141 Va. 213 | Va. | 1925
delivered the opinion of the court.
This ease is here on an appeal of right from the State Corporation Commission. Commissioner Shew-make delivered the opinion of the Commission, which is
“Chapter 161 of the Acts of 1923, which was approved April 3, 1923, became effective sixty days after the adjournment of the special session of the General Assembly, to-wit, June 27, 1923. Prior to the effective date of the act, the Commission was without power or jurisdiction to hear or determine the rights of motor carriers to receive certificate under the act, but anticipating the congestion and confusion which would result upon the act becoming effective, it notified all known motor vehicle carriers operating in the State to file their applications for certificates and to appear before the Commission on June 27, 1923, the effective date of the act, at which time hearings would be had to determine the propriety of issuing certificates upon such applications.
“On the date aforesaid a very large number of the carriers appeared, and in those eases wherein it appeared that the carrier was operating on February 28, 1923, and hence was entitled under the terms of the act to a certificate of right and also in cases where no opposition to the grant of the certificate developed, certificates were granted by the Commission as of that date. Contested eases were set down for subsequent hearing.
“Under date of June 18, 1923, Alexandria Motor Bus Company filed, in conformity with rule 15 of the commission’s rules and regulations, its application for .a certificate of right, permitting its operation as a motor vehicle carrier between the city of Alexandria, Virginia, and the city of Washington, D. C. It is not disputed by the complainant that the Alexandria Motor Bus Line was in operation on February 28, and was entitled, as of right, to a certificate of convenience and necessity.
“The act of 1923 required that every motor vehicle-carrier when granted a certificate should file with the Commission liability and property damage insurance or a surety bond, except in the case of operators-having net surplus assets of $10,000.00 who were-relieved from such obligation and permitted in effect to carry their own insurance. The Alexandria Motor-Bus Line had filed with the Commission with its application a financial statement to show that it possessed the requisite net surplus assets and planned to carry its own insurance. This financial statement, however, was not verified by affidavit as required and was returned by the Commission for the sole purpose of having this omitted detail supplied.
“At this time the operations of the Alexandria Motor Bus Line were directed by L. W. Selph, as general manager of the company, but for some reasons the-Commission’s letter of June 28th was not delivered to him. It apparently was received by Mr. Noel Garner,, an officer of the company; by him turned over to a Dr. Outcault, whose connection with the company is not-disclosed, and by the latter delivered to the company’s-office sometime subsequent to July 1st.
“On the night of June 30, 1923, the Alexandria
' “It is true that at the Commission’s hearing on June1 ■27th it was announced that by reason of the confusion and congestion incident to putting into effect the new law, it was not the purpose of the Commission to immediately impose penalties for continued operation without a permit in the ease of carriers operating bona fide at the time the law became effective, and that such carriers might continue to operate for a xeasonable time thereafter without a formal permit. It is also true, however, that the Alexandria Motor Bus Line was not represented at the hearing and had no knowledge of this ruling.
“On or about July 1, 1923, Commissioner Forward directed Mr. Burton Marye to proceed to Alexandria and report on the motor bus situation and affecting the .lines of Alexandria Motor Bus and the Reo Bus Line. Mr. Marye went to Alexandria where he was informed that the Alexandria Motor Bus Line had ceased operations and that its buses had been removed from the State, which information was reported to Major Forward verbally upon his return to Richmond. On July 7th, without any notice to the Alexandria Motor Bus Line and without any hearing upon the matter, the
“ ‘It is ordered, That this application be, and the-same is hereby, denied.’
“A copy of this order was sent and received at a. time and by some representative of the company, not disclosed by the evidence.
“Operations were, of course, not resumed after the entry of the order of July 7th, and the matter stood in statu quo until February, 1924. Sometime during that month a conference was had between Mr. Selph, Mr. May and the Commission, with reference to the possibility of securing a revocation of the order of July 7, 1923, and a rehearing of the application of the Alexandria Motor Bus Company for a certificate of right and at said conference it was stated to the Commission that it was the purpose of the parties to secure such certificate in the name of the Alexandria Motor Bus Line and, if granted, to have an immediate assignment of such certificate by the Alexandria Motor Bus Line to Robert Lee May. The plan was tentatively approved by the Commission in this preliminary conference.
“Under date of February 26, 1924, Alexandria Motor-Bus Line filed its application with the Commission praying a revocation of the Commission’s order of July 7th, and the issuance to the petitioner of a certificate of right in accordance with the prayer of its original application filed June 18, 1923. On this petition an ex parte hearing was had without notice to the complainant, or to any other person, and on February 27, 1924, a formal order was entered by the Commission revoking and setting aside its order of July 7, 1925, and.
“Immediately upon the entry of the Commission’s order of February 27, 1924, there was filed with the Commission an assignment from Alexandria Motor Bus Line to Robert Lee May, executed under proper-authority of the board of directors of the company, assigning and transferring to the said May all of its. right, interest and benefits in and to the certificate-above mentioned, together with a petition of the said May praying the approval of the Commission of said transfer and assignment and an allowance of a period of seventy-five days within which he should be permitted to commence operations.
“Whereupon a certificate was issued by the Commission under said date to the said May by virtue of the assignment and transfer aforesaid authorizing him to carry on the business of a motor vehicle carrier between the cities of Alexandria, Virginia, and Washington, B. C., under the terms and conditions therein stated. On March 24, 1924, the plaintiff filed its petition praying that the permit thus issued to Robert Lee May should be revoked and the said May and the-Alexandria Motor Bus Line be enjoined and prohibited from operating or attempting to' operate under either of the permits above mentioned issued by the Commission on February 27, 1924.
“On April 17, 1924, a public hearing was had in the court room of the Commission at which time and place the Commission heard the testimony of witnesses and received documentary evidence in support of the contentions of the respective parties and subsequent to that hearing briefs were filed by counsel for the peti
It is insisted by the appellant that the order of the Commission of July 7, 1923, was a final order, and that whether properly entered or not, after January 7, 1924, it was not reviewable either by the State Corporation Commission or by this court. If the order was valid and was final then the position of the appellant is correct. Code section 3734. The order, however, was not valid unless the Commission had jurisdiction to make it and exercised it in a manner allowed by law.
Section 3 of the acb of 1923
The act was approved April 3, 1923, but did not go into effect until June 27, 1923. Acts 1923, page 195, chapter 161. In anticipation of this effective date, motor carriers filed their application for certificates with the Commission prior to June 27, 1923. The Alexandria Motor Bus Line, Incorporated, filed its application June 18, 1923, asking for a certificate “as a, matter of right,” alleging that it was in good faith operating over the proposed line on February 28, 1923. Neither the statute nor the rules of the Commission required that an applicant “as of right” should give notice to anyone of his intention to apply for a certificate, and no such notice was necessary. The applicant was required to satisfy the Commission that he
It is true that the Constitution (section 155) requires the Commission to keep a permanent record “of all its judgments, rules, orders, findings and decisions” and that at least two of the Commission are required to constitute a quorum. But the duties of the Commission are multitudinous, involving the exercise of legislative, executive and judicial powers. There are numerous enquiries to be answered, complaints to be investigated, conferences with parties to be held, adjustments to be made and an almost infinite detail of business to be conducted, so that in many instances it would be impracticable to make the permanent records show more than the ultimate results after all preliminary matters had been disposed of. The record, of course, should show whatever is necessary for the protection of the'rights of third persons, but there are many preliminary conferences and negotiations between the Commission and applicants for some assistance or relief, requiring no notice to third persons, which may never result in any determinate action by the Commission. These it would be impracticable and inadvisable to record, and are not within the meaning of the Constitution.
While no permanent record is vouched in the instant case, it is twice stated in the opinion of the
In this state of the case, the Commission entered the order of July 7, 1923. Of this order, the Commission says:
“This Commission is of opinion that the order of July 7, 1923, was improvidently entered; that the appellant having been granted its certificate as shown by the letter of June 28, 1923, had a right to the same of which it could only be deprived by a formal adjudication after hearing pursuant to notice. The order of July 7, 1923, was entered arbitrarily and without notice and was, therefore, of no effect. It is true that the certificate applied for and which was granted by the Commission, as stated in the letter of June 26th, was never actually issued, but, there is a sharp distinction to be drawn between the granting of a certificate and the mere issuance of the same. After the Commission had passed upon the application of the Alexandria Motor Bus Line, Incorporated, and granted the certificate, there remained nothing to be done but this issuance, a purely ministerial act. It is conceded that the applicant was entitled to the certificate as a matter of right upon the proof produced at the hearing on June 27, 1923. That certificate, once granted, could only be revoked for some cause provided for by statute after hearing pursuant to notice.”
We are unable to concur in this opinion and conclusion of the Commission. It seems clear that the ease was still pending before the Commission on July 7, 1923. It then had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, and the validity of the order made on that day can only be called in question on the ground that, for some reason, it is void. This is recognized by the Commission in its opinion, and it declares the
The certificate required by the statute can only be issued after the applicant has complied with the requirements of the statute, and “the proper orders” of the Commission. When it has been actually issued the application is no longer a pending case before the Commission, and the applicant is no longer charged with notice of any action taken by the Commission. He is no longer in court, and if any further action is to be taken he is entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard.
In a pending case, however, in legal contemplation, every litigant, properly before the court, is personally present at every stage of the litigation from the time he voluntarily comes into court or is brought in by process, until the litigation is ended, and is not entitled to any further notice of the proceedings: If every litigant were entitled to an additional notice every time any order was to be asked affecting his interest litigation would never end, and the búsiness of the court would be paralyzed. Steinman v. Clinchfield Coal Corp., 121 Va. 611, 634, 93 S. E. 684.
The powers and duties of the Commission being of such a varied nature, it cannot be held down to the strict rules applicable to courts of record with regard to the time in which changes may be made in its orders. Its times for holding public sessions are not strictly terms of court. In courts of record, the record remains in the breast of the court during the term at which an order is made or a judgment rendered, and the court may, during the term, without notice to the parties, change any order made or judgment ren
The order of July 7, 1923, shows on its face that it was a final disposition of the case. It is wholly immaterial whether it was right or wrong. The Commission had dismissed it, and no longer had any jurisdiction over it. The right to a rehearing of a final judgment is not a common law right, and exists only by virtue of statute. 18 Enc. PI. & Pr. 65. In the instant case there is no such statute. The only remedy of the applicant was by appeal to this court of which he did not avail himself within the time prescribed by law. Code section 3734. There may be cases subject to the continued supervisory control and direction of the Commission notwithstanding they are no. longer pending cases before the Commission, or where the inherent nature of the subject is such as to imply a right to reopen the ease, or rehear a former adjudication, but this plainly is not one of them.
The legislature never intended that the right to demand a certificate “as of right” should be perpetual. On the contrary, the act expressly provided that “no motor vehicle carrier shall hereafter operate” without having first obtained the certificate by the act. All motor vehicle carriers were brought within the immediate operation of the act. No motor vehicle carrier could operate a single day without the certifi
In the instant ease, the application was made in due time, but was denied by the order of July 7, 1923. It is too plain for argument that the Commission had jurisdiction at that time, for good and sufficient cause, to make an order denying the application, and if it denied such application without such cause, then it is equally plain that its order was not void, but simply erroneous. Such a judgment could only be reversed on appeal. 15 R. C. L. pages 859-61, section 334. It is equally plain that the order was a final order dismissing the case from further hearing by the Commission. To allow such a case to be reopened before the Commission after the expiration of the time in which an appeal could be taken would in effect nullify the provisions of the statute (Code section 3734) requiring appeals from final orders of the Commission to be taken and perfected within six months from the date of such order. In the instant case, the applicant apparently acquiesced in the order of July 7, 1923, dismissing its petition, and waited over seven months before it even suggested.an objection. It could never have been the legislative intent to permit such conduct.
The order of June 27, 1923, treated in its most favorable light to the applicant, was simply an order stating that upon the filing of a properly verified financial statement “the certificate would be issued.” It was not the issuance of a certificate, nor an unconditional order for the issue. of a certificate, but a- eondi
Section 3 of the act, requiring a hearing after notice and an opportunity to be heard, has no application to such an order as that of June 27, 1923. It applies only to “certificates actually issued,” not to orders directing or promising a certificate on conditions never complied with.
It follows from what has been said that the order of July 7, 1923, is still in force and effective, and that the Corporation Commission was without jurisdiction to enter the order of February 27, 1924, hereinbefore referred to.
■Of course the Commission has jurisdiction to hear a new application and to determine it in favor of the applicant if the facts justify granting the certificate.
The record contains much evidence tending to show the insolvency of the applicant and an abandonment of the service after June 30, 1923, but it has not been deemed necessary to enter upon a discussion of that feature of the case.
This conclusion renders unnecessary the consideration of the other assignments of error.
The order of the State Corporation Commission of February 27, 1924, setting aside and annulling its order
Reversed.
. “No motor vehicle carrier shall hereafter operate for the transportation of persons or property for compensation on an improved public highway without first having obtained from the Commission, under the provisions of this act, a certificate declaring that the public convenience and'necessity require such operation; but a certificate shall be granted as a matter of right when it appears to the satisfaction of the commission that such person, firm or corporation was actually operating in good faith,_ over the route for which such certificate shall be sought, on the twenty-eighth day of February, nineteen hundred and twenty-three. The commission shall have power to grant a certificate after hearing when the applicant requests a certificate to operate in a territory already served by a eertificateholder under this act, or any other common carrier, when the public convenience and necessity in such territory are not being reasonably served by some other eertificateholder or other common carrier, provided, that the existence of a railroad or other motor vehicle carrire in the territory sought to be served by such applicant shall not be sufficient cause for a refusal