Brink's Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

Dissenting Opinion by

Judge Craig :

I must respectfully dissent from the majority decision, which may in effect bar Brooks indefinitely *457from any further contract motor carrier permit in its field, solely because Brooks’ affiliate WFB continued to haul money contrary to our October 17, 1977 decision in Purolator Security, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 32 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 175, 378 A.2d 1020 (1977), until the commission issued a cease order in April, 1978.

Review of the whole pattern of the judicial decisions on this type of ease indicates that we are not warranted in reversing the Commission.

At the outset, it must be granted that, after the date of our decision in Purolator, supra, Brooks could have no bona fide misunderstanding as to the legal status of the operations involved, notwithstanding the petitions for allocatur filed by WFB and the Commission or the absence of a Commission cease order until the following April.

Accordingly, at the least it is certain that evidence of WFB’s service from October 17,1977 to April, 1978, could not serve as any part of a basis for a favorable determination of fitness in this ease. The law is clear that evidence of deliberate illegal operations by itself cannot support findings of an applicant’s fitness or the necessity of a proposed service. In Bunting Bristol Transfer, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 418 Pa. 286, 292, 210 A.2d 281, 284 (1965), the Supreme Court continued the rule of “D. F. Bast, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 397 Pa. 246, 251, 154 A.2d 505, 508, . . . that evidence of illegal operations ... is ‘improper for consideration by the Commission’ ”, referring to the use of such evidence in support of the wrongdoer’s position.

However, Bunting also continued the doctrine of “Lancaster Transportation Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 181 Pa. Superior Ct. 129, 138, 124 A.2d 380, 385 [where] President Judge Rhodes stated: ‘The mere fact of prior operation without commission *458approval is not per se equivalent to an offense which will prohibit absolutely the acquisition of proper authority when the application is subsequently made.’ ” Bunting, supra, at 290, 210 A.2d at 283.

The majority here holds in effect that the illegal activities of Brooks’ affiliate categorically preclude the Commission from finding Brooks fit. As Judge Rogers wrote in Johnstown-Pittsburgh Express v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 5 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 521, 527, 291 A.2d 545, 548 (1972), “[,t]his is much too broadly stated. The cases . . . hold only that movements made in wilful violation of authority may not be considered by the Commission as evidence. [Citing Bunting, supra, and D. F. Bast, supra.] ” Thus, past violations, although relevant to an applicant’s fitness, are simply evidence to be weighed by the Commission and are not dispositive.1

These principles have, even recently, been continued and applied by this court. Gettysburg Tours, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 42 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 399, 400 A.2d 945 (1979); B. B. Motor Carriers, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 36 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 26, 389 A.2d 210 (1978).

Under these principles, none of WFB’s activities after our decision in Purolator necessitates a conclusion that Brooks is unfit; even in view of those activities, the Commission can properly find Brooks fit *459if there exists substantial evidence to support that conclusion aside from evidence derived from the unauthorized activities. Gettysburg Tours, supra.

With respect to such positive evidence of fitness, we are faced with a situation very similar to that in Lancaster, supra. There, the Superior Court reviewed the Commission’s grant of two carriers’ applications to establish an interchange at a point common to their respective certificated areas. The two carriers had commenced the interchange in 1949; in July 1951, the Superior Court held that the interchange was unlawful, but the two carriers continued the interchange until the Commission’s cease order of October 20, 1952.

In the interim between the Superior Court’s order and the order of the Commission, the two carriers applied for authority to conduct the interchange, which was granted by the Commission in 1955. Protesting carriers appealed.

The Superior Court agreed that evidence derived from the two carriers’ activities after the court’s July 1951 order should not have been admitted nor made the basis of the Commission’s order. The court continued, however, that “ [u]nfortunately, on the record before us there is no separation of the evidence . . . [between] the respective periods.” Lancaster, supra, at 139, 124 A.2d at 385. The court affirmed the Commission’s grant because it could not “make any distinction between the periods from the evidence, and, secondly, because the service of [the two carriers] was consistently good.” Lancaster, supra, at 139-40, 124 A.2d at 385.

Here, as in Lancaster, the record does not facilitate a precise demarcation of evidence between the two periods of WFB’s operation; the banks which utilized WFB did so from the time WFB acquired its property certificate in 1974, and continued to do so after our de*460cisión in Purolator, until Brooks supplanted WFB’s intrastate operations by its interstate service. Since that time they have used Brooks.

Without distinguishing periods of time, the supporting banks alternatively categorized the service by Brooks and WFB as very good, fine, top-notch, excellant, or high quality. The Federal Reserve Bank witness testified that it had used Brooks’ interstate service since 1975, describing that service as very good.

Therefore, although WFB’s continued operation after our Purolator decision certainly presented a negative mark against WFB, the Commission’s determination of fitness does not lack substantial support in the record. The conflict between the evidence of Brooks’ authorized services taken together with evidence relating to WFB’s service before our Purolator decision, versus the negative evidence of unauthorized activities, was a conflict properly within the province of the Commission.

Accordingly, our scope of review limits our power to reverse the determination of fitness.

Our review here is limited to a determination of whether constitutional rights have been violated, an error of law committed, or if there is a lack of substantial evidence. “We may not conceive an independent judgment and substitute it for the judgment of the Commission and ... we may not indulge in the process of weighing evidence and resolve conflicting testimony.” Johnstown-Pittsburgh Express, Inc., supra, at 525, 291 A.2d at 547.

The remaining contention is that the Commission exceeded its statutory authority by including in its grant of authority the counties of Blair, Bradford, Cameron, and Pike. Admittedly, these four counties were not enumerated in the original application, the “Service of Notice of Motor Carrier Application”, nor *461in the notice of application published in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

The 48 counties enumerated in the Commission’s order comprise the Pennsylvania portion of the Third Federal Reserve District. The initial order of the administrative law judge enumerated only the 44 counties named in Brooks’ application.

Brooks filed an exception to that order requesting the inclusion of the four counties named above; the Commission granted that request “for the reason that these counties lie east of the Counties of McKean, Elk, Clearfield, Cambria and Bedford which comprise the westerly boundary of the area included within the Third Federal Reserve District — the area for which [Brooks] . . . seeks authorization to serve, as established by the evidence. ’ ’

Brink’s contends that the Commission erred because 66 Pa. C. S. §2503 provides that the Commission may authorize “in whole or in part the service covered by the application.” It asserts that the inclusion of these counties was beyond the Commission’s authority because they were absent from the enumeration in the application, and thus due process was violated in that no notice was given that the permission was sought for the four counties.

The Commission urges that the quoted language of 66 Pa. C. S. §2503 should not be so narrowly interpreted as to preclude the addition of the four counties, because all the parties were aware that Brooks sought to serve the whole of the Third Federal Reserve District and because the record clearly shows that such was Brooks’ intent. Further, the Commission notes that Brink’s was sufficiently apprised of the area contemplated in the proceedings and was in no way deprived of opportunity to contest the application.

Although one cannot approve of the process of seeking such changes by exception to the order rather *462than by proposing amendment of the application, the record is clear that the area contemplated was the entire Third Federal Reserve District, that the parties were aware of that fact, and that Brink’s has claimed no prejudice as a consequence of the. discrepancy.

Accordingly, it is submitted that the Commission should be affirmed.

Brink’s argues that Bunting requires an applicant to overcome a presumption of bad faith in illegal activities, and to support a finding of good faith, as threshold conditions to a finding of fitness. That is not the law. Such “presumption” of bad faith as exists (see Johnstown-Pittsburgh, supra), is a threshold condition only of the admissibility of evidence derived from illegal operations. It is not a presumption of unfitness, and it does not make the established burden of an applicant to demonstrate its fitness more legally demanding. A finding of fitness need only be supported by substantial evidence as that standard has been articulated in case law.