delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction restraining defendants from extending their motorhus service on Austin boulevard from North avenue to Roosevelt road. The west half of Austin boulevard is in Oak Park, the east half in Chicago. Complaint was filed May 25, 1951 and on that date plaintiff applied for a temporary injunction. On August 2, 1951 the court granted plaintiff’s application. In the interim briefs had been submitted by the parties on the legal issues, the testimony of witnesses and other evidence presented, and extensive oral arguments heard. The transcript consists of more than 800 pages. The court granted the temporary injunction on the tentative basis that the issues both of law and fact should be reserved for final hearing and the status quo be maintained.
The first question for us to consider is whether defendants were entitled to a decision of the court on the issues argued and the facts developed during the hearing. We are of the opinion that they were. It is true, the cases are in general agreement that the purpose of a temporary injunction is to maintain the status quo until final hearing on the merits. People ex rel. The Chicago Bar Association v. Standidge,
Under the circumstances, the court should have reached some conclusion on the issues presented, and we will examine them in order to ascertain the probability of plaintiff’s right to relief. Biehn v. Tess,
The point urged and most assiduously advanced by plaintiff is that this service is “necessarily local transportation” and is therefore unauthorized because Chicago Transit Authority has failed to obtain either authorization of the Board of Trustees of the Village of Oak Park or a referendum approval of the inhabitants of the village, as expressly required by section 11 of the Metropolitan Transit Authority Act. The Chicago Transit Authority was created by the Metropolitan Transit Authority Act, April 12, 1945 (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1949, eh. 1112/3, sec. 301 et seq.) [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 21.2064(1)]. The object as stated in the title was to create a municipal corporation for public ownership and operation of the transportation system in the metropolitan area of Cook county. To that purpose it was authorized to acquire, construct, operate and maintain such a transportation system and was given all powers necessary or convenient to accomplish the purposes of the Act; to make rules and regulations governing the operation of the system; to determine routings; to pass all ordinances regulating the use, operation and maintenance of its facilities; and to carry into effect the powers granted to that Authority. Section 11 provides that the Authority should have the right to use- any public road, street, or other public way in the metropolitan area of Cook county for interurban transportation of passengers. Specifically excluded, however, was the right to use any street or other public way in any city, village or incorporated town for local transportation of passengers within any such municipality “unless and until authorized so to do by an ordinance . . . . ”
In Lustfield v. Chicago Transit Authority,
“We cannot imagine stronger language to convey to the Transit Authority full power to conduct the business of managing, regulating and operating a transportation system in the municipal area of Chicago.”
It is obvious that what was contemplated by the Act was a transportation system which would provide local transportation for the City of Chicago and which would also operate between the city and suburbs surrounding it. Pursuant to this Act the Chicago Transit Authority acquired the properties of the elevated roads, surface lines and subways operating within the City of Chicago and between the city and adjacent suburbs. On April 23, 1945, it obtained an ordinance from the City Council of the City of Chicago, granting it permission to operate a transportation system within the city. One of the lines it operates within the city runs on Austin avenue from the northern city limits at Milwaukee and Nagle avenues, south six to seven miles to the northern boundary of the Village of Oak Park at Austin and North avenues. At this point Austin . avenue becomes Austin boulevard and extends three miles south to Roosevelt road. The west half of Austin boulevard is within the Village of Oak Park and the east half is within the City of Chicago. North avenue is the northern boundary of Oak Park and Roosevelt road is the southern. The extension proposed would extend the Austin avenue line from North avenue to Roosevelt road. The purpose of the extension, as stated by defendants, is to provide a direct service from the far northwest side of Chicago connecting with the main east and west lines of the Chicago Transit Authority to and from the business districts of Chicago. At the present time the riding public has to disembark from buses at North avenue, transfer to plaintiff’s buses and disembark again to transfer to east and west lines of the Chicago Transit Authority. It is also contended by defendants that the extension was designed to round out the gridiron pattern on which their transportation system is based. Thus, passengers from the northwest side of Chicago would leave the city limits at North avenue and Austin boulevard, ride through Oak Park for a distance of three miles, take one of defendants’ lines entering the City of Chicago and go to their destination, whatever that might be, either the loop or some other portion of the city or its adjoining suburbs, all of which are served by the Chicago Transit Authority. Other passengers living in Oak Park can use the service for the purpose of riding from Oak Park to the City of Chicago. Still other passengers would use this extension for transportation between points within the village, that is to say, local transportation. It the proposed extension, therefore, interurban or local transportation?
The situation is unique and there is perhaps nothing of comparable nature in any great metropolitan area of the world. There are some earlier cases in which the distinction between interurban and street railway service was considered to be that of the difference between the ordinary commercial railroad and the street railways which operate entirely within a town or city. City of Spring Valley v. Chicago, Ottawa & Peoria Ry. Co.,
“Lastly, the appellee says that the cities do not have the power to prohibit busses from using the public highways, and states that the bus service is, in fact, interurban rather than local and is expressly authorized by the Metropolitan Transit Authority Act. Counsel cite People v. Chicago Transit Authority,392 Ill. 77 , and section 31 of the act aforesaid.”
In other words, it was there argued that even though some local transportation was involved in this operation, it was generally interurban and was expressly authorized by the Metropolitan Transit Authority Act. While the court did not specifically touch on this point, its decision in effect sustained it. The broad purpose ascribed to the Act by the court notably strengthens this view: A reasonable interpretation of the language of the Act sustains this view. In section 11 interurban transportation and local transportation within a municipality are contrasting terms. Since interurban involves two municipalities, the other phrase must have reference to a service confined exclusively to one. Despite the fact that some passengers will board and leave buses entirely within Oak Park, that fact is ancillary to the scheme of the service, which is to carry Chicago passengers from the northwest area into Oak Park and thence to Chicago Transit Authority’s connecting elevated and bus lines. To permit the existence of a small “local” transportation system to become an obstacle to development of the Authority’s broad transit plan would be to disregard the purpose of the Transit Act.
“It is our understanding that the Act was designed to provide a transportation system for the largest metropolitan area in the state. To hold that individual communities could prevent the Authority from operating "within its statutory borders would greatly weaken this intent and make it impossible for the Transit Authority to accomplish the purpose for which it was designed.” (P. 415.)
Even if the proposed service were local transportation within the meaning of section 11, consent of Oak Park was not required because at the time the injunctive order was issued, Oak Park did not have jurisdiction over any part of Austin boulevard. It had many years before transferred that jurisdiction to the Park District. The language of the statutes and ordinances involved in this transfer of jurisdiction leaves no question that thereafter Oak Park’s consent to transit service was not required. The consent of the Park District was not necessary under section 7 of the Chicago Park District Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1951, ch. 105, sec. 333.7) [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 96.557]. An Act was passed, however, by the Illinois General Assembly in June, 1951, authorizing the village to reacquire jurisdiction of the west half of Austin boulevard upon ordinance duly passed and submitted to a referendum. On September 5, 1951, the Board passed such ordinance. It was submitted to a referendum and jurisdiction under the law was reacquired by the village on October 19, 1951, that is, assuming the legality of this procedure, which we have not at this time considered. The Village of Oak Park filed an intervening petition July 23,1951, setting forth passage of the Act and the prospective reacqnisition of jurisdiction by the village. Since the lower court was aware of the probability that this action would be taken, should it have permitted such knowledge to influence its decision, that is, should it have considered itself on notice that Oak Park might recontrol Austin boulevard?
The validity of the injunction order must be considered on facts as they existed as of the time the order was entered. Bauer v. Lindgren,
Plaintiff argues that the proposed service would violate the express requirements of the Metropolitan Transit Authority Act and the ordinance of the City of Chicago granting a franchise, both of which, it says, require that new service installed by the Chicago Transit Authority should serve the public convenience and necessity. The presumptions are in favor of the validity of the Chicago Transit Authority ordinance, and the case for invalidity on the ground that such an ordinance may be unreasonable and arbitrary must be clear and convincing. Zadworny v. City of Chicago,
Plaintiff also contends that operating under a certificate of convenience from the Illinois Commerce Commission and being first in the field, it has the right to the exclusive use of Austin boulevard for that purpose. We feel that whatever merit there may be in this point outside the metropolitan area of Cook county, within that area the public policy as set forth in the Metropolitan Transit Authority Act must be reconciled with policies heretofore stated, and examined in that light the ordinance is valid.
Plaintiff presents many questions that have to do with the practical operation of the lines, such as duplication of transportation, diversion of buses and facilities, the prospect of increase in fares, traffic congestion, and disadvantages to patrons of the Chicago Transit Authority. It is also alleged that the Chicago Transit Board was animated by a vindictive spirit against plaintiff. No showing is made that the Board had any other motive than to serve the ultimate best interests of the Chicago Transit Authority. It is revealed that there is and has been keen competition between these two public utilities. Such charges as these must yield to the strong presumption in favor of the validity of the ordinance and of the honest execution of their powers by the Chicago Transit Board.
There is no merit in plaintiff’s contention that the ordinance is invalid because no public hearing with respect thereto was held by the Board before passage of the ordinance. We have examined the Chicago Ordinance and in our opinion the provision for public hearing had application to those extensions within the City of Chicago where rights had not been specifically granted under the ordinance. The Chicago ordinance does grant to the Chicago Transit Authority rights to the east half of Austin boulevard and the City of Chicago has no authority with respect to the west half.
If on final hearing -it should appear that the use of the extension for local transportation is something more than incidental to the interurban character of the line, the court can by proper order, as counsel for defendants suggest, restrict local transportation use within reasonable bounds.
We have examined other points advanced by plaintiff and are of the opinion they provide no support for the injunction order. The order is hereby reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to dissolve the temporary injunction and for such further proceedings as are not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Order reversed and cause remanded with directions.
Tuohy, P. J. and Hobson, J., concur.
