Hays v. Arizona Corp. Commission
Decision Date | 31 December 1965 |
Docket Number | No. 8398,8398 |
Parties | Corwin M. HAYS and Richard M. Jarrett, dba Hays & Jarrett, a co-partnership, Appellants, v. The ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSION, George F. Senner, Jr., E. T. 'Eddie' Williams, Jr., and Jack Buzard, as members of said Commission, Appellees, Tucson Warehouse and Transfer Company, and Reliance Truck Company, Intervenors-Appellees. |
Court | Arizona Supreme Court |
Lutich, D'Angelo & Wilson, by Richard A. Wilson, Phoenix, for appellants.
Darrell F. Smith, Atty. Gen., Robert W. Pickrell, former Atty. Gen., Robert Murless, Asst. Atty. Gen., Phoenix, Robertson, Childers, Burke & Drachman, by Frank E. Drachman, Jr., Tucson, Minne & Sorenson, by Richard Minne, Phoenix, for appellees and intervenors.
Hays, one of the appellants, was granted a certificate of convenience and necessity by the Arizona Corporation Commission prior to the year 1950. The certificate authorized operation of a public service corporation for a period ending December 31, 1950. More than nine months after the expiration date, on October 11, 1951, Jack Buzard, then Director of the Motor Carrier Division of the Commission, sent a letter to Hays referring to the fact that the certificate had expired and advising that:
On October 15, 1951, Hays filed an 'Application for Renewal of Certificate of Convenience and Necessity No. 5220.' The Commission, on October 29, 1951, without public hearing and without notice, granted the application and issued a renewal certificate to Hays.
Some ten years later, after an application to transfer the certificate in question had been noticed, Intervenor, Tucson Warehouse and Transfer Company, filed a complaint with the Arrizona Corporation Commission seeking a revocation of the certificate, on the grounds the renewal certificate was void because the Commission had lost jurisdiction to issue it, and several other alleged grounds, which are not at issue before us. Intervenor, Reliance Truck Company, at the time of the hearing thereon before the Commission joined as a complainant.
The Commission determined that the certificate should be revoked and issued its decision No. 33256 on July 17, 1961. That portion of the Commission's decision which is relative to this appeal is as follows:
'The Commission finds that the Certificate of Convenience and Necessity No. 5220 held by Respondents expired and terminated on the 31st day of December, 1950; that a renewal attempt was made by the Respondents on October 15, 1951, at which time the Commission was without jurisdiction to renew said Certificate, inasmuch as the statutory and regulatory date for renewal had passed, and the Respondents upon application for renewal failed to comply with the statutory provisions relating to notice of hearings upon applications before the Commission, such failure further resulting in lack of jurisdiction in the Commission to renew said Certificate.'
After a motion for rehearing had been denied by the Commission, appellants brought an action in the Superior Court of Maricopa County seeking to vacate and set aside decision number 33256, and to declare that Certificate of Convenience and Necessity No. 5220 was valid and proper.
At the time of the trial, upon the conclusion of opening statements by counsel, the Superior Court granted appellees' and Intervenor's motion to dismiss the complaint. The court below found (a) that certificate number 5220 expired by its own terms on December 31, 1950; (b) that the Commission renewed the said Certificate at an ex parte proceeding based on the application for such renewal dated October 15, 1951, and (c) that no prior or other application had ever been made for renewal of the certificate which had expired on December 31, 1950. The court concluded that under such circumstances the purported renewal of the certificate by the Commission on the 15th day of October, 1951 was null and void since the Commission was without jurisdiction.
The appellants complain that the trial court erred in finding that the Arizona Corporation did not have jurisdiction to renew the Certificate of Convenience and Necessity on October 29, 1951 and argues that such renewal was proper under the circumstances.
Whether the Corporation Commission had the right to renew a Certificate of Convenience and Necessity which expired by its own terms on December 31, 1950, when such application for renewal was made nine and one-half months after the date of expiration depends upon the meaning of A.R.S. § 40-609 which follows:
'A certificate or permit shall not be granted for a term exceeding ten years, but upon the expiration thereof it shall, at the request of the holder, be renewed for a period of time equal to that of the original certificate or permit, unless good cause is shown for refusal thereof.'
Prior to 1933 the statute privided that a certificate of convenience and necessity for common motor carriers should not be granted for a period to exceed ten years. It also set forth the procedure for granting such a certificate upon the application, notice of hearing, and hearing prior to granting. Section 736, Revised...
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