57 S.W.2d 290 | Tex. App. | 1933
This appeal and the appeals in the cases of Railroad Commission et al. v. Jacob T. Bradberry, 57 S.W.2d 294; Railroad Commission et al. v. R M. Rodgers, 57 S.W.2d 294, and Railroad Commission et al. v. George A. Scott Truck Line,
The Attorney General correctly contends for the Railroad Commission that in each appeal the petition for the temporary injunction failed to allege sufficient facts to authorize the court to grant the writ when interpreted in the light of the rule or principle upon which the court acts in reviewing any order of the Railroad Commission. The specific contention is that since each appeal is a statutory appeal under section 20 of the Motor Carrier Act (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art.
It is further contended in this connection that the petition in each case is specifically deficient when viewed in the light of the well-settled rule applicable to petitions for injunctions, to the effect that the "averment of material and essential elements must be sufficiently certain to negative every inference of the existence of facts under which plaintiff would not be entitled to the relief." Gills v. Rosenheimer,
The general rule that as against a general demurrer every reasonable intendment is indulged in favor of the sufficiency of the pleading is not applicable to petitions for injunction as held by the above authorities.
We have chosen this case in which to write the initial opinion, and the principles of law announced will be applied to the facts stated in the other cases by reference to this case as the Forwarding Company Case.
The appellee Forwarding Company alleged that for many years prior and subsequent to *292
the passage of chapter
1. That the order was unreasonable and unjust (a) because it deprived appellee of engaging in a lawful business which it had engaged in for many years prior to the cancellation of the permit; (b) there was no evidence to support the drastic order of the Railroad Commission; and (c) because the commission acted without lawful authority in canceling said permit and in refusing to issue appellee a contract carrier permit, in that there was no testimony offered that would indicate that the granting of such permit would impair the efficiency of public service of any common carrier then serving the same territory. As held in the Shupee Case,
2. That the order of the commission was unjust and unreasonable and unconstitutional in that it contravenes section 1 of the 14th amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in that the denial of said permit constituted the taking of appellee's property without due process of law, and that the same impaired the obligations of appellee's outstanding contracts. This contention has been decided adversely to appellee by the Supreme Court of the United States in the recent case of Stephenson v. Binford,
Ex parte Sterling (Tex.Sup.)
The Stephenson v. Binford Case, supra, further holds that the matter of denying the use of the highways to private persons or corporations for the operation of motor vehicles for private gain was a subject wholly within the purview of the Legislature, and that no court had authority to review its action in that respect, because such regulations of its highways merely involved a consideration of the public policy of this state, and with which consideration the courts have no concern. That the act was not unconstitutional because it authorized the Railroad Commission to deny the permit of any contract carrier who had theretofore operated under a Class B permit, and who might have outstanding contracts, even though it did result in modifying or abrogating the contracts already in existence. The court based its decision upon the well-recognized principle that the public highways belonged to the state and were public property; and that any contract with reference to their future use by any individual is to be regarded as having been made subject to the future exercise of the constitutional power of the state through its Legislature to impose such conditions and regulations as public convenience, safety, and necessity might demand. The court further held that in so protecting the state highways for their primary use for the public, the Legislature had the right to impose upon contract carriers for hire the condition that the permit should be refused in the event that common carriers serving the same territory were reasonably adequate to care for all transportation of freight. It is held that the state provides for its highways and pays for their upkeep; that the state is not powerless to protect its highways from being subject to heavy burdens of motor vehicle transportation when other means of transportation are available. The court further held that since common carrier transportation is conceived to be a great public necessity, and one in which all the public is interested, and since the act was a means of both protecting its highways and the maintenance of a reliable and convenient common carrier transportation system, that the Legislature had the right to require that any contract carrier whose operation might interfere with the maintenance of such common carrier service might in the discretion of the Railroad Commission, be prohibited from operation. Like rulings on principle were made by the *293
Commission of Appeals in Ex parte Sterling,
With the exception of these constitutional questions, all other matters relating to the sufficiency of the petition in each of these appeals have been dealt with by this court in the Shupee and Winkle Cases above referred to. We, therefore, do not see that it is necessary to further discuss the questions raised in this specific case.
The temporary injunction granted by the trial court will be dissolved.
Injunction dissolved.