GODOY ETC. v. Hawaii County

354 P.2d 78, 44 Haw. 312, 1960 Haw. LEXIS 76
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1960
Docket4059
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 354 P.2d 78 (GODOY ETC. v. Hawaii County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GODOY ETC. v. Hawaii County, 354 P.2d 78, 44 Haw. 312, 1960 Haw. LEXIS 76 (haw 1960).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

CASSIDY, J.

Ordinance No. 59 enacted by the Board of Supervisors of the County of Hawaii in 1948 created a committee, commonly called the “Bus Control Committee,” to control and regulate common carriers of passengers in the City of Hilo. The ordinance gave the committee broad powers, *313 including the authority to regulate rates, routes, standards of safety, and the insurance requirements of operators within the purview of the ordinance. All such operators were required to obtain from the committee and maintain a certificate of public convenience and necessity. The committee had the power, in its discretion, to limit the extent of the privilege to be exercised under a certificate and to attach terms and conditions to the exercise of rights granted by one. No authority was expressly granted the committee by the ordinance to charge fees of any kind or to impose other charges against carriers for the use of facilities under the committee’s control.

Commencing April 15, 1949, the committee required all buses subject to its control to be operated from a designated terminal located in the city’s Mooheau Park. At that time there were some 78 buses, of the sampan type unique to Hilo, in operation as certified carriers. The terminal area was only large enough to provide for approximately one half that number of parking stalls. As a necessary expedient the Bus Control Committee adopted a regulation which permitted each bus to be operated from the terminal on alternate days only. The determination of the days on which a bus could be operated depended on the number assigned to its certificate of convenience. Buses covered by certificates bearing odd numbers had to be operated on the odd days of the month and those with even numbers on the even days of the month.

By Ordinance No. 79, adopted on August 19, 1949, the board of supervisors officially set aside the terminal area in Mooheau Park for buses regulated by the Bus Control Committee. Section 3 of the ordinance provided that: “The Bus Control Committee shall collect from the owner of each bus parking in said area the sum of Eight Dollars ($8.00) per month.” Monies collected by the committee were to be set up in a separate fund for use in improving *314 and maintaining bus control. The ordinance vested the committee with power to make such mies and regulations for the parking of the buses as it deemed necessary for carrying out the purpose of the ordinance. The ordinance was adopted on the basis of a report made to the board of supervisors by an investigator of the Territorial public utilities commission. The rate of $8 a month as the rental fee for each bus operated by authority of the committee was fixed and recommended by the investigator and adopted by the board to provide the amount necessary to meet the estimated operating budget for the terminal based on 75 vehicles operating out of it.

Acting under the requirement of Ordinance No. 79, the Bus Control Committee adopted a regulation imposing a parking charge of $8 a month for each bus covered by a certificate of convenience. The regulation permitting the owner to operate a bus only on the alternate days set by the number of its certificate was continued in force.

On March 28,1951, the committee adopted a regulation inaugurating a new optional method of operating out of the terminal. The arrangement was called the “Mabuni Plan” after a member of the Bus Control Committee who was also an active bus operator. Under the new plan, any certified operator who owned two or more buses could, if he desired, withdraw a bus from service and transfer its certificate number and privilege of operating to a bus retained by him in service. The certificate for the retained bus would then bear one odd and one even number and the owner, instead of having to maintain and operate two buses, each of which could only be operated on alternate days, could then operate a single bus every day for the aggregate charge of $16 a month. The Mabuni Plan was put on a trial basis for three months commencing April 1, 1951. It was adopted on a permanent basis on July 18. 1951.

*315 The plaintiff Isidro Godoy elected to come under the plan on May 1,1951. He owned two buses, operating them under certificates Nos. 18 and 21. Under the old system he was entitled to operate bus No. 18 on even days and bus No. 21 on odd days. He retired bus 21 from service and transferred its number to the certificate of bus No. 18. He thereafter was entitled under the Mabuni Plan regulations to operate that bus every day of the month for the same payment of $16 a month previously required of him for the two buses.

Ordinance No. 154, effective May 1, 1955, amended Section 3 of Ordinance No. 79 by reducing the amount of the parking charge from $8 to $6.50 per month.

Approximately six months after the adoption of Ordinance No. 154, Isidro Godoy filed the complaint in this action to recover from the County of Hawaii one half of the total amount of the parking charges collected from him by the Bus Control Committee from and after May 1, 1951. The complaint is predicated on the theory that the Mabuni Plan was illegal for the averred reason that the committee did not have the authority to charge more per month for any one bus using the terminal than the parking fee prescribed by ordinance, that is, $8 a month before, and $6.50 a month after the amendment of Ordinance No. 79. Plaintiff, accordingly, claims he had been overcharged $8 a month from May 1, 1951 to May 1, 1955 and $6.50 a month thereafter. In addition to seeking recovery of the amount of the claimed excessive payments the complaint also prays for injunctive relief against a continuance of the claimed overcharging.

The action was instituted by plaintiff Isidro Godoy on behalf of himself and “Members of the Filipino Bus Association and All Others Similarly Situated.” The complaint alleges there were 31 members of the Filipino Bus Association. After a jury-waived trial in which the above- *316 related basic facts and other facts were made to appear, the circuit judge rendered a decision in favor of the plaintiffs. The judgment entered in the case included a provision restraining the County of Hawaii from further assessing and collecting overcharges as claimed in the complaint. The decision and judgment left the matter as to which members of the bus association were entitled to recover, and the amounts of their respective recoveries, to later determination. The named plaintiff Isidro Godoy is sole appellee on this appeal.

Consistently with the theory of the complaint, appellee contends that the wording of Section 3 of Ordinance No. 79 is without ambiguity and that it so clearly and unequivocally sets and limits the fee that could be charged by the Bus Control Committee to “each bus” using the terminal to the amount specified by the section that no extrinsic considerations may be resorted to for the purpose of ascertaining whether a different meaning may be ascribed to it.

Appellant in effect contends that as the literal or strict construction of Section 3 urged by appellee will work palpable injustice and an unreasonable result, we may consider extrinsic aids to construe the section and that if it is considered in pari materia with Ordinance No.

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Bluebook (online)
354 P.2d 78, 44 Haw. 312, 1960 Haw. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godoy-etc-v-hawaii-county-haw-1960.