Pacific Northwest Transportation Services, Inc. v. Utilities & Transportation Commission

959 P.2d 160, 91 Wash. App. 589
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 17, 1998
DocketNo. 20606-4-II
StatusPublished

This text of 959 P.2d 160 (Pacific Northwest Transportation Services, Inc. v. Utilities & Transportation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Northwest Transportation Services, Inc. v. Utilities & Transportation Commission, 959 P.2d 160, 91 Wash. App. 589 (Wash. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

Morgan, J.

— RCW 81.68.040 governs the intrastate transportation of passengers for compensation. It provides in pertinent part:

No auto transportation company shall operate for the transportation of persons ... for compensation between fixed termini or over a regular route in this state, without first having obtained from the [Washington Utilities and Transporta[591]*591tion Commission] under the provisions of this chapter a certificate declaring that public convenience and necessity require such operation .... The commission shall have power, after hearing, when the applicant requests a certificate to operate in a territory already served by a certificate holder under this chapter, only when the existing auto transportation company or companies serving such territory will not provide the same to the satisfaction of the commission, and in all other cases with or without hearing, to issue said certificate as prayed for; or for good cause shown to refuse to issue same, or to issue it for the partial exercise only of said privilege sought, and may attach to the exercise of the rights granted by said certificate to such terms and conditions as, in its judgment, the public convenience and necessity may require.

Like the parties, we refer to “a certificate to operate in a territory already served by a certificate holder” as an overlapping certificate, and to “the existing auto transportation company” as the incumbent carrier.

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (Sea-Tac) is located in King County. South of King County is Pierce County, and south of Pierce County is Thurston County. Pierce County includes the city of Tacoma, and Thurston County includes the city of Olympia.

For many years, Pacific Northwest Transportation Services, d/b/a/ Capital Aeroporter (Capital), has operated an airporter (van) service between Sea-Tac, on the one hand, and Pierce and Thurston Counties, on the other. It has operated under a certificate of authority issued by the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (WUTC). Although its certificate allowed it to serve Thurston County directly (i.e., without stopping in Pierce County), it has always made its Thurston County service subject to intermediate stops in Pierce County.

On December 1, 1992, Sharyn Pearson and Linda Zepp, d/b/a/ Centralia-Seatac Airport Express (Centraba), appbed to the WUTC for a certificate permitting them to provide direct airporter service between Thurston County and the airport (i.e., service without intermediate stops in Pierce [592]*592County).1 A hearing was held before an administrative law judge (ALJ) on May 24 and July 8, 1993. Four Thurston County users testified that Capital’s service failed to meet their needs because of the unpredictability and delay caused by intermediate stops in Pierce County.

On November 12,1993, the ALJ proposed an order granting Centralia’s application. When Capital petitioned the Commission, however, that body rejected the ALJ’s proposed order and denied Centralia’s application. Centraba then sought reconsideration on grounds the Commission had “erred in its evaluation of [Capital’s] service; erred in its evaluation of [Centraba’s] proposal; gave insufficient weight to public sentiment for [Centraba’s] proposal; and erred in failing to conclude that the pubbc convenience and necessity require the proposed service.”2 The Commission allowed Capital to respond, and Capital filed its response on May 27, 1994. Thereafter, the Commission granted reconsideration and awarded Centraba the requested certificate, finding in part as fobows:

Capital Aeroporter does not offer non-stop service between the Olympia area and Sea-Tac Airport. Its service is a scheduled door-to-door airporter service that makes twelve runs daily from Olympia to Sea-Tac. Each of its northbound runs makes at least one stop in Tacoma, at the Sheraton Hotel, and makes as many additional door-to-door stops in Pierce County as the carrier has reservations.
There is ample evidence that the airporter service that Capital Aeroporter offers in Thurston County is not as direct, expedited, or convenient as the traveling public in the territory expects and desires of airporter service. Four Thurston County witnesses who use and/or arrange for airporter service between the Olympia area and Sea-Tac Airport expressed dissatisfaction with the lack of non-stop service to the airport. The testimony demonstrates that travelers experience anxiety [593]*593and discomfort when a Capital Aeroporter van wanders around the Tacoma area picking up passengers, particularly when the time for getting to the airport is short. The testimony demonstrates that Olympia-area airporter travelers desire a non-stop or “express” service to Sea-Tac.
James Fricke, Capital Aeroporter’s operating witness, admitted receiving passenger complaints about too many stops on the way to the airport. A former driver for Capital Aeroporter, Robert Hastings, testified that the most common complaint he heard from Capital’s passengers was “I wish there were something that did not stop in Tacoma and went straight to the airport.”
The Commission believes that non-stop airporter service for which the Thurston County public witnesses expressed a need is a reasonable service expectation. The Thurston County territory that Capital Aeroporter serves is not a sparsely settled area whose residents are fortunate to have any form of public transportation to the major airport serving the region. It is one of the state’s major population centers. It is the seat of state government. Absent convincing evidence that it is not economically feasible to provide direct, expedited service between the Olympia area and Sea-Tac Airport,[3] the Commission will conclude that Capital Aeroporter’s failure to offer such service makes its service not to the satisfaction of the Commission.[4]

Capital appealed from the Commission to the superior court, which affirmed. Capital then filed the present appeal to this court. As both parties acknowledge, we review the [594]*594decision of the Commission, as opposed to the decision of the superior court.5

Expressly claiming that it is raising issues of law only,6 Capital argues that “the Commission exceeded] its power under RCW 81.68.040 by (1) adopting a new standard for satisfactory service after issuing] its Final Order, and then (2) granting overlapping operating authority to Centraba Airporter without making the threshold determination that the incumbent carrier ‘will not’ offer service to meet the new standard.”7 Capital does not assign error to the Commission’s findings, and thus they are verities on appeal.8

I.

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Bluebook (online)
959 P.2d 160, 91 Wash. App. 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-northwest-transportation-services-inc-v-utilities-washctapp-1998.