Illinois Transportation Trade Ass'n v. City of Chicago

839 F.3d 594, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18285
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 2016
Docket16-2980
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 839 F.3d 594 (Illinois Transportation Trade Ass'n v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Transportation Trade Ass'n v. City of Chicago, 839 F.3d 594, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18285 (7th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

This case, closely parallel to Joe Sanfelippo Cabs, Inc. v. City of Milwaukee, No. 16-1008, also decided today, involves constitutional challenges to the endeavor of a city (Chicago in this case, Milwaukee in the other) to stimulate greater competition in the “for-hire auto transportation market.” That is the market composed of owners of taxicabs that one hails on the street, of lively services, which are usually summoned by phone (as for that matter taxis sometimes are), and of the newer auto-transport services for hire, of which the best known is Uber (the second best known is Lyft); generically these services are known either as Transportation Network Providers (TNPs) or as ridesharing services.

Because the acronym TNPs is not well known, nor the term ridesharing services, but Uber is very well known, we’ll focus on Uber, which “at its core ... is just an app that you download to your smartphone and use to get a nearby Uber driver to come pick you up. While some taxi services are getting on board with these newfangled apps most for-rent cars still wait at the taxi stand or require you to give the service dispatch center a call in advance. Uber doesn’t do that. ... You can only hitch an Uber ride via the service’s app.” Kristen Hall-Geisler, “5 Ways Uber Is Really Different from a Regular Taxi,” http://auto.howstuffworks.com/tech *596 transport/5-ways-uber-really-different-from-regular-taxil.htm (visited Oct. 6, 2016, as was the other website in this opinion). (However, Uber has now added a feature that allows customers to schedule an Uber pickup in advance. See Uber.com, “Scheduled Ride for Extra Peace of Mind,” www.uber.com/infb/scheduled-rides/.) There are other differences, which many consumers consider advantages of Uber over taxis: the storage of payment information, so that one does not need to be carrying cash or a credit card; the ability to see a time estimate of how long a pickup will take and also a driver’s rating by past users; and the ability to request a ride from wherever one is (e.g., from the comfort of home, inside during the rain rather than by hailing on a street).

The plaintiffs are companies that own and operate either taxicabs or livery vehicles in Chicago or that provide services to such companies, such as loans and insurance. Taxi companies are tightly regulated by the City regarding driver and vehicle qualifications, licensing, fares, and insurance; livery companies are also tightly regulated, but we won’t need to discuss them separately. Uber (which remember we’re treating as representative of the TNPs) is less heavily regulated than the taxi and livery companies (until 2014 it wasn’t regulated at all) and has a different business mpdel. For example, you can’t hail an Uber vehicle on the street; you must use a smartphone app to summon an Uber car. Since 2014 Uber and the other TNPs have been governed by an ordinance, but it is different from the ordinances governing taxi and livery services.and more permissive; for example, it allows the companies to set their own fares, and in this and other ways allows them to do by contract some of the things that Chicago ordinances require taxi and livery companies to do.

The plaintiffs challenge the ordinance on seven grounds, of which four are based on the U.S. Constitution and the other three on Illinois law. The district judge dismissed all but the two claims that accuse the City of denying the equal protection of the laws by allowing the TNPs to compete with taxi and livery services without being subject to all the regulations governing those services. The plaintiffs appeal the district judge’s dismissal of five of their claims and the City appeals the judge’s refusal to dismiss the other two as well.

All seven of the plaintiffs’ claims are weak. The first is that allowing the TNPs into the taxi and livery markets has taken away the plaintiffs’ property for a public use without compensating them. A variant of such a claim would have merit had the City confiscated taxi medallions, which are the licenses that authorize the use of an automobile as a taxi. Confiscation of the medallions would amount to confiscation of the taxis: no medallion, no right to own a taxi, Boonstra v. City of Chicago, 214 Ill.App.3d 379, 158 Ill.Dec. 576, 574 N.E.2d 689, 694-95 (1991), though the company might be able to convert the vehicle to another use. Anyway the City is not confiscating any taxi medallions; it is merely exposing the taxicab companies to new competition—competition from Uber and the other TNPs.

“Property” does not include a right to be free from competition. A license to operate a coffee shop doesn’t authorize the licensee to enjoin a tea shop from opening. When property consists of a license to operate in a market in a particular way, it does not carry with it a right to be free from competition in that market. A patent confers an exclusive right to make and sell the patented product, but no right to prevent a competitor from inventing a noninfringing substitute product that erodes the paten-tee’s profits. Indeed when new technolo *597 gies, or new business methods, appear, a common result is the decline or even disappearance of the old. Were the . old deemed to have a constitutional right to preclude the entry of the new into the markets of the old, economic progress might grind -to a halt. Instead of taxis we might have horse and buggies; instead of the telephone, the telegraph; instead of computers, slide rules. Obsolescence would equal entitlement.

Taxi medallions authorize the owners to own and operate taxis, not to exclude competing transportation services. The plaintiffs in this case cannot exclude competition from buses or trains or bicycles or liveries •oí chartered sightseeing vehicles or jitney buses or walking; indeed they cannot exclude conlpetition from taxicab newcomers, for the City has reserved the right (which the plaintiffs don’t challenge) to issue additional tax medallions. Why then should the plaintiffs be allowed' to exclude competition from Uber? To this question they offer no answer.

All that the City give's taxi-medallion owners is the right to operate taxicabs in Chicago, see Municipal Code of Chicago § 9-112-020(b) (a parallel provision, § 9-114-020(b), governs liveries). That isn’t' a right to exclude competitive providers of transportation. As pointed out in Boston Taxi Owners Ass’n, Inc. v. City of Boston, 180 F.Supp.3d 108, 117, 2016 WL 1274631, at *5 (D. Máss. March 31, 2016), “if a person who wishes to operate a taxicab without a medallion is prevented from doing so, it is because he or she would violate municipal regulations, not because he or she would violate medallion owners’ property rights.” Section 9-112-020(b) of the Municipal Code, cited above, which has been on the books since 1963, entitles the medallion owners to be the exclusive providers of taxi service, but not to exclude alternatives to the service they offer. The City has created .a property right in taxi medallions; it has not created a property right in all commercial transportation of persons by automobile in Chicago.

The plaintiffs continue to receive some insulation from competition, because they alone are permitted to operate taxicabs in Chicago.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
839 F.3d 594, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-transportation-trade-assn-v-city-of-chicago-ca7-2016.