State v. Teeslink

278 P.2d 591, 177 Kan. 268, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 211
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 10, 1955
Docket39,690
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 278 P.2d 591 (State v. Teeslink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Teeslink, 278 P.2d 591, 177 Kan. 268, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 211 (kan 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

In this criminal prosecution the five above designated cases were consolidated for trial in the district court and are likewise consolidated for appellate review.

The parties agree a decision in any one case will determine the judgment in all of them. A jury was waived and the actions were tried by the court. It found defendants guilty and they have appealed. Omitting caption and introductory language, the information in the first, the Teeslink case, alleged:

“. . . that on the 17th day of October, a. d. 1953, in said County of Miami, and State of Kansas, one CHARLES ROBERT TEESLINK did then and there, UNLAWFULLY, drive and operate a certain truck tractor, to-wit: a 1953 GMC, Motor No. 302 8361, and semi-trailer upon the public highways of *270 Kansas and more particularly upon Highway No. 69, near Louisburg, Kansas, in a manner not exempt under the laws of Kansas, without having said above described vehicle properly registered with the Kansas State Vehicle Commission, all being contrary to the form of the Statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State of Kansas.” (Our italics.)

The actions were tried entirely on stipulated facts. In our view concerning the proper disposition of the appeal, it is unnecessary to set forth the voluminous stipulations or all the contentions of the parties. It is clearly apparent throughout the record, including the statement of the state’s counsel, that the actions were filed and tried on the theory the statutes on which the state relied for conviction were valid, and that defendants’ crime consisted in their failure to comply therewith. G. S. 1949, 8-127 requires the owner of a motor vehicle, trailer or semitrailer to obtain registration thereof before operating it upon any Kansas highway, with certain exceptions not here material. G. S. 1949, 8-149 prescribes the penalty for failure to comply with the requirements of the motor vehicle act. Punishment is by fine, imprisonment or both. The parties agree the prosecutions were instituted for failure to register the vehicles and to obtain and display Kansas license plates thereon. They all carried Oklahoma license plates. The vehicles were automobile transport carriers on which automobiles were loaded at Kansas City, Kansas, and delivered to points outside of Kansas. They were returning over Kansas highways to the terminal of the owner of the vehicles located at Kansas City, Kansas, at the time of the arrests. The question is whether they were exempt from registration in the vehicle department of our state highway commission and relieved from carrying Kansas license plates.

The principal statute now involved is G. S. 1949, 8-138. The pertinent part thereof reads:

“(a) A nonresident owner, except as otherwise provided in this section, owning any foreign vehicle which has been duly registered for the current calendar year in the state, country or other place of which the owner is a resident, and which at all times when operated in this state has displayed upon it the number plate or plates issued for such vehicle in the place of residence of such owner, may operate or permit the operation of such vehicle within this state without registering such vehicle or paying any fees to this state. . . . Provided, That any exemption granted in this section to nonresidents shall apply to motor vehicles owned by nonresidents only to the extent that the laws of the state in which such owner resides guarantees like exemptions and privileges to motor vehicles owned and operated by residents of Kansas, or to the extent that the proper authorities of the state in which such owner resides *271 grant exemptions or reciprocity of privileges to motor vehicles owned and operated by residents of Kansas: Provided further, That all officers in the state of Kansas charged with the enforcement of this act shall grant to all nonresident owners of motor vehicles privileges of operation within this state equal to the privileges granted in such foreign states to motor vehicles owned and operated therein by residents of Kansas.”

Our motor vehicle reciprocity commission, over eighteen months prior to the instant arrests, had entered into an agreement with Oklahoma authorities whereby the vehicles in question, title to which was obtained in Oklahoma and which bore Oklahoma license plates, could operate in Kansas without being registered in the vehicle department of our state highway commission and without obtaining Kansas license plates therefor, and in which agreement Oklahoma granted the same privilege to the owners and operators of similar Kansas vehicles in Oklahoma.

Specifically stated, it is one of the state’s principal contentions that the five vehicles owned by Auto Transports, Incorporated, which bore Oklahoma license plates were domiciled at the terminal of Auto Transports, Incorporated, at Kansas City, Kansas, and could not be operated under our law over Kansas highways from that terminal to points outside of Kansas or return to that terminal over Kansas highways without being registered in our vehicle department and without Kansas license plates being displayed thereon. In this particular connection the state directs attention to a provision in G. S. 1953 Supp. 74-4302 which prescribes the powers and duties of and restrictions on our motor vehicle reciprocity commission. That provision reads:

“Provided, That no rule or regulation of the commission created by this act shall affect motor vehicles domiciled in or licensed in the state of Kansas from complying with all the laws of the state of Kansas. . . .”

The state argues that commission, therefore, was without power to exempt these vehicles from registration and the duty to obtain and display Kansas license plates.

On this point defendants reason that since these vehicles are owned by a nonresident they should be held to be domiciled in Oklahoma City, which defendants contend is the residence of their owner. They direct attention to the stipulations which state the owner’s principal place of business is Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and that it is the place from which all the owner’s business affairs are daily directed covering the entire area in which it operates. *272 They also assert the stipulated facts disclose our motor vehicle reciprocity commission has placed its operative interpretation on the domicile provision, contrary to that asserted by the state, for approximately a year and a half during which the vehicles have operated pursuant to the reciprocal agreement. In this connection another question intrudes on which the district court has not ruled. It is whether an earlier statute, to which we shall refer as a “lost statute,” remains operative.

Defendants argue the legislature has indicated an intent contrary to that advocated by the state by its repeal of a former statute, R. S. 1923, 8-109, pertaining to registration of motor vehicles by nonresidents. It contained the following provision:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P.2d 591, 177 Kan. 268, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-teeslink-kan-1955.