1 A.2d 540 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued April 26, 1938.
O'Donnell Brothers, a copartnership engaged in selling coal, lumber, and liquid fuels, instituted before the Public Utility Commission a complaint seeking to compel the Lehigh Navigation Coal Company, respondent, to allow the copartnership the use of a certain railroad sidetrack under the provisions of Article 2, § 1(o), of the Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374, 66 P. S. § 103. The sidetrack was one constructed by respondent shortly after April 1, 1932, over property leased by it from other corporations, and connecting the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad with the property upon which the copartnership business is conducted. The parties signed an agreement conferring a ten-year license, subject to renewal, upon respondent, and respondent agreed to bear the entire cost of construction and maintenance of the track. Respondent's answer to the complaint averred that the sole purpose *70
of the construction was the delivery of its anthracite coal to the copartnership. A controversy arose concerning deliveries to the copartnership over the sidetrack of coal not purchased from respondent, with the result that respondent at one time tore up part of the sidetrack, but upon being ordered to replace it, by a decree of the Court of Common Pleas No. 5 of Philadelphia County, affirmed by the Supreme Court (
Testimony on the issue was heard by an examiner for the commission, and the commission, after making findings of fact as to the origin of the controversy, the cost of construction and physical maintenance of the various sections of the sidetrack, as well as of rentals paid by respondent for the land over which the sidetrack passed, assessed the cost of the use sought by the copartnership in relation to these items, and sustained the complaint.
The parties later filed of record a stipulation to modify the commission's assessment. Respondent has appealed, and complainants have intervened.
The principal contention of appellant is that the proviso in Section 1(o), Art. 2, of the Act of July 26, 1913, P.L. 1374, 66 P. S. § 103, and the proviso in Section 406, Art. 4, of the Act of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053, 66 P. S. § 1176, are unconstitutional because they violate in two respects Article 3, § 3, of the Constitution, which reads as follows: "No bill, except general appropriation bills, shall be passed containing more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title." Appellant maintains (1) that they would provide for the *71 regulation of the construction and use of private property of miners and shippers of anthracite coal; and (2) that there is no notice in the title of either act that such provisions are contained therein.
Section 406, Art. 4, of the Public Utility Law of 1937, 66 P. S. § 1176, is virtually a reenactment of § 1(o), Art. 2, of the Public Service Company Law of 1913, 66 P. S. § 103, which was in effect at the time of filing the complaint in this case.
Section 1404, Art. 14, of the Public Utility Law of 1937, 66 P. S. § 1534, provides, inter alia, as follows: "All litigations, hearings, investigations, and other proceedings whatsoever, pending under any act repealed by this act, shall continue and remain in full force and effect, and may be continued and completed under the provisions of this act."
For the purpose of the instant case the proviso under Section 406, Art. 4, of the Public Utility Law of 1937, may be considered as a reenactment of the proviso in Section 1(o), Art. 2, of the Public Service Company Law of 1913. The respective sections containing the provisos are printed in the margin.1 *72
The other questions raised in appellant's brief will be given consideration before reverting to the main issue. Appellant first urges upon us that the proviso extends the principal grant of authority, and is a nullity.
Section 406, 66 P. S. § 1176, grants to any owner or *73
operator of any lateral railroad, or any private sidetrack, or any shipper tendering property for transportation, or any consignee, the right to have a switch connection with the line of any railroad under certain conditions. Clearly, the proviso which follows in that section does not enlarge the grant of power which precedes it, but limits the use and enjoyment of such connection when made. If the right is exercised and a switch connection is made, the owner or operator of the sidetrack shall not have an absolute use of it, but such usage shall be subject to the right of others to connect with it and to use it. The proviso qualifies and limits the right granted. See Montgomery v. Martin et al.,
Appellant next states that the provisos in those sections are provisions entirely foreign to the subject-matter of the entire acts, and hence nullities. This position has no more substantial basis than the previous one. The sidetrack which appellant built, when connected with the Pennsylvania Railroad, constituted a part of the railroad's transportation facilities in the same manner as if constructed by the railroad company itself. The railroad's right of way and tracks are its private property, but subject to public use. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.v. Public Service Commission,
Among the matters which are fairly relative and germane to the regulation of public utilities is the regulation of the facilities of such utilities. The definition of facilities, contained in the Public Utility Law, Art. 1, § 2 (10), 66 P. S. § 1102, is as follows: "`Facilities' means all the plant and equipment of a public utility, including all tangible and intangible real and personal property without limitation, and any and all means and instrumentalities in any manner owned, operated, leased, licensed, used, controlled, furnished, or supplied for, by, or in connection with, the business of any public utility. . . . . . ."
Article 1, § 1, of the Public Service Company Law,
In Overlook Development Co. v. Public Service Commission,
We are of the opinion that the sidetrack involved in the instant case was a facility of the railroad company; *75 that the provisos of Section 1(o) and Section 406 are not foreign to the subject-matter of the acts of which they are a part; that the regulation of such facilities of a utility is germane to the regulation of public utilities as provided by the respective acts.
Appellant's argument that the Public Utility Law contains the general provisions for the regulation of public utilities, and if the proviso in Section 406 is made applicable, as in the instant case, it would provide for the regulation of the construction and use of private property, in violation of Article 3, § 3, of the Constitution, has been partially answered. Appellant's argument was likewise directed to the Public Service Company Law, and the proviso in Section 1(o), Art. 2 thereof. Appellant's business of mining and shipping anthracite coal was not the subject of regulation under the provisos; they in no way relate to the regulation of appellant's business or property used for such purpose. But when appellant's property becomes a facility of a public utility, such property becomes subject to regulation not as the private property of appellant as a miner and shipper of anthracite coal, but as part of the railroad company's facilities. Appellant, by its own conduct, clothed its property in question with the character of a utility facility, subject to public use upon the payment of reasonable compensation; it voluntarily made its property a utility facility.
The real question in the case is whether the titles of the Public Service Company Law2 and the Public *76 Utility Law3 give sufficient notice of the particular ramifications of the subject. Appellant argues that the provisos, requiring a person who builds a private sidetrack *77 and secures a switch connection to permit others to connect with such sidetrack or to use it, contravene Article 3, § 3, of the Constitution, above quoted. The subject of the two statutes is the regulation of public utilities. The sidetrack in question was a facility of the *78 Pennsylvania Railroad Company. It provided access to its lines, and was used by the railroad in connection with its business as a public service company. Having been connected with its lines, the sidetrack formed part of its transportation system. The control of such sidetrack, although privately owned, is therefore a matter of public interest, and included, as we view it, in the subject of regulation of public utilities.
In Payne et al. v. School District of Coudersport Borough etal.,
". . . . . . the constitutional provision as to titles was intended to curb `the vicious practice . . . . . . of incorporating in one bill a variety of distinct and independent subjects of legislation [the real purpose of which] was often and sometimes intentionally disguised by a misleading title or covered by the all-comprehensive phrase, "and for other purposes" with which the title of many "omnibus" bills concluded': Road inPhoenixville,
In Commonwealth v. Stofchek,
We are of the opinion that the titles of the acts are *80
sufficient, and that they indicate a general subject to which the provisions involved are germane. See James v. PublicService Commission,
In determining the validity of legislative enactments our Supreme Court, in Reeves et al. v. Philadelphia Suburban WaterCo.,
Guided by the principles which have been enunciated in the foregoing cases, and others of similar import, we can arrive at no conclusion other than that the titles of the acts do not violate Article 3, § 3, of the Constitution for any of the reasons which appellant has assigned.
It follows that the commission had power to make its order under the facts in the instant case notwithstanding the agreement between the parties, dated April 1, 1932, and subsequent to the enactment of the Public Service Company Law of 1913. See Wilkes-Barre Railway *81 Corp. v. Public Service Commission et al.,
The order of the commission was in conformity with the law and the facts as shown by the record, and is affirmed, at the cost of appellant.
Section 406, Art. 4, of the Act of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1053, 66 P. S. § 1176: "Every public utility engaged in a railroad business shall, upon application of any owner or operator of any lateral railroad, or any private sidetrack, or of any shipper tendering property for transportation, or of any consignee, construct, maintain, and operate, at a reasonable place and upon reasonable terms, a switch connection with any such lateral railroad or private sidetrack which may be constructed to connect with its railroad, where such connection may be reasonably practicable and can be put in with safety, and will furnish sufficient business to justify the construction and maintenance of the same: Provided, That whenever any lateral line of railroad or private sidetrack has been so connected with a line of any railroad, or whenever any owner of such lateral railroad or private sidetrack has at any time heretofore sold or leased, or shall hereafter sell or lease, such lateral railroad or sidetrack to any public utility engaged in a railroad business, any person or corporation, including a municipal corporation, shall be entitled to connect therewith, or to use the same upon payment to the party incurring the primary expense thereof of a reasonable proportion of the cost of such lateral railroad or private sidetrack, and of the maintenance thereof, which shall be determined, in case of disagreement among the parties, by the commission, after notice to the interested parties, and a hearing: Provided, That such connection and use can be made without unreasonable interference with the use thereof by the party incurring the primary expense of owning or leasing such lateral railroad or sidetrack."