Bromide Crushed Rock Co. v. Dolese Bros. Co.

Decision Date08 June 1926
Docket NumberCase Number: 16672
Citation1926 OK 534,121 Okla. 40,247 P. 74
PartiesBROMIDE CRUSHED ROCK CO. v. DOLESE BROS. CO. et al.
CourtOklahoma Supreme Court
Syllabus

¶0 1. Railroads--Sidetracks for Private Business -- Orders of Corporation Commission as to Constructions. Private persons or corporations owning industries within reasonable distances of the track of railways may secure the necessary sidetracks or switches to accommodate their particular industries whenever the amount of business reasonably to be afforded the railway is sufficient to justify the same, and said railway may be required to furnish the switchstand and frog and other necessary material for connecting said sidetrack or switch with the track of such railway, under such reasonable conditions and regulations as the Corporation Commission may prescribe.

2. Corporation Commission--Scope of Powers. The Corporation Commission has only such authority as is specifically given it by the Constitution and statutes.

3. Railroads--Obligations to Public--Equal Facilities to Shippers. Railroad companies are quasi public corporations created for the purpose of exercising the functions and performing the duties of common carriers. These duties are defined by law, and in accepting their charters they necessarily take with them all the duties and liabilities annexed thereto; and they are required to supply patrons similarly situated equal facilities for the transportation of all business offered and to deal fairly and impartially with such patrons. And they have no right to contract with a corporation or an individual to give exclusive rights to the use of any portion to their general system of railway which may be prejudicial to the other patrons or the public in general.

4. Corporation Commission -- Appeal--Presumption as to Findings of Fact. Findings of fact of the Corporation Commission are to be regarded as prima facie, just, reasonable, and correct, but such presumption does not obtain where there is no competent evidence to support such finding.

5. Railroads--Private Switch Track to Rock Crusher--Right of Owner to Exclusive Use. Where a private switch track is constructed from the tracks of a railway to a rock crusher near said tracks and all labor done and material used in the construction thereof is done and furnished by said private individuals, the Corporation Commission is without jurisdiction to authorize another industry to use said tracks without the consent of the owner.

6. Railroads -- Right to Sell Terminal Switch to Landowner. The sale of a terminal switch by a railroad to the owner of the land over which it is laid does not violate any public obligation of the railroad.

Jones & Randolph, for plaintiff in error.

H. D. Driscoll, Cottingham, McInnis & Green, F. G. Anderson, and M. M. Gibbens, for defendants in error.

MASON, J.

¶1 This is an appeal prosecuted by the Bromide Crushed Rock Company from an order of the Corporation Commission entered on the complaint of Dolese Brothers Company which was filed against the Kansas, Oklahoma & Gulf Railway Company, and in which the Bromide Crushed Rock Company intervened. The Kansas, Oklahoma & Gulf Railway Company operate a line of railway which extends across the state of Oklahoma from a point on the northern border near Baxter Springs, Kan., to a point on the southern border near Dennison, Tex. The nearest point on the main line of said railway is approximately four miles from and connected with the town of Bromide, Okla., by a branch line over which regular railway service is furnished to said town.

¶2 It appears that about the time said branch line was constructed, a switch track was built which extended in a northwesterly direction for approximately one mile from the terminus of said branch line, in the town of Bromide, to a rock crusher owned and operated by J. W. Hoffman, who furnished large quantities of crushed rock for ballasting said railway. The record does not disclose definitely who constructed this switch at that time, although the evidence tends to show that it was constructed by Hoffman. During the year 1916, and after said switch had been used for about four years, it was abandoned and the rails and ties were removed and the roadbed and culverts permitted to disintegrate for several years. About the year of 1919, the Viola Crushed Rock & Lime Company rebuilt the grade, constructed culverts and relaid ties and rails and again put said switch in a serviceable condition under a written contract with the railway company under the terms of which the railway company leased the rails and other track equipment to the Viola Crushed Rock & Lime Company for $ 150 per year. Sometime thereafter the Viola Crushed Rock & Lime Company, which had erected a rock crusher at the end of said switch, sold all its rights in said crusher and in said switch track to the Bromide Crushed Rock Company, who have operated the same since that time. It also appears that subsequently the Dolese Brothers Company acquired a tract of land near that of the Bromide Crushed Rock Company upon which it contemplated erecting a rock crusher, from which it desired to construct a spur track connecting with said railway.

¶3 Dolese Brothers Company then instituted this proceeding before the Corporation Commission against the Kansas, Oklahoma & Gulf Railway Company, and its receivers, to secure an order of the Corporation Commission authorizing it to connect said spur track with the switch track above referred to--said connection to be made at a point about 1,600 feet from the terminus of the branch line at Bromide. The Bromide Crushed Rock Company, in its interplea, which was in the nature of a response, alleged, in substance, the facts as herein set forth relative to the building and using of the switch track from the town of Bromide to its crusher. That it had spent large sums of money constructing and maintaining said track; that Dolese Brothers had made no effort to arrange with it for joint use of said track, nor had said company offered to share the expenses incident to the construction and maintenance thereof. It was further alleged that Dolese Brothers Company had not constructed a rock crusher, quarrying plant, or track from its lands to the switch serving the intervener. The intervener then challenged the jurisdiction of the Corporation Commission to make the order prayed for by the complainant, for the reason that the railway track with which complainant sought to connect was a private track of the intervener, and for the further reason that the complainant had not complied with the provisions of section 33, article 9, of the Constitution of Oklahoma, relative to the procedure for an industry desiring switch track connections with the rails of a common carrier.

¶4 A hearing was had before the Commission, at which evidence was taken. The Commission overruled interpleader's objection to its jurisdiction to make the order prayed for and issued its order in which it found that the switch track between the railway terminus at Bromide and the crusher of the Bromide Company was the the property of the railway company; and that the contract between the railway company and the Bromide Crushed Rock Company was void, and ordered the switch connection made at the expense of Dolese Brothers Company. Said company was ordered to pay the expenses of constructing the new spur and to pay the Bromide Company $ 200, to reimburse it for a portion of the money expended in constructing and maintaining the main switch track. The Bromide Crushed Rock Company has duly perfected its appeal to this court and presents the same questions that were raised in its response us above set forth. The railway company does not appeal. Under section 33, article 9, of the Constitution of Oklahoma, private persons or corporations owning certain industries within reasonable distances of the tracks of railways may secure the necessary sidetracks or switches to accommodate their particular industries whenever the amount of business reasonably to be afforded the railway is sufficient to justify the same, and said railway may be required to furnish the switch stand and frog and other necessary material for making connection with such sidetrack and shall make the same under such reasonable terms, conditions, and regulations as the Corporation Commission may prescribe.

¶5 The first question to be considered, as we view the case, is who owned the switch track to which Dolese Brothers Company desired to connect their spur? If it belonged to the Bromide Crushed Rock Company, which is not a transportation or transmission company, and not engaged in the business of a common carrier, the Commission had no authority to make the order complained of. This is true, regardless of the fact that the Commission may have required Dolese Brothers Company to pay a consideration therefor to the Bromide Crushed Rock Company. It would not be contended, we take it, that the Corporation Commission would have jurisdiction if said track was the private property of the plaintiff in error. The Corporation Commission has only such authority as is specifically given it by the Constitution and the statutes, and we know of no...

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4 cases
  • H. F. Wilcox Oil & Gas Co. v. Walker
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • May 8, 1934
    ...State, 158 Okla. 57, 12 P.2d 494; American Indian Oil & Gas Co. v. Collins & Co., 157 Okla. 49, 9 P.2d 438; Bromide Crushed Rock Co. v. Dolese Bros. Co., 121 Okla. 40, 247 P. 74. ¶10 Every person has the right to drill wells on his own land and to take from the source below all the oil that......
  • Sw. Bell Tel. Co. v. State, Case Number: 26340
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • July 13, 1937
    ...before it. ¶16 Many Oklahoma cases are cited [A., T. & S. F. R. Co. v. State, 82 Okla. 288, 200 P. 232; Bromide Crushed Rock Co. v. Dolese Bros. Co., 121 Okla. 40, 247 P. 74; Oklahoma City v. Corporation Commission, 80 Okla. 194, 195 P. 498; City of Tulsa v. Corporation Commission, 96 Okla.......
  • Billy v. Le Flore Cnty. Gas & Elec. Co., Case Number: 23990
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • September 12, 1933
    ...¶11 The Corporation Commission has only such authority as is given to it by the Constitution and the statutes. Bromide Crushed Rock v. Dolese Bros. Co., 121 Okla. 40, 247 P. 74. Its decisions relative to regulating and supervising a public utility in respect to fixing rates are not res adju......
  • Bromide Crushed Rock Co. v. Dolese Bros. Co.
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • June 8, 1926

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