PENN. R. CO. v. Commonwealth
This text of 195 Va. 538 (PENN. R. CO. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY
v.
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA EX REL STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION, ET AL.
Supreme Court of Virginia.
Mears & Mears, for the appellant.
J. Lindsay Almond, Jr., Attorney General, William C. Seibert, Ernest Ruediger, J. Brooks Mapp, R. Norman Mason and A. Swilling, for the appellees.
Present, All the Justices.
1. The Railroad Company's petition to discontinue agency service at and abandon certain stations was correctly denied where the revenue at each station far exceeded the amounts expended for costs; nor could acceptance be given the Railroad's "rule of thumb" which required the discontinuance of any agency where out-of-pocket costs exceeded five per cent of the gross revenue.
2. The finding of the Commission that discontinuance of service at the stations involved would not be in the public interest was amply supported by the evidence.
3. The power and duty given the Commission by Virginia Constitution, section 156-b to require transportation companies to maintain reasonable facilities is not conditioned upon the objection or lack of objection on the part of the public. Hence the Railroad's case for closing certain stations was not helped by the fact that no patron had made formal objection.
Appeal from an order of the State Corporation Commission. The opinion states the case.
EGGLESTON
EGGLESTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court.
In September, 1952 the Pennsylvania Railroad Company filed a petition with the State Corporation Commission seeking authority to discontinue its agency service and abandon its stations at Weirwood, Belle Haven, Keller, Melfa and Mears, in Virginia, and to maintain these locations only for carload freight shipments. The petition alleged that the receipts derived from these agencies do not justify, nor do the public convenience and necessity require, their continued maintenance. Patrons of the stations at Keller, Melfa and Mears, by counsel, appeared and objected to the proposed discontinuance and abandonment.
The Commission heard the evidence offered by the Railroad Company and by agreement of counsel considered, in connection therewith, the entire record in the proceeding which the Railroad Company had instituted in 1949, seeking authority to discontinue agency service at fourteen of its stations on the same line. In that proceeding authority was granted to discontinue certain of the agencies, but denied as to others, including Weirwood, Keller, Melfa and Mears. The discontinuance of the agency at Belle Haven was not then involved.
Upon consideration of the record thus presented in the present proceeding the Commission entered an order denying the prayer of the petition, and from that order the Railroad Company has taken this appeal of right. Code, | 12-63.
The five stations involved in this proceeding are on the main line of the Delmarva Division of the Railroad Company which extends from Wilmington, Delaware to Cape Charles, Virginia. Along the 59.2 miles of this line in Virginia are *540 twenty agency stations including Weirwood in Northampton county, and Belle Haven, Keller, Melfa and Mears in Accomack county.
The Railroad Company operates along this line daily two northbound and two southbound passenger trains, none of which stops at Weirwood, Belle Haven, Melfa, or Mears. Keller is a conditional stop for these trains. If service at Keller is abandoned it is proposed that a conditional stop be made at Painter which is 2.5 miles to the south.
Should the discontinunce of the five stations be authorized the Railroad Company proposes to handle carload shipments to and from each of these points through the nearest retained agency station. Less than carload freight shipments would be handled by the daily "pickup and delivery" service now in operation along the line.
The evidence on behalf of the Railroad Company shows that this line runs through a highly cultivated agricultural section, with principal towns lying along the railroad. The development and prosperity of the section have been attributable principally to its potato crop, from the transportation of which the Railroad Company has in the past derived the major portion of its freight receipts. Witnesses on behalf of the Railroad Company testified that in recent years, because of the truck competition, its receipts from this source have so sharply declined that it is now "economically unsound" and destructive of the "efficiency of railroad operation" to require the maintenance of each of these stations. Without inconvenience to the public, these witnesses testified, the business of the Railroad Company with its patrons may be transacted at the stations to be retained along this line which will be of the average distance of 3.3 miles apart.
Witnesses for the Railroad Company likewise testified that the following were the revenues from and costs of operating the five agencies for the first ten months of 1952: *541 TABLE OMITTED Such revenues do not include the receipts from telegrams or the transportation of express and mail. The items of costs listed for the respective stations include agents' salaries, fuel, electricity and telephone, but not the expense of repairing the station buildings.
While in each instance the amount of the revenue at the station far exceeded the amount expended for costs, witnesses for the Railroad Company testified that its operating department had adopted a "rule of thumb" which required the discontinuance of any agency where its "out-of-pocket costs" exceeded five per cent of its gross revenue. By the application of this formula, it was said, it had been determined that the entire Delmarva Division had been operated at a loss for the same period.
Other than this, the Railroad Company offered no evidence to show that any of these stations was being operated at a loss.
We agree with the Commission that this "rule of thumb" invoked by witnesses for the Railroad Company does not justify the discontinuance of these stations. As the Commission aptly pointed out in its opinion, the application of such a rule would permit every railroad company in the State to select only its more profitable stations for retention and discard the less profitable ones, regardless of the present or future needs of a community. It fails to take into consideration the important factors of public convenience and necessity which must be considered in determining whether the agency service at these stations should be retained or discontinued. *542
Although the objectors, the patrons of the several stations, offered no witnesses in the present proceeding, a number had testified before the Commission at the 1949 proceeding, and, as has been said, by agreement of counsel such testimony has been made a part of the present record, was considered by the Commission, and is before us on this appeal. There is ample evidence in the testimony taken at the 1949 proceeding to support the finding of the Commission that the discontinuance of the services at these stations will not be in the public interest. Numerous citizens of the several communities, including shippers, farmers, merchants and members of the boards of supervisors, testified as to the great inconvenience to the patrons which would result from the abandonment of each of the stations, except Belle Haven which was not then involved.
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