220 S.W.2d 1007 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1949
Reversing.
The appellee, a corporation, owns the Francis Drive-It Garage, and has been engaged for many years in the business commonly known as the U-Drive-It or Rent-A-Car business. It owns and rents sixteen automobiles. On September 22, 1948, it brought a declaratory judgment action in the Franklin Circuit Court against H. Clyde Reeves, Commissioner of Revenue, wherein it sought, first, to have declared unconstitutional Chapter 51 of the Acts of 1948, now KRS
At its 1946 session the General Assembly of Kentucky passed a comprehensive act known as the Motor Vehicle Safety-Responsibility Act. Chapter 118 of the Acts of 1946, now sections
"Self-insurance. (1) Any person in whose name more than twenty-five motor vehicles are registered may qualify as a self-insurer by obtaining a certificate of self-insurance issued by the department as provided in subsection (2) of this section.
"(2) The department may, in its discretion, upon the application of such a person, issue a certificate of self-insurance when it is satisfied that such person is possessed and will continue to be possessed of ability to pay judgments obtained against such person."
Section 1 of the Act of 1948, now KRS
"No person shall engage in the business of leasing, renting, or letting out for hire, motor vehicles to be used for the transportation of persons but for which no driver is furnished, such business being commonly known as the 'U-Drive-It' or 'Rent-A-Car' business, until he has filed with the Department of Revenue an insurance policy, covering the owner as the named assured, and meeting the requirements provided for in KRS
Section 2 imposes a heavy penalty for any violation of the Act. KRS
Prior to the passage of this Act, one engaged in the business of renting motor vehicles to be used for the transportation of persons but for which no driver was furnished was not liable to a third person for damages growing out of the negligence of the person renting the motor vehicle unless he failed to exercise due care in the selection of the lessee. Sanders Drive-It-Yourself Co. v. Walker,
The validity of the statute is assailed on the ground that it violates sections 1, 2 and 3 of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution of Kentucky and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. This is upon the theory that only persons owning more than twenty-five motor vehicles are permitted by the statute to qualify as self-insurers, and the classification is unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious. The answer is, the statute does not make such a classification, consequently it is unnecessary to determine the effect of such a classification on the validity of the statute if one had been made. In considering the validity of the statute in question, we are confronted at the outset by the settled rule that any doubt regarding the constitutionality of a statute must be resolved in favor of its constitutionality, Gaines v. O'Connell,
Appellee also argues that the Act in question is invalid because it discriminates in favor of the general public as against all U-Drive-It companies. There can be no doubt that the business of leasing automobiles to be driven by the lessees upon the public highways is one properly subject to classification and to regulation under the police power. Louisville Taxicab Transfer Company v. Blanton,
"The fact that automobiles of this class are operated by persons who have no ownership in the operated automobiles — and that they operate under a contract which exempts the owner from the application of the doctrine of respondeat superior, which operation has been found by the experience of insurance companies and insurance men skilled in the occupation of determining degrees of hazard to be extra hazardous to the public — is quite sufficient to warrant a classification of this character of automobiles, separate from all others, and to warrant a reasonable regulation of the class." *475
The syllabus prepared by the court reads:
"A separate classification, for regulation purposes, of automobiles kept and used for the purpose of renting them, to be driven by the lessees upon the public streets, is not an unreasonable classification."
The Hodge case was appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States and there affirmed. In the course of its opinion the Supreme Court said:
"There is nothing on the face of the ordinance or in the evidence or findings below to warrant the conclusion that the classification, sec. 65-1 b, is capricious, arbitrary, or so lacking in foundation as to contravene the equal protection clause." Hodge Drive-It-Yourself Company v. City of Cincinnati,
The plaintiff alleged in its petition that it had endeavored to procure the insurance required by the statute, but had found no insurance company willing to execute or deliver to it a policy that would comply with KRS
"The fact, if it be a fact, that the peculiar circumstances of the plaintiffs are such that because thereof they have not the ability to comply with the provisions of the ordinance as to bond, does not militate against the validity of the ordinance so long as they have the same opportunity to comply with the ordinance that other members of the class have and the ordinance has for its reasonable purpose the preservation of the public safety, health, and welfare." *476
One of the questions propounded in the petition but not referred to in briefs is whether or not a person in the U-Drive-It business, by complying with KRS
Summarizing our conclusions: (1) Section KRS
The judgment is reversed.