State Ex Rel. Rutledge v. Public Service Commission

289 S.W. 785, 316 Mo. 233, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 622
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 785 (State Ex Rel. Rutledge 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. Rutledge v. Public Service Commission, 289 S.W. 785, 316 Mo. 233, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 622 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

The appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cape Girardeau County, by which judgment that court set aside an order of the Public Service Commission entered in Case No. 4269, refusing to restore a former railroad crossing in the town of Delta, a village of about two hundred inhabitants, in Cape Girardeau County. -

The railroad at that point runs almost north' and south, the greater part of the village being on the west side of the track. In 1923 the authorities of the village presented to the Public Service Commission an application to have a grade crossing established over the right of way of the railroad company at McKinley Street. The purpose of the proposed crossing was to enable persons living east óf the railroad to cross over to that part of the village on the west, through which *236 a highway ran approximately parallel with the railroad tracks. That proceeding was known as Case No. 3782. There was already a crossing over the right of way and railroad track, 504 feet north of McKinley Street. The relators here, W. H. Rutledge and G. F. Snyder, and one A. W. Bohnstedt all owned property and lived east of the railroad track and had access to their homes by that crossing. The property of Rutledge lay just outside the village limits, while that of Snyder and that of Bohnstedt lay within the village limits. A road extended along between their properties and the railroad tracks. It was a blind alley, had no outlet to McKinley Street, but connected with the crossing over the railroad tracks which led into the highway on the west side of the tracks. The evidence showed there was no other means of ingress and egress. The evidence further showed its use as a public crossing for a period of thirty-five years. For thirty years Rutledge had lived there and used it, and Snyder had used it for only a few years.

On the hearing of Case No. 3782, the Commission found that the crossing 504 feet north of the proposed crossing over McKinley Street would be of no practical use after the construction of the McKinley Street crossing, and ordered it discontinued. The report of the Commission, filed October 13, 1923, contained this finding:

“That said crossing 504 feet north was not a public crossing, there being no street whatever leading to it, and that the same is not recognized by the said village as a public crossing, according to the testimony of the mayor and one of its aldermen. That so far as the village was concerned the same could be abandoned, and should be, as it was not a crossing where any public road or street could be used in reaching it.”
In pursuance of that order of the Commission, in November, 1926, the railroad company took up and removed the planks of the crossing. The evidence showed that the relators in this case afterwards did use it by “bumping the rails.”

From the answer of the railroad company it further appears that in September, 1924, the village of Delta filed an application before the Commission in a case known as No. 4099, seeking to reestablish the grade crossing thus removed. But the Commission, deeming the matter involved in that proceeding fully determined in Case No. 3782, dismissed the complaint and refused to make the order.

The relators here first filed a suit in the Circuit Court of Cape Girardeau County seeking to enjoin the railroad company from removing and obstructing the crossing under consideration, and that injunction proceeding was dismissed by the circuit court on the ground that jurisdiction of public crossings was within the Public Service Commission. The relators then filed their complaint in this case, No. 4269, before the Commission, November 26, 1924, asking *237 the Commission to order the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company to restore the crossing to its original condition as it existed before November, 1924. In their complaint the relators alleged that the crossing 504 feet north of McKinley Street, as a public crossing had been in open, continuous, adverse and notorious use for a period of thirty-five years, and during that period there had been no effort by defendant to prevent or question the use of the crossing by complainants and their grantors, or by the public; that the removal of said crossing and obstruction of the use of the same by the defendant entail'- > a special and peculiar injury to the complainants (relators here) in that it diminished the value of their real estate and destroyed the only means by which they could reach the public highway lying west of said railroad, and obstructed the only means of ingress and egress of their property.

Evidence was taken, as stated, which supported the allegation of the petition on all questions of fact alleged.

The Commission, after hearing the evidence, found the facts substantially as alleged by complainants. It found that there was an alley sixteen feet wide along and adjoining the right of way of the railroad company on the east side of the track, and between the right of way and the property occupied by Rutledge and Bohnstedt, which extends to within 135 feet of McKinley Street; that the crossing 504 feet north of McKinley Street had been ordered abandoned because of no practical use; that the purpose of this proceeding was to establish a crossing over the right of way of the railroad at that point for the accommodation of the two complainants and Mr. Bohnstedt.

The Commission then decided that it would not undertake to determine controversies between individuals and corporations as to construction of private crossings; that its authority was limited to cases where the safety of the public and employees, or service to the public are affected. The Commission further ruled that its previous orders in the premises had become final, but reached this decision:

"The complainants were not parties to the case referred to by defendant, and if we were called upon to determine their status in a judicial proceeding we would doubtless hold that they are not bound thereby. However, this is hot a judicial forum and the doctrine of res adjudicate/, cannot appear to conclude the exercise of the functions of an administrative arm of the State Government like that of the Public Service Commission.”

The Commission then suggested that the village of Delta might relieve the situation by extending the alley in front of the complainants’ property 135 feet to McKinley Street, and if the village of Delta failed to secure such alley way the railroad company should establish the private crossing for the complainants. The Commission *238 then dismissed the proceeding on the ground that it was without jurisdiction, and the public was adequately served by the crossing at McKinley Street.

The relators then sued out a writ of certiorari in the Circuit Court of Cape Girardeau County, and on a review of the matter the record, proceedings and evidence offered in Case No. 4269 was brought before the circuit court. Also, the evidence and the proceedings in Case No. .3782 were offered in evidence and considered by the court. The trial court then found:

“That the Public Service Commission exceeded its jurisdiction by its order in Case No.

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 785, 316 Mo. 233, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rutledge-v-public-service-commission-mo-1926.