141 Va. 179 | Va. | 1925
delivered the opinion of the court.
On July 1, 1924, the State Corporation Commission, in a proceeding in which the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company was respondent, entered an order granting a certificate of public convenience and necessity to the Virginia Beach Bus Line, Incorporated, for the operation of three motor vehicles for the transportation of passengers between Norfolk and Virginia Beach. The case is here on an appeal from that order.
Among the facts contained in the statement of facts certified by the Commission are these:
Norfolk and Virginia Beach are two municipalities about sixteen miles apart, the former being located on Elizabeth river and the latter on the Atlantic ocean. For twenty-five or more years these, two municipalities have been connected by the electrical division of Norfolk Southern Railroad Company. The tracks .and trains of the company now start from the union depot in the city of Norfolk and run through the city to Haynes avenue, and thence by what is known as the south route direct to Lake Station at Virginia Beach, where the line turns northwardly, paralleling the Atlantic ocean through Virginia Beach and on to Cape Henry, at the mouth of Chesapeake bay, and thence by what is known as the north route back to Haynes avenue and to union depot, thus making a complete loop.
The union depot is in the east end of the city of Norfolk, near the wharves, and its line to Virginia Beach runs through the eastern end of the city. The •distance from union depot to 17th street station, the
Virginia Beach is a summer resort with a population of approximately 1,600 people, and during the summer months of June, July and August has a large-temporary population, and on holidays and week-ends, there is a large movement of passengers between Norfolk and Virginia Beach.
Twice each year, just before and just after the-summer season, Norfolk Southern Railroad officials invite a conference with the public of Virginia Beach and Norfolk, for the purpose of establishing schedules-which will be mutually satisfactory. From September 1st to June 1st, which is considered the winter season, Norfolk Southern Railroad Company operates twenty-six trains daily from and to Virginia Beach direct, thirteen each way, and eighteen trains, nine each way, from Norfolk to Virginia Beach, via Cape Henry, thus-making twenty-two trains each way between Norfolk and Virginia Beach. These trains, on the average, are composed of a motor car and trailer, both carrying passengers, with a seating capacity of approximately fifty passengers per car, and during these nine months-the average number of passengers per car is twelve.
During the months of June, July and August, which are considered the summer season, Norfolk Southern Railroad Company operates between Norfolk and. Virginia Beach fifty regular daily trains, that is to say twenty-five in each direction, fifteen of which operate in each direction between Norfolk and Virginia Beach,
State highway No. 10 starts where the Princess Anne road, one of the streets of Norfolk, crosses the Virginian Railroad, which is the boundary line of the city of Norfolk, and runs to 17th street, Virginia Beach, at the western boundary of the town, a distance of sixteen and a fraction miles. Eighteenth street runs from the western boundary, eastwardly, to the ocean front. Atlantic boulevard, in Virginia Beach, runs north and south, paralleling the ocean and about one block therefrom, crossing 17th street. Seventeenth street from the western boundary of the town to Atlantic boulevard is hard surfaced, as is Atlantic boulevard from 17th street to the northern boundary of the town. Seventeenth street crosses the Norfolk Southern Railroad tracks at the 17th street station. Atlantic boulevard is between the railroad and the ocean front, one block from each.
State highway No. 10 is sixteen feet wide. There are sixteen roads, most of Iwhieh are unimproved,
This State highway substantially parallels the south, or direct route of Norfolk Southern Railroad between Norfolk and Virginia Beach for its entire length.. The distance between the two varies from 1,000 to-5,200 feet. From 17th street, in Virginia Beach, north to Hollies, outside of the northern boundary of the town, Atlantic boulevard is one city block from, the railroad.
Applicant’s petition was for permission to operate from Boush street and City Hall avenue, in the city of Norfolk, on Boush street to Plume street, on Plume street to Bank street, on Bank street to Princess Anne road, on Princess Anne road to State highway No. 10, on State highway No. 10, as stated in the petition, to Atlantic boulevard,' Virginia Beach (but actually to-17th street, Virginia Beach), on 17th street, Virginia-Beach, to Atlantic boulevard, on Atlantic boulevard to 40th street, Virginia Beach, a total distance of twenty-three and one-tenth miles, four and nine-tenths miles in the city of Norfolk, and two and one-tenth miles-being in the town of Virginia Beach.
In the territory extending from Norfolk to Virginia. Beach, with a width of two miles, with State highway No. 10 as the center, there are approximately 460 houses, one-third of which are occupied by colored people.
The applicant, at the time of the application and hearing, had not obtained authority from the town of Virginia Beach to operate on and over its streets. The municipality of Virginia Beach, through its council, passed a resolution protesting against the granting of a certificate for the operation of the proposed bus line between Norfolk and Virginia Beach. The council of
The jitney lines operating in the city of Norfolk haul 25,000 people per day from Ghent, West Ghent, ■Colonial Place, Park Place, Algonquin Park, Lochaven, Lambert’s Point and other sections of Norfolk, comprising the best residential and most thickly populated : sections of the city and served only partially by the ■street car lines. Applicant expects to make some • arrangement with the jitney lines operating in the city of Norfolk for transfers between the proposed bus line and the jitneys.
The city of Norfolk is now laying a sixteen inch water main on State highway No. 10 from the city of Norfolk to Virginia Beach at a cost of $300,000.
The statute in force at the time the certificate was .granted is found in chapter 161 of the Acts of 1923, as amended by chapter 222, Acts of 1924, page 330.
Section 2 of the act reads in part as follows: “But all such persons, * * or corporations * * shall be required only to obtain from the State Corporation Commission a certificate or permit to operate motor vehicles so employed over the improved public highways ■of this State, which is, or may hereafter be, declared to be a part of the State highway system, or any •county highway system, or the streets of any city or town, and to pay the license fees and charges imposed by section 5 of this act upon motor vehicles of like class *
Section 3 reads in part as follows: “No motor vehicle carrier shall hereafter operate for the transportation of persons or property for compensation on
Section 3 further provides: “The Commission shall have power to grant a certificate A in the following cases: (1) to an applicant to operate in territory already served by any certificate holder under this act,, or to any other common carrier when the public convenience and necessity in such territory are not already being reasonably served by some other certificate holder or other common carrier, provided such applicant proposes to operate on a fixed schedule and to-comply with the other provisions contained in this act and the rules and regulations which may be made by the Commission respecting holders of this class of certificates, and, provided that the existence of a railroad or other motor vehicle carrier in the territory sought to be served by such applicant shall not be sufficient cause for a refusal to grant a certificate, but. may be considered by the Commission as constituting' good cause for limiting the number of vehicles which such applicant may operate on the route mentioned in. his application.”
The Norfolk Southern Railroad Company makes the-following assignments of error:
“1. That the Commission erred in holding that the public convenience and necessity in the territory proposed to be served by the said motor vehicle carrier are not already being reasonably served by railroad, and that the public convenience and necessity required the service proposed to be rendered by the said bus line.
“2. That the Commission erred in entering the order of July 1, 1924, granting a certificate of public convenience and necessity to the bus line to operate pas
“3. That the Commission erred in holding that the service rendered by railroad between Norfolk and Virginia Beach was not adequate service.
“4. That the Commission erred in not holding that the public convenience and necessity in the territory to be served was not already being reasonably served by xailroad.
“5. That the Commission erred in granting said •certificate for the operation of said busses over the streets of the city of Norfolk and the town of Virginia Beach, whereas no permission had been obtained from "the council of the city of Norfolk or the council of the town of Virginia Beach, as required by section 124 of the Constitution of Virginia.
“6. That the Commission erred in granting said •certificate after petitioner had stated that it would not carry colored people, whereas the law specifically provides for the separation of races as contained in chapter .155 of the Code of Virginia.
“7. That the Commission erred in granting said •certificate when the physical facts show conclusively that the proposed schedule filed with the application •cannot be maintained without violating the laws of the State of Virginia regulating the speed of motor vehicles.”
Assignments of error numbers 2, 3 and 4 are necessarily involved in assignment number 1, and these four will be considered together, after we have disposed •of assignments 5 and 6.
Assignment No. 5 alleges that the Commission •erroneously granted the certificate for operation of buses over the streets of the city of Norfolk and the town of Virginia Beach, when no permission had been •obtained from the council of either the city or the town,
Section 124 of the Constitution was ordained primarily for the protection of the cities and towns of the • State. The applicant’s petition states that it is proposed to operate the bus line a distance of four and', nine-tenths miles in the city of Norfolk and two and one-tenth miles in the town of Virginia Beach, yet neither of these municipalities is here complaining of" the action of the Commission in the instant case.. Besides, the order of the Commission now under review grants the petitioner a certificate for the operation of motor vehicle earners, “between Norfolk and Virginia. Beach, Virginia.”
In these circumstances, further discussion of assign- ■ ment No. 5 would be unprofitable.
Assignment of error No. 6, which relates to the • fact that the applicant has stated that it would not carry colored people, is without merit. At the time of' the filing of the application for the certificate, the bus. line had made no provision to haul any one. It had . the right to secure the permit to operate before buying its equipment. This question is not material until the-bus line refuses to carry colored persons and complaint is made. Then the Commission is fully empowered to ehforce compliance with the law.
Assignment of error No. 7 is likewise without merit,, as will hereinafter appear.
This brings us to the first four assignments of error,. which involve the questions of public convenience and. necessity, and the adequacy of the service being rendered by Norfolk Southern Railroad Company.
The statute empowers the Commission to grant a-certificate to an applicant when the public convenience-
Existing transportation systems should be protected so far as compatible with the public interest. There should be no unreasonable or unnecessary duplication of service, to the point that efficient service is made impossible. Subject to these limitations, when the public convenience and necessity require it, the certificate should be granted. The Commission is vested with a sound judicial discretion in these matters. Its conclusions upon the facts are prima facie correct and the court should be slow to disturb them, unless, plainly wrong. A careful consideration of the record convinces us that there is no error in the action of the-Commission in granting Virginia Beach Bus Line,. Incorporated, a certificate of public convenience and necessity for the operation of three motor vehicle carriers between the city of Norfolk and the town of Virginia Beach, Virginia.
The reasons given by the Commission in its opinion filed with the record are so nearly in accord with our views that we hereby adopt the opinion of the Commission as a part of the opinion of the court in the case,, as follows:
“The Commission is of opinion, without in any way questioning the efficiency of the service of the Norfolk Southern Railway Company within the scope of what
“The same facts and reasoning lead to the conclusion that a bus line on this highway would tend to develop the intervening country much more rapidly than it would otherwise develop and to an extent that probably would never be reached from a residential standpoint without some mode of public conveyance on the highway, and it is a matter of public convenience and necessity that a bus line should operate in order to bring about the development of the intervening country which probably can never be brought about by the present line of the Norfolk Southern Railway Company.
“From the standpoint of through traffic between the city of Norfolk and Virginia Beach, the Commis.sion considers among other things the size of the city of Norfolk; which by the latest census, 1920, is judicially noticed to be approximately 115,777, and the size of Virginia Beach, especially during the summer •season, its character as a summer resort, and the character of the city of Norfolk from a physical stand
“The objection that Norfolk Southern is physically capable of carrying all persons desiring to travel-between Norfolk and Virginia Beach; that it is not a highly successful enterprise; that its traffic will be curtailed, while elements to be duly considered are not-
“If the travel is cut down and the resources cut down to the extent apprehended, the answer is that such situation may be met by a curtailment of service in proportion to and with due regard to the reasonable requirements of the traveling public.
“Objection as to maintenance of the schedule of the bus line within the provisions of the State traffic laws is not deemed by the Commission pertinent to the only question before the Commission, viz., whether public convenience and necessity will be served since it is not a matter of concern to the Norfolk Southern Railway as to whether the bus line operator conforms to such law. If it does not, it is amenable to the proper authorities and any schedule that makes it requisite that the traffic laws be broken can and will be modified by the Commission so that conformity to the law is possible. If such a modified schedule were not such as to appeal to the traveling public the consequences would fall upon the bus line and the railroad company would be the beneficiary. In other words, the impossibility of conforming to the law under a proposed schedule has no bearing, in the opinion of the Commission, upon the question of public convenience and necessity unless it can be shown that such a schedule, that is a schedule impossible to operate under legally, is the only schedule that would satisfy the requirements of- public convenience and necessity.
“While the Commission is not influenced to any material extent by the expression of desire on the part of citizens for an additional mode of transportation in their vicinity, since it is the natural desire of any citizen to have all the methods of transportation possible,
“As previously stated, the Commission by no means holds nor implies that the Norfolk Southern is not rendering reasonable and proper service. It does hold that the record supports the conclusion that the Norfolk Southern does not and cannot under physical and other facts hold itself out to serve the public along State highway No. 10, nor through traffic desirous of a reasonably convenient and different mode of transportation between the two terminals. In other words, the public convenience and necessity will be served by the bus line by means, over a route and in a manner not possible to be served by the Norfolk Southern, without in any way reflecting upon that company as a carrier between the two points involved.”
The order of the Commission, granting the certificate to operate three buses between the city of Norfolk and the town of Virginia Beach, will be affirmed.
Affirmed.