United States v. Canada

105 F. Supp. 126, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1943
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedApril 11, 1951
DocketCr. No. 457
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 F. Supp. 126 (United States v. Canada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Canada, 105 F. Supp. 126, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1943 (D. Neb. 1951).

Opinion

DELEHANT, District Judge.

The defendant was charged, in an information containing twenty counts, with as many several operations each involving the interstate transportation for hire of a quantity of a designated petroleum product as a common carrier, without first obtaining an appropriate certificate of convenience and necessity. Title 49 U.S.C.A. §§ 306(a) and 322(a). He pleaded not guilty and waived trial by jury. ' Trial has been had to the court and the ruling and judgment of the court are now announced. The facts, most of which are not in dispute, are first recalled and found.

The interval within which the challenged cargo movements occurred was from November 5, 1948 to March 29, 1949. Duriiig that period, and for several years theretofore; the defendant, a resident of Bertrand, Nebraska, was engaged in business as a common carrier for compensation by motor vehicle of petroleum products in •bulk on public highways and held an Interstate Commerce Commission permit or certificate of public convenience and necessity, for such transportation over irregular routes' from refining and distributing points in Kansas to a large number of designated points, not including Kearney or Lowell, in Nebraska. ,

Prior to March, 1947, and continuously thereafter through' the interval mentioned in the previous paragraph, H. V. Grantham & Sons, a co-partnership, of Kehrney, Nebraska (hereinafter referred to as Grantham) was the owner of Interstate Commerce Commission permit or certificate of convenience and necessity, No. MC.850 (with supplemental and corrective certificates) granting to it authority to transport in tank trucks for hire petroleum products from Kansas refining points to many points, including Kearney and Lowell, in' Nebraska. Several of -those destination points, but not Kearney or Lowell, were also included within the authorization of the defendant’s permit. Grantham was engaged principally in the petroleum products business at Kearney, and, now under the sole ownership of Charles E. ■ Grantham, still is so engaged.

Eventually, and before July 1, 1947, Grantham discontinued all of its operations ás a carrier of petroleum .products and sold its equipment to others, one unit thereof being sold to the defendant. One of the customers served by Grantham in and during its transportation business was G. W. Ruby Oil Company, of Lowell (hereinafter referred to as Ruby). In anticipation of Grantham’s withdrawal from the transportation field, negotiations for the carriage of petroleum products for Ruby were had between the defendant and Ruby. Similar negotiations were had at a not precisely established time between the defendant and one A. €. Lund, then of [127]*127Kearney, now deceased, for the carriage of petroleum products for an oil and gasoline business of the latter at Kearney. Lund had not theretofore been a customer of Grantham. The managing partner of Grantham was aware of such negotiations of the defendant with Ruby and Lund.

The defendant’s operating authority did not allow him to serve Lund and Ruby. Grantham’s permit No. MC.850 was broad enough to cover that service. Contingent on the approval of the Interstate Commerce Commission, arrangement was made between Grantham and the defendant for the asssignment to the defendant of the holder’s rights under permit or certificate No. MC.850, and early in March, 1947 an application bearing date February 13, 1947 was made to the Commission for such approval. On June 4, 1947, the Commission entered an order denying the application on the ground that as to sundry destination points within MC.850 the transfer would result in the vesting of dual authority in the defendant. On September 4, 1947 it denied a petition for the reconsideration of that ruling.

In the meantime, and on July 1, 1947, Grantham and the defendant entered into a so-called equipment lease agreement in writing, covering a designated motor truck and standard steel trailer belonging to the defendant. By it the defendant, as lessor, ostensibly leased the truck and trailer to Grantham, as lessee, on conditions and for a rental reflected in the instrument, whose essential terms are fully set out in a footnote.1 Before making the agreement the defendant talked with one Benton, an employee of the Commission resident at Lincoln, from whom, or, in any event after talking with whom, he procured a form or forms of agreement which had theretofore supposedly been used by some parties wholly unidentified in the record 'before the court in the leasing of equipment for hauling within the economic area of the Commission’s jurisdiction. But Benton [128]*128had merely cautioned the defendant that any lease of equipment must he in writing, mentioned instances or examples in which leases had been employed, and, possibly, though not certainly, provided the specimen or specimens of such leases. He did not define with any precision the necessary terms of a lease or the details of actual operation thereunder.

Operation within the contemplation of the parties to the agreement proceeded at once, first, in service beginning July 2, 1947 to Ruby and thereafter in service beginning January 17, 1948 to Lund. They included, along with many others, the twenty items of transportation charged in the several counts of the information. Without detailed repetition the factual transportation reflected in each count is admitted, and formally found, to have occurred.2 The circumstances of the movements and the method of operation were essentially the same in reference to each shipment.

For each cargo, the transportation charge was billed by the defendant but in the name of Grantham and collection was made by the defendant, usually, if not invariably, in the form of the customer’s bank -check made' payable to Grantham but, with Grantham’s general knowledge and approval, endorsed in the name of Grantham by the defendant, or one or another of ¡his employees. .The proceeds of such payments were collected and retained by the defendant. After the operation had continued for a measurable period of time and prompted by the admonitions of a representative of the Commission, the defendant (a) caused to be placed on the equipment in question a statement that it was operated by the defendant but leased to Grantham, in which reference was made to permit No. MC.850, and (b) procured at his expense insurance in the name of Grantham to cover the operation.

But in all other respects the transportation was by and in the name of the defendant. The equipment was operated throughout all challenged movements by employees of the defendant, paid by him in the management of his regular payroll. It clearly appears that Grantham paid no drivers’ wages, made no federal payroll deductions, and had no control over the drivers or the movements. Drivers’ logs were returned to and maintained by the defendant. The -defendant paid the transportation taxes on shipments, did all of the bookkeeping incident to the carriage, collected the charges therefor, and paid the cost and expenses thereof. Registrations and reports at state ports of entry were made in the name and behalf of the defendant as “owner or operator”. Notification of the availability of loads for transportation was given by the customers not ordinarily to Grantham but generally to the defendant or his agents or employees, although on some occasions customers made contact with the defendant through Grantfiam. The shipping documents designated the defendant as the carrier. Inspection certificates designated his permit •by number as the authority for carriage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 F. Supp. 126, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-canada-ned-1951.