Nevin Bus Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission

99 Pa. Super. 370, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 340
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 1, 1930
DocketAppeal 270
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 99 Pa. Super. 370 (Nevin Bus Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nevin Bus Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission, 99 Pa. Super. 370, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 340 (Pa. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

The Pennsylvania R. R. Co. filed a complaint with the commission alleging that appellant, Nevin Bus Lines, Inc., was conducting an intrastate passenger transportation business without a certificate of public convenience as required by Art. III, sec. 2 (b), and Art. Y, see. 18, of the Public Service Company Law, (1913 P. L. 1388, and 1414). After an answer was filed, the commission heard the parties and made an order sustaining the complaint, and directing that respondent “forthwith cease and desist from operating a motor vehicle, or motor vehicles, as a common carrier of passengers between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, or any other points in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, over routes in whole or in part within said Commonwealth, unless and until a certificate of public con *372 venience shall have been obtained therefor in accordance with the Public Service Company Law. ’ ’

Nevin Bus Lines, Inc., has appealed. The record below consisted of (1) the petition, (2) the answer and (3) a paper entitled “Stipulation as to Facts,” signed by counsel for complainant and respondent respectively. At the argument in this court, there was filed a map of Pennsylvania and Maryland showing the Lincoln Highway, and other roads on which appellant transacts its business. The order appealed from is based on that record. Excepting the map, there is no evidence in the record unless it can be found in the stipulation. In the light of the inferences sought to be drawn from the stipulation by the parties in their briefs, we are driven to the conclusion, in which we all concur, that the stipulation is insufficient as an agreement of the facts; that it is so contradictory as to establish that the parties have not agreed on essential facts involved, and that the record must be returned to the commission for hearing. Before pointing out in detail this inadequacy, it may be well to state generally what appears to be the basis of the dispute.

Appellant is undoubtedly engaged in interstate commerce, and for such business, does not require a certificate of public convenience. The statute provides that a certificate “shall’be given only if and when the said commission shall find or determine that the granting or approval of such application is necessary or proper for the service, accommodation, convenience or safety of the public.” Whether interstate service is necessary, proper, or convenient is not a matter to be determined by the state: Buck v. Kuykendall 267 U. S. 307; Bush v. Maloy 267 U. S. 317. No question is raised under any police power sought to be exercised by the state, (compare Morris v. Duby 274 U. S. 135; Hendrick v. Maryland 235 U. S. 610; Interstate Buses *373 Corp. v. Blodgett 276 U. S. 245; Kane v. N. J. 242 U. S. 160 and Clark v. Poor 274 U. S. 554, 558).

The dispute in the ease is whether appellant is also engaged in intrastate transportation of passengers by motor-bus; if it is, a certificate is required under the section of the statute referred to. In considering this phase of the ease, we of course lay aside the transportation of passengers whose journey in appellant’s buses begins outside of Pennsylvania for transportation to a destination in the state or in some other state, or which begins in the state for a destination in some other state. The dispute seems to be with regard to passengers who begin their journey in Philadelphia for travel westward to a destination in Pennsylvania, or who begin at Pittsburgh for travel eastward to a destination in the state. If these journeys were made wholly on the public roads of Pennsylvania, no one would deny that they were intrastate. The route marked on the map, as that pursued by appellant, occupies the Lincoln Highway between Philadelphia and Gettysburg, (Ardmore, Lancaster and York being points on this route). At Gettysburg, the route leaves the Lincoln Highway and passes southward to Emmitsburg in Maryland, a point said to be a few miles south of the Mason-Dixon line; from Emmitsburg the route returns northwestward into Pennsylvania, passing through Waynesboro, again reaching the Lincoln Highway at McConnellsburg, and continuing on it to Pittsburgh; (Greencastle, Mercersburg, Bedford and Wilkinsburg being points between Pittsburgh and the Maryland boundary).

Prom the stipulation, the commission concluded, (and in this court its counsel, as well as counsel for the intervening appellee, insist that it concluded correctly) that appellant was engaged in intrastate commerce in carrying passengers:

(1) between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia as points *374 of origin and destination respectively, although, taken into Maryland over the route designated and

(2) between Philadelphia and Gettysburg; — Gettysburg and Ardmore; — Lancaster and Philadelphia;— Lancaster and Gettysburg; — York and Philadelphia;— Greencastle and Pittsburgh; — Mercersburg and Pitts-burg; — Bedford and Wilkinsburg; — trips made without leaving the state. The information, of which the foregoing is part, is said in the stipulation to have been collected by persons who made eight one-way trips between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. But appellant contends that no inference supporting the order appealed from can be made from this information because of its fifth paragraph in the stipulation, to wit: “5. No tickets are sold to passengers carried between Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania state line at the point on the route to Emmitsburg, Maryland, and in like manner, no tickets are sold to passengers carried after leaving Emmitsburg, Maryland, from the state line to Pittsburgh.” Here, then is direct contradiction of the intrastate transportation between the points stated in class 2 above.

Now, while the “Stipulation as to Pacts” begins by an agreement “that the following statement may be accepted as giving the full facts relative to the controversy ......and that said facts are tó be accepted as though witnesses thereto had been called, sworn, examined and testified thereon, and that upon such set of facts the decision.......is sought......;” it continues as follows: ‘ ‘ The complainant represents that the attached papers contain a summary of the evidence that will be introduced by complainant by means of the following witnesses...... [names stated]; ’ ’ then follow four paragraphs, containing inter alia the following — “The actual running time in the state of Maryland is approximately seven (7) to ten (10) minutes, and the actual mileage is but a very small per *375 centage of the total distance between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh — somewhere between five (5) and ten (10) miles out of a total of several hundred miles.

“5.

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Related

Public Utility Commission v. Atlantic Freight Lines, Inc.
4 Pa. D. & C.2d 364 (Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, 1954)
Atlantic Freight Lines, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission
60 A.2d 589 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1948)
Nevin Bus Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission
182 A. 80 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Waer Bus Co. v. Public Service Commission
178 A. 157 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Commonwealth v. Ferrari
173 A. 887 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
99 Pa. Super. 370, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevin-bus-lines-inc-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1930.