T. S. C. Motor Freight Lines, Inc. v. Vanway Express Co.

148 S.W.2d 899
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1941
DocketNo. 9086.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 899 (T. S. C. Motor Freight Lines, Inc. v. Vanway Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T. S. C. Motor Freight Lines, Inc. v. Vanway Express Co., 148 S.W.2d 899 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

Suit was by appellant against the Van-' way Express Company, Inc., and the Railroad Commission, to cancel two certificates of convenience and necessity issued by the Commission, authorizing the holder to operate motor trucks as common carriers for hire over designated highways, and between designated points, from Houston to Port Arthur via Beaumont (Cert. No. 2109) ; and from Beaumont to the Texas-Louisiana State line via Orange (Cert. No. 2796) ; to set aside an order of the Railroad Commission of May 29, 1939, approving the sale and transfer of these certificates to Vanway Express Company, Inc.; and to enjoin any operations by the Vanway under them. The appellant is a competing carrier over the same routes. Trial was to the court without a jury, and the relief sought denied, from which the T. S. C. Motor Freight Lines has appealed.

A history of these certificates will contribute to a better understanding of the issues presented in the instant case. They were originally issued to P. B. Adkins, and by him sold and transferred, with approval of the Railroad Commission, to W. W. Fulbright, doing business under the trade name of L. S. & P. Freight lines, on January 30, 1934, who began operations under them. Soon thereafter a corporation, with Fulbright as president thereof, was formed under the name of L. S. & P. Freight Lines, Inc., and though these certificates were never transferred to the corporation on the records of the Railroad Commission, nor a sale approved by the Commission, the corporation continued operation under these certificates. In January, 1935, this corporation was, at the instance of Fulbright and others, placed in the hands of a receiver by suit in the District Court of Jefferson County, Texas, and Gabe Hebert appointed receiver, who continued such operations for a short time thereafter, when all operations under such certificates appear to have ceased entirely, due to the fact, apparently, that most of the equipment used in such operations was! either turned over to creditors or sold to satisfy debts of the corporation.

On April 9, 1935, after a hearing, the Railroad Commission ordered these two certificates cancelled for failure of the operators to remit COD collections to the shippers. On April 24, 1935, Hebert, as receiver for the L. S. & P., Inc., filed a motion with the Commission to reinstate these certificates and permit him, as receiver, to operate under them. On May 13, 1935, the Commission, in an order made upon such motion, recited that no application had been made to it for the sale of such certificates, and no sale thereof had been authorized; that prior to the April 9th order of cancellation an injunction had been issued out of the District Court of Jefferson County, without its knowledge, restraining the Commission from interfering with the operation by the receiver; and that subsequent to the entry of the April 9th cancellation order, the Commission had been cited for contempt for disobeying that injunction. Its order of May 13, 1935, provided that the April 9th order of cancellation “is hereby rescinded, and said certificates reinstated, pending the final disposition thereof by a proper court of competent jurisdiction and of this Commission.”

Thereafter, with approval of the District Court of Jefferson County, Hebert, as receiver for L. S. & P., Inc., sold as the property of that corporation, these two certificates to the Van way Express Company, Inc., which sale was approved by the District Court of Jefferson County on July 8, 1935. Upon failure or refusal of the Railroad Commission to approve this sale, the Vanway filed a mandamus suit in Jefferson County District Court to compel it to do so. The mandamus was granted, but upon appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont that judgment was reversed, and the whole matter ordered transferred to the District Court of Travis County. See Railroad Commission v. Vanway Express Company, 103 S.W.2d 814.

When the suit was transferred to Travis County, the Railroad Commission filed its plea in abatement to the Vanway’s suit to compel the transfer to it of these certificates, one of the grounds specifically pleaded for abatement being that these two certificates, after notice and hearing had thereon, had been cancelled by a legal and final order entered on April 9, 1935, from which no appeal was ever taken; and “that no valid, legal order rescinding said cancellation has been entered.” Consequently, the certificates having been can-celled, and no longer in force, there was nothing to transfer, and no approval of a *901 transfer to anyone could be given by the Commission. In the trial of that suit, the trial court rendered judgment on September 24, 1937, sustaining the Commission’s plea in abatement after, as recited in said judgment, “having heard the evidence in support of and against same * * That judgment became final.

Meantime, the original application of the L. S. & P. Freight Lines, Inc., for .the sale and transfer of these certificates to the Vanway, filed with the Commission on July 22, 1935, appears to have remained on its docket undisposed of. After the litigation had ended the Commission heard further evidence thereon in June, 1938, entered its order on October 4, 1938, wherein it recited generally the history of these certificates as above outlined, again concluded that these certificates were no longer in force but had been cancelled by its order of April 9, 1935, which cancellation was adjudicated by the September 24, 1937, judgment of the District Court of Travis County, and for that reason dismissed the application of the L. S. & P. for approval of a transfer to the Vanway. This order was not attacked in any manner.

Thereafter,' upon application filed on May 26, 1939, by W. W. Fulbright, doing business as L. S. & P. Freight Lines, the Commission by order dated May 29, 1939, approved the sale and transfer of these two certificates to the Vanway Express Company, Inc., and authorized the use of twelve trucks in operation thereunder. This order is the one here under attack. The grounds of attack are:

1. That the order-was entered and certificates issued ex parte, without notice to appellant, and without a hearing before the Commission.

2. That the certificates had already been cancelled by a valid Commission order of April 9, 1935, and were no longer in force;

3. That the order of May 13, 1935, which undertook to rescind that of April 9th, was entered without notice or hearing, was therefore ineffective to suspend the cancellation order, and had been so adjudged by the District Court of Travis County, on September 24, 1937; and

4. That the Commission’s own order of October 4, 1938, again holding that the certificates had been cancelled, was a final order, not appealed from, nor set .aside, and therefore binding on the Commission.

It is not controverted that no operations were conducted under these certificates from sometime in 1936 until after the first of January, 1940. The certificates were carried on the insurance records of the Railroad Commission in the name of “L. S. & P. Freight Lines, Beaumont, Texas, W. W. Fulbright,” until sometime in 1935, and thereafter as “L. S. & P. Freight Lines, Gabe Hebert, Receiver W. W. Fulbright & or L. S. & P.

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Related

Brown Express, Inc. v. Railroad Commission
415 S.W.2d 394 (Texas Supreme Court, 1967)
Wattenburger v. Railroad Commission of Texas
231 S.W.2d 924 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-s-c-motor-freight-lines-inc-v-vanway-express-co-texapp-1941.