97 S.W.2d 991 | Tex. App. | 1936
This suit brought by appellee is in the nature of an appeal from an order of the Railroad Commission passed December 19, 1934, which set aside an order of the commission passed March 29, 1934, which last-named order granted to appellee a common carrier certificate to operate a line of trucks over certain public highways of Texas in the transportation of interstate freight exclusively; and for ancillary injunctive relief. Upon a trial to the court without a jury, the judgment was in favor of appellee perpetually enjoining appellants (the commission and its members) from interfering with appellee in operating under the order of March 29, 1934. The commission has appealed. Since no conclusions of fact or law were filed or requested, all fact issues are resolved in favor of the judgment.
We have reached the conclusion that the trial court’s judgment should be affirmed upon the holding that the commission was without power to set aside its order of March 29, 1934. We therefore pretermit discussion of other issues presented, and confine our statement of the case to this issue.
Appellee had been engaged in the business of transporting freight for hire by motortrucks for many years prior to the first statute, popularly referred to as the Old Law (Acts 1929, 41st Leg., p. 698, c. 314), placing the regulation of such business under the jurisdiction of the Railroad Commission. Under that law appellee obtained and continuously operated under a class B (contract carrier) permit. When the law was amended in 1931 (Acts 42d Leg. p. 480, c. 277, popularly called the New Law [Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art 911b, § 1
The protestants represented by the attorney for the Railway General Managers Association filed with the Motor-Transport Division of the commission what is styled a motion “for rehearing” and motion “for opportunity to present argument to the Commission wherein its opinion and order granting said application is contrary to the evidence before said Commission and is not supported by evidence before said Commission and is not supported by evidence in the record, nor can it be supported by actual condition upon said highways.”
The motion was dated April 18, 1934, but the file marks showed that it was received in the department on April 19, 1934, or one day too late under the above rule. The attorney who prepared this motion testified some eighteen months after the occurrence, that he filed the motion on April 18th. If the commission had jurisdiction to entertain such motion, but such jurisdiction was dependent upon its being filed within the prescribed twenty .days, we would be constrained to hold in support of the judgment that the trial court was not required as a matter of law to accept the testimony of. an interested witness as to his recollection of a transaction which occurred a year and a half before, against the record evidence of the commission, as shown by the file marks on the motion.
No further action was taken in the matter by the commission until October 30, 1934, when a general notice was issued that the commission “will hear oral argument in * * * on November 12, 1934, at 10:00 o’clock a. m. on the following applications Then followed a list by docket number and style of eleven applications, among them: “Docket No. 9186 — Wald Transfer & Storage Co. for an Interstate Contract Carrier Permit from Galveston and Houston to Dallas, Fort Worth & San Antonio.” The notice concluded: “All of the above applications have heretofore been denied by the Commission and ora] argument will be heard on motions for rehearing.”
Nothing was done under this notice, and on November 28, 1934, another notice was
The record shows a number of conversations and. some correspondence between appellee’s attorney and two members of the commission and the director of the Motor-Transportation Division relating to the hearing of December 17th. We do not regard these conversations and letters as having any material bearing upon the controversy for two reasons : (1) There substance added nothing to the records of the commission ; (2) the two notices of hearing, which constitute the only official action of the commission regarding the hearing, are conclusive of what the commission proposed to consider at the hearing.
„ The notices were clearly insufficient to bring in question the order of March 29; 1934, which granted the application for a common carrier certificate. Both notices described the matter to be heard as appel-lee’s application for a contract carrier permit. The October 30th notice further described the application to be heard as hav-’ ing theretofore been denied by the commission, whereas the order of March 29th, which the commission attempted to set aside under these notices, granted the application for a common carrier certificate.
That adequate notice was essential to the order’s validity under any theory of the case is not questioned. That neither of these notices was sufficient to authorize action upon the March 29th order is manifest. See State v. Blue Diamond Oil Corporation (Tex.Civ.App.) 76 S.W.(2d) 852.
There is another ground upon which the jurisdiction of the commission (granting such jurisdiction, arguendo, and that a motion for new trial was essential thereto) was not properly invoked. The moving party must have a justiciable interest in the controversy. This point was strenuously urged by the commission, and was assumed by this court in the recent case of Railroad Commission v. Red Arrow Freight Lines, 96 S.W.(2d) 735. It was there contended by the commission that since its functions to determine the issue of convenience and necessity of the service, on the one hand, and the issues of condition and uses of the highways, on the other, were severable (citing the Greyhound Lines. Case, above, and the supporting federal authorities), and since competing lines have no justiciable interest in the latter, it was essential for competing lines to show their particular interest in the former by way of damage or detriment. We did not discuss the subject because of our holding that the protestants , there had shown such interest. That case involved intrastate commerce only, and the commission had authority over the issue of convenience and necessity. Here, by reason of the interstate character of the transportation involved, the commission has no power over that issue, but is confined to the subjects of condition and use of the highways. In those subjects the protestants who filed the motion showed no interest other than that of the public in general. It is therefore clear, we think, that they had no justiciable interest in the subject. See Fisher v. Bartlett (Tex.Civ.App.) 76 S.W.(2d) 535 (error dis.) ; Id. (Tex.Civ.App.) 88 S.W.(2d) 1068 (error dis.).
Independently of the question of notice, however, the December 17th order is void under our above holding that the commission had no power to set aside its order of March 29th.
It is not necessary, we think, to enter into a discussion of the proper classifi- ■
Rate making is quite generally classed as a legislative function, although notice and hearing áre usually prescribed as prerequisites to action therein by commissions created for that purpose. Missouri-Kansas & T. R. Co. v. Railroad Commission (Tex. Civ.App.) 3 S.W. (2d) 489, affirmed Producers’ Refining Co. v. Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. (Tex.Com.App.) 13 S.W.(2d) 679. There it was held that orders establishing rates were prospective only in their operation, and once they were made they became final, and the commission had no power over them retrospectively. It might make new orders, but these could operate only in the future, and could not retrospectively annul, modify, or otherwise affect orders previously made. The same conclusion was later announced by the federal Supreme Court regarding rates which the Interstate Commerce Commission had itself promulgated or expressly approved, as distinguished from rates which had only been filed by the carriers. Arizona Grocery Co. v. Atchison, T. & S. Fe R. Co., 284 U.S. 370, 52 S.Ct. 183, 76 L.Ed. 348. In both of these cases the distinction was clearly drawn between the making of rates for the future on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the review of rates already made for the purpose of having them set aside, annulled, or declared unjust, unreasonable, or discriminatory. The latter was held to be a purely judicial function.
The granting of a privilege to use the highways for commercial purposes partakes of the nature of ratemaking to the extent, at least, that its operation is prospective only. An order granting this permission is immediately effective, and the applicant is entitled as a matter of right to operate under it upon compliance with the requirements regarding fees and insurance. Right of review of the order in the courts is 'expressly given by statute; but this review is not of the commission’s delegated discretion, but only to determine whether there has been an arbitrary or unwarranted use of that discretion, or of the commission’s powers. The statutes do not attempt to give the commission any character of power of review of its previous orders. The power to make rules for the conduct of its business bears no proper relation to such review.
That an order of the commission denying a permit to drill an oil well as an exception to rule 37 is final and terminates the jurisdiction of the commission was held by this court in Rabbit Creek Oil Co. v. Shell Corporation (Tex.Civ.App.) 66 S.W.(2d) 737 and Sun Oil Co. v. Gillespie (Tex.Civ.App.) 85 S.W.(2d) 652. This same holding was announced by the Supreme Court, and these cases cited with apparent approval in Magnolia P. Co. v. Railroad Commission (Tex.Sup.) 96 S.W.(2d) 273, 275. We quote from the opinion:
“It is well settled that under the general provisions of the law the Railroad Commission acts in a quasi-judicial capacity. See articles 6024, 6025, 6029, 6033, 6036, and 6036a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. The Railroad Commission has the power to issue and cause process to be served by its own officers, to enter .orders which are final, unless set aside on appeal, and to enforce its judgments which govern valuable property rights. Brown et al. v. Humble Oil & Refining Co. (Tex.Sup.) 83 S.W.(2d) 935, 99 A.L.R. 1107, and authorities cited.
“The order entered by the Railroad Commission on May 7, 1934, denying the permit to drill the three additional wells, was a final order, and its further .jurisdiction of that order, under the law, could not be invoked, except upon motion and hearing, which the Court of Civil Appeals found was not had.”
It may be urged that this decision is authority for the proposition that the com
We are not here concerned with the power vel non of the commission to set aside its previous order which is either void or voidable by reason of some inherent vice; nor with its p.ptyer to annul or ter-? mínate a permit, prospectively, on accounts of changes in highway conditions and usej The commission did not purport to act under any of these powers. What it attempted to do was to rehear and reconsider its former final order.
The right of review and therefore the potential jurisdiction of the courts immediately attaches upon the order’s becoming final. To hold that the commission still had the right of review upon rehearing, it would be necessary to hold that jurisdiction of the commission and the courts was concurrent. This has been repeatedly denied. Stewart v. Smith (Tex.Sup.) 83 S.W.(2d) 945; Edgar v. Stanolind Oil Co. (Tex.Civ.App.) 90 S.W.(2d) 656; Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Railroad Commission (Tex.Civ.App.) 90 S.W.(2d) 663; McNenyv. Railroad Commission (Tex.Civ.App.) 96 S.W.(2d) 96.
There are also important practical considerations which weigh heavily against reposing in the commission the power to review its final orders passed under its delegated authority to regulate commercial traffic upon the state’s highways. The legislative policy as declared, in the statutes is to authorize such use where the conditions of the highways admit and use by the general public will not be unreasonably impaired. To the commission is delegated the important function of regulating this commercial use. In exercising this function the commission has to pass upon important questions involving (1) the sufficiency of the highways; (2) the paramount right of .the general public; and (3) the subordinate right of commercial carriers. The proper determination of these issues requires investigation, study, deliberation, and a careful weighing of the several considerations involved and the rights of the parties affected. The commission is authorized to act only after notice and hearing; and its final orders presuppose its final deliberate judgment arrived at by exercising a like degree of fairness and impartiality in accomplishing the objectives of the statutes as that imposed upon the courts. If it were given the right thereafter to review and set aside such orders, the administration of this important governmental function would b,e fraught with uncertainty and inconvenience. There would be no way of knowing with reasonable certainty when the commission’s jurisdiction had terminated and its orders had effectively become final. This is fairly illustrated in the instant case. The certificate was granted March 29, 1934. No official action was taken by the commission until October 30, 1934, and it did not pass upon the matter until December 17, 1934. During all of this time appellee was operating under the order with the knowledge and at least tacit consent of the commission. To give validity to the December order would in effect render this operation illegal retroactively. The statutes vest no such authority in the commission expressly ; nor do we believe such authority can be fairly deduced from any of the powers delegated to the Commission.
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.