Capaldo v. Public Utility Hearing Board

43 A.2d 695, 71 R.I. 245, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 25, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 A.2d 695 (Capaldo v. Public Utility Hearing Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capaldo v. Public Utility Hearing Board, 43 A.2d 695, 71 R.I. 245, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 49 (R.I. 1945).

Opinions

Flynn, C. J.

This cause is before us again on an appeal, in accordance with public laws 1940, chapter 821, section 1, from a decision of the public utility hearing board denying petitioner's application for a certificate of public necessity and convenience to operate three taxicabs for transportation of passengers within the city of Providence. In our earlier opinion it was remanded to the board for completion and clarification of its decision. Capaldo v. Public Utility Hearing Board, 70 R. I. 356. Thereafter a supplementary decision was filed and on the motion of the petitioner the matter was reargued.

*246 The evidence presented in support of the application comprised petitioner’s own testimony and that of an operator of one of his cars and two patrons thereof, an independent taxicab owner, two policemen, an operator of another public service car, a traffic expert on trucks, and the district manager of the federal office of defense transportation for Providence.

Petitioner was the owner of three public service cars for which he held public or “P” plates, so called, issued by the motor vehicle department. Such cars may be operated from private stands but may not lawfully pick up or solicit passengers indiscriminately on the highways. On the other hand, certificates to operate taxicabs are issued and regulated by the public utility administrator and are legally permitted to have stands, and to pick up and solicit passengers indiscriminately on the public highways.

The gist of the evidence for petitioner, some of which was not corroborated and some of which was refuted, is to the following effect: On several occasions members of the public on highways in the downtown section, during daily peak periods or in other emergencies, have requested transportation or have opened the door of petitioner’s car, when it stopped for traffic or otherwise, and have been transported for hire in violation of law. Similar incidents, in the present war emergency, were claimed by petitioner to have been experienced by owners of most of the cars being operated under public plates.

On a few occasions, particularly in emergencies, certain of the witnesses were unable to obtain taxicab service immediately at the time and place as demanded. On one Sunday morning at the Biltmore Hotel petitioner saw a large number of people waiting, as he presumed, for taxicabs and none was then and there visible, and at Union Station on another occasion he noted a similar condition. Between the hours of midnight or 12:30 and 2 to 3 o’clock in the morning at Exchange Place in the downtown section of Providence a considerable number of persons leaving the cafes and restaurants *247 after they had closed were not able to obtain transportation by taxicabs. The petitioner operated a private stand located on a parking lot on the southerly side of Exchange Place near the location where the last-mentioned demand existed and his cars were kept very busy.

On the other hand, there was testimony presented, in opposition to the granting of petitioner’s application, by representatives of the city of Providence, the Yellow Cab Company and Monahan Cab Company, the latter two being owners and operators of taxicabs that were registered under certificates of convenience and necessity previously issued by the administrator.

Such evidence showed, in substance, the following facts: The city objected to the granting of the application for the particular stand described therein. At least half of the people waiting at the Biltmore Hotel and Union Station on the two occasions mentioned by the petitioner were not waiting for taxicabs at all, and the remainder were served and the sidewalks cleared in not over fifteen minutes. There was no long waiting by passengers at either of these places even at peak periods, and no substantial complaints had been made by any of the witnesses or other members of the public to either of the above-mentioned taxicab companies or to the administrator, alleging any unreasonable delay or inadequate taxicab service. On Exchange Place between approximately 12:30 to 2 or 2:30 o’clock in the morning there were not enough taxicabs actually in operation to meet the demand at that particular time and place, but this was due to unusual war emergency conditions and to efforts of the Yellow Cab Company in particular to conform to general order No. 20 of the federal office of defense transportation; and this demand, which was limited as to both time and place, could be satisfied by use of taxicabs already registered, but then inactive, if the administrator would so order. The Yellow Cab Company was ready and willing to do whatever was necessary to put all of their registered and inactive taxicabs in operation, if necessary and so ordered.

*248 The petitioner renews his contentions that the decision of the board is arbitrary and unlawful in that it is based upon matters not in evidence or properly for the board’s consideration and also that the evidence in any event clearly required the granting of the application.

The board’s original and supplemental decisions, when read together, contain many general and special findings. Such findings are entitled, under the express provisions of the .statute, to be considered as prima facie true and are not to be reversed unless they are unlawful or unreasonable or against the weight of the evidence. P. L. 1940, chap. 821, section 1. Breen’s Taxi v. Division of Public Utilities, 59 R. I. 134. But conversely such findings based upon matters not in evidence or upon considerations that are not proper under the law for the board’s determination are not entitled to such weight.

Some of the board’s discussion in the original decision appears to involve considerations of a broad discretion claimed for the administrator and a policy established by him and his predecessors to issue no more certificates to operate taxicabs in Providence merely because 282 certificates had been previously issued to the Yellow Cab Company. We pointed out in our earlier opinion that these discussions and assumptions threw some doubt upon whether or not they formed any material basis for some of the board’s original findings. As to any established policy of the administrator, we find no direct evidence thereof in the transcript and such a matter, if otherwise proper for consideration, should have been shown by evidence, because the hearing before the board is de novo under the statute. P. L. 1939, chap. 660, sec. 125, as amended by P. L. 1940, chap. 821, section 1.

As to the discretion claimed for the administrator, it may be that the general assembly intended by this statute to give him some discretion in discharging his duties under the law; but in our opinion this statute, at least in its present form, does not give an exclusive franchise to any operator and does not contemplate that the administrator’s discretion should *249 be unlimited. Any policy properly established by the administrator to assist him in discharging his duties under the law must be reasonably related to and be determined by what is conducive to the general public convenience, interest, welfare and protection. See Capaldo v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Berberian v. Public Utility Hearing Board
112 A.2d 876 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A.2d 695, 71 R.I. 245, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capaldo-v-public-utility-hearing-board-ri-1945.