State Ex Rel. Crown Coach Co. v. Public Service Commission

179 S.W.2d 123, 238 Mo. App. 287, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 203
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 179 S.W.2d 123 (State Ex Rel. Crown Coach Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Crown Coach Co. v. Public Service Commission, 179 S.W.2d 123, 238 Mo. App. 287, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 203 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*293 CAVE, J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment.of the Circuit Court of Cole County affirming an order of the Public Service Commission granting to All American Bus lines, Inc., a certificate of convenience and necessity to operate intra-state as a passenger-carrying motor carrier over a regular route between' St. Louis, Missouri, and the Missouri-Kansas State Line about six miles west of Joplin, and over and along U. S. Highway No. 66.

All American. Bus Lines, Inc., was the applicant before the Public Service Commission for such certificate and will be referred to hereafter as “applicant”; the protestants (appellants) which have appealed are Southwest Greyhound Lines, Inc., M. K. & O. Coach Lines, Inc., Crown Coach Company, and Washington Union, St. Louis Bus Company, and will be referred to as “protestants”. The Public Service Commission of Missouri, respondent, will be referred to as “Commission”.

The record of this case consists of some 800 printed pages, together with a large number of exhibits filed. We shall confine oxir reference to the evidence, the issues and the orders of the Commission, to the errors assigned by appellants (protestants).

The hearing was had before the Commission from October 6th to 10th, inclusive, 1942. At the time of the hearing and for some six or seven years prior thereto, the applicant had an interstate permit, issued by the Commission, with authority to operate its busses across the State of Missouri, over Highway No. 66 between St. Louis, Missouri, and the Missouri-Kansas State Line. Its present application sought a certificate authorizing it to receive and discharge passengers at certain designated points or stations along said highway by its busses already operating thereon as interstate carriers. The Commission, by its order, authorized the applicant to so operate, the Circuit Court of Cole County affirmed such order, from which judgment appeal is perfected by protestants to this court.

There are eleven assignments of error, some of which seem to overlap and state substantially the same proposition in a different way. We shall discuss and decide the various questions urged without regard to the manner in which they have been numbered in the briefs.

'Running through appellants’ very able brief is the contention that the Commission, under the pleadings and evidence, should not and could not have authorized the issuance of the certificate of convenience and necessity which was issued; because the application stated and the evidence proved only a temporary need for the service authorized.

*294 The application, in praying for a certificate of convenience and necessity, after reciting such formal matters as its incorporation, its principal office, equipment, schedules, plats and exhibits which were necessary to be filed, then alleges in part “that in addition to the foregoing, the United States of America is now engaged in a total all-out war . . .” and recites the orders of the government restricting the use of gasoline; autonlobile tires, the freezing of busses for transportation, and other similar regulatory matters, and alleges that there have been several large military camps and training centers established in Missouri, all of which has greatly increased the number of passengers being transported by public carriers; and that due to such government restrictions, the public generally has greatly reduced its use of privately owned and operated automobiles and is using in greater numbers than ever before public transportation conveyances. Protestants filed answers asserting they were giving adequate transportation service, and putting in issue the question of need for additional service; and alleged that present conditions were due to the war effort.

We deem it unnecessary to detail the evidence at great length and think it sufficient to say that a great number of witnesses testified as to the need of additional service. The record supports the finding of the Commission that “approximately 40 or 45 witnesses appeared in support of the application. They consisted of merchants, officials, businessmen, traveling salesmen, ordinary public travelers and in fact people from practically every walk of life. They came from almost all communities situated on or along Ü. S. Highway 66. The general tenor of the testimony of each and all of these witnesses was to the effect that most of them are frequent riders of busses; 'that they have travelled to and between many of the points on this highway; that they have observed the busses at bus depots and along the highway, and that the general condition of the bus traffic over and along this highway is crowded”. That applicant was now operating across the State at about seventy per cent capacity. There was evidence to the contrary offered by protestants but we have no hesitancy in saying that the evidence preponderated in favor of the need for additional transportation at the time of the hearing.

Appellants argue that the order is.unlawful because under the evidence the congested travel conditions which now exist are temporary, due to the war effort; that as soon as the war is over, we will again return to normal conditions. We doubt whether the words “temporary” and “permanent” are proper or accurate to describe and define the issues involved in this controversy. B'ouyier defines “temporary” as “that which is to last for a limited, time”; and “permanent”, “does not always embrace the idea or absolute perpetuity”. When the Commission heard this case, it had no information or assurance from any source, nor could it have, when the war *295 would end and normal conditions, if ever, would return; when the restrictions on the use of gasoline, rubber and transportation equipment would be lifted and its acquisition and use be made unlimited; or when, if ever, the large military establishments located in this State would be partially or totally abolished. We would all like to return to the “good old days” existing before the war, but, without any claim to the power of prophesy, we doubt such conditions will again exist. The day may not be far distant when transportation by bus will be as obsolete as the stage coach and the steamboat. What we mean to say is that the Commission, at the time of the hearing, was not required to speculate on or guess when present war conditions would cease and, if so, whether the demand for this additional service would, under such conditions, be required. The Commission was entitled to act and did act upon the evidence which showed the conditions then existing, and by taking into consideration other matters which we will later discuss, it was authorized to issue the certificate of convenience- and necessity on the evidence then before it.

It is strenuously argued that when the war ceases and we return to a normal condition, there will be no public need for this certificate and that applicant would be in destructive competition with, proteStants which would result in injury to the travelling public. While it may not be necessary for us to decide such -question at this time, it does appear clear that the Legislature anticipated such a situation in the field of public carriers, and by Section 5725, Revised Statutes 1939, provided that “The Commission may at any time, for good cause,

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.2d 123, 238 Mo. App. 287, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-crown-coach-co-v-public-service-commission-moctapp-1944.