Nebraska State Railway Commission v. Service Oil Co.

61 N.W.2d 381, 157 Neb. 712, 1953 Neb. LEXIS 139
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1953
Docket33343
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 N.W.2d 381 (Nebraska State Railway Commission v. Service Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska State Railway Commission v. Service Oil Co., 61 N.W.2d 381, 157 Neb. 712, 1953 Neb. LEXIS 139 (Neb. 1953).

Opinion

Boslaugh, J.

This appeal concerns an order of appellee restricting operations of appellant as a common carrier of property intrastate by authority of a certificate of convenience and necessity previously issued to it by appellee.

The certificate issued to appellant January 17, 19.38, authorized it to transport commodities generally, except those requiring special equipment, as a common carrier by motor vehicle in intrastate commerce by “Irregular routes from Ord and within a 50-mile radius thereof, to and from local points, occasionally to and from Omaha, Kimball, intermediate points and points generally throughout the State of Nebraska, on a statewide basis.” Appellant was engaged for many years thereafter principally in transporting livestock from Ord and the surrounding territory to Omaha. It required and used three stock trucks in these operations. It later acquired an insulated van-type reefer trailer and inaugurated and conducted a refrigerated service between Ord and Lincoln and Omaha and Ord.

Appellee by an order of October 17, 1950, required appellant to show cause on a named date why its certificate of convenience and necessity, herein designated certificate, should not be suspended, changed, or revoked because of its willful failure to observe the classification of carriers established and published by appellee; its failure to confine its operations to those authorized by its certificate in violation of an order of appellee; and its failure to comply with the provisions of general order No. 82, supplement No. 2, of appellee by conducting regular route operations when its certificate authorized only irregular service. A hearing had before an examiner resulted in a report that appellant had been and was performing regular route motor carrier operations as to particular transportation; that its certificate *714 authorized only irregular route operations; and that appellant had been and was guilty of willful failure to confine its operations to those authorized by its certificate. It was recommended that its certificate be suspended for a period of 60 days and that it be ordered to cease and desist the operations found to be regular route in character. The exceptions to the report filed October 8, 1951, by appellant were not immediately ruled on by the commission.

A second order was made by the commission on May 16, 1952, requiring appellant to show cause by June 23, 1952, why its certificate should not be suspended, changed, or revoked because of its: Violation during the period September 6, 1951, through April 21, 1952, of the provisions of section 75-228, R. R. S. 1943, in that it had engaged as a common carrier in intrastate commerce not authorized by its certificate; failure during the period designated to perform only operations described in and authorized by its certificate; failure to observe the classification of carriers made by appellee; and failure during the period stated to confine its operations to those authorized by its certificate in violation of an order of the commission.

The pleading of appellant to the order to show cause was in substance a denial of the charges made against it and a request, in the event that the commission found the operations conducted by appellant violated the law of the state or the rules and regulations of the commission, that an application of appellant attached to and made a part of its pleading for a certificate granting it “authority to operate as a regular route operator between Ord, Nebraska, and Omaha, Nebraska” as specifically set forth in the application be approved and granted by the commission, and that a new certificate be issued to appellant as a regular route common carrier with the rights and authority described and requested in the application.

A hearing was had before an examiner and he reported *715 to the commission that the evidence established that appellant had transported meat from Omaha to consignees in Ord on Mondays and Thursdays from September 6, 1951, through April 21, 1952; from Omaha to consignees in Scotia and North Loup on Tuesdays' from February 19 through April 15, 1952; from Omaha to consignees in Ord and Scotia on Mondays and Thursdays from February 7 through April 7, 1952; and that appellant had transported automobile parts from Omaha to consignees at Ord and Burwell almost daily from October 1 through December 28, 1951. The examiner recommended that the commission find that appellant had been and was “performing regular route common carrier operations within the meaning of General Order No. 82, Supplement No. 2, as to the particular movements under consideration”; that the certificate be in part revoked; and that operations of appellant be authorized only “From Ord and within a 50-mile radius thereof, to and from local points, over irregular routes.”

The commission found that the certificate of appellant should be revoked and canceled in part for willful violation of the Nebraska Motor Carrier Act and the rules and regulations of the commission; and that the certificate should be changed to authorize transportation by appellant as a common carrier of property by motor vehicle in Nebraska in intrastate commerce of all commodities, except those requiring special equipment, over “Irregular routes from Ord and from within a 50-mile radius thereof, to and from local points, occasionally to and from Omaha, Kimball, intermediate points and points generally throughout the state of Nebraska, on a state-wide basis. RESTRICTION: No meat nor meat products to be transported between Ord, and points within a 50-mile radius thereof, on the one hand, and Omaha, on the other hand.” The commission ordered that the certificate of appellant be changed to authorize only the operations as described above. A motion for rehearing was overruled and the commission *716 ordered appellant to cease and desist from transporting for hire meat or meat products between Ord and points within a 50-mile radius thereof on the one hand and Omaha on the other hand.

There is evidence of these facts: Appellant, a corporation with a place of business in Ord, is and has been for many years in the commercial trucking business. Its principal engagements in the earlier years of its experience were the movement of livestock from Ord and its surrounding territory to Omaha. It acquired and has used three stock trucks for this purpose. On the return trips of the trucks from Omaha any freight it could secure was carried to Ord or points intermediate that it served. Appellant acquired more recently a refrigerated truck described as a 28-foot insulated van-type reefer trailer. It is not refrigerated mechanically but by the use of dry ice. It has been used to transport cream each Sunday from Ord, North Loup, and Scotia to Lincoln. Delivery of the cargo was there made to the Beatrice Creamery Company, now Beatrice Foods Company. The cream was received for transportation at cream stations in the three towns. There were other articles transported on these trips but the principal item was cream. This unit after unloading in Lincoln moved to Omaha and remained there until it acquired a load of freight, including meat and meat products, consigned to Ord or other towns in that vicinity. The meat shipments moved generally on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays.

Appellant advised Wilson and Company, in answer to its letter of inquiry of August 7, 1950, that “we will give refrigerated service to the following points: Palmer, St.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W.2d 381, 157 Neb. 712, 1953 Neb. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-state-railway-commission-v-service-oil-co-neb-1953.