Conlin Buss Lines, Inc. v. Old Colony Coach Lines, Inc.

185 N.E. 350, 282 Mass. 498, 1933 Mass. LEXIS 920
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 N.E. 350 (Conlin Buss Lines, Inc. v. Old Colony Coach Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conlin Buss Lines, Inc. v. Old Colony Coach Lines, Inc., 185 N.E. 350, 282 Mass. 498, 1933 Mass. LEXIS 920 (Mass. 1933).

Opinion

Rugg, C.J.

These suits in equity are brought under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 159A. Their purpose is to enjoin the defendants from transporting passengers for hire over highways between Boston and Springfield, both in this Commonwealth, without having obtained a certificate of public necessity and convenience from the department of public utilities or having complied with the provisions of the statute. The cases were referred to a master, who, without annexing transcript of the evidence, has made a comprehensive report setting forth "all constituent and subsidiary facts” and stating that all inferences, ultimate facts found, and general findings are based upon the constituent and subsidiary facts found. Essential facts thus displayed are as follows: The plaintiffs are corporations organized under the laws of this Commonwealth and are common carriers of passengers. The Conlin Buss Lines, Inc., operates a fine between Worcester [500]*500and Springfield. The Boston, Worcester & New York Street Railway Company operates a line between Boston and Worcester. Under reciprocal traffic arrangements, brought to the attention of the department of public utilities and informally sanctioned by it but not thought by it to require formal or special approval, the plaintiffs provide through service between Boston and Springfield over highways entirely within the Commonwealth, following the Post Road, so called. Large numbers of. passengers are thus transported between Boston and Springfield and intermediate places. Each plaintiff operates under certificates of convenience and necessity issued by the department of public utilities and licenses procured from the various cities and towns through which its route passes, has filed the requisite bond, and has otherwise complied with controlling statutes and regulations as required by said c. 159A. The defendants are carriers of passengers for hire by motor vehicle between Boston and Springfield, passing through Stafford Springs and some other towns in the State of Connecticut. Their route from Boston follows the Post Road to Worcester, where it turns southwesterly and southerly until it crosses the State line into Connecticut to Stafford Springs about ten miles from the State line, and thence turns northwesterly back into this Commonwealth to Springfield. The entire distance travelled from Boston to Springfield is about one hundred miles, of which about twenty-two or twenty-three miles lie in Connecticut and the rest within this Commonwealth. The distance over the route operated by the plaintiffs is about the same as that followed by the defendants. The defendants carry no passengers who are travelling from one point to another within the Commonwealth, except those who are carried through Connecticut as part of the transportation. The rest of their business is transportation of passengers from places outside of to places within the Commonwealth. The interstate nature of that part of its business is not questioned. The defendants have not certificates of necessity and convenience from the department of public utilities, nor licenses from the various municipalities within the Commonwealth through which their routes pass, as [501]*501required by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 159A. They contend that their business is “exclusively interstate” and therefore beyond the regulatory power of the Commonwealth and excluded from the operation of said c. 159A by its § 1. The main question for determination is the soundness of that contention. The route followed by the defendants from Worcester to Springfield is over a modern road of high speed type for most of its distance, used much less, through a country where less business activity is observable, and where less hazard to travel exists, than on the Post Road traversed by the plaintiffs, and its scenic beauty is superior to that of the Post Road, where there are numerous villages and considerable business activity.- Their running time between Boston and Springfield is about ten minutes less than that of the plaintiffs. The fares charged by the defendants are less than those charged by the plaintiffs. About seventy-five per cent of the business of the Old Colony line was between Boston, Worcester and Springfield and other places in this Commonwealth through Connecticut; that is to say, it was between places within the Commonwealth where passengers were transported through Connecticut. It is mainly dependent for its revenue upon this class of passengers. About twenty-five per cent of its business was between places in this Commonwealth and Connecticut and other places outside this Commonwealth. There is nothing in its record of traffic to warrant the belief that its service is necessary to the communities through which it passes in Connecticut. On the line of the other defendants, known as the New Way Line, which so far as concerns the present issues follows the same route as the Old Colony, about ninety per cent of its business is between places within the Commonwealth through Connecticut, and ten per cent of its business is between places within the Commonwealth and places in Connecticut. Further findings of the master are: “I find that on many occasions the only passengers conveyed by the defendants were passengers leaving Boston or Worcester or intermediate points for Springfield, or leaving Springfield for Worcester or Boston or intermediate points in one continuous journey, and I find that it is the [502]*502intention of the defendants to carry passengers from Boston or Worcester and intermediate points to Springfield, or from Springfield to Worcester or Boston (through Connecticut in each case), even if no other passengers ever embark at, or for, points outside of the State.” After a finding in considerable detail as to numbers of passengers carried between places in Connecticut and places in this Commonwealth and the revenue derived therefrom, as compared with numbers of passengers carried between places within this Commonwealth through Connecticut and the revenue derived therefrom, the master found that the business of each defendant between places outside of and within the Commonwealth “is negligible and very incidental to the service provided by each between Massachusetts points passing via Connecticut en route. . . . and that the defendants would not operate this route if the only business they could legally carry was from Massachusetts to Connecticut or vice versa. So far as it is a question of fact, I find, on all the facts found herein that each defendant is carrying by. motor vehicle passengers for hire as a business between fixed termini in Massachusetts. In so doing neither defendant has obtained the licenses and certificates of convenience called for by State law for others than exclusively interstate carriers. So far as it is a question of fact, I find that such 'carriage,of passengers’ (in the manner heretofore described) is not 'exclusively interstate.’ As bearing upon the defendants’ good faith, I find, if material, that it is close to the line whether the Old Colony is conducting its service at a loss, while a loss is indicated in the business of the New Way. The defendants also urge in this regard, and I find for the present time at least, that they are rendering a public service in providing a route for Massachusetts travellers superior to that of the plaintiffs” in respect to safety of travel on the highway, scenic beauty of route, and fares; but they pay nothing to the Commonwealth under said c. 159A.

This court deals with the case on the report of the master, drawing its own inferences so far as necessary from the facts there stated. Dondis v. Lash, 277 Mass. 477, 482.

Congress has not yet acted upon the interstate trans[503]

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Bluebook (online)
185 N.E. 350, 282 Mass. 498, 1933 Mass. LEXIS 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conlin-buss-lines-inc-v-old-colony-coach-lines-inc-mass-1933.