Oklahoma Gin Co. v. State

1916 OK 314, 158 P. 629, 63 Okla. 10, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1365
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 14, 1916
Docket7022
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1916 OK 314 (Oklahoma Gin Co. v. State) 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
Oklahoma Gin Co. v. State, 1916 OK 314, 158 P. 629, 63 Okla. 10, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1365 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

Upon a hearing of three separate complaints in causes Nos. 1976, 1977, and 1978, made before the Corporation Commission, charging that appellant and certain other ginning companies operating at Chandler had formed an unlawful combination in restraint of trade by fixing a certain price for ginning cotton in violation of an act, entitled “An act to define a trust, monopoly, unlawful combination in restraint of trade; to provide civil and criminal penalties and punishment for violation thereof and damages thereby caused; to regulate such trusts and monopolies; to promote free competition for all classes of business in the state; and declaring an emergency” (approved June 10, 1908, Sess. Laws 1907-1908, p. 750), the Commission, present all parties in interest, on October 17, 1913, made and entered order No. 759, fixing the minimum charge for ginning cotton at Chandler at 50 cents per hundred pounds of lint cotton, with a maximum charge of $2.50 per bale, also fixing the charge for bagging and ties at approximately $1 per bale. On February 26, 1914, three sep arate complaints were filed with the Commission against the appellant, Oklahoma Gin Company, which operated a round bale gin at Chandler, charging it with three separate violations of said order, to which appellant answered, admitting violating the order, but alleging the same to be unjust, unreasonable, and void for certain reasons therein set forth. By consent of parties the three complaints were consolidated and tried together as one case, at the conclusion of which the Commission made and entered three orders adjudging appellant guilty of all three charges and fining it $500 in each case. In each case appellant filed exceptions, and, after motion fo-r new trial filed and also overruled, brings each case here pursuant to Comp. Laws 1909, sec. 1239 (Sess. Laws 1907-1908, p. 230), where all were consolidated on cause No. 7022.

Assailing the validity of the order, it is contended that section 13 of said act vests no *11 jurisdiction in the Corporation Commission, and, if it does, that the same is not ■ embraced within the title of the act, and hence in violation of article 5, sec 57, of the Constitution, and void. Section 13 reads:

“Whenever any business, by reason of its nature, extent, or the existence of a virtual monopoly therein, is such that the public must use the same, or its services, or the consideration by it given or taken or offered, or the commodities bought or sold therein are offered or taken by purchase or sale in such a manner as to make it of public consequence. or to affect the community at large as to supply, demand or price or rate thereof, or said business is conducted in violation of the first section of this act, said business is a public business, and subject to be controlled by the state, by the Corporation Commission or by an action in any district court of the state, as to all of its practices, prices, rates and charges. And it is hereby declared to be the duty of any person, firm or corporation engaged in any public business to render its services and offer its commodities, or either, upon reasonable terms without discrimination and adequately to the needs of the public, considering the facilities of said business.”

Not so. When the Legislature by section 1 of the act denounced every act, agreement, contract, or combination, in whatsoever form, and every conspiracy in restraint of trade within the state as illegal, and in section 13 provided, among other things, that:

“Whenever any business [within the state] * * * is such that the public must use the same, or its services, * * * or [whenever] the commodities bought or sold therein are offered or taken by purchase or sale in such a manner as to mal$e it of public consequence, or [in such manner as] to affect the community at large as to supply, demand or price or rate thereof, or [and] said business is conducted in violation of the first section of this act. said business is a public business, and [is] subject to be controlled, * * ' by the Corporation Commission”

—it meant that whenever a business, although organized, it may be, for the purpose of private gain, has placed its property in such a position that the public has become interested in its use, and such business is conducted in violation of section 1 of the act. i. e., governed by a trust, monopoly, or combination or conspiracy in restraint of trade, the same was, by the act, declared to be a public business, and made subject to the control of the Corporation Commission. Speaking to said section, in Shawnee Gas & Elect. Co. v Corporation Commission, 35 Okla. 454, 130 Pac. 127, quoting approvingly from an unpublished opinion of Hayes, ,T.. we said:

“This section provides that whenever a business shall have certain characteristics, it shall be a public business, and shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Corporation Commission to regulate its practices, rates, and prices; but it does not provide that all public business shall be subject in these respects to such jurisdiction. * * * The first part of said section attempts to define the class of business which the latter part of the section subjects to the jurisdiction of the Corporation Commission and the district courts. It appears to us clear that what was intended was to bring within the jurisdiction of the Commission the regulation of charges and rates for services connected with those businesses that violate the acts and are connected, not with business strictly of a public character, such as common carriage, supply of water and gas, but with that class of business in which the owners, without any intent of public service, have placed their property in such a position that the public has an interest in its use. The distinction between the class of business and its service intended to be defined by and included in said section and the business and sendee of public corporations is, we think, well made by Mr. Justice Brewer, who delivered the opinion of the court in Cotting v. Godard, 183 U. S. 79, 22 Sup. Ct. 30, 46 L. Ed. 92, in the following language: ‘In the one [referring to property devoted to public 'service] the owner has intentionally devoted his property to the discharge of a public sendee. In the other, he has placed his property in such a position that, willingly or unwillingly, the public has acquired an interest in its use. In the one he deliberately undertakes to do that which is a proper work for the state. In the other, in pursuit of merely private gain, he has placed his property in such a position that the public has become interested in its use. In the one it may be said that he voluntarily accepts all the conditions of public service which attach to like service performed by the state itself; in the other, that* he submits to only those necessary interferences and regulations which 'the public interest require.’ It was this second class of business with which we think section 13 was dealing and intended to place under tho jurisdiction of the Corporation Commission and the district courts of the state as to all practices, rates, and charges. * s * The act confers, not only upon the Corporation Commission jurisdiction to prescribe rates and charges under the conditions therein named, but confers also a like and concurrent power upon the district courts of the state.”

And the jurisdiction thus vested was embraced in the title of the act.

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 314, 158 P. 629, 63 Okla. 10, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-gin-co-v-state-okla-1916.