Eastridge v. Southeastern Greyhound Lines

133 S.W.2d 95, 280 Ky. 392, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 24, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 133 S.W.2d 95 (Eastridge v. Southeastern Greyhound Lines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastridge v. Southeastern Greyhound Lines, 133 S.W.2d 95, 280 Ky. 392, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 126 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

The appellee, Southeastern Greyhound Lines, holds a certificate of convenience and necessity, issued it by the Director of Motor Transportation, authorizing it to operate motor buses for the transportation of passengers for hire over Highway 60 from Lexington to Louisville, via Versailles and Frankfort.

■ The appellant, T. W. Eastridge, has acquired by purchase and lease two permits, Nos. 123 and 185, the first authorizing its holder to operate motor bus service for hire from Lexington to Midway, over' the route of the Leestown Pike, as therein specified, and the second, No. 185, authorizes á like bus operation from Midway to *394 Frankfort, also over the Leestown Pike to the point of its junction with Highway 60, some foijr or five miles east of Frankfort, and thence over Highway 60 to its terminal point of Frankfort.

Appellant having bought, on October 6, 1937, from one Wilson the first (No. 123) of these permits and .having acquired by lease from one Medley the second (No. 185), respectively authorizing bus service between Lexington and .Midway and Midway and Frankfort, he applied to the Division of Motor Transportation for its approval of the through service he proposed to operate thereunder between Lexington and Frankfort, by combining these two permits, which, when linked, together covered the entire Midway route, paralleling Highway 60, between Frankfort and Lexington.

The director approved appellant’s application to operate this through service, without notice being given to the parties in interest of the application or the holding of a public hearing on the matter.

Eastridge having then, pursuant to this approval given, begun advertising and operating such through bus service between Frankfort and Lexington, via Midway, the appellee, who was also, it is shown, at the time operating a through bus 'service between Frankfort and Lexington, via Versailles, over Highway 60 (a parallel route), brought this suit against Eastridge alleging that he was illegally operating a like through bus service, via Midway, between thdse terminals, basing such allegation upon the ground that the director had improperly approved such through service, and, further, that it was conducted in violation of the express terms and conditions of the sale contract had between plaintiff and Wilson and subject to which the latter had sold its permit No. 123 to Eastridge.

The petition concluded with a prayer that Eastridge be permanently enjoined from operating motor buses between Lexington and Frankfort, via Midway; that a temporary injunction be immediately issued, restraining defendant from such operation; arid that D. C. Moore, Director of Motor Transportation, be required to withdraw his earlier approval given Eastridge’s application for through service, and that the defendants Eastridge and Medley and, defendants Eastridge and Wilson be enjoined from extending. his bus line beyond Midway towards Frankfort, -on that, the s&le contract of .permit. No. *395 123 be annulled and that defendants Wilson and East-ridge be required to reassign it to plaintiff.

The plaintiff having given notice of its motion ior a temporary injunction and the case having been set for hearing, defendant filed answer denying the allegations of the petition and pleaded that plaintiff’s sale contract and transfer of permit No. 123, subject to the conditions of .which it alleged Eastridge had purchased the permit, was void and unenforceable, because made in restraint of trade and against public policy.

The court, after considering the pleadings and hearing arguments of counsel on the motion for a temporary injunction, based upon appellee’s contention that East-ridge was illegally operating through buses between Frankfort and Lexington, via Midway, in violation of the sales contract entered into between it and Wilson and subject to which the permit was sold to and bought by defendant and the further contention that the Director of Motor Transportation had improperly approved schedules for through service under the two certificates, the one permitting bus service between Lexington and Midway and the other between Midway and Frankfort, was of the opinion that the through operation, approved by the Director, was in effect a change of route between fixed terminii, which made it necessary for the Director, before granting approval of the through bus service under the combined certificates, to give notice to the parties in interest and hold a public hearing, as provided by Section 2739j-10, Kentucky Statutes. The court therefore ordered that the case be re-referred to the Director and that he have a public hearing, as provided by Section 2739j-14, for the purpose of determining whether or not a public convenience and necessity existed for a through bus service between Lexington and Frankfort, via Midway.

Pursuant to such direction, on November 14, 1938, a rehearing was held by the Director on the application of the defendant Eastridge, at which witnesses were introduced and heard upon the question submitted, of whether a public convenience and necessity existed for through bus service between Lexington and Frankfort, via Midway.

At the close of the hearing, the- Director rendered his decision, wherein he set out his findings of fact and law governing the question submitted.

*396 Upon the question of law, the Director found that no public convenience and necessity existed for the additional through bus service between Frankfort and Lexington, via Midway, whicn appellant proposed to operate under the authority of the combined certificates. Upon the question of fact, he found that the appellee Southeastern Greyhound Lines was at the time operating a through service between Lexington and Frankfort, via Versailles, under a prior certificate .issued it ‘and that it offered and was able to put on any additional service schedules found necessary between Lexington and Frankfort ovep its parallel route between said terminals. Further he - found that 'Eastridge’s lease of permit No. 185 from Medley, which authorized him to • operate buses from Midway to Frankfort, and the through schedules applied for, were approved by the Director without notice given or the holding of a public hearing and therefore ordered that the lease' of permit No. 185' be re-approved, insofar as it offers service over the route between Frankfort and Lexington, with the following restrictions:

“No passengers to be handled between Frankfort and Lexington or vice versa; but it is understood that the approval of said lease grants the applicant, T. W. Eastridge, the- right to pick up passengers in Lexington for any point over the highways traveled by him, except through passengers between said points, and is also authorized to pick up and discharge passenger's at any point between Frankfort and Lexington * * * except he will not be permitted to transport through passéngers between Lexington and Frankfort and between Frankfort and Lexington. ”

Upon such decision being reported back- to the Franklin Circuit Court and therein filed, further pleadings and motions were filed by the parties, when the court, upon its own motion, again ordered a re.-reference of the' case to the Director, to be tried- on the merits of the rights of the applicant, T. W.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W.2d 95, 280 Ky. 392, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastridge-v-southeastern-greyhound-lines-kyctapphigh-1939.