to any evidence bearing upon the stimulation of “social, intellectual, or spiritual life” of the communities to be served by the applicant Yule. On the contrary it is abundantly clear that the commission bases its finding that “the proposed operations of the applicant as a common motor carrier of property are in the public interest ánd required by public convenience and necessity” upon the ground that “there is a public need for such service” with respect to meeting transportation needs of the communities to be served, and not social, intellectual, or spiritual needs.

The conclusion reached by the commission that public convenience and necessity may justify the granting of an application for a certificate to a new applicant carrier, even though the service being rendered by the carrier already licensed and operating is adequate in the sense that a service complaint cannot be successfully prosecuted against it, is supported by the following quotation from an opinion of the New York Public Service Commission in Re Troy Auto Car Co. P. U. R. Anno., 1917A, 700, 707, set forth with approval in the decision of this court in Clintonville Transfer Line v. Public Service Comm. (1945), 248 Wis. 59, 73, 21 N. W. (2d) 5:

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.W.2d 548, 263 Wis. 31, 1953 Wisc. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/motor-transport-co-v-public-service-commission-wis-1953.