New Street Bridge Co. v. Public Service Commission

114 A. 378, 271 Pa. 19, 1921 Pa. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1921
DocketAppeal, No. 453
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 114 A. 378 (New Street Bridge Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Street Bridge Co. v. Public Service Commission, 114 A. 378, 271 Pa. 19, 1921 Pa. LEXIS 452 (Pa. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

The New Street Bridge Company, appellant, hereinafter called the bridge company, was incorporated by Act of May 3, 1864, P. L. 687. In 1867 it built a bridge from New Street in the Borough of Bethlehem, across the Lehigh River and the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company Canal, to New Street in South Bethlehem. As originally constructed, the bridge cost $63,150. It is 1,473% feet long, 30 feet wide, including a roadway of 18 feet and two foot passages of 6 feet each, and is supported by two abutments and eight piers. The bridge, since then, has been practically rebuilt, and is to-day a steel and concrete structure. In 1892 the bridge company made a written lease with the Allentown & Bethlehem Rapid Transit Company for the use of a part of the bridge. In 1910 the Lehigh Valley Transit Company, hereinafter called the transit company, intervening appellee, became the successor of the several street rail[24]*24way companies, lessees of the bridge company. Its lease was for a period of twenty-two years and granted the sole and exclusive right to cross the bridge with street cars. The amount of annual rental was fixed by the number of cars and passengers moved over the bridge; for each passenger one-half of a cent was to be paid, and for each car ten cents, with the minimum rental of $750 per year. The transit company charged a rate to each passenger using its cars over the bridge an additional fare of one-half cent. This was covered by a supplemental ticket sold in connection with fifty and sixty strip and commutation tickets to Allentown and Hellerstown. The Borough of Bethlehem, now City of Bethlehem, filed a complaint against the transit company, charging excessive rates to the citizens in using this bridge. The Bethlehem Steel Company filed a like complaint. The transit company filed a complaint against the bridge company, averring its rate of one-half cent was unjust and unreasonable. The bridge company demurred to the complaint for the reasons hereinafter stated, the commission overruling the demurrer. An answer was filed, hearings had, and the commission ordered the rate reduced from one-half cent to one-third cent per person. From this order an appeal was taken to the Superior Court, and upon its affirmance of the commission’s order an appeal was allowed to this court. The appeals of the Bethlehem Company and the City of Bethlehem against the transit company have been postponed, awaiting the determination of the order now before us.

The jurisdiction of the commission to determine the matter complained of is challenged for the reason that the bridge company is not a public service company, doing business in the particular matter under inquiry, within the meaning of the act, such as would make it subject to regulatory control. The position assumed comes to this: In the execution of the lease and subsequent performance thereunder, the bridge company was not functioning under its charter as an operating com[25]*25pany, but had divested itself, through the lease, for a given term of years, of property and franchises, or the right or power.to render service to the public. It had granted to the transit company the right to occupy, with its rails and wires, a portion of the bridge as a right-of-way, and, during certain scheduled periods of each day, yielded the exclusive occupancy of that part of its fixed and immovable property without any control on the part of the bridge company as to the manner or means of operation. For this sale and divestiture, they received compensation in the nature of a rental, fixed by car and passenger movement. This contract, they urge, was in the nature of a private contract relating to a private undertaking, as distinguished from one relating to a public duty affecting that part of the public having a right to demand performance of charter obligations; therefore the investigation undertaken by the commission was without authority of law, not being within the Public Service Act as a rate, charge or compensation. Appellant presents, among other cases, as closely analogous, the commission’s ruling in underlying company cases from Pittsburgh. There lessors were made respondents because of rentals and invested capital in a complaint filed by the city against the operating company. The commission denied their right to so join the lessors because the contracts were private matters with the operating company: City of Pittsburgh v. Pittsburgh Railways Co., 8 Pa. Corp. R. 441.

For a proper determination of these questions it will be necessary to consider the general structure of the act as it relates to both companies, the jurisdiction of the commission as it attaches to certain acts done by these companies, and the joint exercise of charter functions which, by their nature, are common to both.

Article 1 of the Public Service Act defines the various companies subject to the commission’s control; the extent of authority may be found in other parts of the act. This article also defines properties necessarily a part of [26]*26the life of certain public service companies. These must be considered in connection with the particular subject under inquiry, as they are, by the act and in practice, set into appropriate spheres of corporate activity. But it is not intended each corporation, named in article 1 as a public service company, is affected with these attributes. They become so when, in “doing business” under charter privileges, they meet what is comprehended therein.

Limiting our discussion to the present inquiry, the Public Service Act, taken in its entirety, clearly recognizes corporations which perform charter obligations in and of themselves. Such classes comprise possibly the largest part of the utilities in the Commonwealth. It also considers corporations which have parted with franchises and property by lease or otherwise, retaining merely a corporate shell, with given powers and privileges to be applied as occasion demands. These may be called lessor or owning companies. The act also assumes a defined control of the lessee or substitute; that is, — the company receiving, under authority of law, by lease or otherwise, the lessor’s franchise and property, undertaking, by such lease and its own charter engagement, all the duties and obligations imposed on the lessor of performing for the lessor its charter responsibility to the State. Such lessee companies may be called operating companies. There may be, degrees of such leasing; we have been speaking of absolute withdrawal from all owning and operating activities or control. There are situations where the company not only owns but operates a part of the property devoted to public use, the remainder being leased to a different concern for operation. Many difficult questions may be presented bearing on these latter conditions; they are here mentioned as an aid in determining the matter before us. Where the lease is an absolute one of a given part of the company’s holdings, the question is not difficult; where there is interchange of facilities or property, mixed with [27]*27operation in both concerns, it becomes more difficult to determine rights with respect to the public. Because of the complex question, and the relation to the various phases discussed, in addition to that heretofore mentioned we shall review the act as it relates to the different classes of corporations subject to regulatory control, and the applicability of relevant provisions to such concerns, eliminating any specific reference to the first class, above mentioned, with this observation: What may be said of the lessor and lessee, applies to such companies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 378, 271 Pa. 19, 1921 Pa. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-street-bridge-co-v-public-service-commission-pa-1921.