Pub. Ser. Com. v. Kensington R.R. Co.

102 A. 1011, 131 Md. 649, 1917 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 13, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 A. 1011 (Pub. Ser. Com. v. Kensington R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pub. Ser. Com. v. Kensington R.R. Co., 102 A. 1011, 131 Md. 649, 1917 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

*650 Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by the Public Service 'Commission of' Maryland,—hereinafter designated in this opinion as the Commission,—from an order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County refusing to grant a preliminary injunction as prayed for in a hill filed in that Court by the Commission against the Kensington Railroad Company of Montgomery County, Maryland, a corporation, which will be referred to-hereafter in this opinion as the railroad.

The railroad is a public service corporation, and owns and operates an electric railway from Chevy Chase Lake, in Montgomery County, to the town of Kensington, in said county. It is subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission. In January, 1917, it filed with the Commission' and advertised in accordance with law a new schedule of rates to take-effect March 1, 1917, to he known as P. S. C. No. 3, and to cancel a former schedule of the company known as P. S. C. No. 2 filed May 24, 1915. Objections were filed with the-Commission to the new schedule by citizens of Montgomery County, and, after full investigation and bearing before the-Commission, that body on May 5, 1917, passed an order,, which, among other things, provided:

“3. That the said Kensington Railway Company of Montgomery County shall not later than the first day of June, in the year nineteen hundred and seventeen, file with the Public Service Commission of Maryland a schedule of rates and fares on and over its line of railway as described in section 2 of this order, which shall embrace the several rates and fares mentioned and set forth in its schedule P. S. C. Md. No. 2, filed with the Commission on the 24th day of May, in the year nineteen hundred and fifteen, as modified, hy Order No. 2423 of this Commission passed- on the-9th day of July, in the year nineteen hundred and fifteen, in Case No. 954, which said schedule hereby ordered shall be designated P. S. C. Md. No. 4, cancelling P. S. C. No. 3, and shall be effective from and after the first day of July, nineteen hundred and *651 seventeen—-which said rates and fares shall he and remain in force for the period of one year from and after the said first day of July, nineteen hundred and seventeen, and until the further order of this Commission in the premises.
“4. That the said Kensington Railway Company of Montgomery County shall, within fifteen days from the receipt of a copy of this order, notify the Commission whether or not it will accept and abide by the same.”

This order was duly served upon the railroad, which notified the Commission that it did not propose to obey the order, but would appeal to the Court to rescind or revoke it. Thereafter it filed a hill in the Circuit Court Eo. 2 of Baltimore City praying’ 1hat the Commission he enjoined from taking any action to enforce its order, that the order might he revoked, and for general relief. The Commission demurred to the bill, but, before hearing was had on the demurrer, the railroad by leave of Court, filed an amended bill to- which the Commission demurred, except as to one paragraph which related to the inadequacy of rates, which it denied.

The amended bill, filed July 16, 1917, charged, upon the facts alleged therein, that the Public Service Commission was without authority or power to pass the order of May 5, 1917, and that the same was an arbitrary assumption of authority, and was unlawful, unjust and unreasonable, and that its enforcement would have the effect of depriving the railroad of its property without, due process of law. The relief prayed for was:

“1. That the order of the Public Service Commission of Maryland, dated May 5th, 1917, may he by this Honorable Court declared void.
“2. That this Honorable Court may enjoin the said'defendants constituting the Public Service Commission of Maryland from attempting to enforce said order.
*652 “3. That this Honorabe Court may grant unto these complainants a preliminary injunction, enjoining and restraining the said defendants, constituting the Public Service Commission of Maryland, from attempting to enforce said order, until the hearing of this cause.”

The record does not show that the demurrer to the amended bill has ever been heard, or that any action has been taken by the lower Court upon the bill.

The railroad company did not file with the Commission the schedule of rates and fares prescribed by the order of May 5, 1917, and, in defiance of said order, it has since the first day of July, 1917, been charging to and collecting from, and is now charging to and collecting from the patrons of its line the fares and charges fixed by its schedule P. S. C. No. 3, exactly as- if the order of May 5, 1917, had never been passed.

The bill in this case sets out the facts as above stated, and other allegations were made which need not be adverted to, and prayed: First, that the defendant, the Kensington Railway Company of Montgomery County, Maryland, its officers, agents, employees and servants may be peremptorily restrained and enjoined by this honorable Court-, by a preliminary injunction, from charging to, or collecting from, the patrons of its line of railway, extending from Chevy Chase Lake, in Montgomery County, in the State of Maryland, to its other terminus opposite Hopkins’ Store, in the town of Kensington, in said county and State, the rates, fares and charges set forth in said schedule P. S. C. Md. No. 3; or any rates, fares and charges except those set forth in the schedule- to be designated P. S. C. Md. Ho-. 4, which was prescribed by the order of the Public Service Commission of Maryland, that is to say, Order Ho. 3632, passed on the 5th day of May, 1917, in a case depending before the said Commission, that is to> say, case Ho-. 1290, wherein A. H. Hobson and others were complainants and the Kensington Railway Company of Montgomery County, Maryland, were *653 the respondents; secondly, that the said injunction may, in due course, become, and be made, final and perpetual; thirdly, and that your orators may have such other and further relief as their case may require.

The question which is presented by the appeal is a narrow but an important one in connection with the administration of the Public Service Commission law, and its determination depends upon the construction of certain provisions of the Act creating the Commission,—the Act of 1910, Chapter 180. Section 43 of that Act is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
102 A. 1011, 131 Md. 649, 1917 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pub-ser-com-v-kensington-rr-co-md-1917.