Allaman v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

27 A.2d 516, 149 Pa. Super. 353, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 378
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 1, 1942
DocketAppeal, 243
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 516 (Allaman 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
Allaman v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 27 A.2d 516, 149 Pa. Super. 353, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 378 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, jointly with eight other railroad companies, in April 1940 filed a complaint with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission against C. W. Allaman, Francis Allaman and Eugene Allaman of Shippenville, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, which, as amended or supplemented, alleged that the respondents on or about April 24, 1940, May 20, 1940, June 22, 1940, and at other times, engaged in the business of common carrier, or contract carrier, by motor vehicle, in the transportation of coal between points in Clarion and Venango Counties, namely, from the Decker mine, Mechanicsville, Pennsylvania, State Route 66, Clarion County, to the Pennzoil Company plant, Rouseville, Venango County, without first having obtained requisite authority from the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, in violation of sections 201(b), 202(c) and 804 of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Law.

To this respondents filed an answer denying the aver-ments in said complaint.

The matter was heard by the commission, which on October 28, 1941 entered an order sustaining the complaint and ordering the respondents to cease and desist from all transportation for compensation between points in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania unless and until requisite authority be first secured from it.

Respondents appealed to this court.

The gist of the appeal lies in the finding of the commission sustaining the complaint of the petitioners. That complaint did not aver whether respondents were common carriers or contract carriers. The averment was in the alternative or disjunctive. Nor did the commission, in its order, find whether the respondents’ *356 operations were those of a common carrier or of a contract carrier. The finding was:

“After full consideration of all the facts presented in this record, we have concluded, and therefore find, that the primary activity of respondents with regard to coal handled by them is the transportation of that coal. Since respondents’ main activity in connection with coal handled by them is the moving of the coal from mines to the consumer, we find that the difference between the purchase price paid the producer, and the sale price to the consumer, represents an actual payment to respondents for transportation, and respondents’ operations are, therefore, in fact those of a carrier;” not stating whether respondents were operating as a common carrier or a contract carrier.

The commission, however, stated: “There are no serious differences between the parties as to the basic facts in this case. The complainants charge and the respondents admit that respondents’ trucks carried coal from the Decker Mine at Mechanicsville, Pennsylvania, to the Pennzoil Company at Kouseville, Pennsylvania ......The parties differ only in the conclusion as to respondents’ status which should be arrived at as a result of respondents’ activities.

“The respondents maintain, in substance, that their business is that of a coal dealer and they transport coal only as an incident to their business. They maintain further that they hold a mercantile license to sell coal and have filed State and Federal Tax returns as dealers in coal. They supply coal to at least 50 customers. Some of these customers are served from a yard maintained for the purpose and some by direct delivery from mine to consumer.

“On the other hand, complainants contend that respondents’ operations are those of a common carrier by motor vehicle, engaged in the transportation of coal.

“The record indicates that the coal purchased by re *357 spondents is ordinarily sold without any unloading or further handling before delivery to the consumer...... The sale price of coal sold on direct delivery is higher than that paid for it by the respondents, and complainants contend that this differential represents a charge for transportation.”

We have reviewed the evidence in the record and are of opinion that it does not support the finding of the commission, “that the primary activity of respondents with regard to coal handled by them is the transportation of that coal”; nor sustain the finding, “that the difference between the purchase price paid the producer, and the sale price to the consumer, represents an actual payment to respondents for transportation, and respondents’ operations are, therefore, in fact those of a carrier.” The uncontradicted evidence is directly to the contrary. The difference between the purchase price paid the producer and the sale price to the consumer, gives appellants a profit out of which they pay their expenses of operation, including transportation, leaving a net profit over and above expenses.

On the other hand the uncontradicted evidence fully sustains the following statements of fact appearing in the appellants’ history of the case:

“In 1938 the appellants formed a partnership for the purpose of engaging in the business of buying and selling coal. (Record page 35a) A place of business was then established at Shippenville, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, where they 'had an office, scales, coal yard and trucks. (Record page 34a) They advertised as being in the coal business, kept books and maintained a bank account. (Record page 36a).
“They filed partnership income tax returns in their coal business, and at all times took out and operated under a mercantile coal dealer’s license. (Record page 36a).
“They bought coal from various mines in Clarion *358 County and sold the same to approximately fifty customers. (Becord page 37a) They never held themselves out as carriers. They never hauled coal for others. (Becord page 37a) They never contracted with anyone to haul coal. (Becord page 31a).
“They had invested in their coal business, including coal yard, office, scales and [four] trucks, about $15,000. (Becord page 36a).
“They used their trucks [only] to deliver their coal to their buyers. The coal was sold for more than they paid for it, and the difference represented the cost of transportation and a profit. (Becord page 42a).
“The coal sold to The Pennzoil Company was usually obtained at the miné and taken by truck to the Pennzoil plant. Sometimes the coal was obtained from the yard. (Becord page 30a). Sometimes the trucks with the coal were stored over night in the garage at the coal yard. (Becord page 33a).”
And it justified the following summary taken from the appellants’ argument: “The clear weight of the testimony in this case, without contradiction, showed that these appellants were engaged in the business of buying and selling coal since 1938. They selected their own source of supply. They made their own purchases of coal, paid for it and found their customers. They advertised as coal dealers, had their own office, their own coal yard, weighing' scales, and kept books showing the transactions in their coal business ...;.. They never hauled or contracted to haul goods for any other person.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 516, 149 Pa. Super. 353, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allaman-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1942.