OPINION
McWood Corporation (hereafter termed McWood) sought review by the district court of an order of the State Corporation Commission (hereafter termed Commission), requiring McWood to cease and desist from transporting crude oil for hire without a certificate of public convenience and necessity. That court reviewed the Commission’s order in the manner provided by § 64-27-68, N.M.S.A.1953, concluded that the Commission’s findings were supported by substantial evidence, and affirmed the order. This appeal followed.
At the outset, we call attention to McWood’s contention that it was not given a full, fair and impartial hearing before the Commission. The view we take of other questions makes it unnecessary to resolve the merits of that point. However, we feel compelled to note that the trial court erred insofar as it found McWood’s complaint in this respect to be without merit because “this was brought about, in part, by the activities of plaintiff in refusing to obey two subpoenas duces tecum.” It is abundantly clear that McWood’s failure to obey the Commission’s subpoena could not justify the denial of a full, fair and impartial hearing. Obedience to the subpoena, if it properly called for production of records, could have been enforced by application to the district court. Sec. 64-27-41, N.M.S.A.1953. The Commission, however, apparently decided to proceed with the hearing without the records it had requested.
The Commission’s authority under the Motor Carrier Act, § 64-27-1 et seq., N.M.S.A.1953, is expressly limited to the supervision and regulation of the transportation for hire of persons and property by motor vehicle over the public highways. Sec. 64-27-1, N.M.S.A.1953.
The term “for hire,” as used in this context, was defined in Rountree v. State Corp. Comm’n,
“Compensation ‘for hire’ must necessarily be paid by one who hires, so in transporting his own goods a carrier does not come within the statutory definition of ‘contract motor carrier for hire’ as no one ‘hires’ him.”
It is not disputed that McWood bought and sold all of the oil it is charged with having transported. The Commission, however, forcefully argues that if the purchase and sale of the commodity transported is a mere subterfuge to avoid the requirements of the Motor Carrier Act, the carriage may, nevertheless, be one “for hire” requiring a permit. Brooks Transp. Co. v. United States,
The fact that title to the oil being transported was vested in McWood does not alone compel the conclusion that McWood was not a carrier for hire. Scott v. Interstate Commerce Comm’n,
It remains to be determined, however, whether the Commission’s findings applying the “primary business” theory are supported. We recognize that this court makes the same review of the proceeding before the administrative agency as did the district court. Such a review is limited to the record of the proceeding before the agency and is governed by the substantial-evidence rule. Ferguson-Steere Motor Co. v. State Corp. Comm’n,
Substantial evidence was defined in Wilson v. Employment Sec. Comm’n,
“ * * * more than merely any evidence and more than a scintilla of evidence and contemplates such relevant legal evidence as a reasonable person might accept as sufficient to support a conclusion.”
See, Consolidated Edison Co. of New York v. National L. R. Bd.,
In summary, the Commission found that McWood purchases crude oil at its place of production in this State, transports it by motor truck, and sells and delivers it to purchasers at refineries or pipelines. This much seems undisputed. The Commission went on, however, to make crucial eviden-tiary findings to the effect, (1) that Mc-Wood knows prior to any purchase of crude oil that a market is available, the location of this market, and the quantity and price at which it will sell the crude oil; (2) that the distance McWood will have to transport the oil to its place of sale is a principal factor in determining McWood’s purchase price; and (3) that the difference between the purchase price and sale price is substantially related to the tariff price of certified carriers for the transportation of the oil. From these findings followed the Commission’s finding 15:
“That the primary business, past and present, of McWood Corporation within the State of New Mexico was and is in the transportation of crude oil by motor vehicle for hire both in intrastate and interstate commerce.”
To support these findings, it would be necessary to trace, by competent legal evidence, the purchase of specific crude oil from the place where it was loaded onto McWood trucks, to the person to whom it was delivered or sold, together with evidence of the price paid and the price received for that particular oil, and, in order. to establish the tariff price, the number of • miles the particular load of oil was transported.
Out review of the record in this case-discloses evidence of'the existence of certain contracts under which McWood . was to purchase crude oil at specified r prices, and of other contracts by which McWood agreed to sell specified quantities of crude oil to named customers at the posted price for such oil. There is a total. failure of evidence, however, to show that the oil contracted to be purchased was the same oil transported and sold under the other contracts, or the distance such oil was actually transported. Absent a tracing of specific loads of oil from purchase to sale and delivery by legally competent evidence, we are not persuaded that the Commission’s findings in relation to McWood’s primary business have the requisite foundation. Mere hearsay or rumor, and the testimony of “competitors” respecting the mode of operation of their own transportation for hire business does not constitute substantial evidence so as to support findings concerning the operation of McWood’s business. See Consolidated Edison Co. of New York v. Nat’l L. R. Bd., supra; see, also, Red Ball Motor Freight Lines, Inc. v. Shannon, supra; Interstate Commerce Comm’n v. Woodall Food Products Co.,
It would serve no useful purpose to lengthen this opinion by detailing the evidence. We are satisfied that the order of the Commission directed to McWood requiring it to cease and desist from transporting crude oil rested upon findings unsupported by substantial evidence, and that the district court erred in its conclusion that such findings are sustained by the evidence. Where the findings are not' supported by substantial evidence, the order is neither lawful nor reasonable as required by § 64-27-68, supra. See Western Oil Transp. Co. v. State Corp. Comm’n,
It is so ordered.
