Association of Independent Taxi Operators, Inc. v. Yellow Cab Co.

82 A.2d 106, 198 Md. 181, 1951 Md. LEXIS 310
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1951
Docket[No. 160, October Term, 1950.]
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 82 A.2d 106 (Association of Independent Taxi Operators, Inc. v. Yellow Cab Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Association of Independent Taxi Operators, Inc. v. Yellow Cab Co., 82 A.2d 106, 198 Md. 181, 1951 Md. LEXIS 310 (Md. 1951).

Opinion

Marbury, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The amended bill of complaint which is before us in this case was filed by the Association of Independent Taxi Operators, Inc., and certain individual members who own and operate taxicabs under permits of the Public Service Commission. It may be noted here that, under our decisions, the corporate plaintiff, as described in the bill, is not a proper party plaintiff (Maryland Naturopathic Ass’n, Inc. v. Kloman, 191 Md. 626, 62 A. 2d 538. Beckett v. Housing Authority, 198 Md. 71, 81 A. 2d 215, this term), but as the individual plaintiffs undoubtedly have the right to bring such a suit, that question is not important to our decision. The defendants are the Yellow Cab Company, the Northern *186 General Railway Company, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and the Police Commissioner of Baltimore City. The purpose of the suit is to define the status of the taxicab stand at Pennsylvania Station in Baltimore. The facts, as developed in the hearing, are adequately stated by the chancellor in the following words:

“In 1911, the Pennsylvania Railroad, either as owner or as lessee of the Northern Central Railway Company, erected the Pennsylvania Station on the site of the old Union Station, on a plot of land near Jones Falls, between Charles Street and St. Paul Street, in Baltimore City. The Station consists of a large stone building, south of which there is a driveway running from St. Paul Street to Charles Street, in a generally east and west direction, approximately forty feet wide and 400 feet long. The driveway connects with St. Paul Street at grade on the east, and with Charles Street at grade on the west, and is used for ingress and egress to and from the Pennsylvania Station, it being south of the principal passenger entrance of the Station. The driveway serves vehicles bringing passengers to and from the Station, and is paved with asphalt paving similar to that on Charles and St. Paul Streets. It is carried by a steel and concrete structure which was built at the same time as the Station, and in some respects forms an integral part of the Station building. Below the driveway is a lower station level, approximately at the same elevation as the railroad tracks; and leading down to this lower level on the south side of the driveway is a ramp, which is used for access to the baggage department of the railroad, and perhaps for other purposes. There are no gates at either Charles or St. Paul street end of the driveway. .
“The driveway was constructed at the expense of Pennsylvania Railroad, and the cost was later charged back to the Northern Central Railway, as *187 the basic owner. The relation between those two corporations is that the Northern Central Railway has title to the land; the Pennsylvania Railway is lessee under a lease for 999 years, executed in 1914 but dated back to 1911. The Pennsylvania Railroad is the operator of the station; it pays for the cleaning and lighting and the removal of snow and the paving of the driveway. It also polices the driveway, and Pennsylvania Railroad Police are assigned to that duty. On the driveway there are various signs for the direction of traffic, indicating, among other things, that traffic must be from east to west. Lines are painted on the pavement, indicating parking areas, and there is a raised platform or safety zone directly opposite the main entrance to the Station, by which there are created at least two traffic lanes for passenger vehicles approaching the Station. The northernmost or ‘inside’ lane, that is the one next to the Station, has signs on it indicating that it is for the use of Yellow cabs and the testimony is that the Pennsylvania Railroad police and the Yellow Cab Company together reserve this ‘inside’ lane for the use of Yellow cabs exclusively in so far as they are able to do. The southernmost or ‘outside’ lane is used by private vehicles and by taxicabs other than Yellow cabs. Both the Station and the driveway are open twenty-four hours a day, every day in the year, except in so far as repairs make partial closing necessary.
“There has been no cab stand designation made by the Police Commissioner for a cab stand in the driveway in front of the Station. The legal status of the driveway does not depend upon a designation by the Police Commissioner, however, but upon other considerations. In 1921, the Pennsylvania Railroad entered into a contract with the taxicab company which was the predecessor of the present Yellow Cab Company, which contract has been renewed continuously from time to time by contracts *188 which have been introduced in evidence. The last renewal was made by a letter dated December 2, 1947, under which the previous agreements were extended under an arrangement whereby Yellow Cab Company pays the Pennsylvania Railroad Company $750 per month for the privileges set forth in the prior agreements as modified. The essential clause which is involved in these proceedings is the second paragraph of the agreement of September 10, 1921, which reads as follows:
“ ‘Second. The Railroad Company hereby agrees that in so far as it legally and properly can, consistently with its public duty and contractual obligations, it will not permit other persons engaged in the same business to enter upon its premises at said station for the purpose of soliciting patronage, but it shall not be required to prevent local teamsters, hackmen or carriers of passengers and their baggage or others, from entering upon said premises with their vehicles, cabs, and teams at the instance of, and by arrangement with, departing or arriving passengers for the conveyance of passengers or their baggage or other property to and from said station ;■ nor shall this agreement apply to or prevent private teams and vehicles, in which no fare is charged, from entering upon its premises for the conveyance of passengers and baggage; nor shall this agreement apply to or prevent persons or corporations from entering upon the premises of the Railroad Company for the purpose of taking baggage or passengers to or from said station, under contracts heretofore made or which may be hereafter made with the said Railroad Company/
“The net result of the operation is simply this: both the Railroad Company and the Cab Company consider that under their agreements the Yellow cabs have the exclusive right to solicit patronage of passengers who are leaving the station, and they reserve the inner or northernmost traffic lane for *189 Yellow cabs. Other cabs are allowed to come in and discharge passengers. The Railroad police make every effort to prevent other cabs from soliciting patronage within the driveway. If the other cabs do not move on after having discharged their passengers, they are told to move by the Pennsylvania Railroad police. On the other hand, if passengers waiting for cabs solicit the other cabs at Pennsylvania Station, neither the railroad nor the Yellow Cab Company men make any effort to prevent such other cabs from taking passengers. The right of the Yellow Cab Company is regarded by the Railroad and by the Cab Company as an exclusive privilege, and both companies make every effort to enforce it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A.2d 106, 198 Md. 181, 1951 Md. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/association-of-independent-taxi-operators-inc-v-yellow-cab-co-md-1951.