This bill in equity seeks declaratory and injunctive relief against the authority, Nantucket Express Lines, Inc., and Island Steamship Lines, Inc. The authority exists under St. 1960, c. 701, 1 to provide transportation between Falmouth (Woods Hole) and the islands, Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket. Since 1946, the plaintiff (Boat Inc.) has furnished water transportation between Hyannis and Nantucket by vessels of less than 100 gross tons. The bill alleges that, “provided a payment of at least” $10,000 is made (presumably to the authority), the authority intends to license the “Martha’s Vineyard,” a vessel of more than 100 gross tons owned by Island Steamship Lines, Inc., to be operated by Nantucket Express Lines, Inc., between Hyannis and Nantucket, and that such operation “would improperly and unlawfully compete with the operations and business of” Boat Inc. The bill further avers (a) that “the proposed operation ... is not necessary or desirable to serve the purposes” of the 1960 statute, (b) that the statute contains “no sufficient declaration of policy, standards or limitations to be followed by . . . [the] authority in giving such written license,” (c) that §§ 4 and 5 2 of the statute *553 illegally delegate a legislative function to the authority in violation of art. 30 of the Declaration of Bights, (d) that the proposed action denies Boat Inc. the equal protection of the laws, and (e) that the “proposed operation . . . would result in loss . . . to” Boat Inc.* * 3
Bach defendant filed a demurrer on the ground, among others, that the bill does not set forth facts justifying equitable relief to Boat Inc. Boat Inc. appealed from interlocutory decrees sustaining each demurrer and from a final decree dismissing the bill.
1. Whether a plaintiff has standing to seek declaratory relief may be raised by demurrer.
4
Burnes
v.
Metropolitan Dist. Commn.
2. Boat Inc. has not alleged that it has any special standing given to it by statute (see
Massachusetts Soc. of Optometrists
v.
Waddick,
It thus is not necessary to consider whether § 4 (e) of the 1960 statute lays down adequate standards for the authority’s exercise of its power to license (cf. the
Retail Stores Delivery, Inc.
case,
3. The interlocutory decrees sustaining the demurrers and the final decree are affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
The provisions of the 1960 act and the history of the authority were considered in detail in
Barnstable
v.
Woods Hole, Martha’s Vineyard & Nantucket S.s. Authy.
Two provisions of the I960 act must be considered. Section 4 gives the authority power “(e) ... to contract by license ... or other arrangement for the provision of excursion service by other persons to and from the islands *553 of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket from any point on the mainland of the commonwealth, when it shall be deemed, necessary or desirable to serve the purposes of this act” (emphasis supplied). Section 5, dealing with the authority’s bonded debt, states, among other things, “Except as provided in this act no person shall operate a vessel of more than one' hundred gross tons for the carriage of passengers, vehicles or freight for hire by water between the mainland of the commonwealth and . . . Martha’s Vineyard or . . . Nantucket . . . unless licensed ... so to do by the Authority. The superior court shall have jurisdiction, on a petition in equity by the Authority, to enjoin any such operation.’’
The Attorney General has been given notice pursuant to G. L. c. 231A, § 8, last sentence.
Of course, if a bill states a case for declaratory relief to the plaintiff, a demurrer on the ground of want of equity cannot be sustained.
Price
v.
Price,
