47 F. Supp. 444 | D. Or. | 1942
JAMES ALGER FEE, District Judge.
Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc., was granted authority to conduct certain designated motor carrier operations in interstate commerce between Portland, Oregon, and San Francisco, California, by order of the Interstate Commerce Commission under the applicable statute.
The record seems to show adequate basis in pleading by the supplemental application, if not the original, for the allowance of these rights. Nor is this position shaken by the recitals of certain colloquies between counsel at certain of the hearings. The Commission controls the adjective regulations of proceedings before it, and there is no doubt that the matter was fully and clearly presented. Courts in reviewing proceedings should look through form to substance. If a matter has been fairly heard, especially before an administrative body, no order or finding should be overturned because of formal defect. Furthermore, this is not a question of procedure. The rights claimed by the applicant or disclaimed cannot control the performance of the specific duty, if it be found such is, enjoined upon the Commission by the terms of 208, to consider public necessity and convenience in placing terms, limitations or conditions upon the right to which applicant was found to be entitled under the provisions of 206(a).
There is no direct finding in the report of the Commission that the Pierce Lines transported property between points intermediate to Portland and Drain during the critical period. A review of the record also shows that the proof did not establish transportation between such points. There is, however, clear evidence that during this time goods were carried from points intermediate to Portland and Drain both to Portland and to points south of Drain and were carried to said intermediate points from Portland and from points south of Drain.
The order is, therefore, in this narrow respect unsupported by the evidence. But it is contended by the United States and the Commission that the latter had power by statute to permit or compel Pierce Lines to carry property without limitation to and from such intermediate points.
Legislation was enacted to bring the motor transport industry under control and prevent abuses of unsafe and uneconomic operation in that field. If the industry had not been already in existence, a more symmetrical operation throughout could have been planned. The only excuse for invading the field was ¡the public convenience and necessity. In view of the immense sums of money invested in equipment and facilities, Congress granted rights of operation along the route or routes or within the territory previously served by a carrier. To have done otherwise would have amounted to virtual confiscation. By the process valuable property rights were conserved.
In the earlier phases of enforcement with the approval of the courts, the Commission strictly construed the rights and privileges confirmed by the legislative expression by finding limitations and conditions precedent therein in accordance with their construction of Congressional policy and the public interest. This tendency toward too narrow construction of the rights confirmed to existing carriers has latterly been checked by highest authority.
It was obvious that some provision was required which would permit the Commission, while confirming all privileges and rights guaranteed to the existing carriers by the statute, to lay the foundations of a consistent transportation system by modifying other operations in accordance with a symmetrical plan in the public interest.
Congress, in order to render the elimination of excrescences more easy and the building of the transportation structure more symmetrical, by Section 208 gave the Commission power to prescribe “terms, conditions, and limitations as the public convenience and necessity may * * * require”.
While the Commission had no power to take away any rights or privileges thus confirmed by Congress to an established operator, they could place such terms in the certificate as were required by public necessity to make the operations conducted thereunder consistent with operations carried on by others and convenient for the public. While an applicant might be deprived of the right to serve certain points to which he had actually transported property during the critical period, if he failed to ask for such rights in his application, the reverse is not true, since the Commission could add such terms or conditions, even if he were unwilling.
The statute does not require any pleading or notice by the Commission of their intention to impose such terms, conditions or limitations in the public interest. Certainly, there is no requirement that applicant for a “grandfather” certificate pray that such clauses be added to his certificate. No notice is required to competitors, because the statute assumes that the public and the applicant are alone interested in the granting of a “grandfather” certificate.
In confirming existing rights by certificate or in adding terms, conditions and limitations thereto, the Commission need not be concerned whether the operation permitted by the certificate so limited was pleasing to the applicant for “grandfather” rights, nor whether on the whole it would be profitable. Otherwise, an applicant could forget the portion of the territory previously served by him which might prove unprofitable and ask only for that which was sure to make money, irrespective of the public interest, and the Commission would be powerless. Further, the Commission could not be controlled by the question whether such an addition to the certificate would be pleasing or profitable to a competitor. Otherwise, the results would be obvious. Congress intended the public interest to be paramount in this regard.
The mere fact that the evidence does not show that Pierce Lines in the past had covered these intermediate points in all possible combinations and permutations did not prevent the Commission from imposing on the carrier the necessity of transporting property between these intermediate points, as well as to and from such points, as a condition to the exercise of the privileges confirmed by the certificate.
The order of the Commission is valid and is upheld.
The complaint is dismissed.
The references to Sections 206(a) and 208 indicate these portions of Motor Carrier Act of 1935, now incorporated in Part II, Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U. S.C.A. §§ 306(a), 308.
28 U.S.C.A. § 41(28), §§ 43-48.
See Mississippi Valley Barge Line Company v. United States, 292 U.S. 282, 286, 54 S.Ct. 692, 78 L.Ed. 1260.
See Rochester Telephone Corp. v. United States, 307 U.S. 125, 59 S.Ct. 754, 83 L.Ed. 1147.
United States et al. v. Carolina Freight Carriers Corporation, 315 U.S. 475, 62 S.Ct. 722, 86 L.Ed. 971.
United States v. Maher, 307 U.S. 148, 59 S.Ct. 768, 83 D.Ed. 1162.
See Interstate Commerce Commission v. Chicago, Kock Island & Pacific Kailway Company, 218 U.S. 88, 103, 30 S.Ct. 651, 54 D.Ed. 946.
But see Alton Bailroad v. United States, 315 U.S. 15, 62 S.Ct. 432, 86 L.Ed. 586.
Clarence Tarbet Common Carrier Application, 31 M.C.C. 63, 66, 67.
The applicant here desires the rights in controversy. See United States v. Carolina Freight Carriers Corporation, supra, 315 U.S. 488, 62 S.Ct. 729, 86 L.Ed. 971, where the court, dealing with the case where the carrier desired such rights, say: “To freeze them into the precise pattern of their prior activities as was done here not only may alter materially the basic characteristics of their service; it also may well be tantamount to a denial of their statutory rights.”