Moritas. v. Pub. Ut. Com.

40 Haw. 579, 1954 Haw. LEXIS 10
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1954
DocketNO. 2978.
StatusPublished

This text of 40 Haw. 579 (Moritas. v. Pub. Ut. Com.) 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
Moritas. v. Pub. Ut. Com., 40 Haw. 579, 1954 Haw. LEXIS 10 (haw 1954).

Opinion

This is an appeal from an order of the public utilities commission granting the application of the Honolulu Rapid Transit Company, Limited, to conduct a tour service on a schedule basis around the island of Oahu.

It is alleged that the applicant is a public utility as defined by section 4701, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945, operating a transportation service in Honolulu pursuant to its franchise; that applicant had surveyed the field and ascertained that there was a public need and convenience for such a service at reasonable rates on a schedule basis, and prayed for the issuance of a certificate of public convenience and necessity pursuant to section 4719, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945, and rule 5 of the commission's rules of practice. It sets out the proposed rule and alleges that no other person held a certificate for such service; it also set forth the proposed schedules and equipment, as well as the applicant's financial ability to perform the service. It also alleged that the proposed around-the-island service could be operated at a profit and would afford applicant additional revenues that would tend to avoid future fare increases in its transportation system which had decreased since 1941.

A public hearing was held on December 10, 1953, pursuant to published notice. Appellant Auto Rental Company appeared by counsel and filed a protest and petitioned for leave to intervene. Appellant Morita appeared in *Page 582 person and protested the granting of the application. Statements and letters from the public were received and read into the record and the applicant presented certain evidence with reference to its revenue passengers, tax bill, population of Oahu, the increase in tourists in Honolulu, the existing fares charged by appellant Auto Rental and other limousine services, and contrasted such charge of $9.50 with the proposed Honolulu Rapid Transit charge of $3.45. Evidence was further introduced by the treasurer of the company that the tours could be operated at a profit. The evidence also showed that the Honolulu Rapid Transit Company had been chartering its equipment to appellant Auto Rental and others for use in a similar around-the-island service.

After the evidence of the Honolulu Rapid Transit, the hearing was adjourned until January 22, 1954, for the commission to investigate the matter and report. The report consisted of a survey made by the commission on the question of whether there was a need for the proposed service and whether it would be patronized.

At the conclusion of the hearing on January 22, the board of supervisors addressed a letter to the commission calling attention to the territorial limits of the transit company's franchise and questioning the commission's authority to grant a certificate outside these limits.

On March 11, 1954, the commission made its decision and issued an order granting a certificate of public convenience and necessity for the proposed tour schedule around the island of Oahu.

From this order and decision an appeal was filed which presents two questions: (1) Does the franchise to the Honolulu Rapid Transit Company, authorizing it to operate a street railway and bus system in the district of Honolulu and a portion of the district of Ewa, prohibit it from engaging in any transportation activity outside of *Page 583 the said districts? Or, to express the proposition positively rather than negatively, does the charter creating the Honolulu Rapid Transit Company as a corporation, as distinguished from its franchise (the grant of certain special privileges), authorize the company to engage in operating such a bus system as proposed? (2) Was the decision and order of the commission, that the public convenience and necessity would be served by granting a certificate, supported by substantial evidence?

Act 69, Session Laws of 1898, granted a franchise or special privilege to operate a street railway system in the district of Honolulu to a number of individuals consisting of Clinton G. Ballentyne and others "and to their associates and assigns or to such corporation as may be organized by them." Pursuant to this Act, a corporation was thereafter formed, organized by Mr. Ballentyne and his associates, called the Honolulu Rapid Transit and Land Company, to which the franchise was assigned. The life of the franchise was for a term of thirty years but by Act 186 of the Session Laws of Hawaii 1921 its life was extended indefinitely.

A franchise is a special privilege conferred by governmental authority on corporations, on individual persons or associations to do something otherwise legally incompetent, such as the right to operate a ferry, a railway, a street railway system, and to lay tracks and poles along public streets, etc. Unfortunately, much confusion has resulted because the term "franchise" has frequently been used with two meanings: one, the right to be a corporation, because frequently the franchise and the creation of the corporation occurred under one legislative act; the other, special rights, privileges and powers granted to the corporation (or to an individual) by legislative act. The special rights granted are not ordinarily part of the corporation; they can be granted to an individual with the same legal *Page 584 force and effect as to a corporation. "They are no part of corporate life if owned by a corporation, any more than they are a part of individual life if owned by a human being." (Lord v.Equitable Life Ass. Co. of U.S., 194 N.Y. 212.)

The same corporation may hold several different franchises just as an individual may own separate items of property, whether franchises or other property. (Fletcher, CyclopediaCorporations, Perm. Ed., vol. 6A, § 2879, p. 448.)

Obviously, the franchise granted to Mr. Ballentyne and his associates did not give corporate existence to the Honolulu Rapid Transit and Land Company, but the charter afterwards obtained by Mr. Ballentyne and his associates did create the corporation to which the franchise was duly assigned.

The corporation formed to take over the franchise was created by a charter granted on the 30th day of August, 1898, by the minister of the interior under chapter 127, Laws of 1897. This charter gave the corporation life for a term of fifty years. (Note that the franchise was for a period of thirty years only.)

Apparently further confusion has arisen because the Honolulu Rapid Transit and Land Company was chartered and not organized under articles of association which at that time was limited to businesses of "mercantile, agricultural or manufacturing." To add to the confusion, the term "charter" is often used in the sense of "franchise." This mixing of terminology requires an examination of the laws relative to incorporating under the early statutes of Hawaii and the later amendments thereto.

The first Act providing for the organization of corporations was contained in Statute Laws, volume 1, 1845-1846, at page 111, relative to the powers of the minister of the interior. This section provided: "Said minister shall also *Page 585 have power, at the direction of His Majesty in privy council, to issue charters of incorporation to any private body politic and corporate, calculated by its operations to benefit the government in any island division of this kingdom; and to confer upon suchcorporation all the privileges and powers of a person in law, for any term of time, to be limited in said charter, upon the terms and conditions to be therein expressed, reserving to His Majesty's government the right of annulment, as prescribed in the act to organize the judiciary." (Emphasis added.)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Haw. 579, 1954 Haw. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moritas-v-pub-ut-com-haw-1954.