This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent Commission to assume and exercise jurisdiction over certain persons engaged in the business of transportation of property as common carriers for compensation over the public highways in this state between fixed termini or over regular routes, and to require such persons to cease operating until they shall have applied for and obtained from the respondent Commission certificates of public convenience and necessity therefor. The truck operators referred to are engaged exclusively in the movement of products or implements of husbandry and other farm necessities from farm to farm or between farms and loading points. There is no dispute as to the facts herein and the matter is submitted upon a general demurrer to the petition. The refusal of the respondent Commission to assume and exercise jurisdiction herein is predicated upon chapter 310, Statutes of 1923, purporting to amend section 5 of the Auto Stage and Truck Transportation Act of 1917 so as to exclude such persons from the regulations of said act. Prior to 1917 the Railroad Commission exercised no jurisdiction over transportation companies operating as common carriers of freight or passengers over the public highways by motor-stage or motor-truck. In December, 1916, this court held that under section 22 of article XII of- the constitution, as amended in 1911, the Railroad Commission was vested with
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the jurisdiction and the duty to regulate rates and charges of such carriers of freight and passengers by motor-truck; that this provision of the constitution could not be rendered nugatory by the omission of the legislature to prescribe procedural provisions for the carrying out thereof; and a peremptory writ of mandate was issued requiring the Railroad Commission to assume and exercise its jurisdiction over such carriers
(Western Association of Short Line Railroads
v.
Railroad, Com.,
The question, therefore, is whether or not the exemption created by the proviso of 1923 constitutes a lawful classification. Concededly the classification here made does not rest upon a constitutional distinction, and some natural or intrinsic distinction must therefore be found as a basis for it. It is well settled that the authority and duty to ascertain the facts which will justify classified legislation rests in the first instance with the legislature. Every presumption is in favor of the validity of the legislative determination, and its decision as to what is a sufficient distinction to warrant the classification will not be overthrown by the courts unless it is palpably arbitrary
(Anastasion
v.
Superior Court,
“Provided, that any storing or holding by any farmer, gardener, or other person of the products of any farm, garden, or other land cultivated by him, shall not be deemed to be a storing or holding within the meaning of this act: provided, further, that farmers and fruit growers, co-operative and other exchanges, or societies of a similar character, shall not be included within the provisions of this section.” In the district court for the district of Indiana, the contention was made that the exemptions created by the provisos constituted an arbitrary and unlawful classification, violative of the due process clause of the fifth amendment, and that if enacted by a state legislature it would be equally violative of the like clause of the fourteenth amendment. In support of the act the contention .was made there, as here, that the exemption of the farmers was justified upon the ground that it would promote the general welfare by stimulating them to greater production. That contention applied with much greater force to the situation then obtaining, with the nation involved in a great war, than it possibly could to the present situation. It was argued that Congress might well have determined that the safety of the nation depended upon the ¡increased production and conservation of food supplies and
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that the national welfare would be promoted by exempting the farmers from the drastic provisions of the act and thus stimulating them to increase their production. But the court held that the exemption was unreasonable, unjust, and wholly arbitrary and could not constitute a valid classification. Judge Anderson said: “The indulgence to the excepted class is in respect to the farm products produced or raised upon the land owned, leased, or cultivated by the members of it. But this does not differentiate the instant case from the Connolly case (
It is ordered that a peremptory writ of mandate issue as prayed herein.
Waste, J., Shenk, J., .Seawell, J., Lawlor, J., Lennon, J., and Richards, J., concurred.
