This is an original proceeding in prohibition to restrain respondent judge from entertaining further jurisdiction in a suit brought in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County by one J. J. Goldstein, as plaintiff, against relators (members of, and composing the Public Service Commission, and the State Highway Commission; the Superintendent of the State Highway Patrol; the commanding office of Troop C thereof, and one of the division engineers of the Highway Department), as defendants, to enjoin them from arresting, molesting or harassing or ordering the arrest of plaintiff therein, his agents, servants and employees, for operating his busses without a permit or license from the Public Service Commission. A restraining order was issued, as prayed in the petition, conditioned upon Goldstein giving a bond in the penal sum of Two Hundred Dollars. The issuance thereof was without notice to defendants, who thereafter appeared specially, and moved to dismiss said restraining order and plaintiff’s “pretended cause of action.’'’ Their motion was overruled, and a temporary injunction granted. Whereupon relators applied to this court for prohibition, and the preliminary rule issued. The case is here on the application for the writ, the preliminary rule itself, and the motion of respondent to quash said application and the rule. As originally brought, this proceeding was directed against Hon. Jerry Mulloy, as judge of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, and Division No. 2 thereof. His term of office having expired after the issuance of the preliminary rule, upon the suggestion and motion of relators, his successor in office, the present incumbent, Hon. John Witthaus, judge, was substituted as respondent in his place and stead.
The suit in the circuit court is based on the theory that Gold-stein’s business of “chartering’’’ busses does not come within the purview of what is commonly known as the Bus and Truck Act, passed by the Fifty-Sixth General Assembly. [Laws 1931, p. 304.] Its purpose, as respondent contends, was to enjoin prosecutions for alleged violations of a criminal statute (plaintiff’s remedy not being adequate, and such prosecutions would work an irreparable injury), and so prevent relators from acting beyond the scope of their authority and duties, as delegated under the statute, supra. On the other hand, it is relators’ position that Goldstein’s opera
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tions were such as to constitute him a “motor carrier,” as defined by the act, and that it was, therefore, unlawful for him to- operate his busses without first having obtained a certificate of convenience and necessity from the Public Service Commission. They invoke the statute (Sec. 5234, R. S. 1929; Sec. 5234, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 6661) which provides that “no court of this state, except the circuit courts to the extent herein specified and the supreme court on appeal, shall have jurisdiction to . . . enjoin, restrain or interfere with the commission in the performance of its official duties.” Relators rely on the case of State ex rel. v. Mulloy, J.,
The crux of this case is whether Goldstein is a “motor carrier,” and so within the statute. If so, it is tacitly conceded that the circuit court would have no jurisdiction to grant him the relief sought in his suit pending therein. Respondent takes the position that “in an original proceeding in prohibition to 'prevent a judge of the circuit court from entertaining jurisdiction of a suit to enjoin criminal prosecution for alleged violation of a statute, the facts well pleaded in the petition for injunction must be treated as true.” To this we assent. [State ex rel. v. Hall, J.,
The act in question, as its title discloses, provides “for the supervision, regulation and licensing of transportation of persons and property for hire over the public highways of the State of Missouri by motor vehicles; conferring jurisdiction upon the Public Service Commission to license, regulate and supervise such transportation; providing for the enforcement of the provisions of this act, and for the punishment for violation thereof.” It is expressly declared by Section 5280 that “the legislation herein contained is enacted for the sole purpose of promoting and conserving the interests and convenience of the public.” By paragraph (b) of Section 5264, it is provided, “The term ‘motor carrier,’ when used in this act, means any person, firm, partnership, association, jointstock company, corporation, lessee, trustee, or receiver appointed by any court whatsoever, operating'' any motor vehicle with or without trailer or trailers attached, upon any public highway for the transportation of persons or property or both or of providing, or funishing such transportation service, for hire as a common carrier. Provided, however, this act shall not be so construed as to apply to *1010 motor vehicles used in the transportation of passengers or property for hire, operating over and along regular routes within any municipal corporation or a municipal corporation and the suburban territory adjacent thereto, forming a part of transportation system within such municipal corporation' or such municipal corporation and adjacent suburban territory, where the major part of such system is within the limits of such municipal corporation.” This definition gives the term “motor carrier” a meaning equivalent to that of a common carrier. [Schwartzman Service, Inc., v. Stahl et al., supra.]
In State ex rel. v. Public Service Commission,
In Campbell v. Storage & Van Co.,
In Lloyd v. Haugh, 223 Pa. St. 148, an oft-cited case (trespass to recover damages for the loss of household effects), the court was considering the question of whether the defendant was a common carrier. It was there said, “Defendant does hold itself out to the public as engaged in the moving of household goods, thereby inviting employment along this line. . . . Notwithstanding this public committal of the company to a general and undiscriminating service, it is argued that inasmuch as the company claims the right to select those whom it will serve, and because its custom has been and is to discriminate, accepting some and rejecting others, as it may choose, this circumstance makes it a private as distinguished from a common carrier, and exempts it from the obligations and liability which the law imposes on the latter relation. The argument assumes that no legal duty rests upon the defendant to treat alike all applying for is services. . . . Whether such a duty attaches as a necessary incident to the relation of common carrier, under any and all circumstances, need not be discussed. . . . Conceding, however, that such a duty rests upon a common carrier, to claim that one is hot a common carrier because he has persistently disregarded this duty and has arbitrarily chosen whom he would serve, notwithstanding he has invited the public generally to apply, is to make a public duty determinable by the pleasure of the individual, and not by principle or law. We express a doctrine universally sanctioned when we say, that anyone who holds himself out to the public as ready to undertake for hire or reward the transportation of goods from place to place, and so invites custom of the public, is in the estimation of the law a common carrier. . . . We are dealing with a case where the carrier made the transportation of household goods a part of its regular business, advertised that business in a way to solicit custom from the general public. An unavoidable implication arises that it holds itself in readiness to engage with anyone who might apply.” The essential feature of ,a public use is that it is not confined to privileged individuals, but is open to the indefinite public. It is this indefinite or unrestricted quality that gives it its public character. [White v. Smith, 189 Pa. St. 222,
Under the admitted facts in relation to the nature of G-oldstein’s business, as set out in his bill filed in the circuit court, we are constrained to hold that he is amenable to the Bus and Truck Act, as a common carrier. The preliminary rule in prohibition should be made absolute; and it is so ordered.
