[ G.R. No. 36893, February 24, 1933 ]
MANILA ELECTRIC COMPANY, PETITIONER AND APPELLANT, VS. PASAY TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, INC., RESPONDENT AND APPELLEE.
D E C I S I O N
HULL, J.:
Formerly the Public Service Commission adopted the sound policy that duplicate bus service through the crowded and narrow streets of the City of Manila would not be in the public interest and permitted joint use of streets only when they were for a short distance and merely incidental to the main route. In their present orders they have, without any hearing and without taking any evidence whatsoever, disregarded not only this sound principle, but also the principles laid down for their guidance by this court in Batangas Transportation Company vs. Orlanes (52 Phil., 455). If a route that was not entirely parallel in 1928 engendered ruinous competition it is hard to understand why a more parallel route would not bring improper competition in 1931.
The Pasay Transportation Company, Inc., lays great stress upon the fact that its right to operate was not formally terminated, and insists that it has a property right of value that can only be taken away after hearing. (Bohol Land Transportation Co. vs. Jureidini, 53 Phil., 560.) It does not regard the other side of the picture that by receiving a grant it owes a duty to the public to comply with the conditions and duties of the grant.
It likewise treats of no moment that it only used the permission in a meager way for a couple of days when it asked for suspension and for almost three years it flouted and set at naught the clear instructions of the Public Service Commission to resume operation under the penalty of having its certificate cancelled. It made no investment for equipment and risked nothing trying to develop business. On September 18, 1931, it had at most a mere technical right (Reyes vs. Orlanes & Banaag Transit Co., G. R. No. 35562)[1]. The commission, without any hearing, did not permit the resumption of the service but, in fact, authorized the inauguration of a new line and to call such an action a modification of the certificate heretofore issued is hardly a recital of the true facts. The orders of the commission of September 22, 1931, being issued without any hearing and without receipt of any evidence, must be vacated and set aside as this court upon review can not state that they are reasonably supported by the evidence. With costs against the respondent and appellee[2]. So ordered.
Villamor, Villa-Real, Vickers, and Imperial, JJ., concur.[1] Promulgated April 29, 1932, page 964, post.
[2] Modified by resolution of March 20, 1933.