Phillips v. Moulton

54 F.2d 119, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1864
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 8, 1931
DocketNo. 382
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 F.2d 119 (Phillips v. Moulton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Moulton, 54 F.2d 119, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1864 (D.R.I. 1931).

Opinion

LETTS, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity wherein four parties join as complainants against the members of the board of publie safety for the city of Providence and the members of the publie utilities commission for the state of Rhode Island. There is named also as' party respondent the chief of police of the city of Providence.

The complainants are severally engaged in the interstate carriage of passengers for hire between the city of Providence and various points in the states of Massachusetts and Connecticut. They together operate some twenty vehicles, properly licensed by the state of Rhode Island. These vehicles are ordinary Cadillac and Pierce-Arrow passenger cars with some readaptation of the seating arrangement to increase their capacity.

Each of the complainants has complied with the requirements of chapter 254 of the General Laws of Rhode Island 1923, in filing with the public utilities commission schedules setting forth the routes into the city and terminal for discharging and taking on passengers. These routes and the terminal now used were approved by the public utilities commission and a certificate issued to each complainant in accordance with section 3 of said chapter, the commission recognizing that it has no jurisdiction to refuse a certificate to one about to engage in interstate commerce. Said chapter 254 provides, in part, as follows:

“Sec. 2. Every person, association or corporation owning or operating a jitney is hereby declared a common carrier and subject as such to the jurisdiction of the pub-lie utilities commission, and while so operating to such reasonable rules and regulations as said commission may prescribe with respect to routes, fares, speed, schedules, continuity of service, and the convenience and safety of passengers and the publie.
“See. 3. No person, association or corporation shall operate a jitney until the owner thereof shall have obtained a certificate from the publie utilities commission specifying the route over which such jitney may operate, the number of passengers which it may carry at any one time, and the service to be furnished and that publie convenience and necessity require its operation over such route. Such certificate shall be issued only after written application, for the same has been made by the owner of sueh jitney. No such certificate shall be issued to any person who is not a citizen resident within this state, [120]*120nor to any association unless all the members of such association are citizens resident within this state, nor to any corporation unless such corporation has been created by a special act of the general assembly upon petition for the same, the pendency of which petition shall he notified in such manner as the general assembly may by general law or special act prescribe. * * *
“See. 12. Each section of this chapter and every part of each section are hereby declared to he independent sections; and the holding of any section or sections, or part or parts thereof, to be void, ineffective or unconstitutional for any cause, shall not be deemed to affect any other section or part thereof.”

In respect to each complainant the route which was thus approved by the commission in 1926 included an entry upon the northerly end of Eddy street and a left turn upon a short section of Worcester street, at which point passengers were taken on and discharged. At this terminal point the complainants have had no waiting room or station but merely took on and discharged passengers at this definite point on the public street. This location is in a busy downtown section and adjoins the principal hotel in the city. It is undisputed that the complainants operating from this terminus and over the routes in question have built up a substantial business in the interstate carriage of passengers.

In the spring of 1931 the General Assembly passed an act creating the board of pub-lie safety for the city of Providence (Laws 1931, c. 1710), the members of which are herein named respondents. Under the terms of this act, this board, among other duties, took over the management and direction of certain departments of the municipal government, including that of the police commission of the city and the public service engineer. The former police commission had in 1926 given its approval to the action of the public utilities commission in approving the routes and terminus used by the complainants. Shortly, however, after the new board of public safety assumed its duties, it petitioned the public utilities commission “to require all jitney operators now having routes or terminals involving operation in Eddy Street, between Washington and Fountain Streets; Worcester Street; Washington Street, between Eddy and Union Streets; and Union Street, between Washington and Fountain Streets, to submit revised routes and termini which eliminate such operation within a reasonable period.”

Following a hearing given to the operators of the busses and jitneys affected, the public utilities commission, under date of August 28, 1931, entered an order, the material part of which is as follows: “That Roy C. Famum, I. C. T. Company, Tne., New England Transportation Company, Bessie Phillips, (Arrow Line), Ida Trostonoff, (Arrow Line) and Harold Turner, holding certificates for bus operation out of a terminal at the corner of Worcester and Eddy Streets, over a route from West Exchange Street to Eddy Street to Worcester Street to Dorranee Street, be each and all required to present to this Commission on or before October 15, 1931, for approval, such amendments to their respective routes and termini, as will eliminate the use of Eddy and Worcester Streets and any terminus thereon, and to cease operation through -said streets on and after November 1,1931.”

It also appears that the board of public safety, acting upon its own initiative, independent of the public utilities commission and prior to the entry of the aforementioned order, imposed upon the complainants restrictions as to the length of time that their vehicles would be permitted to stop at the Worcester street terminus. While this restriction, as evidenced by the formal communication of the board, restricted the complainants to a ten-minute stop, there is evidence which strongly suggests that the board, acting through its uniformed police -officers, did, for a period at least, enforce much more drastic requirements. There was no evidence, however, that any unreasonable annoyances of this character had been persisted in to the time of this hearing.

The complainants contend, that their status and right to operate over the present routes should in no way he affected either by the petition of the board to the public utilities commission or by its direct action in undertaking to limit the period that their vehicles may stop at the terminus because of the alleged unconstitutionality of the legislation under which the hoard of public safety was created.

The relief asked is, therefore, directed not only to the public utilities commission because of its order, but also against the board of public safety, and is as follows: “That said Court issue a preliminary injunction, directed against the defendants enjoining and restraining them, their agents and servants and subordinates from moving said plaintiffs from their terminal on Worcester Street in said'Providence and from interfer[121]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 F.2d 119, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-moulton-rid-1931.