Lillie Boman v. Birmingham Transit Company

280 F.2d 531, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4023, 1960 WL 99240
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1960
Docket18187
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 280 F.2d 531 (Lillie Boman v. Birmingham Transit Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lillie Boman v. Birmingham Transit Company, 280 F.2d 531, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4023, 1960 WL 99240 (5th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a class action on behalf of Negro patrons of the Birmingham Transit Company seeking to enjoin it from enforcing its published rule of seating passengers according to race.

The suit joined the City Commissioners of Birmingham as individuals and the Bus Company. It was alleged that the Company and the Commissioners were illegally enforcing a state law or policy of insisting on racial segregation of the seating in the buses, and that although the City of Birmingham was not joined, the officials, one of whom was the Police Chief, and the Bus Company were agents of the state in requiring segregated seating.

This suit was brought soon after the City of Birmingham repealed the provisions of its code that had long required separate seating on City buses of Negro and white patrons. On the day the old ordinances were repealed a- new one, No. 1487-F, was enacted by the City Commission. It provided as follows:

“Section 1. That carriers of. passengers for hire operating in the City of Birmingham are authorized to formulate and promulgate s,u.ch rules and regulations for the seating of ; passengers on public conveyances in-, *533 their charge as are reasonably necessary to assure the speedy, orderly, convenient, safe and peaceful handling of passengers.
“Section 2. A willful refusal to obey a reasonable request of an operator or driver of such a public conveyance in relation to the seating of passengers thereon shall constitute a breach of the peace.”

At approximately the same time as the enactment of this ordinance the Bus Company put new buses into service. Instead of having movable “color boards,” separating the white and Negro portions of the bus, the Company painted signs at the front and rear of each bus:

“White Passengers Seat From Front, Colored Passengers from Rear.”

Within a few days of this, a group of some twenty-five Negroes, including the plaintiffs in this action, boarded a bus and proceeded to sit in the front of the bus. The driver closed the doors of the bus and permitted no one else on the bus; he requested the passengers to move to the rear. They declined to do so. Thereupon, the driver called his supervisor, holding the bus out of operation in the meantime. The supervisor arrived and he asked the passengers to move to the rear. They again declined to do so. Then a police traffic officer arrived and a crowd began to gather. The police officer called his superior who went to the scene and ordered the operator to take the bus to the barn. Then two other police officers arrived and after another request by the operator that the passengers move, again fruitless, they arrested nine of them. They were held in jail until 2:00 A.M., released on bond, charged with disorderly conduct, conspiracy to commit a breach of the peace and a breach of the peace. After trial and conviction they were held in jail some five days awaiting sentence; thereafter they were released on appeal bonds.

The trial court held that the arrest of the appellants was illegal and was a deprivation by the individual officers of their civil rights. 1 It found, however, that the individual officers acted on their own responsibility as police officers and not at the request of the Bus Company or under orders from the three City Commissioners or Chief of Police. The court found that the segregated seating rule was established by the Company on its own responsibility and that its driver sought only to use the quiet persuasion enjoined upon him by the instructions issued by the Company. 2 It is not disputed that *534 the bus operators were instructed not to call the police in case of refusal to move. They were instructed to call their supervisor and in the meantime to hold the bus.

The appellants, having failed in their proof to show joint or agreed action between the appellee and the City Commissioners, lost the opportunity to argue that the Bus Company’s action was, for that reason, state action. The trial court decided that this caused the case against the Bus Company to collapse and dismissed the suit as to it.

Appellants here assert the proposition that the City ordinance expressly granting authority to the franchised transit company to adopt seating rules at the identical meeting at which it repealed the compulsory segregation ordinance, so delegated the City’s governmental authority, especially when the ordinance contained criminal sanctions for violation of the Company’s rule, as to make the Company’s adoption of the segregation rule state action.

Because of the peculiar function performed by this Transit Company as a public utility, and its relation to the City and State of Alabama through its holding of a special franchise to operate on the public streets of Birmingham, we conclude that so long as such an ordinance was in force, the acts of the Bus Company in requiring racially segregated seating were state acts and were thus violative of the appellants’ constitutional rights. Browder v. Gayle, D.C.M.D.Ala., 142 F.Supp. 707, affirmed 352 U.S. 903, 77 S.Ct. 145, 1 L.Ed.2d 114; Flemming v. South Carolina Elec. & Gas Co., 4 Cir., 224 F.2d 752.

It was alleged in the complaint that the Bus Company “is engaged in operating within the corporate limits and police jurisdiction of said City [Birmingham], a bus line for transportation of passengers for hire, pursuant to a franchise issued by said City of Birmingham.” This allegation was, as it must have been, admitted in the answer.

The issuing of such a franchise by the City of Birmingham is a governmental function, controlled and authorized by the constitution of Alabama. Section 220 of the Constitution of 1901 reads:

“No person, firm, association, or corporation shall be authorized or permitted to use the streets, avenues, alleys or public places of any city, town, or village for the construction or operation of any public utility or private enterprise, without first obtaining the consent of the proper authorities of such city, town or village.”

Such “consent” has uniformly been held by the Alabama Supreme Court to *535 foe a franchise. Birmingham Interurban Taxicab Service Corp. v. McLendon, 210 Ala. 525, 98 So. 578, 579. In the more recent case of City of Mobile v. Farrell, 229 Ala. 582, 158 So. 539, 540, the court said:

“The right to use the public streets for hire does not exist in public or private enterprises. The privilege is a grant by sovereign authority, and is what is generally termed a franchise [citing cases.]”

Further, in the same opinion, the ■court said:

“In construing the effect of a grant it must not be forgotten that it is in the nature of a privilege thus extended as well as the regulation of a business

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Bluebook (online)
280 F.2d 531, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4023, 1960 WL 99240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lillie-boman-v-birmingham-transit-company-ca5-1960.