St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Lewis

243 S.W. 63, 154 Ark. 478, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 516
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 63 (St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Lewis) 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
St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Lewis, 243 S.W. 63, 154 Ark. 478, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 516 (Ark. 1922).

Opinions

McCulloch, C. J.

This appeal involves a controversy which arose in a proceeding instituted against appellant before the Railroad 'Commission of Arkansas concerning the building of a new station at Fayetteville. Appellees, citizens of Fayetteville, filed a petition before the Railroad 'Commission asking that appellant be required to construct and maintain an adequate building as a depot and station house for passengers and freight. Appellant appeared and responded to the petition, proposing to remodel the building now in use as a station and to improve and enlarge the facilities in that respect.

Appellant furnished plans and specifications of the improvements to be made, which contemplated the use of the walls and foundation of the old building, so far as the same could be used, and extensive enlargements of the building. The estimated cost of the contemplated improvements was shown to be about $68,000.

The Commission, after hearing the evidence and viewing the premises, made an order rejecting the plans proposed for repairing and improving the present passenger station at Fayetteville, and directing that appellant “file with this 'Commission'on or before the first day of January, 1922, plans for the erection of a new passenger station at Fayetteville, Arkansas, said station to be constructed of brick and the plans to provide for suitable and adequate waiting-rooms for white and colored passengers, with a modern heating plant, said station to be in keeping with the importance of the city of Fayetteville and the business transacted by the railroad company at said station.”

The order of the Commission concluded with a recital that jurisdiction of the matter was retained by the Commission “for the purpose of making a final order, or orders, for the erection of said passenger station after the plans have been submitted and approved, and for ■such further orders as may appear just and necessary.”

The company appealed from this order to the circuit court of Pulaski County, and the cause was there heard on the record made before the Commission, the trial resulting in a judgment of the circuit court affirming the order of the Commission.

These proceedings were instituted and prosecuted before the Commission pursuant to the statute (act No. 124, Acts of 1921) giving jurisdiction to the Railroad Commission and providing for an appeal to the circuit court from the orders of the Commission, and also an appeal from the circuit court to this court.

The Railroad Commission is an administrative body, but its actions in the regulation and control of public utilities are ^¿«si-judicial, and the circuit court on appeal acts judicially in the determination of the correctness of the orders made by the Commission. St. L. S. W. Ry. Co. v. Stuart, 150 Ark. 586.

There is no conflict in the statements of the witnesses in regard to the facts, though different deductions may be drawn from some features of the evidence.

Fayetteville is a city of about 5,500 inhabitants, and the State University is located in the western side of the city, the business part of the city being situated on the east side. Dickson Street, running east and west, is the one principally traveled between the University and the business district, and the railroad station is situated at the intersection of appellant’s railroad tracks with this street, the station being on the east side of the tracks and on the north side of Dickson Street. There is a considerable residential section west of the railroad, and the travel along Dickson Street is heavy.

The undisputed testimony shows that there is considerable congestion in travel at the railroad crossing on account of the numerous tracks and frequent passage of trains — main line trains, and freight cars being switched.

There are six side-tracks crossing ‘Dickson Street east of the station.

The present building is about forty years old, and is constructed of brick with stone foundation. It is thirty feet wide and one hundred seventy-two feet long, sixty-seven feet on the south end being devoted to passenger facilities, and the remainder to freight. There is a platform twenty feet wide on the west side of the station, running its full length, but a bay window extending out from the building narrows the space so that it is difficult for passengers to pass along there when trains are receiving or discharging passengers.

One of the side-tracks east of the station runs parallel with the building and cuts off the approach to the east side of the building. This situation is caused by the fact that the building is- used for freight purposes, and it is necessary to have a track running close to the platform of the freight station to receive and unload freight.

Most of the testimony introduced by the petitioners was directed to the state of congestion on account of the numerous tracks and the amount of traffic along Dickson Street, and also the insufficient approaches to the station building and the insufficiency of the platform.

It is not contended, on behalf of appellant, that the present facilities are adequate or suitable to the necessities of the railroad traffic and business at the city of Fayetteville. The contention is that the plan of reconstructing and enlarging the old building, separating the freight station from the passenger station and changing the location of the tracks, will be amply sufficient to afford adequate and convenient facilities in keeping with the railroad business at that place, and that the construction of a new building is entirely unnecessary and will cost the company nearly double the amount of the cost of reconstructing the old building in accordance with the proposed plans.

It is shown that the ground owned and occupied by the railroad company at the station in Fayetteville fronts 250 feet on Dickson Street and runs north over 600 feet, narrowing down to a shorter distance about midway of the length of the lot.

The nrcDOsal of the company is to rebuild the passenger station, using the stone foundation and walls, with certain changes, converting the whole of the present station building into a passenger station, and remodel it from one end to the other. The plan contemplates the construction of a new freight house 140 feet long by 30 feet wide, north of the passenger station, with a platform on the west side along the main track extending the full length of both buildings, which would give a platform about 600 feet long, parallel with the main track, which is to be removed westward five feet so as to give that much additional platform space. The bay window referred to is to be eliminated, and this will make a platform of unobstructed width of twenty-five feet between the walls of the building and the main track. The sidetrack running along the platform on the east side of the station is to be removed eastward from the passenger station so as to give space for a driveway of macadam sixty feet wide and two hundred feet in length, unobstructed by any of the side-tracks.

Specifications for the size and inside arrangements of the remodeled building are shown in detail, and it is not contended in any quarter that the canacity of the building is insufficient for the volume of railroad travel and business at that place.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 63, 154 Ark. 478, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-v-lewis-ark-1922.