Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc. v. Flagg

159 P.2d 162, 177 Or. 1, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 126
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 159 P.2d 162 (Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc. v. Flagg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc. v. Flagg, 159 P.2d 162, 177 Or. 1, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 126 (Or. 1944).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a decree of the circuit court which dismissed their complaint. The latter was filed under the provisions of § § 113-151 and 115-531, O. C. L. A. It challenged orders entered November 5 and December 17, 1942, by the public utilities commissioner. The second order was merely an affirmance, upon rehearing, of the first; hence, when we hereafter speak of “the order” we mean both. The plaintiffs were Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc., Consolidated Freightways, Inc., Bend-Portland Truck Service, Inc., Southern Pacific Company, Pacific Motor Trucking Company, all corporations, and Raymond and Earl E. Lininger, partners doing business as Independent Truck Line. The public utilities commissioner was the defendant. The commissioner, at the time of the entry of the orders and the commencement of this suit, was Mr. Ormond R. Bean. June 1, 1943, he was succeeded by the present commissioner, Mr. George H. Flagg. Oregon-Nevada-California Fast Freight, Inc., became intervenor.

*6 The appellants are the above plaintiffs. In the proceeding before the commissioner they were the protestants. The respondents are the defendant and the intervenor. The latter was the applicant for a permit (§ 115-511, O. C. L. A.) before the commissioner.

The issue presented by the pleadings and by the appeal is the validity of the aforementioned order. The appellants contend that it lacked support by substantial evidence and that its entry was not authorized by § 115-511, O. C. L. A. It granted the intervenor a permit to operate as a common carrier of freight on U. S. Highway 99 between Portland and Ashland. A statement of some facts, undisputed by any party to this appeal, will assist in an understanding of the issues.

The Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc., and Consolidated Freightways, Inc., hereafter termed Pierce and Consolidated, respectively, possess permits authorized by § § 115-501 to 115-516, O. C. L. A., and pursuant to them, render service as common carriers of freight on Highway 99 between Portland and Medford. Ash-land is thirteen miles south of Medford. The distance from Portland to Ashland is 319 miles. Highway 99 parallels the Southern Pacific Company line of railroad between Portland and Ashland. The Southern Pacific Company runs trains between those places, and as a part of its service operates merchandise cars affording substantially the same service and schedules as Pierce and Consolidated. The Pacific Motor Trucking Company is a subsidiary of the Southern Pacific Company. The principal function which it renders is a pickup and delivery service for the Southern Pacific’s merchandise cars. Bend-Portland Truck Service, Inc., is immaterial to any issue presented by the appeal. The aforementioned partnership, which does business under *7 the names of Independent Truck Line, operates two common carrier trucks between Ashland and Med-ford, It interchanges freight with Pierce and Consolidated. The latter two deliver nothing directly to consignees in Ashland. Freight from the north for, Ashland is turned over to Independent at Medford and is distributed by it to the consignees. Likewise it picks up freight in Ashland for points north and turns it over in Medford to Pierce and Consolidated. Pierce, besides its schedules between Portland and Medford, also operates into San Francisco. Consolidated affords truck service as a common carrier in all of the territory west of Chicago.

Oregon-Nevada-California Fast Freight, Inc., the intervenor, which will hereafter be termed O. N. C., is engaged as a common carrier in the transportation of property by motor truck. Prior to the entry of the attacked order it operated schedules between (1) San Francisco and points in Nevada; (2) San Francisco and Klamath Falls; (3) San Francisco and Medford; (4) Klamath Falls and Medford; and (5) Portland and Medford through the Coos Bay cities. The following is an explanation of the schedules last mentioned. Trucks operate under it from Portland along Highway 99 to Drain; from Drain to Reedsport on Highway 38; from Reedsport to Coquille on Highway 101; from Coquille to Dillard on Highway 42; and at Dillard return to Highway 99 and continue on to the southern terminus of the schedule at Medford. As an incident to the Coos Bay service they operate between Drain and Dillard. The permit under which that schedule was authorized denies to O. N. C. the right to receive any shipment along Highway 99 for delivery to any point on Highway 99. Thus, O. N. C. cannot accept *8 any traffic in Portland, Salem or any other point on Highway 99 for delivery in Engene, Roseburg, Grants Pass or Medford. It can, however, accept goods at any of the points last mentioned for delivery in Reeds-port, Coos Bay or Coquille because those points are not on Highway 99. Likewise it can accept a shipment at any of the three cities just mentioned for delivery in Medford, Grants Pass or Portland.

At the time of the entry of the attacked order, O. N. C. was bringing north from San Francisco to Medford a greater tonnage than any other carrier. The volume averaged 80 tons per day. But since it possessed no permit authorizing it to run north from Medford directly into Portland along Highway 99, it was compelled to turn over the tonnage at Medford to other carriers which took it north. At the time of the hearings, which we shall shortly describe, O. N. C. and a carrier, entitled Oregon Express Company, had an agreement under which Oregon Express accepted at Medford and hauled to Portland about 70 tons per day of the lading which O. N. C. brought to Medford. Oregon Express possessed a permit for operation on Highway 99 between Portland and Medford, but lacked sufficient equipment to enable it to render the service. Pursuant to the contract just mentioned, O. N. C. leased to Oregon Express whatever equipment was needed and with it Oregon Express proceeded to Portland with the tonnage which O. N. C. had delivered to it. In Portland the empty trucks were returned to O. N. C. which drove them back to Medford. O. N.' C., in addition to the lading which it delivered to Oregon Express at Medford, turned over additional quantities to Pierce, Consolidated and Pacific Motor Trucking Company. For instance, in 1941, it delivered to Pierce *9 in Medford 2,610,981 pounds for transportation' to points north of Grants Pass.

The application filed with the public utilities commissioner which resulted in the two aforementioned orders, and which ultimately yielded the decree under attack, sought a permit enabling O. N. C. to operate between Portland and Ashland on Highway 99. O. N. C. was the applicant and all of the parties-plaintiff in this suit were protestanfs. The orders aforementioned were entered at the end of the hearing and authorized O. N. O. to maintain daily three schedules south from Portland to Ashland and two north from Ashland to Portland. Its rates will be the same as those of' other carriers. In other words, competition, in the event the orders were sustained, will not be based upon rates.

Although the application which resulted in the order under attack is not before us, it apparently was filed in 1940. The appellants’ brief states that in it O. N. C. sought, not only a permit for service between Portland and Medford, but also the permit under which it instituted the Coos Bay service.

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Bluebook (online)
159 P.2d 162, 177 Or. 1, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-auto-freight-lines-inc-v-flagg-or-1944.