Red Line Transfer & Storage Co. v. Arkansas Commerce Commission

452 S.W.2d 650, 248 Ark. 515, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1247
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 13, 1970
Docket5-5195
StatusPublished

This text of 452 S.W.2d 650 (Red Line Transfer & Storage Co. v. Arkansas Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Red Line Transfer & Storage Co. v. Arkansas Commerce Commission, 452 S.W.2d 650, 248 Ark. 515, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1247 (Ark. 1970).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

The appellants, including Red Line Transfer and Storage Company, Inc., are certified motor carriers operating in intrastate commerce pursuant to authority granted by the Arkansas Commerce Commission; and the appellee-respondent, Atlas Transit, Inc., is a competitor engaged in the same business under similar authority. Red Line and the other competitors of Atlas bring this appeal from an adverse decision of the Pulaski County Circuit Court affirming an order of the Arkansas Commerce Commission denying the appellants’ petition to clarify, revise and correct certificate No. 651 issued by the Commission to Atlas on December 14, 1966.

The facts are not in serious controversy and the question presented is primarily one of law, stated by the appellant as follows:

“The specific legal question here involved is whether under Section 10 of Act 397 of 1955 (The Arkansas Motor Carrier Act) — Section 73-1763, Ark. Stats., requiring a Certificate issued by the Commission to specify whether the permitee is authorized to serve intermediate and off-route points, which requirement is contained in the statute, and which Appellants contend have throughout the years been omitted from all Certificates issued to Atlas, and its predecessors (except the Certificate of July 15, 1966 not here involved) are erroneously included in the Certificate of December 14, 1966. The power and authority of the Commission to correct its errors of omission and commission by inserting in the Certificate of December 14, 1966, without notice, hearing and proof of public need, specific authority to serve intermediate and off-route points, is also here involved.”

Atlas received its first certificate in 1930 under authority of Act 99 of the Acts of 1927, as amended by Act 62 of 1929. Section 3 (a) of Act 62 pertains to applications for permits and provides as follows:

“Application for such permit shall be made by such corporation or persons, their lessees, trustees, or receivers, to the Commission, and shall specify the following matters:
The public highway or highways over which applicant intends to operate, and the cities and towns and the termini on the regular route to the [be] operated over.”

Subsection (1) of § 3 (a), among other things provides that the applicant “shall maintain an office at some town or city along the route on which it proposes to operate.”

The 1929 Act changed the responsibility from the applicant to the Commission for the giving of notice in connection with hearings, and Act 62 of 1929, § 3, (6), (c), in part, provides:

“. . . After such hearing the Commission may issue the license certificate or refuse the same, or may issue the same with modifications, and upon such terms and conditions as in its judgment the public convenience and necessity may require. No license shall be issued to any person, firm, corporation or association or to associated interests for a total mileage in excess of an aggregate twenty per cent of the total mileage within the State Highway System, nor shall any such license, in any event, be exclusive.”

Section 3, subsection (6), (d) also provides:

“Each license certificate issued under the provisions of this Act shall contain such matters as may be prescribed by the Commission, and sháll specify that the same is issued for an indeterminate period of time, and after such license has been issued the same shall be cancelled only for cause after notice and a hearing as herein provided.”

The Arkansas Motor Carrier Act of 1941 was enacted by Act 367 of the Acts of Arkansas for 1941, and § 10 of this Act (Ark. Stat. Ann. § 73-1763 (a) (b) [Repl. 1957]) is as follows:

“(a) Any certificate under this Act shall specify the service to be rendered and the routes over which, the fixed termini, if any, between which, and the intermediate and off-route points, if any, at which, and in case of operations not over specified routes or between fixed termini, the territory within which, the motor carrier is authorized to operate; and there shall, at the time of issuance and from time to time thereafter, be attached to the exercise of the privileges granted by the certificate such reasonable terms, conditions, and limitations as the public convenience and necessity may from time to time require, including terms, conditions, and limitations as to the extension of the route or routes of the carrier, and such terms and conditions as are necessary to carry out, with respect to the operations of the carrier, the requirements established by the Commission under this Act; provided, however, that no terms, conditions, or limitations shall restrict the right of the carrier to add to his or its equipment and facilities over the routes, between the termini, or within the territory specified in the certificate as the development of the business and the demands of the public shall require, (b) A common carrier by motor vehicle operating under any such certificate may occasionally deviate from the route over which, and/or the fixed termini between which, it is authorized to operate under the certificate, under such general or special rules and regulations as the Commission may prescribe, (c) Any common carrier by motor vehicle transporting passengers under a certificate issued under this Act may transport to any place within this State special or chartered parties under such rules and regulations as the Commission may prescribe, (d) A certificate for the transportation of passengers may include authority to transport in the same vehicle with the passengers, newspapers, baggage of passengers, express, or mail, or transport baggage of passengers, in a separate vehicle.”

Many of the common carriers, under the jurisdiction of the Arkansas Commerce Commission, have through the years been issued separate certificates for operation over separately designated highway routes. As a matter of convenience, in enforcing its powers and administering its duties, the Commission has for sometime, and usually on' its own motion, been consolidating the separate route certificates held by a single carrier into a single certificate designating the various routes. It was under such procedure that the Commission issued to Atlas the certificate dated December 14, 1966, setting out the numerous regular routes over which Atlas was authorized to perform transportation service. For example, the routes were designated in language as follows:

“U. S. -Highway 67, Texarkana, Arkansas, to Corning, Arkansas;
U. S. Highway 65, from Junction of U. S. Highway 64 to Eudora, Arkansas;
U. S. Highway 167, Little Rock, Arkansas, to Thornton, Arkansas;
State Highway 81, Jet. U. S. Highway 65, to Hamburg, Arkansas;
U. S. Highway 165, Jet. U. S. Highway 65 to Wilmot, Arkansas;
U. S. Highway 70, West Memphis, Arkansas, to Little Rock, Arkansas;
U. S. Highway 64, Ft. Smith, Arkansas, to Conway, Arkansas;
U. S. Highway 70, Hot Springs, Arkansas, to Kirby, Arkansas;

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Arkansas Motor Freight Lines, Inc. v. Johnson
252 S.W.2d 814 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
452 S.W.2d 650, 248 Ark. 515, 1970 Ark. LEXIS 1247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/red-line-transfer-storage-co-v-arkansas-commerce-commission-ark-1970.