Parsons v. City of Galveston

84 S.W.2d 996, 125 Tex. 568, 1935 Tex. LEXIS 348
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1935
DocketNo. 6400.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 84 S.W.2d 996 (Parsons v. City of Galveston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parsons v. City of Galveston, 84 S.W.2d 996, 125 Tex. 568, 1935 Tex. LEXIS 348 (Tex. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge RYAN

delivered the opinion for the Court.

The question to be determined is the validity of an ordinance of the City of Galveston prescribing minimum fares to be charged by “any person in charge or control of or engaged in the operation of any automobile, taxicab, motor bus, or similar vehicle, devoted to or used in the carriage of persons for hire over the streets of and within the limits of the City of Galves *570 ton.” The ordinance declares it unlawful to charge or receive for the carriage of any passenger not exceeding five in such vehicle, less than twenty-five cents for each trip, between points within a certain district, and fifty cents between points without such district, and provides that nothing contained therein shall be taken as permitting any charge or fare in excess or greater than the maximum charge or fare prescribed by existing ordinances of the city. Such ordinance is copied in the margin (a) .

Vince Parsons and G. E. Metcalf, doing business in the City of Galveston, under the name of the “Dime Taxi Service,” sought injunctive relief against the city, its mayor and commissioners, its chief of police and city attorney, restraining the enforcement of said ordinance and interference in any manner with plaintiff in the operation of their taxicab business, challenging the constitutionality of said ordinance as violative of Sections 3, 16, 19 and 26, Article 1, and Section 5 of Article 11 of our State Constitution, and of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in that the ordinance unreasonably interferes with the rights of property as guaranteed by said constitutional provisions, and specifically the constitutionality of Section 1 of the ordinance, because, (1) plaintiffs are engaged in a lawful occupation with a great amount of money *571 invested therein and the ordinance has infringed their right to the use of the property so invested; (2) the ordinance tends to create a monoply in favor of the large taxicab companies in that they will then operate under a rate yielding a larger return than they are entitled to, to the detriment of the public at large; (3) the ordinance tends to restrain trade and stifle competition, in that the smaller companies who are unable to compete with the larger companies will be put out of business, and interferes with the free right of trade in the service of the public, and tends to regulate and fix a rate which will prevent and stifle competition; and (4) the ordinance abridges the right of contract in that it prevents a free and untrammeled contract between operators of automobiles for hire and the public at large, the contract being for the benefit rather than to the detriment of the public.

It appears from the allegations of the petition that plaintiffs had set a price of ten cents for the carriage per person to any part of the city within the district for which the ordinance fixes the minimum of twenty-five cents, and a minimum of twenty cents for carriage between points, one or both of which are without said district.

The trial court upon hearing for the issuance of a temporary injunction, denied the same and sustained the defendants’ general demurrer to the plaintiffs’ petition, from which order, plaintiffs prosecuted an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District, where the judgment below was affirmed. 53 S. W. (2d) 160.

In their application for writ' of error plaintiffs in error concede the right of the city to regulate taxicab fares by setting a maximum to be charged, as being within its police power of protecting the public in the transportation of passengers for hire. They concede also, the city’s right to regulate taxicabs by enacting ordinances requiring bond to indemnify for personal injuries, and by any other reasonable regulation.

Under the Enabling Act (Chap. 13, Title 28, par. 21, Rev. Stat. 1925), cities, like Galveston, are given the power to regulate, license and fix the charge or fares made by any person, ■owning, operating or controlling any vehicle of any character used for the carrying of passengers for hire or the transportation of freight for hire on the public streets and alleys thereof. This provision was adopted by the city as provided under the Home Rule Amendment to the State Constitution, in Sec. lc of its charter as follows, “The City shall have all powers that are or may hereafter be granted to municipalities by the Con *572 stitution or laws of Texas; * *

The State has therefore delegated to the City of Galveston full power with reference to the regulation and fixing of fares of persons using its streets intra-city as carriers of passengers for hire. The main, in fact the only serious, attack upon the validity of the ordinance is on the proposition that the city can not legally set a minimum fare for the transportation of passengers for hire, binding upon the carrier who is willing to carry for less than such a regulatory fixed minimum, on the theory that rate fixing regulations must take into consideration the interest of the public, and the lower the rate the more it is to the interest of the public; therefore, say plaintiffs in error, the owner’s right to contract with the public for a lower rate than the fixed minimum, is impaired and the police power can not be invoked to prohibit a particular use of private property, towit: — their taxicabs and automobiles for hire, “unless such use reasonably endangers or threatens the public health, safety, comfort and welfare.”

In Stephenson v. Binford, 53 Fed. (2d) 509, at p. 514, Judge Hutcheson said: — “Standing out in decisions, text-books, and law articles is the universally accepted doctrine that the use of the public roads for the conduct of business thereon, whether by common or by private carriers, is an extraordinary use, and as such is enjoyed, not as a right, but as a privilege. That the State may altogether exclude hauling by carrier, common or contract intrastate, from its roads, is generally taken for granted. The difficulties of the states have arisen where, choosing a middle course between exclusion altogether and permitting unbridled use, they have sought to impose conditions upon private carriers the same as, or analogous to, those imposed upon common carriers, and here its difficulty has arisen, not out of efforts to regulate the manner of the use of the highways, but by controlling rates and practices to regulate the business done thereon.”

In that case an attack was made upon Chap. 277, House Bill 335 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat. Art. 911b) which among other powers given the Texas State Railroad Commission was that of fixing maximum or minimum, or maximum and minimum rates, fares, and charges, by carriers of freight over State highways; the act was sustained by the court below. The case reached the Supreme Court of the United States by appeal, resulting in affirmance of the judgment below. 287 U. S., 251. Mr. Justice Sutherland reaffirming the well settled rule that a state has power to regulate not only the use of its high *573

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84 S.W.2d 996, 125 Tex. 568, 1935 Tex. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-city-of-galveston-tex-1935.