157 P.2d 309 | Wash. | 1945
On April 13, 1944, plaintiff made application for the extension of its common carrier permit No. 3740 to authorize it to engage in local cartage of general commodities in the city of Tacoma. Pending hearing on the application, the department granted a temporary permit. Protests against the granting of the application were filed by several carriers in Tacoma already engaged in local cartage under permits from the department. At the hearing on plaintiff's application, several other Tacoma carriers intervened and joined in the protest against its allowance.
After hearing the evidence offered by plaintiff, the protestants and the interveners, the department made comprehensive findings of fact, from which it concluded:
"That the granting of the requested rights would not be in the interests of the shipping public and will tend to impair and jeopardize the stability and dependability of existing service in the area by enabling applicant to divert to itself local distribution business now enjoyed and relied upon by Tacoma carriers to sustain their operations."
An order denying plaintiff's application was accordingly entered. Plaintiff obtained a writ of review in the superior court for Thurston county, which, after a hearing on the record, entered judgment affirming the findings and the order of the department.
Plaintiff appeals, assigning as error: (1) That the statute under which the order was entered is unconstitutional in that it embraces an unlawful delegation of legislative power; (2) that the evidence does not support the findings of fact made by the department; (3) that the findings do not support the conclusions; and (4) that included in the costs charged against it was the expense incurred by the *568 department in preparing a transcript of the testimony taken at the hearing on the application.
First. The statute under which the validity of the departmental order must be determined is Rem. Supp. 1941, § 6382-5, which, in so far as pertinent, provides:
"No `common carrier,' `contract carrier,' or `temporary carrier' shall hereafter operate for the transportation of property for compensation in this state without first obtaining from the Department a permit so to do under the provisions of this act. . . .
"Nothing contained in this act shall be construed to confer upon any person or persons the exclusive right or privilege of transporting property for compensation over the public highways of the State of Washington, but the Department may deny an application when it appears clearly, after public hearing, that the additional service would unreasonably congest the highwaysor unreasonably endanger the stability and dependability of theservice essential to the public needs.
"The Department shall also consider the amount and type of service rendered in any area by any class of service and maydeny an application for permit or extension if it appears thatthe grant of such permit or extension would not be in theinterest of the shipping public or would tend to impair thestability or dependability of existing service essential to thepublic needs or requirements." (Italics ours.)
As we understand appellant's contention, it is this: That the italicized portions of the statute set up standards for administrative guidance so vague and indefinite as to amount to a delegation of legislative power to the department.
[1] We think appellant's position is without foundation. To begin with, it has no inherent right to move freight over the highways for compensation. State ex rel. Scott v. SuperiorCourt,
[3] Whether transportation facilities in a given area are adequate to meet traffic demands, can be determined only by a survey of conditions as they exist. This is purely an administrative function. John Benkart Sons Co. v. PennsylvaniaPublic Utility Commission,
The statute is not vulnerable to attack as a delegation of legislative authority.
Second. The department found: That there were as many as fifty or sixty operators actually furnishing local cartage service in the city of Tacoma; that one of these, the Inter City Auto Freight, Inc., operating approximately sixty units of equipment, conducted an intrastate and interstate service between Seattle and Tacoma and full local cartage operations in Tacoma in the transportation of general *570 freight, and that its operations were "as nearly identical to those of applicant as any two operations can be," and it had a daily average of between six and eight trucks which were idle and available for the handling of additional distribution business; that another, the Tacoma Moving Storage Company, was conducting a local cartage service, that fifty to sixty per cent of its business consisted "of distribution service similar to that proposed in Tacoma by applicant," and the company operated eight trucks, two of which, on a daily average, were idle and available for the handling of additional distribution service; that still another, the Cooney Transfer Storage Company, conducted similar operations, and that it had twenty-four pieces of equipment, three units of which were "classed as idle and so registered with the Office of Defense Transportation."
Findings of similar import were made with respect to two other companies, one of which operated twenty-one pieces of equipment and the other, nine.
[4, 5] That these findings are supported by the evidence, is not open to dispute; so it would appear that the shipping public of Tacoma is afforded in abundance the type of service the appellant would offer if its application were granted. But, in addition, we think it is clear from the evidence that appellant's application is prompted primarily to subserve its own convenience and interest. There is no evidence of any demand, or even desire, on the part of the shipping public in the area for any additional service of the character appellant would give.
Third. From the foregoing summary, it is apparent, we think, that the conclusions of the department — "that the granting of the requested rights would not be in the interests of the shipping public and will tend to impair and jeopardize the stability and dependability of existing service in the area" — are amply supported by the evidence and the findings. In any event, it cannot be said that the department, in denying appellant's application, acted arbitrarily, capriciously, or upon a fundamentally wrong basis.
"Unless we can say that the order of the commission is wrong in the sense that its discretion has been arbitrarily *571
exercised, we must, under well settled rules, say that it is not to be overcome by judicial decree. To do so would be but to substitute our own will for that of the commission, and in so doing we would in all probability trench upon some equities while declaring others." State ex rel. Tacoma Eastern R. Co. v.Northern Pac. R. Co.,
[6] Fourth. The statute, Rem. Rev. Stat. (Sup.), § 10428 [P.C. § 5613], provides:
"The reasonable cost of preparing the transcript of testimony taken before the department shall be assessable as part of the statutory court costs . . ."
Appellant urges that costs should not be allowed for the preparation of the transcript of the testimony, because it had been prepared by the department for its own convenience before it rendered its decision; consequently, no additional expense was incurred when the writ of review was sued out. No such limitation on the department's right to recover the cost of the transcript can be discerned in the statute.
Judgment affirmed.
BEALS, C.J., ROBINSON, SIMPSON, and MALLERY, JJ., concur. *572