Railroad Commission v. Southern Pacific Co.

454 S.W.2d 853, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2387, 1970 WL 198350
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1970
DocketNo. 11743
StatusPublished

This text of 454 S.W.2d 853 (Railroad Commission v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railroad Commission v. Southern Pacific Co., 454 S.W.2d 853, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2387, 1970 WL 198350 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

Southern Pacific Company (now merged into Southern Pacific Transportation Company) filed an application with the Railroad Commission seeking authority to discontinue its existing agency at Navasota, Texas, retire the depot, and change the applicable tariffs to show Navasota as a non-agency station.

By an order entered September 5, 1968, the Railroad Commission denied the application.

Southern Pacific filed suit in Travis County under Article 6453, Vernon’s Ann. Tex.Civ.St, to cancel the order of the Commission and authorize discontinuance of the agency. The City of Navasota and interested civic groups sought to intervene in the case, but their petition was denied by the trial court.

The cause was heard by the court without a jury. After trial, the court held for Southern Pacific, setting aside the order of the Railroad Commission, in a judgment entered September 26, 1969. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The Railroad Commission brings three points of error. The Commission insists that this is a substantial evidence case, and that the single issue is whether the trial court’s judgment is incorrect in holding that there was no substantial evidence to sustain the Commission’s order.

Southern Pacific urges that the test is not whether the order of the Commission has reasonable support in substantial evidence, but whether the order was reasonable and just.

The trial court found:

“Based upon the entire record, the Court finds the law and the facts to be with the plaintiff [Southern Pacific] and against the defendants [the Railroad Commission and Commissioners], in that there is no substantial evidence to sustain the * * * order of the Railroad Commission of Texas, and in that said order [855]*855is unreasonable and unjust to plaintiff, and if permitted to stand, would have the effect of requiring plaintiff to maintain the Navasota agency at an unwarranted and needless expense to the railroad, which expense substantially exceeds the revenues from traffic at that station experienced in the past and reasonable to be anticipated in the future, all as shown by sound railroad accounting principles; and the Court further finds that under the evidence there is no public need for such agency and that the plaintiff has available other agencies, services and facilities reasonably adequate and sufficient to serve the public at Navasota in connection with the transportation services performed by plaintiff.”

The Railroad Commission, through the testimony of four witnesses who were shippers using the Southern Pacific rail service in connection with businesses located in Navasota sought to show that the various functions qf the railroad agent at Navasota so vitally affected the public convenience and necessity as to support the Commission’s order denying discontinuance of the agency. Two other witnesses testified in general regarding efforts of the community to attract industry and gave their views as to the need of an agent in Navasota to handle shipments made through Southern Pacific rail facilities. One witness testified that loss of the agent would have an adverse effect on the community’s image.

The services of the railroad agent that the shipper witnesses considered they could not conveniently do without and considered necessary to their businesses were in the main: (1) handling claims, (2) signing bills of lading, (3) obtaining cars needed for shipments, (4) spotting cars on tracks, (5) obtaining weight slips, (6) obtaining credit slips, and (7) obtaining refund slips.

It is undisputed that Navasota is a town having a population of about 4,900 and is served by three rail lines, including Southern Pacific. Each of the three lines maintains an agent in Navasota. Southern Pacific has two through freight trains daily and two switching units each day. The Southern Pacific agent in Navasota has had no duties related to passenger train service or mail service since 1958, and for the past several years the agent has performed no duties in connection with Western Union or Railway Express activities. Shipments in less than carload lots have been taken over by the motor truck division of Southern Pacific and the agent in Navasota since 1964 has not been permitted to perform duties in connection with these shipments.

The Navasota agent for Southern Pacific handles only duties related to carload shipments by rail. For many years, it was shown without dispute, the Navasota agent has had no duties connected with handling carload rail shipments of livestock and poultry requiring feeding and watering.

Southern Pacific proposed, in connection with its application to discontinue the agent at Navasota, to assign his duties to the existing agent at the Waller depot, which is 29.2 miles by rail and 31 miles by highway from the Navasota depot. The agent at Waller is now responsible for agent duties of five other communities and shipping points. With approval of the Navasota removal, the agent at Waller would be responsible for approximately fifty miles of track and six shipping points.

Southern Pacific further proposed to assign the several duties of the Navasota agent to other employees of the railroad. The bills of lading, after being prepared by the shipper, would be signed by the train conductor. If the customer preferred not to seal his own cars with seals provided for that purpose, the conductor would seal the cars.

To request other services now performed by the agent, the shipper would be allowed to make collect telephone calls to the agent at Waller. The shipper would use this means of ordering cars, obtaining rate and routing information, tracing and locating [856]*856rail cars, securing the timetable of the local or switching trains, and in reporting claims and getting inspections in connection with claims.

Southern Pacific represented the agent as a middle man in obtaining information on rates and routes and in tracing cars, this information being obtained presently by the Navasota agent from the Houston traffic office. The agent was represented also as the middle man in ordering cars from other points on the lines. All such duties would be handled by the Waller agent as middle man instead of by the Navasota agent in the same capacity.

Under the changes proposed by Southern Pacific, procedures would be no different from the present with respect to freight bills and remittances, which presently are handled from the Houston office by mail, and billing and paying of demurrage charges would be handled in the same manner by mail.

Testimony was offered that the present duties of the Navasota agent require less than two hours of work per day and that the Waller agent could absorb the added work. Southern Pacific introduced evidence of losses in revenues which would continue without the savings that might be effected by closing the agency at Navasota. It appears undisputed that the losses over a two-year period amounted to a minimum of approximately $4,158, although Southern Pacific introduced evidence tending to show losses of $10,986 to $13,880. Southern Pacific presented testimony that by transferring the duties of the Navasota agent to the agent at Waller a savings of $16,000 would be effected over the two-year period.

By its application, Southern Pacific sought to consolidate the accounting and clerical work on carload freight from Navasota to Waller and transfer the agent at Navasota to another station where a greater need existed.

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Related

Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Co. v. Fowler
290 S.W.2d 922 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1956)
Shupee v. Railroad Commission
73 S.W.2d 505 (Texas Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
454 S.W.2d 853, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2387, 1970 WL 198350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-commission-v-southern-pacific-co-texapp-1970.