Restivo v. Public Service Commission

129 A. 884, 149 Md. 30, 1925 Md. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 30, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 129 A. 884 (Restivo v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Restivo v. Public Service Commission, 129 A. 884, 149 Md. 30, 1925 Md. LEXIS 154 (Md. 1925).

Opinion

Walsh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Some time prior to March 12th, 1925, the appellant was engaged in operating certain automobile busses between Gwynn Oak Junction and the Sykesville Sanatorium, and had a permit from the Public Service Commission of Maryland authorizing him to so operate them. Shortly before-the date above mentioned he sold the good will of his business over this route to the Blue Ridge Transportation Company for $6,000. and thereafter his permits, to use this-route were transferred to that company. The appellant owned a garage' located at Gwynn Oak Junction, in which garage he kept his busses and cars and, shortly after the sale of the good will, he began to run his busses and cars-to the sanatorium on Sundays over the same route, the plan being to sell tickets to persons who came to the junction on those days for the purpose of visiting the sanatorium,, which tickets entitled the parties holding them to ride on the busses and cars of the appellant. He was indicted for this method of operation because he did not have any permit from the Public Service Commission, as required by the “Public Passenger Motor Vehicle Law” (sections 251 to-257 of article 56 of the Code), and, on March 12th, 1925, he was convicted. On Sunday, March 15th, 1925, he again ran one of his busses carrying nineteen persons from the-junction to the sanatorium, and also ran a touring car with *33 two passengers. On the following Sunday two tonring cars carrying a total of ten persons were used, and on the last Sunday in March’ one bus, carrying seventeen passengers, and a touring car, carrying three passengers, were used. On all of these occasions the passengers signed a paper stating that they were “chartering” the vehicle used, a charge of thirty dollars was made for each bus, and varying charges were made for the cars. All of the vehicles left between noon and 1:30 P. M., all of them were driven by employees of the appellant, and all of them, save one of the touring cars used on March 22nd, went from the junction to the sanatorium over the route sold by the appellant to the Blue Ridge Transportation Company.

While this operation was being carried on, the appellant was notified by officials of the Public Service Commission that he was violating the “Public Passenger Motor Vehicle I,aw,” and that if he did not cease his operations he would be arrested by the State police for such violation. The appellant thereupon filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, alleging that his operations did not constitute a violation of the law above mentioned, and asking that the Public Service Commission and the commissioner of motor vehicles he restrained from preventing the. appellant “from operating said busses and said tonring cars in the manner aforesaid or from interfering in any way with the said plaintiff or with the said busses and touring cars or with the agents and servants of the plaintiff in operating said busses and touring cars.” An answer to this bill was filed by the Public Service Commission and tbe commissioner of motor vehicles, testimony showing substantially the facts above set forth was taken, and after hearing and argument the learned court below dismissed the < bill of complaint, and the plaintiff appealed.

The law of Maryland divides passenger motor vehicles operated for gain into two classes.. One of these is governed by Class E of section 182 of article 56 of the Code (section *34 182 being' originally chapter 687 of the Acts of 1916), which provides for the payment of a; license fee of one dollar and twenty cents per horsepower or fraction thereof in the case of all motor vehicles operating for the purpose of transporting persons for hire upon any of the public highways of this State other than motor vehicles operating on fixed schedules, the registration fees of which are fixed by other specific provisions of law, and the other is governed by the “Public Passenger Motor Vehicle Law” (sections 251 to 257 of article 56 of the Code, originally chapter 610 of the Acts of 1916), the first section of which provides that: “It shall be the duty of each owner of a motor vehicle to be used in the public transportation of passengers for hire operating over State, State aid, improved county roads and streets and roads of incorporated towns and cities in the State of Maryland to secure a permit from the Public Service Commission of Maryland to operate over said roads and streets, and present same to the motor vehicle commissioner annually at the time and according to the method and provisions prescribed by law for owners of all other motor vehicles, to make an application in writing for registration with the commissioner of motor vehicles, and to state in said application besides the other matters by law provided, the seating capacity for passengers of said motor vehicle, the route in which said motor vehicle is to be used,” etc.

These two statutes were first considered by this Court in the case of Smith v. State, 130 Md. 482, and, in delivering the opinion of the Court, Judge Stockbridge said: “The intent of the legislative enactment is perfectly clear. What that body was attempting to do, was to distinguish as between motor vehicles operated as common carriers, and those not regularly so operated; the former would be subject to the provisions of chapter 610; the latter governed by the provisions of chapter 687.” And in the later case of Towers et al. v. Wildason, 135 Md. 677, 682, this construction of the two acts was approved.

It is difficult to determine with exactness just when the *35 owner of a motor vehicle is operating as a common carrier, as that term is ordinarily understood in the law, but the courts have not been inclined to excuse the increasing number of those wdio earn their livelihood by transporting persons or goods for hire in motor vehicles, from the responsibilities of common carriers simply on technical grounds, and they have been particularly slow to excuse them, when their plan of operation bore evidence of being a studied attempt to reap the rewards of common carriers without incurring the corresponding liabilities.

In the case of Smith v. State, supra, this: Court, in holding the operator of a “jitney bus” amenable to the statute under consideration, said: “That the owner of a motor vehicle who regularly transports passengers for hire between given termini for a fixed compensation may, by varying his route from time to time between such termini, change his classification, amounts to a scheme to evade the provisions of law and can not find countenance a.t the hands of the courts.”

And in the case of Goldsworthy v. Pub. Serv. Commn., 141 Md. 674, 683, a plan whereby the owner of a motor vehicle entered into a written agreement with another person, under the terms of which the owner was to transport, for a varying consideration, such passengers as the other person designated, was held to be an evasion of the statute, and Chief Judge Boyd in the course of the opinion said: “The use of motor vehicles in carrying passengers and property has become very general in this state, as well as elsewhere, and while such business should not be unnecessarily interfered with, the protection of the public demands careful supervision and proper control over them, in so far as they are brought within the statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 884, 149 Md. 30, 1925 Md. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/restivo-v-public-service-commission-md-1925.