176 P. 393 | Okla. | 1918
Appellants own a line of railway extending through the state between Oklahoma City and Ardmore, and to points outside of the state, both north and south, over which it operates three passenger trains per day, two of which both north and south bound, pass through the points named during the daytime. One train, hereinafter referred to as No. 405, leaves Oklahoma City for the south at 12:01 at night, and one north-bound train, referred to as No. 406, arrives at Ardmore at 12:30 at night. No. 405 carries regularly, between Oklahoma City and Ardmore, and to points beyond in the state of Texas, terminating at Cleburne, Texas, two Pullman cars, one of which is known as the Chicago-Cleburne Pullman, carried for the purpose of accommodating passengers between the two points and intervening points. The second is operated from Oklahoma City to Cleburne, and is known as the Oklahoma City-Cleburne car. This latter Pullman is picked up by train No. 405 at Oklahoma City, and a like Pullman is carried by train No. 406 from Cleburne to Oklahoma City, arriving at Ardmore at 12:30 a. m. and at Oklahoma City at 4:21 a. m., where it is set out. Persons taking passage on train No. 405 at Oklahoma City may enter the Pullman at 9 o'clock p. m. and desiring to disembark at Ardmore are required to get up at 3:58 a. m. Passengers coming from Ardmore to Oklahoma City can embark on the Pullman at 12:30 a. m., and remain therein until 7 o'clock. a. m., after arrival at Oklahoma City.
A number of residents of the various towns on the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company, between Ardmore and Hugo, and a number of citizens in the city of Ardmore, *168 filed a complaint with the Corporation Commission, wherein they sought to procure an order requiring an extra Pullman to be attached to train No. 405 and carried to Ardmore, and set out to be picked up by the St. Louis San Francisco passenger train, and carried over that line to Hugo, and for a Pullman to be attached to the orain of the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company leaving Hugo in the afternoon and arriving at Ardmore about 8 o'clock at night, to be picked up by train No. 406 of appellants and carried to Oklahoma City and there set out. The evidence in support of the complaint is all by residents of towns along the line of the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company, and is largely based upon complaints that the passenger trains of the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company do not carry sufficient coaches to accommodate the passengers traveling over that road, and that the Pullman car would furnish additional accommodations for said passengers. There were two hearings upon this complaint, the first hearing being continued to permit representatives of Ardmore to testify, but no witness from Ardmore testified to any necessity or demand for extra Pullman service. The commission ordered appellants to operate a Pullman car between Ardmore and Oklahoma City upon trains Nos. 405 and 406 until the 10th day of January, 1917, to determine whether the revenue from the operation thereof was remunerative, from which order appellants prosecute this appeal.
This order can be complied with only in one of two ways, either by stopping one of the through interstate cars now operated on their trains, or by attaching an additional Pullman to each of these two trains. The evidence conclusively shows that Pullman accommodations between Oklahoma City and Ardmore have at all times been adequate. Indeed, it appears that for a period of six months or more, about the first of the year 1916, vacant berths, both upper and lower, might be had at all times on any of the Pullmans operated on trains Nos. 405 and 406, between the two points, and no witness had testified that he ever applied for a berth and failed to obtain one. One witness testified that at one time he and a number of other persons applied for accommodations at Ardmore, and that four or five of them rode in the chair car. He does not say whether they did not obtain such accommodations, or whether they applied for lower berths and failed to get them, and refused to take upper berths. It also appears that during a long period of time the number of interstate passengers accommodated by the Oklahoma City-Cleburne car exceeded the number of intrastate passengers from 50 to 100 per cent. If the Oklahoma City-Cleburne car be operated only between Oklahoma City and Ardmore, all interstate passengers on train No. 406, who could not be accommodated on the Chicago-Cleburne car, would be required to arise at Oklahoma City at 4:21 a. m., and all passengers from Oklahoma City to Texas points, embarking upon train No. 405, could not get to bed until the arrival of the train at Oklahoma City at 11:50 p. m. This would result in the same inconvenience to a much larger interstate traffic which this car accommodates than now exists as to intrastate traffic. In addition, the evidence satisfactorily shows that the traffic now taken care of by the Chicago-Cleburne car could not be taken care of by the Chicago-Cleburne car, if the other was discontinued or required to be set out at Ardmore.
The Corporation Commission is vested with authority to require all reasonable and proper facilities to be furnished by a railroad company, such as Pullman service, and the fact that an order of the commission requiring such facilities may incidentally affect interstate commerce does not render the order a nullity. C., R.I. P. Ry. Co. v. State,
The Corporation Commission is vested with power, under section 18, art. 9, of the Constitution, to require all public service corporations to establish and maintain all such *169
facilities and conveniences as may be reasonable and just. The term "reasonable and just," or "reasonable and adequate," when applied to facilities or service required of public service corporations, is not capable of exact definition; but the terms are relative, and must be interpreted in the light of conditions existing at the time and in relation to all the surrounding circumstances. M., K. T. Ry. Co. v. Town of Norfolk, supra; M., K. T. Ry. Co. v. Wicher,
The order here is very similar to that reviewed in Public Service Commission v. Chesapeake Ohio Railway Co., P. U. R. 1916E, 353. An order had been made to require the railroad company to transfer at Huntington a Pullman known as the "Wheeling sleeper," operated by the Baltimore Ohio Railway between Wheeling and Huntington, to a train of the Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company, and carry the same into Charleston. The Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company operated a parlor and buffet car on this train, arriving at Charleston at 9:10 a. m., which furnished sufficient accommodations for all passengers transferring to its train from the Wheeling sleeper at Huntington for Charleston. It was urged that passengers going to Charleston were required to rise at 7:15 a m., and be transported across the city in carriages, in order to take the Chesapeake Ohio train, and returning from Charleston would arrive at Huntington at 9 p. m., where they would again be required to transfer to the Wheeling sleeper, which left Huntington at 11:50 p. m. It also appeared that this additional service would result in a loss to the Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company. The Supreme Court of West Virginia reversed the order of the commission (Chesapeake Ohio Ry. Co. v. Public Service Commission,
In the case at bar the Corporation Commission finds that the expense to appellants for the use of Pullman cars per year is $6,000, being approximately $20 per day per car. If two additional Pullmans be required to render the additional service, this would entail an extra expense of $40 per day, saying nothing about the operating expense of hauling the cars, the wear and tear of the track, and repairs and other items. The evidence shows that the total patronage between Oklahoma City and Ardmore is insufficient to pay the operating expenses of these two cars alone, and without any demand therefor justifying the additionall accommodations, if all the traffic between the two points is considered, there would be a clear loss to the company of between $2,000 and $3,000 per year. In addition to this, the passenger traffic between the two points during the year 1916, covering a period of 7 months, decreased more than 30 per cent. Under this statement of facts the order appealed from is unreasonable and unjust, and imposes an unnecessary burden upon the appellants.
The question of expense in requiring facilities by a carrier is not always conclusive. United States Express Co. v. State,
The order is therefore reversed. *170