Blackmore v. Public Service Commission

183 A. 115, 120 Pa. Super. 437, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 25
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1935
DocketAppeal, 146
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 183 A. 115 (Blackmore v. Public Service 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
Blackmore v. Public Service Commission, 183 A. 115, 120 Pa. Super. 437, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 25 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

The Public Service Commission of this Commonwealth instituted an inquiry and investigation upon its own motion for the purpose of determining the character of the motor vehicle operations conducted by appellants, and thereafter Carriers’ Protective Committee, an organization representing various railroads and certified truck operators, was permitted to intervene as a party complainant. After service of notice of the proceeding upon the respondents, an answer was filed by Annie Blackmore, president of A. Blackmore Transfer Company, Inc., on behalf of that company and the other *439 respondents in which there was set np as a sole defense the allegation that all business conducted by each of the defendants was interstate commerce and therefore not under jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission of this Commonwealth. After hearing and arguments, the commission made an order finding that certain motor vehicles had been operated by appellants as common carriers in violation of the Public Service Company Law and that A. Blackmore Transfer Company, Inc., had operated in violation of the law of this state on twenty separate occasions between March 21 and July 13, 1934, inclusive; and that all of the appellants had “under various guises and fictitious names operated transportation activities in violation of the Public Service Company Law.” It directed the corporation to pay to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania the sum of one thousand dollars and ordered each of the appellants to cease and desist from such operations. Prom that order an appeal has been taken to this court.

The operations of appellants found by the commission to be in violation of law were of three different types, were considered separately on argument by the parties, and, as they involve different legal principles, we will take them up in the same manner. They are: (1) a movement of mixed merchandise between termini in the state of Pennsylvania and wholly within the state; (2) like movements of silk and silk products where it is claimed by the appellants that the transportation was a part of an interstate movement; and (3) movements of freight between termini within this state but transported between these points over a route partly in the state of New Jersey, where it was found by the commission that such movements as took place in the state of New Jersey were mere subterfuges of the respondents to avoid regulation of purely intrastate transportation by our commission.

1. Witnesses were called who furnished evidence *440 tending to show that about July 11,1934, the A. Black-more Transfer Company, Inc., moved a truck loaded with freight from Dunmore, near Scranton, to Easton over a route wholly within the state when a part of the load was transferred to another truck and carried to and delivered at Allentown, and the remainder of the load was taken by the original truck from Easton to Philadelphia. While the inspectors employed by the appellees followed the movement south of Easton toward Philadelphia for only a few miles and to a point beyond the place where the roads by the usual routes led to New Jersey, any deficiency in the proofs with respect to the ultimate destination at Philadelphia was supplied by the testimony of the appellants’ own witness, the driver of the truck, and others. The appellants in their argument attack this finding on the ground that appellants’ witnesses and not appellees’ witnesses should be believed. This raised a pure question of fact which was for the commission and not for this court under numerous decisions: Motor Freight Express v. P. S. C., 117 Pa. Superior Ct. 174, 177 A. 493; Waer Bus Co. v. P. S. C., 117 Pa. Superior Ct. 514, 178 A. 157; Vance Transportation Co. v. P. S. C., 105 Pa. Superior Ct. 228, 161 A. 428; York Express Co. v. P. S. C., 110 Pa. Superior Ct. 197, 168 A. 327.

A careful reading of the entire testimony convinces us not only that there was ample evidence to sustain the finding of the commission that this movement was intrastate transportation, but that the credibility of appellants’ witnesses was so shaken on cross-examination that we are unable to see how the commission could have come to any other conclusion than it did. As there were numerous other violations which we will consider under the next heading where there is no dispute as to the facts and a pure question of law is involved, it is not necessary to depend upon this one *441 offense to sustain the commission’s order. It is not probable that tbe commission would have issued a cease and desist order if this bad been tbe sole violation by appellants.

Tbe fourteenth assignment of error is to tbe refusal of an offer of appellants to show by one of them that tbe president of tbe Arrow Carrier Corporation bad made certain threats against one of appellants and that one of tbe witnesses, Mr. Duffy, called to sustain tbe charge concerning tbis one shipment, was an employee of that corporation, for the purpose of affecting tbe credibility of such employee. We think, as tbe examiner ruled, that tbis was going too far afield to affect tbe credibility of tbe witness who bad just testified. If tbe offer bad been to show threats of tbe witness it would clearly have affected bis credibility. Taking into account tbe facts that it appeared that tbe Arrow Company was a rival of tbe appellants and that it was admitted of record that Mr. Duffy was an employee of a rival concern and employed as a solicitor to obtain business in tbe same field, we are satisfied in any event that no barm was done to tbe appellants. Tbe fourteenth assignment of error is not sustained.

2. We are next concerned with certain movements of raw silk and silk products. It was established by abundant proofs and, in fact, admitted by appellants that on a large number of occasions appellants transported silk thread or yarn on bobbins for different silk mills over a route wholly within tbis Commonwealth and between termini therein, but by way of defense tbe appellants contended that each such movement was a part of an interstate shipment. Appellants offered evidence tending to show that they contracted with several silk mills to transport raw silk from tbe seaboard in New York and New Jersey to throwing mills in Pennsylvania where it was processed into yarn and wound on bobbins, an operation which required from four to *442 seven days; that they were then to move the yarn to a weaving mill in Pennsylvania over an all Pennsylvania route where it was made into cloth, requiring several days more; and that then they were to move the cloth to dye mills in New Jersey. It was shown that the appellants did move large quantities of silk and silk products hut did not move all of the yarn or cloth which they had transported from out of the state in the form of raw silk to the throwing mill as, for example, quantities of yarn were transported to mills at Williamsport by other carriers. There were also separate bills of lading for each of the movements and the freight charges were dependent upon the weight and bulk of the different articles. The ownership of the mills in the state of Pennsylvania was in different persons although in some cases they were affiliated concerns.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A. 115, 120 Pa. Super. 437, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackmore-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1935.