Phillips v. Public Service Commission

191 A. 641, 127 Pa. Super. 341, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 225
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 12, 1937
DocketAppeal, 420
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 191 A. 641 (Phillips 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
Phillips v. Public Service Commission, 191 A. 641, 127 Pa. Super. 341, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 225 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

The Public Service Commission of Pennsylvania in March, 1935, instituted on its own motion an inquiry and investigation for the purpose of determining ivhether Glen Phillips had violated the provisions of the Public Service Company Law. After a hearing the commission found that the respondent had operated between points in this Commonwealth as a common carrier of freight without a certificate of public convenience, issued a cease and desist order, and certified to the Secretary of Revenue two of respondent’s vehicles for the suspension of the 1936 registration licenses. Phillips has appealed to this court from that order and the question now involved is whether there is sufficient evidence in the record to sustain the finding of the commission that he operated as a common carrier. He admits the operation of motor vehicles but contends that he acted as a private carrier only.

The complainant, to make out a case, depended almost exclusively upon the testimony of respondent Phillips who was called as on cross-examination. There is, therefore, no serious disagreement as to the facts but there is some dispute as to the inference to be drawn from respondent’s testimony. The father of the respondent had formerly engaged in a trucking business without a certificate and an application for authority *343 so to operate as a common carrier was refused Mm. Glen PMllips had been employed as one of his drivers. After a cease and desist order, the senior Phillips abandoned his business and the business of respondent as a carrier had its start after the father ceased to operate.

Glen Phillips has a terminal platform in Reading which is operated under the name of Mideastern Distributing Company. A number of certified carriers make use of the facilities furnished, which include telephone service, the service of a girl in the office to answer telephone calls, and the privilege of having freight brought to the platform where it is checked and turned over to a carrier. For this service payment is made by the carriers. The appellant did not solicit orders for these carriers and received no commissions from them. When one wished service he would call over Mideastern’s telephone for the particular carrier he wished to employ. We do not understand that the commission predicated its conclusions in any respect on the service that was furnished at the terminal and no order was made as to such business. Testimony was received with reference thereto in order to give the general surroundings and to explain other testimony.

Appellant owns two trucks and a trailer and has been serving three customers under special contracts, two of them oral and one in writing. He has rendered to the Pottstown Metal Products Company a service which is exclusively interstate and to two other companies, the Reading Foundry and Supply Company and Blandón Broom Works, an intrastate service. Appellant served the Hyde Park Bedding Company until 1935 when he gave up that contract and took on the Blandón Broom Works. The last named concern, in order to supply a full load from Philadelphia to Reading and thus secure a lower transportation charge, engaged to haul between the same points supplies for the West *344 Reading Broom Company. This was an arrangement initiated by Blandón and paid for by that company without any suggestion from appellant. Even that service was discontinued some time before the hearing.

Dorothy Phillips, wife of appellant, is the owner of a truck and trailer. She has been employed part of her time in the office of Mideastern Distributing Company. When appellant gave up his contract with the Hyde Park Bedding Company, it was taken over by her and she has been serving that company. In cases of emergency due to breakdowns or lack of available facilities, Phillips and his wife have loaned their trucks to each other. Each has separate bill heads and they keep separate books. Each likewise paid for the gasoline used in the owner’s truck but at times the profits were placed in a common fund and used for family expenses.

That one may engage as a carrier in the movement of freight without becoming a common carrier and thereby making himself or his business subject to regulation under the Public Service Company Law of this state is admitted and it has frequently been so decided. As has often been pointed out in other cases, “it is beyond the power of the state by legislative fiat to convert property used exclusively in the business of a private carrier into a public utility, or to make the owner a public carrier, for that would be taking private property for public use without just compensation, which no state can do consistently with the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment”: Michigan P. U. C. v. Duke, 266 U. S. 570, 577, 45 S. Ct. 191, 193; Frost v. R. R. Commission of Cal., 271 U. S. 583, 592, 46 S. Ct. 605, 607; Washington v. Kuykendall, 275 U. S. 207, 210, 48 S. Ct. 41, 42.

There are two definitions of the term common carrier given at an early date which have not been improved upon in all the discussions of this subject. Chief *345 Justice Gibson, in Gordon v. Hutchinson, 1 W. & S. 285, said that “any man undertaking to carry the goods of all persons indifferently” is a common carrier. The Chief Justice of Massachusetts, in Dwight v. Brewster, 18 Mass. 50, 53, expressed the same thought thus: “A common carrier is one who undertakes, for hire or reward, to transport the goods of such as choose to employ him, from place to place.” As our Supreme Court has said, “we express a doctrine universally sanctioned when we say, that anyone who holds himself out to the public as ready to undertake for hire or reward the transportation of goods from place to place, and so invites custom of the public, is in the estimation of the law a common carrier”: Lloyd v. Haugh, 223 Pa. 148, 154, 72 A. 516. The character of the service may be exhibited both by actually rendering service and by an offer to furnish service, that is, by the manner in which the carrier holds himself out to the public.

The commission, to sustain its order depends on findings to the effect (1) that respondent operated three trucks (one of which is the property of his wife who has pretended to operate it as her individual enterprise) ; (2) that respondent has been serving four concerns and his wife one; (3) that he has rendered service to the limits of his capacity; (4) that respondent had at a former time engaged in the general hauling business to such an extent that the commission had decreed that he was a common carrier of property by motor vehicle and had issued a cease and desist order against him; (5) that respondent had maintained an advertisement in a telephone directory giving his occupation as a “contract carrier”. Prom these premises the commission concluded: “Respondent has been holding himself out to the public as ready to undertake, for hire or reward, the business of transporting goods from place to place in Pennsylvania.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 A. 641, 127 Pa. Super. 341, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-public-service-commission-pasuperct-1937.