21 N.W.2d 5 | Wis. | 1945
Lead Opinion
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On February 26, 1943, the respondent, Clintonville Transfer Line, Inc., a common motor carrier (sec.
The only opposition to the granting of the application was that made by the objector, Pope Brothers Red Top Cab Company, *63 also a common motor carrier authorized under its certificate to transport property between Wausau and Antigo over Highway 52. At the time of filing its application and for some considerable time prior thereto, the respondent had authority to transport property between Wausau and Antigo over Highways 51, 29, and 45. The applicant wished to shorten its route by traveling Highway 52, the most direct route between Wausau and Antigo. This would result in the lowering of applicant's rates from two to twelve cents per hundred pounds of freight, depending on the class of freight and the distance transported. During the six months' period ending February 28, 1943, the applicant transported 102, 140 pounds of freight between Wausau and Antigo. It operated a daily service between said points and served intermediate points on its certificated route. It further appeared that the run took two hours whereas a direct run between Wausau and Antigo would take little more than an hour; that the shortened run would save the applicant $2,500 a year and, if granted, would improve applicant's service generally and reduce rates to patrons.
On behalf of the objector, testimony was offered which showed there was existing service both ways between Wausau and Antigo on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays; that the effect of granting the application would be to lessen the amount of freight carried by objector's trucks which would tend to impair the amount of service which the objector could furnish to the public; that the objector had received no complaints from shippers in the territory involved within the last year. It appears also that the objector transports freight for various railroads.
It also appears that the commission was in the possession of letters, all to the effect that the present motor-carrier service between Antigo and Wausau is adequate and satisfactory; that there is not sufficient transportation business between those two places to justify dividing it up between the existing carrier and a competitor; and that to authorize such competition *64 would be detrimental to the service which the public is receiving.
A copy of Exhibit 1 is reproduced herewith:
[EDITORS' NOTE: THE EXHIBIT IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.]
And also a copy of Exhibit 2, which is a comparison of distances and class rates (in cents per 100 pounds) between the points named below, with what the distances and rates would be by the use of Wisconsin Highway 52.
BETWEEN — WAUSAU
Distance Classes AND (Miles) 1 2 3 F 4 ----------------------------------------------------------- Aniwa (1) 43 45 38 31 24 22 " (2) 26 36 31 25 20 18 ----------------------------- Reduction 17 9 7 6 4 4 Antigo (1) 53 50 42 35 28 25 " (2) 34 38 33 27 21 19 ----------------------------- Reduction 19 12 9 8 7 6 Birnamwood (1) 36 41 35 29 22 21 " (2) 32 38 33 27 21 19 ----------------------------- Reduction 4 3 2 2 1 2 Elmhurst (1) 49 48 40 34 27 24 " (2) 31 38 33 27 21 19 ----------------------------- Reduction 18 10 7 7 6 5 Keshena (1) 62 55 47 38 31 28 " (2) 59 53 46 37 30 27 ----------------------------- Reduction 3 2 1 1 1 1 *65
BETWEEN — WAUSAU — Continued Distance Classes AND (Miles) 1 2 3 F 4 ----------------------------------------------------------- Mattoon (1) 51 50 42 35 28 25 " (2) 34 38 33 27 21 19 ----------------------------- Reduction 17 12 9 8 7 6 Neopit (1) 62 55 47 38 31 28 " (2) 47 48 40 34 27 24 ----------------------------- Reduction 15 7 7 4 4 4 Phlox (1) 54 50 42 35 28 25 " (2) 36 41 35 29 22 21 ----------------------------- Reduction 18 9 7 6 6 4 Volland Farm (1) 57 53 46 37 30 27 " (2) 53 50 42 35 28 25 ----------------------------- Reduction 4 3 4 2 2 2
(1) — Via Present Route. (2) — Via Proposed Route. ----------------------------------------------------------- There is no evidence as to the amount of traffic of the various classes between these points. The applicant contends that at least it should be granted the right over Highway 52 for operating convenience if not for rate-making purposes. In response to that the appellant said:
"If a carrier achieves operating economies through a shortened route, such economies should be passed on to the shipping public in the form of lower rates. Our general order governing rates of common motor carriers resulted from long hearings and full consideration of the various matters involved. To grant a route for convenience purposes without requiring use of such route for rate-making purposes is a violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the general rate order which bases rates of common motor carriers on their certificated mileages so that rates truly will reflect actual operating costs. In a few instances where we have permitted short routes to be used for convenience but not rate-making purposes, there have been unusual or historical circumstances justifying the exception. There is no such justification for making an exception in this case."
The commission concluded, (1) that the applicant has failed to show that the proposed authority requested herein is *66 in the public interest or is required by the public convenience and necessity; (2) that the grant of authority for the proposed operations would result in an unnecessary duplication of service of an existing common motor carrier of property and is therefore contrary to the public interest.
As appears from the above quotation from its opinion, the commission refused the applicant permission to travel over Route 52 for purposes of convenience only and not for rate-making purposes, on the ground that it is in conflict with what it designates as its general order governing rates of common motor carriers, which the commission might ignore in cases where unusual or historical circumstances exist, justifying an exception, but holds there is no such justification in this case. An order was entered dismissing the application from which the applicant appealed to the circuit court for Dane county pursuant to the provisions of sec.
It is ordered and adjudged that the order and decision of the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin entered on January 17, 1944, and thereafter reaffirmed on rehearingon February 25, 1944 (proceeding No. CC-238), be andthe same is reversed, and the record is remanded to the PublicService Commission of Wisconsin with directions to grantthe application of the plaintiff (appellant) for amendment ofits common motor-carriers certificate CC-238 authorizingtransportation of property in intrastate commerce (RevisionApplication No. 6), and particularly granting it authority tooperate on Wisconsin Highway No. 52 between Wausau andU.S. Highway 45 for operating convenience and rate-making,purposes only with no service to any points which applicantis not now authorized to serve."
The defendant appeals.
The circuit court reversed the findings of the commission on the ground that they are unsupported by substantial evidence and are arbitrary and capricious. (Sec.
The court further pointed out that the applicant is an existing carrier, not an applicant asking to serve one single new point on the map which is not served by it already, and that the applicant seeks to cut down its line of travel
The court further said:
"We do say that, on the record, there is an utter dearth of evidence to support the commission's conclusion in this regard."
We think it should be further pointed out that although the commission filed an opinion, nearly ten printed pages in length, it does not appear by the opinion that it gave any consideration whatever to the points served by the applicant beyond Antigo. In this case the interests of these points certainly represent at least a part of the public interest and it would seem that the improved service and lowered rates to these points ought to be controlling as against any duplication of service as between the applicant and the objector, the Pope Brothers Red Top *68 Cab Company. Unless there is some obstacle or hidden reason which we do not detect, why this duplication of service should not be allowed, then we see no reason why the commission should not, in the interest of the other points to be served, disregard its self-imposed limitation of its power and grant the applicant permission to travel over Route 52 for convenience without a change of rates. It appears to us that the conclusion reached by the commission sacrifices public necessity and convenience for the sole purpose of favoring another carrier. It does not appear that the revenue derived from the service between Antigo and Wausau is the sole source of revenue of the objector. No doubt it constitutes but a very small fraction of that revenue, one so small that it might well be ignored, or if it is so large as to be of such importance as to make it determinative of the matter, that permission might be granted without change of rate between Antigo and Wausau. We concur in the view of the circuit court that the conclusion reached is not supported by substantial evidence, and we conclude further that the denial of the application was based in part on nonstatutory grounds.
The record in this case presents some of the most baffling and complicated questions that arise under our system of constitutional law. These relate to the extent to which legislative power may be delegated to administrative agencies and how far the exercise of those powers by administrative agencies is subject to review by the courts. While these questions have been before the legislatures and courts of this country ever since the adoption of the Interstate Commerce Act in 1887, many of them still remain unsolved. It may be helpful state a few fundamental propositions which are generally agreed upon.
1. The power to declare whether there shall be a law; to determine the purpose or policy to be achieved by the law; and to fix the limits within which the law shall operate is vested *69 in the legislature and may not be delegated, but when the legislature has laid down the fundamentals of the law, it may delegate to administrative agencies such legislative powers as may be necessary to carry into effect the general legislative purpose.
2. The powers exercised by administrative agencies are legislative and not judicial in their nature.
3. If in the exercise of delegated power the constitutional rights of a citizen are impaired, his rights will be protected by a court.
4. So long as an administrative agency acts within the scope of the powers granted to it without impairing the constitutional rights of a citizen, its findings of fact are subject to review by the courts only to the extent and in the manner prescribed by the legislature.
5. It is not competent for the legislature, even in a circumscribed field, to grant to an administrative agency unlimited legislative power. The power granted must be exercised in accordance with standards and limitations fixed by the legislature.
6. If no appeal or comparable procedure is prescribed for review, none exists. In the absence of legislative authorization to review the facts, administrative determinations can be reviewed only by certiorari, in which only questions of law are raised.
As regards the subject matter of this litigation, the Public Service Commission is empowered to issue licenses to motor carriers upon application. The statute provides:
Sec.
Further regulatory powers are granted to the commission by sec. 194.18, Stats., which it is not necessary for us to consider in connection with this case.
It is apparent that the commission construes the language:
"The commission shall have power, as the public interest may require, upon a finding of public convenience and necessity, to issue or refuse any such certificate or amendment or to issue it for the partial exercise only of the privilege sought,"
as meaning that it is wholly within the discretion of the commission, even though public convenience and necessity may require it, to grant or deny a certificate. The conclusion that the commission so regards it is based upon the fact that in this proceeding the commission finds that granting a route for convenience purposes without requiring the use of such route for, rate-making purposes is a violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the general rate order which bases rates of common motor carriers on their certificated mileages so that rates truly will reflect actual operating costs and denies the petition. We find no statutory authority by virtue of which the Public Service Commission may make orders limiting the exercise of its own statutory powers.
While by sec.
"to adopt rules to govern its proceedings and to regulate the mode and manner of all investigations and hearings, — *71
this provision does not confer upon the commission power to enlarge or limit its own power. There is a wide constitutional gap between an order regulating procedure before the commission and an order which operates to limit the exercise of the statutory powers of the commission. The first is made in the exercise of a power delegated to it by the legislature. The power to limit or prescribe the field of action of an administrative agency is the kind of legislative power that cannot be delegated. What the commission did in this instance is to enact a rule which within the prescribed field and as administered by the commission operates in certain cases to deny an applicant a certificate for no statutory reason. The granting of certificates is a power exercised under one legislative grant and the rate-making power is entirely different in its nature and is granted to the commission under another section of the statutes. To the extent that the denial of the application was based upon this reason, it was arbitrary and unlawful. The power exercised by the commission must be exercised in accordance with some statutory standard fixed by the legislature or it constitutes the exercise of the kind of legislative power that cannot be delegated. The statute is subject to an interpretation which removes all questions as to its validity. Upon a finding that public convenience and necessity require it, the commission is to grant a certificate. If public convenience and necessity do not require it, the commission is to deny it. The legislature says that in one case the public interest requires it and in the other that it does not. If the words "as the public interest requires" be interpreted to mean that after the commission has found that public convenience and necessity require the issuance of a certificate, it then has an unlimited discretionary power to issue or refuse it, it is invalid. Such an interpretation makes the rights of an applicant for a certificate subject to the arbitrary power of the commission, a power which the legislature itself does not have. We still have in the law of this country, even in administrative law, such a thing as equality of citizens before the law. The *72
organic principle of equality includes within its application a granted privilege as well as a regulated right. Rosenblum v.Griffin (1938),
It may be said that the standard fixed by the statute as a test whether a certificate should be issued is indefinite and uncertain. It is true that the words "public convenience and necessity" are not words of precise legal content. However, they have been employed in the statutory law and the decisions of the courts of this country for more than forty years and their meaning grows more definite and certain with the passing years.
This court first considered the meaning of these words inWisconsin Tel. Co. v. Railroad Comm. (1916)
"The term is relative rather than absolute. No definition can be given that would fit all statutes in which the word has been used. The meaning in a given case must be ascertained by reference to the context and to the objects and purposes of the statute in which it is found. If there was a strong or urgent need of the connection here sought, then there was a necessity for it, and the finding that necessity existed is not shown to be wrong or unreasonable by clear and satisfactory evidence."
In United Parcel Service v. Public Service Comm. (1942)
"If there is a reasonable need apparent for the use of the service and if the common carrier is not unduly interfered with nor the public highways unduly burdened, a case of convenience and necessity exists." See also Farmers Co-op. E.U.S.Asso. v. Public Service Comm. (1944)
In Re Troy Auto Car Co. P.U.R. Ann. 1917 A, 700, 707, the New York public service commission, speaking of necessity and convenience said:
"It is dangerous to undertake to formulate abstract definitions in deciding a concrete case, but we take it that for such purposes as are involved in this and similar applications, a public convenience and necessity exists when the proposed facility will meet a reasonable want of the public and supply a need, if existing facilities, while in a sense sufficient, do not adequately supply that need."
The most helpful comment upon the meaning of the words "convenience and necessity" is to be found in the opinion of. the supreme court of the state of Utah, Union Pac. R. Co.v. Public Service Comm. (1943)
"Necessity means reasonably necessary and not absolutely imperative. The convenience of the public must not be circumscribed by holding the term `necessity' to mean an essential requisite. It is necessary if it appears reasonably requisite, is suited to and tends to promote the accommodation of the public. The statute should be so construed and applied as to encourage rather than retard the quality of the service rendered to the public to the end that both the quality and quantity of that which is offered to the public may be improved and increased. Any service or improvement which is desirable for the public welfare and highly important to the public convenience may properly be regarded as necessary. A service is not necessarily adequate because the community can conduct its business without further or additional service. To be adequate they must safeguard the people generally from appreciable *74 inconvenience in the pursuit of their business. If a new or enlarged service will enhance the public welfare, increase its opportunities, or stimulate its economic, social, intellectual or spiritual life to the extent that the patronage received will justify the expense of rendering it, the old service is not adequate."
The court further said:
"We have repeatedly stated that `convenience' and `necessity' are not segregable and to be considered as separate terms, but must be construed together and constitute a joint concept, which must be construed and considered according to the whole concept and purpose of the act. As to what constitutes `public convenience and necessity' must fundamentally have reference to the facts and circumstances of each given case as it arises, as the term is not, and was not intended to be, susceptible of precise definition." See also In re Minneapolis St. L.R. Co. (1941)
If upon hearing the basic ultimate facts are found, it should not be difficult to apply the standard of public convenience and necessity prescribed by the legislature and make a proper determination. It may be noted that in no case that we have discovered, considering the question of public convenience and necessity, has the matter of rates been given weight.
We come now to the question of what the court may do in reviewing the determination of an administrative agency. We need not discuss here the extent to which the legislature may go in conferring legislative power upon an administrative agency without at the same time providing for a review of its determinations. Hardly any two states confer upon the courts the same powers of review. Therefore decisions from other states are not helpful in the solution of this question. For instance in In re Consolidated Freight Co. (1933)
We do not have that question here, as under the procedure prescribed by the legislature administrative findings are to be reviewed by the circuit court. Sec. 8, art. VII, of the constitution, provides:
"The circuit courts shall have original jurisdiction in all matters civil and criminal within this state, not excepted in this constitution, and not hereafter prohibited by law. . . ."
The review of administrative findings is certainly a civil matter. The legislature may therefore confer jurisdiction upon the circuit court in this regard and prescribe its extent. The legislature has adopted a carefully prepared program for administrative procedure and review.
Ch. 194, Stats., is entitled "Motor Vehicle Transportation Act."
Sec. 194.13, Stats., provides: "Orders and determinations made pursuant to this chapter shall be subject to review in the manner provided in chapter 227."
Ch. 227, Stats., is entitled "Administrative Procedure and Review."
Sec.
"(a) Contrary to constitutional rights or privileges; or
"(b) In excess of the statutory authority or jurisdiction of the agency, or affected by other error of law; or
"(c) Made or promulgated upon unlawful procedure; or
"(d) Unsupported by substantial evidence in view of the entire record as submitted; or
"(e) Arbitrary or capricious.
"(2) Upon such review due weight shall be accorded the experience, technical competence, and specialized knowledge of the agency involved, as well as discretionary authority conferred upon it. The right of the appellant to challenge the constitutionality of any act or of its application to him shall not be foreclosed or impaired by the fact that he has applied for or holds a license, permit or privilege under such act."
By this section it is provided in effect that administrative decisions are not to stand if the decisions prejudicially affect the substantial rights of an appellant. The substantial rights of an appellant are affected when the decision is contrary to his constitutional rights or privileges; in excess of the statutory authority or jurisdiction of the agency; the procedure is not in accordance with the law; is not supported by substantialevidence; or is arbitrary or capricious.
If the court on review finds the decision of an agency to be contrary to any of these provisions and prejudicial to the appellant, it is to be reversed, otherwise it is to be affirmed.
The grounds of review provided by sec.
When the matter is brought before this court on appeal from an order (the proceeding to review is a special proceeding) of the circuit court, the question presented is whether the circuit. *77 court erred in, its determination, this court in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction does not reverse or modify the order of the commission. It deals with the order of the circuit court. In this case the circuit court found that in matters of fact the commission's findings were not supported by substantial evidence and that its determination was arbitrary and capricious. It was clearly within the jurisdiction of the circuit court to consider and determine these matters. The question presented, then, is whether the circuit court was in error. As already stated, we concur in the conclusion of the circuit court, upon this phase of the case.
However, so much of the judgment as directs the Public Service Commission to grant the application of the plaintiff cannot be affirmed. When a court reverses and vacates a decision of the commission, it does so in the exercise of a strictly judicial power. When it commands an administrative agency to exercise the powers conferred upon it by statute in a specified way, it in practical effect exercises legislative power. By ch. 194, Stats., the power to issue certificates to motor carriers is expressly conferred upon the Public Service Commission. This is concededly an exercise of delegated legislative power. the court has jurisdiction to enter such a judgment, the commission has no alternative except to enter the order as directed. The power to issue is exercised by the court and not by the commission. It may be said that in some instances an applicant may be left without an efficient remedy if the agency should be contumacious. We must assume that public officials will perform their duties in accordance with the command of the legislature. In the experience of this state with administrative agencies covering a period of more than forty years, nothing of the kind has occurred although their powers were less circumscribed then than now.
The fundamental reason for the lack of the court's jurisdiction is that the legislature may not confer legislative power upon the judiciary. In re Incorporation of Village of North *78 Milwaukee (1896),
The same rule is adhered to by the supreme court of the United States. Federal Power Comm. v. Pacific Power Light Co. (1939)
"If an order is valid only as a determination of policy or judgment which the agency alone is authorized to make and which it has not made, a judicial judgment cannot be made to do service for an administrative judgment. For purposes of affirming no less than reversing its orders, an appellate court cannot intrude upon the domain which congress has exclusively entrusted to an administrative agency."
Our constitution does not expressly declare that one of the co-ordinate departments shall not exercise the powers of another; it is nevertheless implicit therein. In Springer v.Philippine Islands (1928),
"Some of our state constitutions expressly provide in one form or another that the legislative, executive and judicial powers of the government shall be forever separate and distinct from each other. Other constitutions, including that of the United States, do not contain such an express provision. But it is implicit in all, as a conclusion logically following from the separation of the several departments. [Citing.] And this separation and the consequent exclusive character of the powers conferred upon each of the three departments is basic and vital — not merely a matter of governmental mechanism."
While legislative power may be delegated to subordinate administrative agencies and municipal bodies, it cannot be delegated to or exercised by the judiciary. *79
While the distinction between the statutes which delegate legislative power and those which do not may seem shadowy, it is in fact substantial and fundamental. This is nowhere better illustrated than in our own decision. In In reIncorporation of Village of North Milwaukee, supra, the statute there held invalid was sec. 861, S. B. Anno. Stats. 1889. The parts which were held by the court to delegate legislative power to the circuit court are italicized. The section is as follows:
"If the court after such hearing shall be satisfied of the correctness of any such survey or resurvey and census, that all the requirements of the statutes have been complied with; thatthe lands embraced in such territory or any part thereof oughtjustly to be included in the proposed village; that the interestthe inhabitants will be promoted by such incorporation, and that such territory as ought to be included contained, at the time such census was first or subsequently taken, the population, in number and in proportion to the quantity of land therein, required in section 854, it shall make an order declaring that such territory, the boundaries of which shall therein be set forth by courses and distances, and which may be enlargedor diminished by such court from the boundaries specifiedin such application, as justice may require, shall be an incorporated village by the name specified in such application, or by such other name as to the court shall deem proper, if the electors thereof shall assent thereto as hereinafter provided. . . ."
The court in its order found:
"The lands embraced in said territory ought justly to be included within the proposed village, and that the interests ofthe inhabitants would be promoted by such incorporation." (p. 619.)
The court held that in making the order of incorporation, the court was in the exercise of legislative power.
In re Incorporation of Village of North Milwaukee, supra, was decided in 1896. The section was amended by ch. 287, Laws of 1897, by striking out the italicized parts of the section. *80 Under the statute as amended, if the court finds that the requisite facts exist, the statute commands it to make the order. Under such a statute discretion is exercised by the legislature and not by the court.
This principle is fully elaborated in Minneapolis, St. P. S. S. M. R. Co. v. Railroad Comm. (1908)
In United Parcel Service v. Public Service Comm. (1942)
This case was also cited in Gateway City Transfer Co. v.Public Service Comm. (1944)
We find it necessary to advert to one other matter. The Public Service Commission is an agency within the definition of that term found in ch. 227, Stats., relating to administrative procedure and review and its proceedings are governed by the provisions of that chapter. It should proceed accordingly. Sec.
"Every decision of an agency in a contested case shall be in writing accompanied by findings of fact and conclusions of law. The findings of fact shall consist of a concise and separatestatement of the ultimate conclusions upon each contestedissue of fact without recital of evidence." *81
In this case, after the controversy was submitted to it, the Public Service Commission wrote an opinion some ten pages in length. At the close, under the heading of findings, it stated its conclusions of law. Nowhere was there an attempt made to comply with the command of the statute as to findings of fact. The last sentence of sec.
"Considered as an opinion, the document is admirable and is really all that an opinion should be; considered as a response to the statutory requirement that the trial judge should state in his decision `the facts found by him,' it is all that such a response should not be."
The court then goes on to state what constitutes findings of fact, and gives an illustration by stating the ultimate facts in that case. With this decision before it, no agency should have any difficulty in preparing findings of fact which state the ultimate conclusions upon each contested issue of fact and do that without reciting the evidence. It is to be hoped that all administrative agencies will take note of and comply with the provisions of sec.
By the Court. — So much of the judgment as vacates and sets aside the decision of the commission is affirmed. That part of the judgment which directs the issuance of the certificate is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court with directions to remit the record to the defendant for further proceedings according to law. *82
Dissenting Opinion
I concur in the decision of the court in so far as it reverses the judgment of the circuit court, but am of the opinion that the mandate should direct the circuit court to confirm the order of the commission.
In determining whether a certificate of public convenience and necessity should issue, it is not just a matter of the length of a route nor that a time-saving schedule may be constructed. The question the commission must answer is: Is the public getting a service that in the commission's opinion after a review of the evidence is sufficient?
The statute reads: "The commission shall have power, as the public interest may require, upon a finding of public convenience and necessity, to issue or refuse any such certificate or amendment or to issue it for the partial exercise only of the privilege sought." Sec.
The power of the state to limit the number of common carriers operating over highway routes springs from its power regulate the use of highways and common carriers under the police power of the state. See United Parcel Service v. PublicService Comm. (1942)
When the court decides that the commission's action in denying a certificate is reversible because, in the judgment of the court, there is no evidence that it would not be more convenient to have an additional carrier operating on the particular route involved, it is clearly exercising a legislative function. Since, in this case, there is evidence that the existing service is adequate and satisfactory, the court cannot substitute its judgment as to the desirability of issuing the certificate. The commission's denial should be sustained.
I am authorized to state that Mr. Justice FOWLER concurs in this opinion. *85