261 Ala. 163, 73
So.2d 756 Supreme Court of
Alabama. MARTIN TRUCK LINE,
Inc. v. ALABAMA TANK LINES, Inc., et al. 6 Div. 531. June 24, 1954. [*163] [**756] COUNSEL:
Lange, Simpson, Robinson & Somerville, Birmingham, for
appellant-cross appellee. Maurice F. Bishop, Birmingham, for Alabama Tank Lines. [*164] Jack
Crenshaw, Montgomery, for Smith Transfer Co. Wm. Inge Hill, Montgomery, for Chambers Truck Lines. [**757] JUDGE: LAWSON,
Justice. This suit was filed in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, In
Equity, by Alabama Tank Lines, Inc., a corporation, Smith Transfer Co., Inc., a
corporation, and W. M. Chambers, an individual, doing business as W. M.
Chambers Truck Line, against Direct Transport Company of Alabama, Inc., a
corporation, Martin Truck Line, Inc., a corporation, and against Calvin
Houghland and J. B. Page, Jr. The complainants at the time this proceeding was instituted were
each engaged in the intrastate transportation of petroleum products in bulk,
that is they transported petroleum products in special equipment, such as tank
trucks and tank tractors. For the purpose of this case, it may be said that
each of the complainants was authorized by the Alabama Public Service
Commission, hereafter referred to as the Commission, to engage in such
transportation. The respondent Direct Transport Company, of Alabama, Inc.,
hereafter referred to as Direct, is an Alabama corporation. It does not hold
either a certificate or permit issued by the Commission authorizing it to
transport commodities for hire in intrastate commerce, although it owns
equipment of the kind used in the transportation of petroleum products in bulk. The individual respondents Houghland and Page, residents of
Nashville, Tennessee, own all of the stock of Direct except one share. On July 13, 1950, the Commission authorized the transfer of its
Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity No. 824 to the respondent,
Martin Truck Line, Inc., a corporation, sometimes referred to hereafter simply
as Martin. All of Martins stock was then owned by Edna D. Thornbury,
O. M. Cook, and Frances W. Edwards. The transfer was made to Martin by
Thornbury, Cook and Edwards, who held said Certificate No. 824 and who had been
doing business as Martin Truck Line. Thornbury, Cook and Edwards had become the
holders of said Certificate by virtue of an order of the Commission made in
1947, authorizing its transfer to them from L. A. Ragsdale, to whom the
Certificate had been originally issued. Certificate No. 824 was issued to
Ragsdale, doing business as Martin Truck Line, on or about January 28, 1944. The commodity description contained in Certificate No. 824 reads: Iron and
Steel products, building material, cottonseed hulls and meal, cotton (in
bales), fertilizer, cement and clay products, petroleum products, sugar, syrup,
peanut meal and hulls, mixed feed, over Irregular Route No. 1. [*165] Irregular
Route No. 1 is defined in said Certificate No. 824 as follows: Between
Birmingham, Alabama, and Mobile, Alabama, and all points within a radius of One
Hundred twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham, Alabama. Prior to May 1, 1952, no holder of Certificate No. 824, had ever
engaged in the intrastate transportation of petroleum products in bulk, but on
that date Martin began such an operation. Although it did not own the required
special equipment, Martin used equipment which had come into its possession
under the terms of a lease agreement which it had entered
into with Direct on or about April 18, 1952, on which date Martin and Direct
also entered into an option agreement, whereby Martin
granted to Direct the right or option to purchase Certificate No. 824. Martin
transported petroleum in bulk under the lease agreement
with Direct until June 1, 1952, on which date Direct and Martin orally
cancelled the lease agreement and the option
agreement, because the Commission had questioned the legality of
Martins operation on the ground that the lease agreement
was not a bona fide lease of equipment, but was tantamount to a lease of
operating authority. On the following day, June 2, 1952, the respondents Houghland and
Page, purchased all of the stock of Martin from Thornbury, Cook and Edwards,
and at the [**758] time the suit was filed owned all of
that stock except one share. Also on June 2, 1952, Direct and Martin entered
into what is styled an Equipment Lease, whereby Martin
obtained from Direct, tank trailers needed to transport petroleum products in
bulk, for as heretofore shown Martin owned no such equipment. Subsequent to June 2, 1952, Houghland and Page, through their
ownership of Martins stock, directed and controlled all of its
operations. And after June 2, 1952, Martin engaged in the intrastate
transportation of petroleum products in bulk using the tank trailers leased
from Direct, in connection with truck tractors leased by Martin from various
individuals. The intrastate transportation of petroleum products in bulk by
Martin caused this litigation. The complainants sought declaratory and injunctive relief. The
respondents demurred to the bill and answered after their demurrer was
overruled. We are not concerned here with the ruling on demurrer. The cause was submitted on pleadings, on a stipulation of the
parties and on certain documentary evidence. Three questions were presented to the trial court for decision. 1. May Martin
subsequent to the date of the purchase of all of its stock by Houghland and
Page, continue to operate under Certificate No. 824, the Commission not having
authorized the transfer of the said Certificate in accordance with the
provisions of Section 15 of the Alabama Motor Carrier Act of 1939, Section
301(15), Title 48, Code of 1940, 1953 Cum.Pocket Part, Vol. 7, p. 107? 2. Does Certificate
No. 824 authorize the transportation of petroleum products in bulk in tank
vehicles? 3. What is the
territorial authority authorized by Certificate No. 824? As to those issues the trial court decreed: 1. Martin, subsequent
to the date of the purchase of all of its stock by Houghland and Page, may
continue to operate under Certificate No. 824, without an order of the
Commission. 2. Certificate No. 824
authorizes the transportation of petroleum products in any form, including
petroleum products in bulk in tank trucks. 3. Martin is
authorized to transport the named commodities, between Birmingham,
Alabama, and Mobile, Alabama, and between Birmingham, Alabama, and any point
within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham,
Alabama; that the said shipments may originate in Birmingham destined for
Mobile or any point within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles
of Birmingham; [*166] that said shipments may originate in Mobile destined for
Birmingham; that said shipments may originate at any point within a radius of
One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham destined for Birmingham;
* * *. From the decree of the trial court, the respondent Martin appealed
to this Court. The complainants below took a cross-appeal. The several assignments of error made by Martin all challenge the
correctness of the trial courts holding as to issue No. 3, which, as
shown above, was what is the territorial authority authorized by
Certificate No. 824? The appellees cross-appellants have assigned as error the holdings
of the trial court on the other two issues. We will treat first the cross-appellants assignments of
error which challenge the correctness of the trial courts holding on
the first issue or question as numbered above. Section 15 of the Alabama Motor Carrier Act of 1939, 1953
Cum.Pocket Part, Vol. 7, p. 107, Code of 1940, Section 301(15), Title 48 reads: Subject to
the provisions of section 301(12) of this title, any certificate or permit may
be transferred or leased [**759] pursuant to
such rules and regulations as the commission may prescribe, provided, however,
that no such certificate or permit shall be transferred, or lease of any such
certificate or permit approved, except after a finding by the commission that
the proposed transferee or lessee is in all respects qualified under the
provisions of this article to conduct the service or operation contemplated by
such certificate or permit and that the proposed transfer or the approval of
said lease is consistent with the public interest. It is elementary that a corporation is for the most purposes an
entity distinct from its stockholders. By its very nature the corporate
property is vested in the corporation itself and not in the stockholders. The
natural persons who procured its creation and have pecuniary interest in it are
not the corporation. The Corporation, Martin Truck Line, Inc., and not
Thornbury, Cook and Edwards, owned Certificate No. 824 and all other assets of
the company at the time those individuals sold their stock to Houghland and
Page. The stockholders are but the equitable owners of the corporations
property. State of Alabama v. L. P. Gas Transport Co., Inc., 260 Ala.
637, 71 So.2d 839; Boozer v. Blake, 245 Ala. 389, 17
So.2d 152; Autauga Co-operative Leasing Assn v. Ward, 250 Ala.
229, 33 So.2d 904. The purchase of the stock of Martin by Houghland and Page
certainly worked no change in the corporate entity or in the ownership of the
assets of the corporation. It did not operate as a transfer of Certificate No.
824 from Martin to Houghland and Page. There is nothing in the provisions last above quoted which
delegates to the Commission the power to impose conditions on the ownership and
transfer of the stock of a corporate certificate holder. We are of the opinion that the provisions of Section 15 of the
Alabama Motor Carrier Act of 1939 have no application where all of the stock of
a corporate certificate holder is sold and that no order of the Commission, of
the kind provided for in that Section, was necessary to enable Martin to
legally operate under its Certificate No. 824 after the purchase of its stock
by Houghland and Page. See Nicely v. Public Service Commission, 129 W.Va.
680, 41 S.E.2d 297; Corporation Commission v. Consolidated Stage Co., 63 Ariz.
257, 161 P.2d 110. We will consider next the cross-appellants assignments
of error which question the trial courts holding on the second issue
which was to the effect, that Certificate No. 824 authorizes the transportation
of petroleum products in bulk in tank trucks. It is the contention of the cross-appellants, complainants below,
that Certificate [*167] No. 824 does not authorize the transportation of petroleum
products in bulk by tank trucks or trailers, but only authorizes the
transportation of such products in dry freight or package form. In dealing with this question we think it best to set out again
the commodity description contained in the Certificate: Iron and Steel products, building material, cottonseed
hulls and meal, cotton (in bales), fertilizer, cement and clay products,
petroleum products, sugar, syrup, peanut meal and hulls, mixed feed, over
Irregular Route No. 1. (Emphasis supplied.) The trial court in its final decree had this to say with reference
to this question: As to (1) above, the complainants contend that
Certificate No. 824 does not authorize the transportation of petroleum products
in bulk in tank trailers, while the respondents contend that it does. The
authorization under the Certificate includes the transportation of petroleum
products without limitation. The evidence shows that the Public
Service Commission issues some certificates authorizing transportation of petroleum
products in bulk, others petroleum products in packages
and others petroleum products. Each of these designations
has a distinct meaning. The court fails to see any ambiguity in the designation
petroleum products and, therefore, the court is of the [**760]
opinion that Certificate No. 824 authorizes the transportation of petroleum
products in any form. The record in this case fully supports the finding that the
Commission has issued some certificates giving the right to transport petroleum
products without any limitation, yet, in other instances has granted authority
to carriers to transport such products in bulk, to others the authority is
given to transport such products in tank trailers only and still to other such
carriers the authority to transport petroleum products is in package form only. There is no ambiguity in the commodity description that calls for
the application of the well-known rules of construction where there is an
ambiguity. Actually, what the cross-appellants seek to have the court do, is,
to rewrite the Certificate provided for in the order of January 28, 1944. We are unwilling, as was the trial court, on this collateral
attack, to write into the Commissions order of January 28, 1944,
words of limitation which the Commission did not include, although such words
have been included in other Certificates. We come now to consider the appellants assignments of
error. As shown above they all relate to the trial courts ruling on
the territorial question, which we referred to above as Question No. 3. Martins contention in the court below in regard to the
territorial issue is shown in that part of the stipulation of the parties
hereafter set out: Insofar as the territorial authority authorized under
A.P.S.C. Certificate No. 824 is concerned, Martin contends that the words between
Birmingham, Alabama, and Mobile, Alabama, and all points within a radius of One
Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham includes authority
to transport the commodities listed therein (1) from Birmingham to Mobile (2)
from Mobile to Birmingham (3) from Birmingham to all points within a radius of
One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham (4) from Mobile to all
points within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham
and from said points to Mobile (5) between all points within a radius of One
Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham, that is, from any points
within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham, to
Birmingham or any other point within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five
(125) miles of Birmingham. The holding of the trial court on this issue was against the
contention asserted by Martin in the following respects of which Martin here
complains. Martin is not authorized to transport from Mobile to all [*168] points within a radius of One Hundred
and twenty-five (125) miles of Birmingham. It is not authorized to transport
from points within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of
Birmingham to Mobile. It is not authorized to transport from one point outside
of the City of Birmingham but within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five
(125) miles thereof to another point outside of Birmingham but within a radius
of One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles thereof. The words used in Certificate No. 824 in defining or attempting to
define Irregular Route No. 1, certainly create an ambiguity. The principal
difficulty which gives rise to the ambiguity is the use of the word between,
followed by more than two points. But since the Commission in writing
Certificate No. 824, included more than two points, it is necessary for us to
consider the various alternative constructions. Since the word between can be used properly
only as a preposition connecting two points, it is necessary to imply at least
one more between, in the language used in the Certificate
to define Irregular Route No. 1. The construction which the trial court placed on that language
does imply one between so as to make the descriptive words
read: between Birmingham, Alabama, [**761] and
Mobile, Alabama, and between Birmingham, Alabama, and all
points within a radius of One Hundred and twenty-five (125) miles of
Birmingham, Alabama. To adopt the construction contended for by the appellant, it would
be necessary to add the word between' at least three times. Moreover,
the construction contended for by appellant, would, in our opinion, result in
territorial authorization far in excess of that which Ragsdale operated prior
to the filing of his application under the Grandfather Clause.' We are of the opinion, that the logical and reasonable
construction, is that adopted by the trial court. The questions presented on this appeal are not free from
difficulty, but we are of the opinion that they were correctly decided by the
court below, and that the decree appealed from should be affirmed. It is so
ordered. Affirmed. |