Nevin Bus Lines, Inc. v. Public Service Commission

182 A. 80, 120 Pa. Super. 266, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 150
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 23, 1935
DocketAppeal, 22
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 182 A. 80 (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, 182 A. 80, 120 Pa. Super. 266, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 150 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

Tbe Pennsylvania Railroad Company filed a complaint with tbe Public Service Commission alleging that Nevin Bus Lines, Inc., was operating motor ve *268 hides as a common carrier for the transportation of intrastate passengers without a certificate of public convenience as required by the Public Service Company Law. A stipulation having been entered into as to the facts, a cease and desist order was issued by the commission and an appeal was taken to this .court. The order and because the stipulation contained contradicremitted for further hearing after an opinion (99 Pa. Superior Ct. 370) by Judge Linn, now Mr. Justice Linn of the Supreme Court, on the ground that the agreed statement of facts was not sufficient to support the order and because the stipulation contained contradictions. Further hearings were then held before the commission and, in the meantime, the respondent made an arrangement with certain of its corporate affiliates, Nevin Atlantic Lines and Nevin Transit, Inc., whereby certain operations were taken over by these companies. Such companies were made parties respondents by agreement, and it is not necessary to distinguish between the operations of the respective allied companies.

The commission again found that appellant was engaged in intrastate commerce in carrying passengers (1) between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, each as points of origin and destination, routed through Emmitsburg, Maryland, and (2) between various points in Pennsylvania without leaving this state, and then made this final order: “It Is Further Ordered: That Nevin Bus Lines, Inc., Nevin-Atlantic Lines, and Nevin Transit, Inc., their agents and employes, forthwith severally cease and desist from transporting passengers as eommon carriers between points in Pennsylvania.”

The appellants, by their assignments of error complain of the findings of fact and the “cease and desist order.” Two distinct situations are raised by the proofs and require separate treatment, to wit, those operations between points in the state where the route traversed is partly out of the state and those where the *269 operations are all within the state. They will be considered in the same order.

I. The sixth assignment of error is as follows: “The Commission finds that this combination of elements constitutes a subterfuge and that the respondent in transporting passengers between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh and intermediate points via Emmitsburg, Maryland, has been and is engaged in intrastate transportation in violation of the Public Service Company Law.”

It is not disputed that the respondents have been operating from New York through Philadelphia to Pittsburgh and thence westwardly to Chicago and other midwestern cities. As we said in the former appeal (p. 372): “Appellant is undoubtedly engaged in interstate commerce, and for such business, does not require a certificate of public convenience......Whether interstate service is necessary, proper, or convenient is not a matter to be determined by the state.” The immediate question here involved on this branch of the controversy is whether there is sufficient evidence to support the finding of the commission that the routing of this traffic between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh through Emmitsburg, Maryland, was a mere subterfuge to avoid the regulation of what was, in fact, intrastate transportation. The essential facts in the case are not disputed, although the credibility of the witnesses was for the commission as the fact-finding body.

We will enumerate the facts on which the commission depends for support of its order. The respondents operated on schedule a regular passenger bus route from New York to Philadelphia, thence via the Lincoln Highway to Gettysburg where it left that highway and passed to the south through Emmitsburg, Maryland, and Waynesboro, Greencastle, and Mereersburg, Pennsylvania, to McConnellsburg, where it again joined the Lincoln Highway, thence by that thoroughfare to Pitts *270 burgh and on west to Chicago and other cities in the middle west. Passengers were sold tickets and transported by this route from points of origin in Pennsylvania east of Emmitsburg to points of destination in Pennsylvania west thereof, and vice versa. The route traveled by the busses of appellant between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh through Emmitsburg is 303 miles in length, while the route by the Lincoln Highway through Gettysburg, Chambersburg, and McConnellsburg is only 293 miles, and the distance traversed in Maryland is less than ten miles. The territory between Emmitsburg and Gettysburg is a place where lines passing east and west and north and south naturally meet, and it is to the interest of motor bus companies and for the convenience of the public to have a point of interchange or junction for passenger routes in that vicinity. Gettysburg is preferable to Emmitsburg from the standpoint of efficient motor transportation, and there is more traffic available at Gettysburg than at Emmitsburg. The facilities by way of hotels, restaurants, and garages are better at Gettysburg than at Emmitsburg, the former being the larger town. It is the contention of the complainants that the natural route for the transportation of passengers from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh is over the Lincoln Highway through Lancaster, Gettysburg, Chambersburg, and McConnellsburg, while the ¡respondents diverge from that route at Gettysburg by a more southerly route through Maryland for a short distance, which detour is ten miles farther than the direct route.

While there is evidence which warrants the finding of these primary facts relied upon by the commission, there is other uncontradicted evidence shown by the testimony of witnesses for the complainants or admissions which must be considered before an inference can be drawn that the directing of the route through Maryland was a mere subterfuge to avoid intrastate regula *271 tion. At the time these complaints were filed, the route Between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh via Emmitsburg, Maryland, on account of the condition of the different highways, was a route used not only by these respondents but by other passenger bus operators who were at the time accommodating the same districts and traffic, and the commission had issued a certificate of public convenience to a rival operator for that portion of this route through Emmitsburg which was within the state of Pennsylvania, thereby indicating that such a route was proper and necessary for the accommodation of the public. At the same time, a number of operators were operating over the route now objected to and using Emmitsburg as a junction or focal point between routes passing east and west and those running north toward Harrisburg and south to Baltimore, Washington, and southern cities. The respondents had established a route which was clearly interstate from Pittsburgh over the Lincoln Highway to McConnellsburg, thence by Emmitsburg to Baltimore and Washington, so that Emmitsburg became the natural junction point of east and west and north and south routes. Respondents carried a large number of passengers from points in Pennsylvania whose destination was Emmitsburg or points south thereof. In laying out such interstate route, connections were made and facilities were established which made it inconvenient for the respondents to change their junction to another point.

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Bluebook (online)
182 A. 80, 120 Pa. Super. 266, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevin-bus-lines-inc-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1935.