Connecticut Limousine Service, Inc. v. United States

281 F. Supp. 681, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10075
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 16, 1968
DocketCiv. No. 12085
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 281 F. Supp. 681 (Connecticut Limousine Service, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Limousine Service, Inc. v. United States, 281 F. Supp. 681, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10075 (D. Conn. 1968).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

J. JOSEPH SMITH, Circuit Judge.

This is an action to set aside or annul an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission. This three-judge district court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1336 and 28 U.S.C. §§ 2321-2325.

Plaintiff Connecticut Limousine Service, Inc., by application filed September 29, 1965, sought a certificate of public convenience and necessity authorizing operation in interstate or foreign commerce as a common carrier by motor vehicle, over regular and irregular routes, transporting passengers and their baggage, generally between New Haven, Fairfield, Stratford, Waterbury, Derby, Bridgeport, Norwalk, Stamford, and Danbury, Connecticut, on the one hand, and, on the other, John F. Kennedy International Airport and LaGuardia Field Airport, New York, New York, and Newark Airport, Newark, New Jersey.

The effect of granting the application would be to remove from the outstanding certificates held by plaintiff a restriction limiting plaintiff to “ * * * the transportation of not more than eleven passengers in any one vehicle, not including the driver thereof * * * ”

Numerous motor carriers, most of them intervenors herein, opposed the granting of the application. Hearings were held in Hartford, Connecticut on March 31, April 1, June 29 and 30, 1966. The hearing examiner, in his report served November 9, 1966, recommended that the application be denied. The Commission, Operating Rights Review Board No. 3, adopted that recommendation by its decision and order entered on February 24, 1967, No. MC-123748 (Sub-No. 18); plaintiff’s petition for reconsideration was denied by the Commission, Division 1, acting as an Appellate Division, by order adopting the hearing examiner’s report, and dated June 16, 1967.

Plaintiff's president, Edward DiLauro, began operating between the New York Airports and New Haven and Fairfield, Connecticut in 1960, using three five-passenger vehicles on three round trips daily. He carried 275 passengers during his first month of operations. DiLauro received permanent authorization for that operation in the ICC’s decision of February 27, 1961, Edward DiLauro Common Carrier Application, 84 M.C.C. 501. Subsequently the business was incorporated. As demand for the service increased, plaintiff obtained authority by a series of applications before the Commission to serve eighteen Connecticut towns and cities. At the time of the hearing, plaintiff was carrying more than 20,000 passengers per month; at present, plaintiff is carrying more than 35,000 passengers per month. (At least in part, the increase is due to plaintiff’s acquisition of Brown’s Connecticut Limousine Service, Inc., one of the carriers originally in opposition in the proceeding under review.)

Defendants claim that any increase in plaintiff’s business since the hearing is outside the record and not properly before the court; plaintiff contends that since its acquisition of Brown was known to the ICC before its petition for reconsideration was denied, the increase may be considered. The reasoning by which the ICC denied plaintiff’s application supports the result equally well whether the increase is considered or not, so that the question need not be decided here.

Plaintiff operated at the date of the hearing, 12 five-passenger, 3 eight-pas[684]*684senger, 1 seven-passenger, and 55 eleven-passenger vehicles, and had 6 eleven-passenger limousines under construction. The basic operation is over a route from New Haven to the airports, a distance of approximately 90 miles, which plaintiff covers in less than two hours. Vehicles leave New Haven for Kennedy and LaGuardia on the hour from early morning until 8 p. m., stopping at Stratford, Bridgeport and Fairfield, and serving Hamden and North Haven by connecting service. This operation is tied in once in the morning and once in the afternoon with an operation serving Waterbury and Derby. The on-the-hour departures from New Haven are also continued as on-the-half-hour departures from Norwalk, and in addition plaintiff offers service originating in Norwalk on the hour, serving Darien, Stamford and Greenwich. Plaintiff also operates a service from Danbury, Ridgefield, Wilton, and New Canaan, connecting with the Norwalk and New Haven runs at Darien. In addition, service is offered approximately every two hours from New Haven, Stratford, Bridgeport, Fairfield, Darien, Norwalk, Stamford and Greenwich to the Newark Airport. And, of course, there are trips from the airports to Connecticut. There are two aspects of the return operation worth noting: (1) there are scheduled departure times, approximately every hour on the hour, but in addition there are trips in between the scheduled trips, with the limousines departing as they are filled, as often as every fifteen minutes when the traffic is heavy; and (2) the points which are served are determined by the needs of the passengers being carried.

Generally, the operation involves the simultaneous departure of two limousines from New Haven, the vehicles “leapfrogging” on movement to the airports so as to reduce the number of stops each limousine is required to make. The flexibility of the operation allows cars from different Connecticut points to meet at the Freedom Land area in New York (a service depot for plaintiff) and sort out passengers according to destination, eliminating the need for each vehicle to stop at each airport. The same sort of rendezvous may take place on trips from the airports to Connecticut.

Plaintiff bases its application on the contention that its substantial growth has created a need for the use bf larger vehicles in its operations. It has represented to the Commission that if the restriction on its operations were removed, it would use 39-passenger buses together with limousines, that the buses would be equipped with lavatories, and that serious consideration is being given to having hostesses on the buses. Plaintiff proposes to operate two buses, making four daily round trips between New Haven and the airports, at times when its greatest volume of traffic is being carried. The contention is that such operation would, as to each of the four trips, eliminate the operation of three limousines. (Plaintiff would in the future, apparently, further substitute buses for limousines where justified by traffic, although the total elimination of limousines is not contemplated.)

The question before the Commission, under 49 U.S.C. § 307, was whether the proposed service is, or will be, required by the public convenience and necessity. One method of proving such a requirement is the use of public witnesses to show that the new service will be responsive to a public demand and need, cannot be served as well by existing carriers, and will not endanger or impair the operations of existing carriers contrary to the public interest. See, e. g., Pan American Bus Lines Operation, 1 M.C.C. 190, 203 (1936). But this method is not exclusive.

Public convenience and necessity may also be shown in cases such as this, by proof of operating economies or improved services, and this was the type of showing which plaintiff attempted to make before the Commission. In Salem Transp. Co., Inc., Petition to Amend Authority, 100 M.C.C. 373, 377 (1966),

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Related

Connecticut Limousine Service, Inc. v. United States
295 F. Supp. 1335 (D. Connecticut, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
281 F. Supp. 681, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-limousine-service-inc-v-united-states-ctd-1968.