Southwestern Cotton Oil Co. v. Farmers Union Co-Op. Gin Co.

1933 OK 371, 24 P.2d 658, 165 Okla. 31, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 6, 1933
Docket21641
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1933 OK 371 (Southwestern Cotton Oil Co. v. Farmers Union Co-Op. Gin Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Cotton Oil Co. v. Farmers Union Co-Op. Gin Co., 1933 OK 371, 24 P.2d 658, 165 Okla. 31, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 235 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

RILEY, O. J.

Herein is presented an appeal from the findings and order of the Corporation Commission in a proceeding, to obtain a license for the operation of a cotton gin.

The Farmers Union Co-operative Gin Company filed with -the Corporation Commission its application for license to construct and operate a cotton gin at Pauls Valley. Shortly thereafter the Farmers Gin Company of Foster, Okla., filed its application to remove its gin from the town of Foster to Pauls Valley. The Southwestern Cotton Oil Company and the Planters Gin Company filed their protest to the issuance of permits to either. They objected specifically to the issuance of a permit to the Farmers Union Co-operative Gin Company upon the ground that its system of doing business in allowing what is termed rebates to its customers constitutes discrimination contrary to the Constitution of Oklahoma and the Constitution of the United States. They further objected to the granting of permits to either applicant or both upon the ground that there were already four up-to-date gins then licensed and operating in Pauls Valley and some 14 other gins within a distance of 11 miles, and that the gins already licensed and operating within said territory .were adequately and conveniently equipped to gin four times as much cotton as was grown within that trade territory.

The two applications and the protests were consolidated and a hearing had, result *32 ing in the allowance of both applications. Prom these orders, protestants appeal.

Cotton gins were first declared by the Legislature to fee public utilities and placed under the supervision of the Corporation Commission in 1915, S. L. 1915, c. 176, p. 291,

By section 3 of the Act of 1915, the Corporation Commission was given the right with respect to granting licenses for the operation of a cotton gin to take into consideration the necessity for a gin at the place of its location or proposed location, and with respect to the location of a new gin, if the facts disclosed that the ginning facilities afforded by gins already licensed were adequate for the reasonable demands for ginning at such place, the Corporation Commission was justified in denying the license. However, it was not mandatory so to do.

In 1923, ch. 191, S. L. 1923, the act was amended so as to provide that no new gin plants should be constructed, installed, or licensed or any old gin removed from one point to another until satisfactory showing-had been made that such gin was a needed utility; the provision with reference to existing facilities was stricken from the act.

The act was further amended, chapter 109, S. L. 1925, by adding a proviso;

“That on presentation of a petition for the establishment of a gin to be, run cooperatively, signed by 100 citizens and taxpayers of the community where the gin is to be located, the Corporation Commission shall issue a license for said gin.”

This proviso was held unconstitutional in Frost v. Corporation Commission, 278 U. S. 515, 73 L. Ed. 483.

It is first contended that there is no written statement of the reasons upon which the action of the Commission was based,' filed with the record as required by section 22, art. 9, Constitution.

In Pioneer Telegraph & Telephone Company v. Westenhaver, 23 Okla. 226, 99 P. 1010, it was held that said section of the Constitution in effect requires the Commission, upon hearing, an application to reduce telephone rates, to make findings of fact upon which its orders were based, and upon appeal from such, to certify the facts found by it to the Supreme Court.

That case and A., T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. State, 27 Okla. 820. 117 P. 330, are cited and relied upon. There was an entire absence of findings of fact in those cases. Chi cago Ry. Co. v. Commerce Commission, 336 Ill. 51, is also cited. The findings in that case were condemned as being indefinite and uncertain. Therein it was said:

“The question before the Commission was whether public convenience and necessity required the operation of motor busses over the routes described in the coach company’s petition, and an express finding of fact showing that public convenience and necessity required thei operation of motor busses along certain routes and upon certain streets or highways was a condition precedent to the jurisdiction of the Commission to grant a certificate of public convenience and necessity for the operation of motor busses along such routes and over such streets and highways.”

Herein the questions before the Commission were;

(a) Whether the proposed new gin and the removal of the gin from Foster to Pauls Valley were needed utilities, or whether either was a needed utility, and

(b) Whether the proposed corporation or corporations were competent and desirable corporations to establish and operate a gin.

On these questions the Commission, in the application of Farmers Union Co-operative Gin Company, found:

“Second: That applicant, Farmers Union Co-operative Gin Company, is a competent and qualified concern under the law to engage in the ginning of seed cotton for the public.
“Third: That necessity will be accom-anodated and convenience afforded by the granting- of a license to applicant authorizing the construction, maintenance, and operation of a cotton gin at Pauls Valley.”

Substantially the same findings were made as to the application of the Farmers Gin Company. This was a substantial compliance with the requirements of section 22, art. 9, of the Constitution.

It is next contended, in substance, that, inasmuch as the uncontradicted evidence is that there were already four licensed gins at Pauls Valley with capacity to gin approximately twice as much cotton as came to Pauls Valley on an average for a period of five years, another gin, and especially two other gins, could not be needed utilities at that place.

This is perhaps true, if capacity of existing licensed gins is the only thing that the Corporation Commission can take into consideration in determining- whether or not another gin at a given locality is a needed *33 utility. The record shows that a considerable amount of cotton raised within the vicinity of Pauls Valley and which would ordinarily be taken to that point for ginning went to other smaller towns or gins located within five to eleven miles of Pauls Valley, not because of inability to get it ginned at Pauls Valley without unreasonable delay, but because the prices paid at other points for seed cotton and cotton seed were always higher in such places than at Pauls Valley. At Pauls Valley there was no co-operative gins, while at one or two of the nearby smaller towns co-operative gins were in operation. At the town of Paoli, about eight miles north of Pauls Valley, prices paid were higher than at Pauls Valley. The reason for the difference in prices does not clearly appear. It may be because of the co-operative gin at Paoli, or because of lack of storage facilities at Pauls Valley.

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Related

Turpen v. Oklahoma Corp. Commission
769 P.2d 1309 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1989)
Southwestern Public Service Co. v. State
1981 OK 136 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1981)
Pannell v. Farmers Union Co-Op. Gin Ass'n
1943 OK 256 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
Lone Star Gas Co. v. Corporation Commission
1934 OK 396 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 371, 24 P.2d 658, 165 Okla. 31, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-cotton-oil-co-v-farmers-union-co-op-gin-co-okla-1933.