Aizen v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

60 A.2d 443, 163 Pa. Super. 305, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 327
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1948
DocketAppeal, 80
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 60 A.2d 443 (Aizen v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aizen v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 60 A.2d 443, 163 Pa. Super. 305, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 327 (Pa. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, P. J.,

This is an appeal from the order of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission of February 3, 1948, refusing Max Aizen, the appellant, a certificate of public convenience to rendér táxicab service upon call or demand in the city and county of Philadelphia. Appellant’s application was one of ninety-six similar applications filed February 11, 1947, each involving the proposed operation of one vehicle. 1 The only question before the commission in this proceeding was the grant or refusal of additional certificates, the applicants alleging that the existing service was inadequate.

At the hearings before the commission, the ninety-six applicants, known as the Aizen group, were represented by the same counsél. A second group of sixty-four similar applications filed about the same time was designated as the Landa group. Protests against these applications were filed by the Yellow Cab Company of Philadelphia, by Local No. 156 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, and by twelve individual operators. Pursuant to a stipulation of counsel for all parties, entered into in order to expedite the' procedure before the commission, the matter of the character and fitness of each of the ninety-six applicants was presented during the week of August 6, 1947, by the use of questionnaires prepared in advance of the hearings.

In the Aizen application, ten witnesses testified during the week of April 17, 1947,' as to the alleged need for additionál service in Philadelphia; twenty-three during the week of September Í5, 1947. Testimony in *308 the Aizen application was incorporated by reference in the other ninety-five applications. During the week of May 11,1947, eleven witnesses were produced on behalf of the Landa group, which testimony was also considered by the commission in connection with the Aizen application,.

Yellow Cab Company, .one of the protestants, presented a total of one hundred and forty-six witnesses who testified on its behalf during the period of October 14 through October 24, 1947, which evidence was also incorporated by reference in all of the other cases. On February 3, 1948, the commission, in a majority report by Commissioner Siggins, made an order refusing the Aizen application. Commissioner Houck filed a concurring opinion, and Commissioner Conly a dissenting opinion.

In refusing the applications of appellant and the others in the Aizen group, the commission in its report and order reviewed the history of taxicab regulation in Philadelphia as shown by former cases on its own dockets. It also discussed in detail the testimony of each of the witnesses for applicants, as well as all the testimony offered by protestants. '

In order to ascertain what steps operators were taking to return to a prewar basis of service, the commission, on January 22, 1946, initiated an investigation of its own motion into taxicab service in Philadelphia generally and held many hearings. In its report and order of December 2, 1946, following this investigation the commission found that any company which purported to give the public in Philadelphia proper taxicab service . must have adequate telephone, facilities, that it would be impossible for individual operators to meet such requirements, that to set up a competing company with substantially similar facilities would duplicate costs, and result in harmful competition and impairment of service to the public. The commission found that, as of December 2, 1946, taxicab service *309 in Philadelphia was “quantitatively although not qualitatively inadequate,” and ordered Yellow Cab Company to purchase new cabs as rapidly as possible for replacement and to augment its existing fleet, 2 and to keep a monthly record of telephone calls received and serviced, as well as the number of cabs in daily use in excess of ten hours each day.

In the order refusing the present application, the commission found: “The reports filed with the Commission pursuant to its order of December 2, 1946, indicate that practically all of Yellow Cab’s wartime equipment has since been replaced by new cabs and that, except during periods of rainy of stormy weather, and when unusual events produce peak demands greatly in excess of ordinary periods, the cab company’s response to telephone orders is practically back to its pre-war basis, when the company’s service was coneededly satisfactory in every respect.” 3

The commission found that the placing of additional cabs of independent operators upon the streets in the downtown district.would not only fail to remedy any existing inadequacy in telephone service, but would be detrimental to the development of the coordinated service rendered by Yellow Cab Company, and therefore detrimental to the public interest. It also found that there was ample coverage of downtown Philadelphia by cruis *310 ing taxicabs, and that there could be no better test of adequacy than the company’s “ability, in normal weather to serve as high a percentage of all telephone calls offered as they now are doing, and a flow of empty cabs at the pivotal points in the City’s downtown business district at intervals of about a minute.” It is undisputed, as the commission points out, that the applicants would not afford telephone service throughout the city, but would confine their activities to the downtown business district. The commission concluded with the finding “that the granting of additional certificates of public convenience would be detrimental to the further development of a coordinated taxicab service in Philadelphia.”

We allowed the City of Philadelphia to intervene as an appellant and the Yellow Cab Company as an appellee. Arguments and briefs have been presented on behalf of the intervening appellant and the intervening appellee.

We think that the present appeal is controlled by the principles set forth at length in our recent case of Yellow Cab Company et al. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission et al., 161 Pa. Superior Ct. 41, 54 A. 2d 301. In that case, involving the taxicab service in Pittsburgh, we affirmed an order of the commission which granted an applicant, the Peoples Cab Company, Inc., the right to operate in an attempt to secure adequate taxicab service in Pittsburgh partly by regulated monopoly and partly by allowing limited competition; In the present case, the commission has concluded' that the public interest for the time being requires a regulated monopoly and no further competition of the type proposed by appellant.

The gist of appellant’s complaint is that the commission abused its discretion in refusing to grant appellant a certificate and in fostering Yellow Cab Company as the dominant operator. In the Pittsburgh case, *311 supra, 161 Pa. Superior Ct. 41, pages 45, 50, 51, 52, 54 A. 2d 301, pages 304, 306, 307, this Court stated:

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Bluebook (online)
60 A.2d 443, 163 Pa. Super. 305, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aizen-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1948.