219 P. 983 | Cal. | 1923
The petitioner seeks a writ of mandate to compel the Railroad Commission of the state of California to assume jurisdiction of and to hear and determine a complaint which the petitioner filed with said Commission. In this complaint the petitioner asked the Commission to order the Los Angeles Railway Corporation to extend certain of its street-car lines in the city of Los Angeles into the territory constituting a part of the city and known as Hollywood. After hearing argument on the question the Commission although of the opinion that it had power to make the order prayed for, dismissed the complaint without receiving any evidence, on the ground that it would be to the advantage of all parties and of the public generally if the question of jurisdiction was determined by this court prior to an exhaustive hearing on the merits.
The Hollywood district, as shown by the official map attached to the petition on file herein, occupies a strip of land about five miles long from east to west and three miles wide from north to south, lying along the northwesterly edge, but contiguous to the main residence district, of the city of Los Angeles. This community, formerly a city of the sixth class, has a large population, with business houses, studios, churches, and residences. One main line of the *309 Pacific Electric Railway Company connects Hollywood with the downtown district of Los Angeles. This line runs north from the downtown district until it reaches the western edge of Hollywood, where it turns west, and from that point it branches, and two lines run approximately parallel and about one-half mile apart through the entire territory from east to west. With the exception of two lines of minor importance and the main line first mentioned, there is no north to south service through this territory or connecting it with the main residence district of Los Angeles.
The Los Angeles Railway Corporation maintains a streetcar system throughout the greater part of the city of Los Angeles. Five of its lines which run in a northerly direction approach or touch at various points the southern edge of the Hollywood community, two of them extending into it for a short distance. These five lines are the ones which the Railroad Commission is requested to order the owner thereof to extend, the extensions desired ranging from one-half to two or three miles.
The Pacific Electric Railway and the Los Angeles Railway companies in a brief filed in their behalf contend that the Commission has no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed, alleging various reasons based on constitutional provisions protecting property rights, including section 1 of article XIV, and article V of the amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
The city of Los Angeles also filed a brief as amicus curiae in opposition to the application for the writ of mandate, contending that by reason of various provisions of the constitution of California and of the municipal charter of Los Angeles the Railroad Commission has no jurisdiction to order the extensions here sought, the power in that behalf resting in that municipality.
Under the view which we take of this case it is only necessary for us to consider the question whether any state agency, be it Railroad Commission or municipality, has power to order the extensions here in question.
What is in effect sought to be accomplished by the proceeding before the Railroad Commission is to compel the Los Angeles Railway Corporation to construct ten and one-half miles of double track railroad at its own expense, amounting to a sum in excess of one million and a half dollars, *310 and dedicate such railroad to public use, in a territory which it does not now and has not heretofore undertaken to serve; and it is argued in support of the application that the Commission possesses authority to make such order by virtue of section 36 of the Public Utilities Act (Stats. 1915, p. 115), which confers upon that body very wide powers in the regulation of the service of public utilities. The railway company, on the other hand, urges that obedience to such an order would be tantamount to depriving it and its shareholders of their property without due process of law, with the result of denying to them the equal protection of the laws, in that their property would be taken and appropriated to public use without just or any compensation, while all other classes of persons are guaranteed by the constitution of the state (art. I, sec. 14) that their property shall not be so taken except upon making just compensation.
[1] We entertain no doubt that neither the Railroad Commission nor any other governmental agency possesses such power. [2] It has been repeatedly held by this court and by the supreme court of the United States that railroads are private property, the owners of which, in common with other property owners, are under the protection of national and state constitutions. (Interstate Commerce Commission v. Chicago, G. W. R. Co.,
[3] Within the field of original dedication the regulative authority has ample freedom of action, as a public utility undertaking to supply a given public need submits itself to the regulation and control of public authority with respect to the service it has undertaken. Thus, improved train service may be required, as may switching connections between railroads. But all of these requirements represent a legal exercise of the police power, under which the state may regulate the service which the public utility has undertaken to give the public. It is obvious that an order compelling extensions and service in a field not embraced within the limits of its enterprise is of a totally different character.
The Railroad Commission, in an opinion filed in connection with its order in this matter, recognizes the principle that a public utility cannot be required to dedicate its property to a new and additional enterprise not theretofore *312 undertaken by it, but contends that the undertaking to serve is not limited by the franchises which the utility holds, but is a question of fact to be determined from all the circumstances attending the organization of the company.
[4] To us it seems beyond question that the extent of the obligation of the Los Angeles Railway Corporation to serve the public, although not necessarily limited by the street-car lines now in operation, is limited and defined by the franchises under which it operates. To hold otherwise is to disregard the basic principle that railroads are private property devoted to a public use, and would be a departure from the doctrine enunciated in Atchison etc. Ry. Co. v. RailroadCom., supra, namely, that a railroad company cannot be compelled to dedicate its property to a new service.
The argument of the Railroad Commission seems to be predicated upon the erroneous assumption that a street railway company's public duty is analogous to the duties of a water, gas, electric power, or telephone company, which are required to expand their facilities to meet the demands of a growing community. (Lukrawka v. Spring Valley Water Co.,
We are of the opinion that the following decisions of public utility commissions in other states lend support to the conclusion which is herein reached: In Re Union R. Co. (1916, N Y), P. U. R. Ann. 1916F, 773, it was held that the power of the Commission to require an extension of a street-car line depended upon the question whether the company possessed the franchise right to operate over the street on which the extension is desired. In City of Scranton v. Scranton Rys. Co.
(1915, Pa.), P. U. R. 1915C, 890, 893, the Pennsylvania Commission said: "The charter of a street railway company specifies its route and designates the streets upon which it shall be constructed, and also the termini. Before it can construct its route, consent must be obtained from the municipality, which can prescribe conditions under which the franchise is granted. After construction, extensions can only be made by a vote of its stockholders authorizing said extension, and consent of the municipality is again necessary, if permission to make said extension was not granted in the original franchise. To hold, therefore, that the Commission had power to order a street railway company to make an extension beyond points named in its charter would be in effect to compel the stockholders *314
to authorize the extension, and to require the company to enter into a contract with the municipality upon any terms which it might impose." Similar results were reached in the cases ofAllied Associations v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. (1917, Pa.), P. U. R. 1917E, 945, State ex rel. United R. Co. v.Public Service Com. (1917),
[5] We conclude, therefore, that section 36 of the Public Utilities Act (Stats. 1915, p. 115), in so far as it seeks to confer jurisdiction upon the Railroad Commission to order a street railway company to extend its lines into a new territory in which it has no franchises, is ineffective for that purpose and to that extent void.
The writ of mandate is denied.
Waste, J., Lawlor, J., Seawell, J., Lennon, J., and Wilbur, C. J., concurred.
Myers, J., being disqualified, did not participate in the foregoing decision.
Rehearing denied.
*315All the Justices concurred.