State ex rel. Hayford v. Public Service Commission

Morris, J.

The Public Service Commission, on its own motion, commenced these proceedings for the purpose of eliminating a dangerous grade crossing on the Great Northern Railway near Spokane. The railroad track, at the location in question, forms a decided loop. The highway, known as Euclid road, running east and west, intersects this loop at two points about half a mile apart. Both crossings are at grade. The east one is admittedly very dangerous and, under the order complained of, is to be eliminated by deflect*649ing the highway to the south of the railroad track between the two crossings. Appellants are the owners of land abutting upon the highway within the loop and between the two crossings. About midway between the crossings is a second highway, running north and south, which passes under the railroad tracks, affording appellants additional facilities for reaching their property.

In considering the question of eliminating this dangerous crossing, two plans were considered. First, the construction of an underground crossing necessitating but slight change in the highway, but requiring considerable change in the railroad grade. Second, the diversion of the highway south of the railway. On a full hearing, the commission entered its order adopting the second plan. Appellants sued out a writ of review directed against this order to the superior court of Spokane county, and being there defeated, have appealed.

The chief complaint here is that the commission is without authority to enter an order of this character on its own initiative; and second, if such power exists in the commission, its exercise in this instance was arbitrary and based upon a fundamentally wrong basis in not giving due effect to the testimony, of appellants as to the damage to be sustained by their property in deflecting the highway to the south of the railroad.

The whole matter is one of statutory construction. Section 8733-4, Rem. Code, provides that the mayor or city council of any city or town, or the county commissioners of any county within which a dangerous crossing exists, may file with the public service commission a petition stating that the public safety requires an alteration of the crossing. The commission will then fix a time for hearing on such petition, and if the contemplated change requires that private land be damaged, ten days’ notice of hearing shall be given to owners of such land. Upon such hearing, the commission shall make such order as to it seems proper, and if private land is to be taken or damaged, the right to take or damage such land *650shall be acquired as later provided. The last paragraph of this section is as follows:

“Petition for the change in any existing grade crossing, or for the elimination thereof, may be filed by the commission on its own motion, and proceedings thereon shall be the same as herein provided for the hearing and determination of a petition filed by a railroad company.”

It is clear that, under this last paragraph, the commission has power, upon its own motion, to institute proceedings of this character—and we so hold.

In support of their second contention, appellants cite cases such as Spokane v. Miles, 72 Wash. 571, 131 Pac. 206, and others where, in reviewing the assessment of eminent domain commissioners in condemnation proceedings, it was held that the commissioners acted upon a fundamentally wrong basis in charging back upon abutting property the amount of damages awarded by the jury in the condemnation proceedings for the taking of the property plus the benefits. Manifestly, such decisions are not in point. There the court was dealing with a special statute authorizing courts to modify or change any assessment when, in the judgment of the court, such change would be necessary. In construing this statute, we said that to charge back against the property the amount of the condemnation award and then assess the remainder for the full benefits is evidence that the commissioners acted arbitrarily and were proceeding upon a fundamentally wrong basis, calling for correction by the court. This statute, § 8733-13, provides that an order of the commission of this character may be reviewed in the superior court and on appeal by this court “and the reasonableness and lawfulness of such . . . order . . . inquired into and determined.” That the order is lawful, that is, within the power of the commission, we have already held. The commission having the power to make the order, it cannot be disturbed unless it manifests a clear abuse of that power, or there is a showing of such unreasonableness and unlawfulness as to *651call for correction by the court. There is no showing in the record before us on which we can say that the commission has entered an unreasonable or unlawful order. The procedure relative to the taking or damaging of private property in ordering the change of railroad crossings is. provided for in § 8733-15, which affords ample protection to all property owners injured in the carrying out of the order complained of.

Judgment is affirmed.

Ellis, C. J., Chadwick, Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.