Seaboard Air Line Railway Co. v. Wells

132 So. 113, 100 Fla. 1631
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 8, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 132 So. 113 (Seaboard Air Line Railway Co. v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seaboard Air Line Railway Co. v. Wells, 132 So. 113, 100 Fla. 1631 (Fla. 1931).

Opinions

Whitfield, J.,

Concurring:

Under Chapter 13700, Acts of 1929, the operation of “any motor vehicle for the transportation of persons or property for compensation on any public highway in this State” is lawful only after “having obtained from the Railroad Commission a certificate that the present or future public convenience and necessity requires or will require such operation.”

*1634 The purpose of Chapter 13700, Acts of 1929, is not only to regulate the use of the public highways by motor vehicles for compensation, but, in order to conserve the public roads and the safety of the traveling public thereon, to exclude from the use of the public highways in the State any and all motor vehicles operated for compensation except such motor vehicles as are affirmatively shown to be required to serve the “public convenience and necessity.”

Public highways are maintained by taxation primarily for public use of individuals for themselves; and the use of such highways by motor vehicles for hire, is permitted only when and as the “public convenience and necessity” may require it. Public convenience alone does not authorize the issuing of a certificate. There must be public necessity as well.

A certificate authorizing the operation of a motor vehicle for the transportation of persons or property for compensation on any public highway in this State, should be issued only after due notice to all proper parties including “all transportation companies serving any part of the route between the fixed termini,” and after a legal, adequate and appropriate hearing and a proper finding duly made by the Railroad Commission predicated upon sufficient affirmative evidence “that the present or future public convenience and necessity requires or will require” the particular operation that is authorized by the certificate.

The statute provides that orders made by the Railroad Commission shall be deemed and held “to be reasonable and just and such as ought to have been made in the premises, * * * unless the contrary plainly appears.”

The statute, makes an order of the Railroad Commission prima fade legal and proper, and contemplates that in appropriate judicial review, as by certiorari, where it plainly appears from the record of the proceedings culminating in the oi’der, that the order was not “properly made and arrived at in due form of procedure” and is not “such as ought to have been made in the premises,” the order shall be adjudged to *1635 be invalid, since the Constitution ordains that “all courts in this State shall be open so that by due course of law right and justice shall be administered.”

Where an order that is reviewable on certiorari, is not in accord with the essential requirements of the law, the order will be quashed so that by due course of law right and justice be administered as required by the organic command and the rules of the forum.

When the probative force and legal effect of the evidence adduced before the Railroad Commission and made part of the record on certiorari, show that the operation of motor vehicles in transportation for compensation on the public highways as authorized by the certificate issued under the order is a convenience to a portion of the public on the route involved, but the evidence does not show that “public convenience and necessity require or will require such operation,” within the meaning and contemplation of the statute regulating the business of transportation for compensation on the public highways which are maintained by taxation and designed primarily for use of the public and not for the business of transportation for compensation, the order will be quashed on certiorari.

Brown, J.

The record in this case shows that H. T. Pace filed an application with the Railroad Commission under Chapter 13700. of the Laws of 1929 for a certificate of public convenience and necessity authorizing him to operate a motor truck freight line between Jacksonville and Tallahassee and intermediate points, over State Road No. 1, on the established railroad freight rates. Upon the hearing, of which the petitioners were given due notice, it was made to appear by the evidence that the route applied for, over State Road No. 1, paralleled the line of the Seaboard Air Line Railway between the two cities named, and that said cities and all the intermediate points designated in said application were also located on said railway line, and were *1636 already afforded adequate transportation facilities for both freight and express by the petitioners, the Seaboard Air Line Railway and the Railway Express Agency, who were fully equipped to satisfactorily handle all the business of this nature, existing or prospective, afforded by the territory in question. If this evidence was entitled to be considered by the Railroad Commission, it would appear that they should have, and probably would have, denied the application ; the applicant, in the face of this uncontradicted evidence, having failed to carry the burden which the law imposed upon him of showing that the public convenience and necessity demanded or warranted the granting of his proposed service. But the Commission manifestly did not consider this evidence, for they granted the application and ordered the issuance of a certificate of public convenience and necessity for the operation of the freight truck service applied for. In fact, it appears that the Railroad Commissioners construed the statute as excluding from their consideration this matter of “other transportation facilities within the territory sought to be served" unless such other transportation facilities consisted of motor vehicle transportation facilities, for they have moved this Court to quash the writ of certiorari upon the ground inter alia that under Chapter 13700 they could not consider the effect which their action might have upon carriers by rail or express serving the same territory. This construction of the statute was in substance held to be erroneous in the recent case of Seaboard Air Line Railway Co. and Louisville & Nashville Co. v. Wells et al., Railroad Commissioners, 130 So. R. 587, decided at the present term, but which decision had not been rendered at the time the motion to quash was filed in this proceeding, nor when the same was briefed and argued. It appears that, there is some conflict of authority on this point in other States having similar statutes, as is candidly *1637 admitted by counsel for the Commission in his very able brief, but we are convinced that our prior decision is well founded, and that we should adhere thereto. In this connection, it might be noted that as to other motor transportation facilities, the evidence showed that certificates had already been issued to five freight truck lines for operation between Jacksonville and Baldwin, four between Jacksonville and Lake City, four between Jacksonville and Live Oak, three between Jacksonville and Madison and two between Jacksonville and Tallahassee at the time this application was filed, though none of them interposed any objection to the granting of Pace’s application.

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 113, 100 Fla. 1631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaboard-air-line-railway-co-v-wells-fla-1931.