147 A.2d 761
[No. 106, September Term, 1958.]Court of Appeals of Maryland.
Decided January 20, 1959.
APPEAL — Dismissed For Mootness — No Opinions On Abstract Or Moot Questions — Dismissal Granted In Instant Case. An appeal to the Court of Appeals will be dismissed as a matter of course if the case has become moot. If the chronology of the case makes it apparent that nothing which the Court could do, by reversal or otherwise, could undo or remedy that which has already occurred, the Court is powerless to make a decision in the case which will bind any of the parties to it or accomplish any of the purposes for which it is brought or defended. Appellate courts do not sit to give opinions on abstract or moot questions. In the instant case, on October 10, 1957, The Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad Company, operating as a common carrier by bus between Baltimore and Annapolis, asked the Public Service Commission to order The Baltimore Motor Coach Company, also a common carrier, not to transport the brigade of midshipmen from Annapolis to Baltimore and back to Annapolis, in connection with football games in Baltimore on October 26, November 9, November 16 and November 30, 1957, for the reason that it did not hold a permit authorizing it to transport persons on regular schedules between the fixed termini of Annapolis and Baltimore and Baltimore and Annapolis. On October 17, 1957, the Commission denied the relief sought. On December 10, 1957, and more than a week after the last trip complained of had taken place, the Railroad Company filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City a petition for review of the Commission’s order. On April 7, 1958, that court affirmed the order of the Commission and dismissed the petition. The Railroad Company appealed. The appeal was dismissed because the case had become moot. The Railroad Company had urged the Court to decide the matter because the same operations took place in 1958 and may take place again and because the matter was of public interest. The Court
Page 567
rejected this argument, pointing out that the matter was of public interest only in the sense that any statute is, which involves the whole state, that the matter did not seem likely to recur with any frequency and that, if it did, it could be passed upon by the Court as a live issue. pp. 567-570
Decided January 20, 1959.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Baltimore City (CARTER, J.).
Complaint to the Public Service Commission by The Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad Company, seeking an order that The Baltimore Motor Coach Company not be permitted to transport midshipmen from Annapolis to Baltimore and back for football games. The complaint was dismissed and the relief denied. The complainant filed a petition for review in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. From a decree affirming the order of dismissal of the Commission and dismissing the petition for review, complainant appealed.
Appeal dismissed, costs to be paid by the appellant.
The cause was argued before BRUNE, C.J., and HENDERSON, HAMMOND, PRESCOTT and HORNEY, JJ.
Joseph I. Huesman, for appellant.
John C. Griffin, Special Counsel, with whom was Stanley Scherr, General Counsel, on the brief, for appellee, Public Service Commission of Maryland.
Edward Pierson for appellee, The Baltimore Motor Coach Company.
HAMMOND, J., delivered the opinion of the Court.
On October 10, 1957, The Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad Co., a Maryland corporation, operating as a common carrier of persons by motor bus for hire between fixed termini within the State of Maryland, two of which were Baltimore and Annapolis, asked the Public Service Commission to order The Baltimore Motor Coach Company, a similar
Page 568
corporation, not to transport the brigade of midshipmen from Annapolis to Baltimore and back to Annapolis, in connection with football games on October 26, November 9, November 16, and November 30, 1957, as it had contracted to do, for the reason that the Coach Company did not hold a permit authorizing it to transport persons on regular schedules between the fixed termini of Annapolis and Baltimore and Baltimore and Annapolis. The Railroad Company relied on two sections of Code, 1957, one of which, Art. 78, § 32(a), forbids transportation of persons for hire “on regular schedules and between fixed termini” without a permit from the Public Service Commission; and the other of which, Art. 66 1/2, § 2(a)(42), provides: “`Regular schedule’ shall be given a liberal construction and shall include the carriage of * * * passengers of at least one single trip per week for four consecutive weeks, or three single trips within a period of ten days * * *.”
The Baltimore Motor Coach Company, in its answer, admitted that the transportation was proposed but said that it was a charter operation not subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission and not in violation of the provisions of Art. 78. A hearing was held on October 16, 1957, at which witnesses were produced for both sides, and argument heard. On October 17, 1957, the Commission filed its opinion and order, dismissing the complaint and denying the relief sought by The Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad Co.
Almost two months later, on December 10, 1957, and more than a week after the last trip complained of had taken place, the Railroad Company filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City a petition for review of the order of the Public Service Commission. After a hearing, the Circuit Court, on April 7, 1958, affirmed the order of the Commission and dismissed the petition for review. The Railroad Company appeals.
The Public Service Commission has moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the case is moot, and we think the motion must be granted. The action which the Railroad Company sought to prevent took place and was fully accomplished over a year ago, in fact, before there was an appeal to the Circuit Court. What we said and held in Lloyd v. Supervisors
Page 569
of Elections, 206 Md. 36, 39, 43, controls the appeal at bar: “The chronology of the case makes it apparent that nothing this Court could do, by reversal or otherwise, could undo or remedy that which has already occurred. It is beyond our power to make a decision in the case which will bind any of the parties to it or accomplish any of the purposes for which it was brought or defended. The case was moot as to the parties when it reached us. Appellate courts do not sit to give opinions on abstract propositions or moot questions, and appeals which present nothing else for decision are dismissed as a matter of course.” The appellant urges us to decide the matter because the same operations took place in 1958 and may take place again, and because, in their eyes, the matter is of public interest and concern. What was said in the Lloyd case, in answer to a similar argument, again is pertinent here: “The matter may be said to be of general public interest only in the sense that any statute is, which involves the whole state. Moreover, it does not seem likely that it will recur with any frequency, and if it does again present itself, there need be no difficulty in having it passed upon by this Court as a live issue.”[1] See also Price v. Cohen, 206 Md. 45.
Code, 1957, Art. 78, § 93(b), provides that every proceeding before the trial courts coming from the Public Service Commission “shall be preferred over all other civil causes except election causes in all the courts of this State, irrespective of their position on the dockets * * *.” Where there has been a necessity to do so, this Court has decided appeals within a few days of the judgment or decree appealed from. We have no doubt that an appeal from the Public Service Commission in a situation such as confronted the Railroad Company, if promptly initiated and vigorously prosecuted,
Page 570
could be heard and decided in the trial court and this Court before the case becomes moot.
Appeal dismissed, costs to be paid by appellant.