State Ex Rel. City of Kirkwood v. Public Service Commission

50 S.W.2d 114, 330 Mo. 507, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 586
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 27, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 50 S.W.2d 114 (State Ex Rel. City of Kirkwood v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. City of Kirkwood v. Public Service Commission, 50 S.W.2d 114, 330 Mo. 507, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 586 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

This is an appeal by the defendant Public Service Commission of Missouri from the judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, by which judgment the Circuit Court of St. Louis County on a writ of review set aside and annulled an order made by the Public Service Commission of this State permitting the St. Louis Public Service Company, a corporation of this State, owning and operating the street railroads of the city and county of St. Louis, to abandon a portion of its line of street railroad known as the Osage Hills line west and southwest of the intersection of Clay Avenue and Woodbine Avenue, in the city of Kirkwood, to the terminus of said line at the Osage loop, a distance of approximately two and one-half *Page 511 miles. The trial court on the writ of review ruled that the order of the Public Service Commission granting the St. Louis Public Service Company, the owner and operator thereof, the right to take up its tracks and abandon the operation of this part of its electric street railway line was unreasonable and unlawful.

The case originated in this way: The St. Louis Public Service Company applied to the Missouri Public Service Commission for an order permitting it to remove its tracks and abandon the operation of this part of its Osage Hills line, describing the route to be abandoned, and stating, as grounds therefor:

"(4) The income derived from the operation of those portions of said lines sought to be removed is and always has been insufficient to pay operating expenses and to yield a return upon the investment, and the cost to applicant of reconstructing tracks and improving that portion of the streets occupied by its tracks, if it were forced to so reconstruct its tracks and improve such portions of said streets, would be exorbitant.

"(5) Applicant proposes, if it is authorized to remove its tracks as herein prayed, to substitute for that portion of its street railway lines sought to be removed, adequate bus service to serve the territory affected by the removal of the tracks if the patronage of that portion of its system sought to be removed justifies the substitution of such bus service, and applicant proposes to operate such bus service so long as the same is self-supporting."

The St. Louis Public Service Company stated, and it so appeared in the evidence taken, that the immediate cause of its making application at this time to be allowed to abandon this part of its line of street railroad was that the city of Kirkwood was preparing to and intended to reconstruct and repave Woodbine Avenue and Quinette Road, along and over which this line extended, and this would necessitate a reconstruction and relaying of its tracks at very large expense.

A protest was filed by the city of Kirkwood and a full hearing was had by the Public Service Commission at Kirkwood, St. Louis County. The Public Service Commission, after hearing the evidence, made a finding of the facts substantially as follows:

The application of the St. Louis Public Service Company is for authority to remove that part of its tracks of its Osage Hills line in the city of Kirkwood, St. Louis County, Missouri, from the intersection of Clay Avenue, a north and south street, and Woodbine Avenue, an east and west street, running thence west and southwest to a loop at or near Osage Hills, a distance of approximately 2.45 miles, and to substitute bus service for that portion of its street railway lines.

The St. Louis Public Service Company operates an extensive system of electric street railways in the city of St. Louis and its suburban *Page 512 territory. The Kirkwood-Ferguson line runs substantially east and west between Ferguson, a suburb of the city of St. Louis, and Magnolia Avenue loop on Woodbine Avenue in Kirkwood. The Magnolia Avenue loop is situated on Woodbine Avenue at Magnolia Avenue and is a part of the line proposed to be abandoned. It is a half mile from the corner of Clay and Woodbine avenues, the point where the proposed abandonment starts. The Osage Hills line operates from Clay on Woodbine Avenue, passing the Magnolia Avenue loop, and thence on to the Osage Hills Country Club, both lines being over this half mile on Woodbine Avenue. Thus the proposed abandonment includes a half mile of the Kirkwood-Ferguson line and 2.45 miles of the Osage Hills line.

Kirkwood is a city of approximately 9,100 people, according to the 1930 census. It is situated about ten miles from the limits of the city of St. Louis and is in the suburban territory of St. Louis.

The city of Kirkwood has contracted to pave Woodbine Avenue between Clay Avenue and Geyer Road, which is between Clay Avenue and the Magnolia Avenue loop. The St. Louis Public Service Company has a double track on Woodbine Avenue between these points. The city has notified the company to pave between its tracks, as provided by the ordinance. The evidence shows that the cost of reconstructing tracks and paving on Woodbine between Clay and Geyer Road is $34,340.

The city has also contracted to improve Quinette Road along which the Osage Hills line sought to be abandoned operates. The tracks along Quinette Road will have to be relocated, and the improvement of Quinette Road will make necessary extensive track reconstruction. There is no franchise obligation on the part of the company to pave between its rails. The tracks of the St. Louis Public Service Company along Quinette Road are off center for some distance. The evidence shows that if the tracks between Bach Road and Edna Avenue are relocated so as to be in the center of Quinette Road and rebuilt upon a concrete foundation with concrete paving, the cost will be $25,860. If they are shifted between the same points, using the present rail on macadam foundation with macadam paving, the cost will be $11,500. West of Edna Avenue, on Quinette Road to the loop at the end of the line, the tracks will have to be shifted to the center of the street. New rail will have to be used for this portion and the cost, with concrete foundation and pavement, will be $62,000, and on macadam foundation, with macadam pavement, the cost will be $43,190.

No contract has been let for the improvement of Woodbine Avenue between Geyer Road and George Avenue where this line leaves Woodbine Avenue. If such improvement should be made, the cost would be $29,840. There is evidence showing that this improvement is very likely to occur. The evidence, therefore, shows that the improvements *Page 513 already contracted for will entail expenditures on the part of the St. Louis Public Service Company in excess of $100,000.

A check of the traffic in both directions along the whole portion of the line proposed to be abandoned shows that the average number of passengers per day is 1,424. A twelve days' check was made by the city of Kirkwood, which shows that the average number of passengers in both directions over the proposed abandonment is 1,348, is seventy-six less than the check made by the company. A check made in 1919 of the passengers using the line proposed to be abandoned showed that 1,257 passengers were carried in both directions west of Clay and Woodbine avenues, an increase of eight per cent over a period of ten years.

According to the evidence, the average number of car miles per day over this part of the line is 476. The revenue derived from this operation is $115.31, based on a full fare of 8.1 cents for each passenger, which is the average fare under the rate schedule now in operation. The revenue per car mile is 24.3 cents, whereas operating costs, including taxes and depreciation, exclusive of any return, is 36½ cents per car mile.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W.2d 114, 330 Mo. 507, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-kirkwood-v-public-service-commission-mo-1932.