Parker v. City of Silverton

220 P. 139, 109 Or. 298, 31 A.L.R. 589, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 100
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 220 P. 139 (Parker v. City of Silverton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. City of Silverton, 220 P. 139, 109 Or. 298, 31 A.L.R. 589, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 100 (Or. 1923).

Opinion

BAND, J.

The plaintiff is a common carrier of passengers, between Salem and Silverton, by means of motor vehicles, under a permit regularly issued by the Public Service Commission. He brought this suit to enjoin the enforcement of an ordinance of the [300]*300City of Silverton. This ordinance was passed on March 28, 1923, and it prohibits the operator of any vehicle, used for the carriage of passengers or property for hire between points within and without the city, from receiving or discharging passengers or property on any of the public streets of the city, except upon payment to the city of a license fee of $300 per annum for each vehicle having the seating capacity of those operated by plaintiff.

The ordinance also provides that permits may be issued upon the annual payment of $75 for each stage having the seating capacity of those operated by the plaintiff,' on condition that the operator shall provide a stage terminal in the City of Silverton, which, under the terms of the ordinance, shall be located entirely upon privately owned property, shall be housed, in a substantial structure and be constructed in conformity to the ordinances of that city and be equipped with suitable waiting rooms, which shall be heated in the cold season and shall have adjacent thereto suitable lavatories and toilet facilities for both males and females. But in such case the carrier must receive and discharge all passengers at the terminal station, and is not permitted to receive or discharge passengers on the public streets at all. It also provides that the fares and charges for transportation shall be just and reasonable and that if the same are exorbitant or unreasonable, the permit may be revoked by the council. It prescribes the streets which may be used by motor vehicles carrying passengers or property for hire in entering and dep aiding from the City of Silverton, and forbids the use of streets other than those designated. It provides a penalty of imprisonment or fine or both for its violation, and gives the recorder of the city [301]*301power to revoke the license for a second or subsequent conviction for violation of its terms. By its terms the ordinance is made applicable to all carriers, whether operating wholly within the city or operating to and from points outside of the city.

By Chapter 10, Laws of 1921 (Spec. Sess.), the legislature confers upon the Public Service Commission of Oregon the exclusive power to regulate public carriers engaged in transporting by motor propelled vehicles passengers or property for hire over the public highways of the state, not operating exclusively within the corporate limits of an incorporated city or town. Under this statute, it is made the duty of the Public Service Commission of this state to supervise and regulate all transportation companies engaged in the transportation of persons or property for hire by motor vehicles over the public highways of the state, and to fix their rates and charges therefor. The term “transportation company” is defined by the act to include every corporation or individual thus engaged, and the term “public highway” as defined means “every public street # * in this state.” The commission is empowered to prescribe general rules and regulations governing such transportation and providing for the safety thereof; to require them to furnish adequate facilities for the conduct of their business, and to file annual reports and to furnish such other information as the commission may require. The act requires transportation companies to pay an annual license fee to the commission in order to defray the expenses of administering the act, and to furnish bonds with sufficient sureties satisfactory to the commission, conditioned to pay the fees prescribed by Section 25 of Chapter 371 of the General Laws of [302]*302Oregon for 1921, as amended by Chapter 8, Laws of 1921 (Spec. Sess.). Section 9 of Chapter 10 prescribes a penalty which may be enforced upon any carrier under the act who violates or fails to comply with any order, decision, rule, regulation or requirement of the Public Service Commission, and Section 3 of Chapter 10 provides that the Public Service Commission, in the exercise of its jurisdiction, shall have the power to make orders, and prescribe rules and regulations affecting transportation companies “notwithstanding the provisions of any charter, ordinance or permit of any incorporated city or town or county, and in case of conflict between .any such order, rule or regulation' of any such charter provision, ordinance or permit, the order or regulation of the Public Service Commission shall in each instance prevail, but cities and towns may enact and enforce reasonable regulatory licenses not destructive of the general purposes of this act.” Section 26 of Chapter 371 provides that the registration and license fees imposed upon motor vehicles “shall be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses except municipal license fees under regulatory ordinances to which such vehicles or the owners thereof, by reason of such ownership, may be subject.”

Under the plain provisions of Section 26, Chapter 371, the payment by transportation companies of the registration and license fees prescribed by Section 25 thereof, as amended, was made to and accepted by the state upon the express condition that no other tax or license fee should be exacted of any transportation company, by the state or by any municipality or governmental agency of the state, except such reasonable municipal license fees as should be imposed by municipalities for purposes of regu[303]*303lation only, and then only for such an amount as would be necessary to cover the expenses of such regulation; while under the provisions of Section 3 of Chapter 10 quoted above, the ordinance in question cannot be upheld or enforced unless it (1) is a mere reasonable regulation not destructive of the general purposes of the act embraced in Chapter 10, and (2) imposes the payment of a mere regulatory license fee and does not exact the payment of a tax.

1,2. The public streets within the limits of an incorporated city or town are a part of the public highways of the state and belong to the whole people of the state. They are maintained primarily for the benefit of the people at large. Persons residing in the city or town have an equal, but not a superior right, to the use of the streets, over those who reside elsewhere. All alike must malee a reasonable use of them so as not unduly or unreasonably to interfere with the common right possessed equally by all. The municipalities themselves possess no legislative power over the public streets within their corporate limits unless conferred by some legislative authority. It is within the legislative power to delegate to municipalities the sole power to regulate and control the streets within their corporate limits and to withdraw this delegated power at will.

3. Under the provisions of Chapter 10, municipalities are given the power to regulate and control traffic upon their streets which begins, ends and is completed within their corporate limits, but as to the transportation for hire of passengers or property by motor vehicles not exclusively and wholly conducted within the corporate limits of a city or town, the power to regulate it is conferred exclu[304]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 P. 139, 109 Or. 298, 31 A.L.R. 589, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-city-of-silverton-or-1923.