Turner v. State

1938 OK 90, 76 P.2d 254, 182 Okla. 81, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 8, 1938
DocketNo. 27736.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1938 OK 90 (Turner v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. State, 1938 OK 90, 76 P.2d 254, 182 Okla. 81, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 60 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

BAXLESS, v. c. J.

This is an appeal from the Corporation Commission, involving a controversy between operators of bus lines. Missouri, Kansas & Oklahoma Coach Lines. Inc., applied to the Corporation Commission of Oklahoma for permission to operate a class “A” motor carrier service between Cushing, Okla., and Seminole. Okla. Ered O. Turner, doing business as Turner Transportation Company, appeared and opposed the application. An order was entered in favor of the applicant over the protest, and Turner appeals.

Cushing is located about 12 miles west of Drumright, on State Highway 33, and M., K. & O. operates a class “A” motor carrier service east and west through these towns. About four miles west of Drumright on said Highway 33. State Highway 48 branches off to the south, and passes through Stroud, Prague, and Seminole. Several years ago two services were authorized; Pickwick Greyhound having authority to operate from Cushing to Seminole, and Vaughn having authority to operate from Stroud to Seminole. Vaughn’s route from Stroud to Seminole was in a north and south direction generally. The Pickwick route led east from Cushing along Highway 33 to the point where Highway 48 turns south, and thence it proceeded south along Highway 48 through Stroud and Prague into Seminole, and return. Pickwick transferred this route to Vaughn, with the approval of the Corporation Commission. It appears that Vaughn did not operate into Cushing, but instead used Drumright as his northern terminus, and passengers bound to Cusblng transferred to busses of M., K. & O. and completed the journey. It does not appear whether the Corporation Commission approved ’ this variation in route. About January 3, 1930, Vanghn applied to the Corporation Commission for authority to transfer this route to M., K. & O., said application reciting:

“* * * That the public interest will be served, its convenience afforded and necessities supplied, by permitting the operation of busses from Seminole via Prague and Stroud into Drumright and there connecting with the operation of the Missouri-Kansas & Oklahoma Coach Lines.”

This application was approved simply by notation of approval of a majority of the members of the Corporation Commission. It is said that M., K. & O. operated this service for a while, and then abandoned the service in 1929, and it is not shown that the Corporation Commission knew or approved of this step. June 11, 1934, M., K. & O. applied to the Corporation Commission for permission to transfer this operation to Turner. August 13, 1934, the Corporation Commission entered an order approving the transfer, and recited that Turner had authority to operate “Class A motor carrier service in Oklahoma for the transportation of passengers between Drumright and Seminole, via State Highway No. 48'* * *”

Turner began operating this service, and transferred traffic for Cushing to M., K. & O. busses at Drumright.

June 10, 1936, M., K. & O. filed a petition with the Corporation Commission reading in part:

“Xour petitioner is the holder and owner of certificate No. 34 issued by this commission, which authorizes the carriage and transportation of passengers intrastate from and between Cushing to Seminole, via State Highways 12 and 48. That said certificate No. 34 is a consolidation of certificates held by your petitioner and which, among those being consolidated therein, is certificate No. 1301. which authorizes your petitioner by reason of this Commission’s approved assignment to it, to render intrastate motor vehicle service from • Cushing to Seminole *83 over the route heretofore set forth. ' That said certificate No. 1301, in so far as it covers the route from Cushing to Seminole, is still owned and held by your petitioner and has never been transferred or assigned to any person, firm or corporation and is a part of consolidated certificate No. 34 held by your petitioner. Your petitioner further states that there is at present no person, firm, or corporation rendering class A Intrastate motor vehicle service from Cushing to Seminole and that public convenience and necessity requires the reinstatement and commencement of such service from and between Cushing and Seminole, inasmuch as there is at present no carrier rendering class A intrastate passenger service by motor vehicle from and between said termini nor does any carrier other than your petitioner have authority from this honorable commission to render such service.”

Turner filed an answer and protest containing, generally, a denial that M., K. & O. has any right or authority to operate between Cushing and Seminole; a denial of the allegation that no motor vehicle carrier service is being rendered between said points; and an allegation that public convenience and necessity do not require a change in the present service, and if a hearing does so show the necessity for additional service, that Turner be granted authority to furnish the same. We do not understand the reference to Highway No. 12, as elsewhere the east and west highway is referred to as No.' 33, we find no such highway nearby on maps in evidence. An order was made in January, 1937, reading in part:

“Findings: That the movant is the record owner of the commission’s certificate No. 34, whereunder for a number of years it has operated, among other, class ‘A’ motor carrier service between Tulsa and Oklahoma City, via Drumright an'd Cushing, Oklahoma : That on January 3, 1934, the commission transferred permit No. 1301 from Stanley Vaughn, record owner thereof, to Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma Coach Lines, Inc., the right to operate class ‘A’ motor carrier passenger service from Cush-ing to Seminole; that thereupon the commission amended certificate No. 34 to witness this right.
“That the instant motion is to resume its service from Cushing to Seminole; that the protestant herein claims the sole right to service Seminole from the junction of State Highways Nos. 33 and 48 by virtue of order No. 7852 entered August 13, 1934. which transfers from Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma Coach Lines, Inc., to Fred O. Turner, the right to operate motor carrier passenger service between Drumright and Seminole, via State Highway No. 48, and while the records of the commission show that Stanley Vaughn by permit No. 1301 was authorized to operate between Cushing and Seminole via said junction, at the hearing on the transfer from Stanley Vaughn to Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma Coach Lines, Inc., the commission approved the transfer from Drumright to Seminole via said junction, notwithstanding this fact, however, the Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma Coach Lines, Inc., thereafter continued the operation of motor carrier service between Drumright and said junction and Cushing, it believing in good faith it had relinquished only an interest in this part as well as a part of the controverted route herein, which is from the junction of State Highways Nos. 33 and 48, and Seminole ; that the Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma Coach Lines, Inc., to resume this service between Seminole and Cushing via said junction, ’ would afford a service between Seminole and Cushing which does not now exist.
“The commission further finds that both movant and protestant have an undivided interest in operating the service between said junction and Seminole, although mov-ant, by reason of the transfer evidenced by order No.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 90, 76 P.2d 254, 182 Okla. 81, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-state-okla-1938.