Lowe v. Stoutamire

166 So. 310, 123 Fla. 135, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 944
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 29, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 166 So. 310 (Lowe v. Stoutamire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe v. Stoutamire, 166 So. 310, 123 Fla. 135, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 944 (Fla. 1936).

Opinion

Davis, J.

The salient facts before this Court are that Carl Lowe, the petitioner in habeas corpus herein, was arrested in Leon County, Florida, on October 31, 1935, on .a warrant issued by Hon. W. May Walker, County Judge, wherein and whereby it was charged that said Lowe operated an International Truck, a mortor vehicle, for the transportation of property for compensation over the public highways of said county, without having a permit under Chapter 14764, Acts 1931, Laws of Florida, to operate said motor vehicle for hire; (2) that said Carl Lowe without authority from the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States, as required by the Federal Motor Carrier Act of 1935 (U. S. Interstate Commerce Act as amended by Chapter 8, 49 U. S. Statutes), unlawfully operated said motor vehicle for hire over Florida Highways in Leon County without complying with said U. S. Motor Carrier Act of 1935; and (3) that the said motor vehicle was operated for hire by the defendant named in the warrant *137 without his having applied to the Florida Railroad Commission for a designation of route within the State of Florida and absent the designation of any route therefor by the Railroad Commission of the State of Florida; that on the date of his arrest said Carl Lowe was a driver and employee of L. & L. Freight Lines, Inc., and was engaged in the course of his employment in driving a motor vehicle belonging to his employer; that at the time of the driver’s arrest the motor vehicle in question was loaded only with freight originating at points outside of the State of Florida, which freight had come into the defendant’s possession outside of the State of Florida destined for delivery in the State of Florida; that the L. & L. Freight Lines, Inc., had undertaken to engage in interstate commerce only over the highways described in an application for Certificate of Convenience and Necessity filed by it with the Florida Railroad Commission on October 8, 1935; that at the time of petitioner’s arrest he was operating his employer’s vehicle only on such highways as were described in the aforesaid application; that although the application to the Florida Railroad Commission had been duly filed on October 8, 1935, the said Commission had taken no steps with reference to said application either looking toward the denial or the granting of same.

As grounds for his release from custody, the prisoner asserts a privilege and immunity claimed to have been exercised by him according to the laws of the United States— “Motor Carrier Act, 1935,” Sections 201-227, inclusive, Interstate Commerce Act of the United States, Part II, approved August 9, 1935 — in that the motor vehicle operation for which he was arrested was at the time being carried on solely in interstate commerce, and by reason of that fact, was, under the terms of said “Motor Carrier Act, *138 1935,” and Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3 of the Constitution of the United States, beyond the reach of criminal statutes of the State of Florida insofar as they intended to hinder, delay, embarrass or punish the privilege of engaging in interstate commerce by motor carrier for hire pending the actual putting into operation by the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States of the administrative details required to be performed and carried out by said Commission with reference to certificating motor carrier operations such as that in which the petitioner was engaged in at the time of his arrest.

Paragraph (c) of Section 202 of the United States “Motor Carrier Act, 1935,” provides in terms that nothing in the Federal Act shall be construed to affect the powers of taxation of the several states, or to authorize a motor carrier to do an interstate business on the highways of any state, or to interfere with the exclusive exercise by each state of the power of regulation of intrastate commerce by motor carriers on the highways thereof.

The necessary intendment of this clause of the U. S. “Motor Carrier Act, 1935,” as we construe it, is that insofar as any state has previously set up, and put into operation a system of statutory provisions for regulating traffic and commerce on the state’s highways by motor carriers for hire or compensation, that all state made statutory regulations referrable to the state’s inherent powers of taxation, the state’s police authority to reasonably conserve its proprietary rights in its roads as an incident to its right of ownership thereof by imposing non discriminatory regulations as to use applicable to all traffic generally, whether interstate or intrastate, and the state’s powers to exercise complete and sole regulation of all intrastate commerce and traffic by motor carriers on state highways, remain sever *139 ally undiminished and unimpaired by the Federal Act aforesaid.

This view of the law leads to the inescapable conclusion that the United States “Motor Carrier Act, 1935,” did not supersede nor impair the operation of Chapter 14764, Acts 1931, Laws of Florida, insofar as that Act has heretofore required interstate motor carriers to apply for and obtain from the State Railroad Commission a certificate of registration * showing the nature of the interstate operation privilege being exercised, and has compelled observance of those provisions of the Act sustained by the Federal Courts as heretofore capable of being enforced against interstate motor carriers.

In Alkazin v. Wells, 47 Fed. (2nd) 904, Chapter 13700, Acts 1929 (which Act of 1929 has been superseded by Chapter 14764, Acts 1931) was upheld by a three-judge Federal Court as a proper exercise of the state’s power insofar as it had been construed and applied to make it applicable to motor carriers for hire engaged exclusively in interstate commerce in the following particulars only; registration and obtaining from the state of a formal certificate or permit to operate in interstate commerce, such certificate being grantable as a matter of right and as of course whenever appropriately sought; payment of prescribed mileage taxes exacted by the State of Florida as compensation for use of its highways; appropriate police regulation reasonably adopted to conserve the state’s property rights in the highways, as well as to protect the comfort, safety and convenience of citizens and the traveling public on the highways; or pertaining to the speed at which vehicle may travel, or requiring a statement of routes traveled, schedules *140 followed and rates charged to be filed with the State Commission; to give security for the protection of third parties from negligence due to improper use of the state’s highways, etc. The law of that decision still prevails in the State of Florida, despite the enactment by Congress of the U. S. “Motor Carrier Act, 1935,” which is dominant over the laws of the State of Florida only insofar as the State and Federal law and regulations may be in conflict.

The mere enactment of the “Motor Carrier Act, 1935,” by the U. S. Congress did not ipso facto suspend nor eo instanti supersede, the laws of the State of Florida applicable to interstate motor carriers, hut left those laws to be co-operatively applied insofar as they can be so applied without overriding, hindering, burdening or embarrassing the regulations of Congress applicable to the identical subject matter.

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In re South Florida Freightways, Inc.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 So. 310, 123 Fla. 135, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-v-stoutamire-fla-1936.