Ashland Transfer Co. v. State Tax Commission

56 S.W.2d 691, 247 Ky. 144, 87 A.L.R. 534, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 863
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 691 (Ashland Transfer Co. v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashland Transfer Co. v. State Tax Commission, 56 S.W.2d 691, 247 Ky. 144, 87 A.L.R. 534, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 863 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Couut by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

These two consolidated actions, separately filed in the Franklin circuit court by the respective appellants, as plaintiffs below, against the State Tax Commission, its members, and other related administrative hoards *147 and their members, present the question of the constitutionality of chapter 106 of the Acts of 1932, which is on page 537 of the Session Acts for that year. Its title reads: “An act to further regulate motor-trucks, semi-trailer trucks, semi-trailers and trailers to enlarge the powers of the State Highway Commission, County Courts, and cities and incorporated towns in respect thereof, to provide for enforcement of the act and penalties for violation thereof, and repealing all laws inconsistent therewith,” and from which it will he seen that it is confined to the regulation of the use on the public highways of the commonwealth of motortrucks carrying freight or merchandise, and has nothing to do with privately owned automobiles not so employed, nor to passenger busses which are operated. on the public roads as carriers of passengers.

The plaintiff in the first case in the caption is strictly a common carrier, while the one in the second case is engaged in carrying its own freight or merchandise, and they each operate in both interstate and intrastate transportation. In their petitions they attack certain provisions of the statute upon the grounds (a) that they are arbitrary and confiscatory, and by reason of which plaintiffs, if subjected to the attacked provisions, would be deprived of their property without due process of law, and would also be deprived of the equal protection of the law contrary to provisions in the Federal Constitution (Amendment 14); and also upon ground (b) that section 12 and subsection (c) of section 13 of the act delegate legislative powers to the State Highway Commission and to the various county judges of the state in exercising supervision in the application of the provisions of the statute to state and county roads. Defendants by appropriate motions and pleadings combated each of those contentions, and upon submission the trial court denied the relief sought by plaintiffs in their petitions and dismissed them, and to reverse that judgment they prosecute this appeal.

The arguments in support of ground (a) are not recent or new ones, since it has become, especially in recent years, quite common for litigants to employ such “conventional methods of presenting constitutional questions” in efforts to nullify statutes when they (generally utilities companies) are restrained by the attacked statute from operating their business contrary *148 to their unqualified desires; and in the majority of cases it is upon the theory either that the right of the particular regulation does not exist at all, or, if it does, that some one else is a better judge of the limitations imposed than is the Legislature. The attacked act defines motortrucks, trailers, and semi-trailers, and prescribes their maximum length, loaded weight, height, etc., and forbids altogether the use of a trailer “on any highway.” The maximum load is 18,000 pounds; the maximum height is 11½ feet; the maximum width is 96 inches. The maximum length of a motortruck alone is 26½ feet, and of a semi-trailer truck hot exceeding 30 feet. Other sections provide a limitation of speed as applicable to transportation both in and out of incorporate towns, and exempts certain trucks operating within incorporated towns, and named radius distances around it, from certain provisions of the act.

It is argued in support of ground (a), (1) that some of the prescribed maximum limitations, and especially the ones as to the length and width, are arbitrary, and their application would operate to confiscate the property of plaintiffs, since the trucks they ar,e now operating exceed those limitations; (2) that the act is unconstitutional because subsection (d) of section 13 postponed the application of the maximum weight for trucks operated over- the highways until January 1, 1933, and did not postpone the enforcement of the enacted maximum length of trucks and semitrailer trucks; and (3) that the imposition of the regulations of the act would impair the obligations of plaintiffs’ contracts with patrons for the carriage of freight, and the one which they claimed to have with the commonwealth by virtue of their complying with the license statutes and other regulatory measures under prior statutes, which the attacked act superseded. Other more detailed objections are made in support of ground (a), but they are of far less merit than the three we have mentioned, and are not strenuously urged in brief of counsel.

The authority which is embraced within what is known as the “police power” of a state or government is sometimes difficult to define; but all possess it, and its exercise is, perhaps, the most useful power that a government employs in the administration of the public affairs of the state for the protection of its citizens. *149 We are concerned in this case only with public highways. Their regulation, maintenance, and protection,, as well as the safety of travelers upon them, is everywhere and by all courts conceded to he within the police power of the jurisdiction maintaining them. Such regulatory authority in the exercise of the state police power-may also apply to and operate upon nonresidents or those engaged exclusively in interstate commerce, as well as those engaged in intrastate commerce, and especially so when the field of regulating interstate commerce by highway traffic has not been taken over by the federal Congress, and which latter is true at this time. Hence, in the case of Continental Baking Co. v. Woodring (D. C.) 55 F. (2d) 347, 351, the court, in passing upon questions similar to those we have in this case, said: “It is likewise settled that such users, although nonresidents and although engaged exclusively in interstate commerce, may be required to contribute to their (highway) cause and upkeep. The highways are public property,” etc.

All of the provisions of the Kansas act were upheld in that opinion, and an appeal was prosecuted to the Supreme Court of the United States where the judgment of the trial court was affirmed in the case of the same style reported in 286 U. S. 352, 52 S. Ct. 595, 598, 76 L. Ed. 1155. The opinion of the Supreme Court was written by Chief Justice Hughes, and in it he approvingly incorporated a part of the trial court’s opinion, sáying: “The state of Kansas has constructed at great expense a system óf improved highways. These have been built in part by special benefit districts and in part by a tax on gasoline sold in the state and by license fees exacted of all resident owners of automobiles. These public highways have become the roadbeds of great transportation companies, which are actively and seriously competing with railroads which provide their own roadbeds; they are being used by concerns such as the plaintiffs for the daily delivery of their products to every hamlet and village in the state. The highways are being pounded to pieces by these great trucks which, combining weight with speed, are making the problem of maintenance well-nigh insoluble.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.2d 691, 247 Ky. 144, 87 A.L.R. 534, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-transfer-co-v-state-tax-commission-kyctapphigh-1932.