State Ex Rel. v. Publ. Serv. Comm.

40 S.W.2d 614, 330 Mo. 1, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 40 S.W.2d 614 (State Ex Rel. v. Publ. Serv. Comm.) 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. v. Publ. Serv. Comm., 40 S.W.2d 614, 330 Mo. 1, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 575 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

This is an appeal by the Public Service Commission of Missouri (hereinafter referred to as the commission) from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cole County setting aside an order of the commission refusing the application of The Alton Transportation Company for a certificate of convenience and necessity authorizing it to operate a motor bus line, as a common carrier, between St. Louis and Kansas City and intermediate points on Missouri-U.S. Highway No. 40. The applicant, Alton Transportation Company is a subsidiary of the Chicago Alton Railroad Company, the entire stock of the transportation company, except qualifying shares, being owned by the Receivers of the railroad company. The transportation company "was organized for the purpose of conducting a motor carrier business in the states of Illinois and Missouri in co-ordination with the Chicago Alton Railroad Company." By its application herein the transportation company sought permission to operate motor busses as a common carrier between St. Louis and Kansas City on Missouri-U.S. Highway No. 40 serving all intermediate points thereon. The application states, that the Chicago Alton Railroad is an "old, established steam carrier," operating between Kansas City, Missouri, and St. Louis, Missouri, "and intermediate cities, towns and villages" and that the commission had theretofore determined that "public convenience and necessity required the operation of a motor bus line on substantially the same route as herein set forth; that the Chicago Alton Railroad is for a considerable distance, paralleled and intersected at numerous points by U.S. Highway No. 40; that the construction of U.S. Highway, No. 40 and the operation of motor busses thereon, has taken away from said railroad in the community which it has served as a pioneer carrier for a great number of years and helped to build up and sustain, and has large investments, a substantial part of its passenger traffic, making necessary, if the operation of motor busses is a public convenience and necessity on said highway, the operation of a motor bus line in coordination with said railroad as herein prayed, so that the community served will have sufficient, reliable, dependable, *Page 5 economical and permanent transportation service by rail and motor bus, at reasonable cost; that reasonable consideration to the transportation furnished by rail by the Chicago Alton Railroad requires that if motor bus transportation on U.S. Highway, No. 40 between Kansas City, Missouri, and St. Louis, Missouri, and intermediate points is a public convenience and necessity, that your petitioner be given the right to furnish the same in coordination with said railroad service by rail." The application then asks that the transportation company be granted a certificate of public convenience and necessity to operate a motor bus line on Highway No. 40 as therein set out. At the hearing before the commission the granting of a certificate was protested by the Wabash Railway Company, the St. Louis Public Service Company, the Yelloway, Inc., and the Purple Swan Safety Coach Lines, Inc.

The Chicago Alton Railroad enters Missouri at Louisiana and runs thence through Bowling Green and Vandalia to Mexico from which point a branch line runs south through Fulton to South Cedar City. From Mexico its railroad lines continue to Kansas City passing through Centralia, Higbee, Slater, Glasgow, Marshfield, Higginsville, Odessa and other towns and villages. Its St. Louis and Kansas City trains are run over the Chicago-Burlington Quincy tracks between Mexico and St. Louis. It runs two passenger trains each way between Kansas City and St. Louis daily. Missouri-U.S. Highway, No. 40 over which the Chicago Alton Railroad Co., through its subsidiary, the applicant herein, seeks permission to operate motor busses, is the shortest and most direct cross-state highway connecting St. Louis and Kansas City, the distance between the two cities by this route being 258 miles. The cities of Wellston, St. Charles, Warrenton, Columbia, Boonville and Odessa and numerous other towns and villages are served by Highway No. 40. The Chicago Alton Railroad does not directly contact and serve any of these towns and cities except at the town of McCredie in Callaway County, the branch line of the Chicago Alton running south from Mexico to South Cedar City intersects the highway and at Odessa, about forty miles from and east of Kansas City the Chicago Alton line from Louisiana, Missouri, through Mexico to Kansas City contacts the highway and from that point parallels the highway for some distance serving the territory between Odessa and Kansas City. The St. Louis Public Service Company's lines over which a regular schedule of street car service is maintained parallels the highway from St. Louis to Wellston and St. Charles. The St. Louis Public Service Co., also serves this territory with motor busses. The protestant, Wabash Railway Company's line of railroad from St. Louis to Kansas City closely parallels Highway No. 40 from St. Louis to New Florence in Montgomery County from whence it runs in a northwesterly direction *Page 6 through Mexico and Centralia. From St. Louis to High Hill in Montgomery County the Wabash serves the same cities, towns and villages served by Highway No. 40 between those points. A Wabash branch line runs from Centralia to Columbia. The Missouri-Kansas Texas Railroad also runs into Columbia. The evidence shows that inclusive of the trains of the two railroads and all motor busses operated by certified motor carriers between St. Louis and Columbia there are seventeen passenger trains and busses operating daily, each way, between Columbia and St. Louis and fourteen passenger trains and busses operating each way daily between Columbia and Kansas City. The schedule and number of passenger trains operated by the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company in and out of Boonville is not shown by the evidence but it appears that eleven certified motor busses are operated each way daily between Boonville and Kansas City over Highway 40 and ten between Boonville and St. Louis. It was stated in the testimony that in addition the Missouri Transit Company operates motor busses, the number and schedules thereof not being shown, between Boonville and Columbia. It appears that a motor bus line referred to as the Odessa-Kansas City Bus Line operates between Odessa and Kansas City though the number of daily busses and the schedules are not shown. The evidence is that ten large, well equipped, through, certified motor busses were operated, each way daily, on regular schedules, as common carriers of passengers, over Highway No. 40 between Kansas City and St. Louis serving all intermediate points on that route and that five railroads, the Wabash, Missouri Pacific, Chicago-Rock Island Pacific, Chicago Alton, and Chicago-Burlington Quincy, operate a total of thirteen passenger trains each way daily between St. Louis and Kansas City making twenty-three separate movements of passenger carrying units from St. Louis to Kansas City and Kansas City to St. Louis daily. Applicant's evidence was that the Chicago Alton Railroad had suffered losses in its revenues derived from the transportation of passengers and the decrease in passenger business was attributed in part to the operation of motor bus lines on state highways. It was shown by the testimony of witnesses for applicant and by exhibits filed that the Chicago Alton Railroad Company was a pioneer in railroad transportation in Missouri; that it had been engaged in operating railroads in this State for fifty years, owned railroad property in this State valued at more than $11,000,000 upon which it annually paid taxes of more than $100,000 and employed in this state an average of 1500 persons.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Missouri Pacific Railroad v. Public Service Commission
37 S.W.2d 576 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W.2d 614, 330 Mo. 1, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-v-publ-serv-comm-mo-1932.