Mason v. Intercity Terminal Railway Co.

251 S.W. 10, 158 Ark. 542, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 461
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 7, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 10 (Mason v. Intercity Terminal Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason v. Intercity Terminal Railway Co., 251 S.W. 10, 158 Ark. 542, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 461 (Ark. 1923).

Opinions

McCulloch, C. J.

The decision of this case calls for a determination of the question of the authority of the Railroad Commission of the State, under existing statutes, to regulate vehicles commonly known as “jitneys,” or “jitney busses,” operating as public carriers outside of or between municipalities. A brief outline of the powers conferred by the lawmakers in this respect is necessary.

The Arkansas Corporation Commission was created by the General Assembly of 1919, and in one of the sections of the statute creating the Commission its jurisdiction was defined to extend to and include “common carriers, railroads, street railroads, express companies, all car 'Companies, freight lines, toll bridges, ferries and steamboats, and vehicles of all kinds engaged in the transportation of freight and passengers.” Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 1618. The same- section also included, as being within the jurisdiction of the Commission, telegraph and telephone companies, pipe-line companies for the transportation of oil, gas and water, all gas companies, hydro-electric companies for the generation and transmission of light, heat, power and water.

The General Assembly of 1921 (Acts of 1921, p. 177) abolished the Arkansas Corporation Commission and substituted therefor the Arkansas Railroad Commission, the declared purpose being to transfer from the former “all its proper functions” to the latter. • This is declared in the first section of the act, which reads as follows:

“Section 1. That the intent of this act is that the present Arkansas Corporation Commission be abolished and that all its proper functions, not elsewhere herein delegated, be transferred to the Arkansas Railroad Commission as herein constituted.”

• Section 2 of the statute provides that the Railroad Commission “shall have and possess all of the powers and duties provided in this act, and all such other powers as were possessed by and exercised by the Railroad Commission of Arkansas * * * * which are not in conflict with the terms of this act.”

Section 3 defines the jurisdiction of the Railroad Commission as follows:

“Section 3. That section 5 of the said act No. 571, General Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas of 1919, above more particularly referred to, be and the same is hereby amended to read as follows:

“Section 5. Jurisdiction. The jurisdiction of the Commission shall extend to and include all matters pertaining to the regulation and operation of—

“(a) All

“Common carriers,

‘ ‘ Railroads,

“Express companies,

“Car companies,

“Freight lines,

“Toll bridges,

“Ferries,

“Steamboats,

“Street railroads,

‘ ‘ Telegraph companies,

‘ ‘ Telephone companies,

“Pipe-line companies for transportation of oil, gas and water,

“Gas companies,

“Electric lighting companies, and other companies furnishing gas or electricity for light, heat or power purposes,

“Hydro-electric companies for the generation-and for transmission of light, -heat or power, -

“Water companies-, furnishing' water within municipalities for municipal, domestic or industrial use.

“Provided, hoivever, that nothing herein shall vest said Commission with jurisdiction as to any rate, charge, rule, regulation, order, hearing, investigation, or other matter pertaining to 'the operation within the limits of any municipality of any street railroad, telephone company, gas company, pipe-line company for transportation of oil, gas or water, electrical company, water company, hydro-electric company or other company operating a public utility or furnishing public -service as to which jurisdiction may be elsewhere conferred in this act upon any municipal council or city commission; notwithstanding, however, the jurisdiction of the municipality as to the above matters within the limits of such municipality, the said Arkansas Railroad Commission shall have and is hereby delegated the authority and duty to require all utility companies now furnishing public service within the limits of any municipality to -furnish and continue furnishing such service to such municipality, though the right of regulation of such utility as to rates and all other matters within such municipality is herein elsewhere conferred upon the municipal councils or city commissions, subject to right of appeal-to the -courts.

“Provided, further, that nothing herein shall vest said Commission with jurisdiction as to any improvement district or municipality furnishing gas qr electricity for any purpose.

“And for the purpose of this act, and in the construction of this act, every person, firm, association, company, partnership or corporation or other -organizations engaged in the operation of any public utility above indicated shall be deemed to be a company within the meaning of this act.

“(b) All other jurisdictions, if any, possessed by the Arkansas Railroad Commission under the laws of Arkansas, in force on March 31, 1919.”

It will be observed that the- phrase, “and vehicles of all kinds engaged in the transportation of f-réight and passengers,” in the former- statute -defining the jurisdiction of- tlxe Corporation Commission, is omitted from tlxe last statute defining the jurisdiction of tlxe Railroad Commission, and tlxe contention of eouixsel for appellant is that this indicates the legislative will to withdraw the power ixx t-hi-s respect, aixd that under the familiar rule iix regard to the use of general words in connection with specific words of description being confined to things of the same kind or species (ejusdem generis) the words "common carrier” ixx the last statute do xxot have the effect of extending the jurisdiction beyond the specific things mexxtioned so as to include other vehicles, such as those ixxvolved ixx the present controversy.

The rule of interpretation ixx regard to ejus-clem generis has always found its application, so far as we can ‘ascertain, to general terms subjoined to other specific words of description of the same generic class, axxd we have xxot found an instance where the question of its application was ixxvolved in regard to preceding words, as in the present instance. It is coxxtexxded by eouixsel for appellee that the rule of interpretation is applicable solely to subjoined words of description, but we are unable to discover any reason for distinction in tli o application of the rule. We see no reason why the raid should not be applied to preceding as well as to subjoined words of general description, and we think that the effect would be the same if, instead of prefacing with the words "common carrier,” those words had been subjoined to the -other descriptive words used. The effect is the same, we think, as if there had been subjoined the words "other common carriers.” And the question then arises whether or not, taking the statute as a whole, the generic term should be confined in its application to things of the specific kinds mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 10, 158 Ark. 542, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-intercity-terminal-railway-co-ark-1923.