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[BRIGIDO JUGUETA v. PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2f34?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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105 Phil. 721

[ G.R. No. L-12044, May 20, 1959 ]

BRIGIDO JUGUETA, ET AL., PETITIONERS, VS. THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, ET AL., RESPONDENTS.

D E C I S I O N

LABRADOR, J.:

When on December 15, 1956, Silvestre Caparros & Co., a partnership  operating the motorboat "Lola Victorina" between Atimonan and  Alabat Island, Quezon Province, applied to the Public Service Commission for authority to charge specified passenger  and freight rates  on its sea route, Brigido Jugueta, Jose Angulo and Jose  Olaivar opposed the application.  They alleged that they were the grantees of certificates of public convenience to operate a ferry service, with motor launches, in the Atimonan-Alabat line; that they were rendering adequate service; that Silvestre Caparros & Co. had no  such certificate and was illegally operating in their given area of activity; and that no need had arisen for another boat to carry passengers and cargo between the two points, etc.

By  order  of January  29,  1957,  the Commission provisionally approved the rates thus proposed, and then set the case for hearing on February 28, 1957.  On February 23,  1957, this petition for certiorari with  preliminary injunction was filed here, alleging grave abuse of discretion and/or excess of jurisdiction.

It is the petitioners' theory that the Public Service Commission  erred  in not previously requiring Caparros & Co,, to obtain a certificate of public convenience,  and in allowing said partnership to make use of its motorboat in disregard of their previously acquired  certificates of public convenience.

After stating that the "Lola Victorina" was duly  licensed and permitted by the Bureau of Customs to engage in the  bay  and  river  business  in the waters of Alabat, Perez  and Atimonan,  Quezon  Province, the  Commission went on to say in the appealed order,

*   *   *  applicant does not seek a certificate for a ferry service but  merely approval  of rates under  Section 13 (b)  of the Public Service  Act;  in other words, for inter-island service.   Is  a  boat service  from  Atimonan  to  Alabat  a  ferry or  inter-island?  In Javellana vs.  Commission  (G. R.  L-9088)  the Supreme Court held "that it will  be more in consonance with  the  spirit  of  the  law to consider steamboat or motorboat service between  different islands, involving more or less great distances and over more or less turbulent and dangerous waters  of the open  sea, to  be coastwise  or inter-island service", and the fact that a  definite  route is  applied for  does not  make  the service  a ferry service.  We  do not see really that a boat service from  Atimonan  to Alabat,  considering the  body of water traversed  and the distance,  can  be considered a ferry service for which  a certificate  should  be required.  The body of water between Atimonan and Alabat cannot be considered as a small body of water connecting an interrupted highway, we cannot  say either that Atimonan and Alabat are two points  on opposite shores of a body of water which does not involve too great of distance or too long a time to navigate.  It is actually a crossing from one island  to another with a distance of approximately 15 kilometers, and cannot be considered  a ferry service but inter-island in accordance with the ruling of the Supreme  Court  in Javellana vs. Commission, so that applicant's petition for approval of  rates under Section 13(6)  of the Public Service Act may  be entertained."

The Commission erred, argue the petitioners, in applying and following the Javellana decision, because water transportation between  Alabat  and Atimonan constitutes ferry service, and not inter-island shipping.   They make distinctions between  the circumstances of this case and those mentioned in the Javellana decision, particularly  the distance between the terminal points, and the condition of  the seas to reach the conclusion that the Alabat-Atimonan route is not inter-island, but a ferry service for which a  certificate of public convenience must first be secured from the Public Service Commission.

We think the matter depends mostly on the surrounding conditions  of the trips,  and the  Commission's judgment must be accorded preponderant  weight.  It  is true, the distance between the two towns is only 14 kilometers whereas the distance in the  Javellana decision (Batangas-Calapan)  was 44 kilometers.  But  as respondent's  counsel explain,  the  latter  decision did not  intend to make the circumstances existing in the said route as the absolute minimum  necessary  to classify a particular water transportation service as inter-island.

At any rate, in the said Javellana decision we said the Commission had no authority to require steamboats, motorboats or motor vessels plying between the different islands to obtain certificates of public convenience, whether such means of conveyance are used  in ferry  service or in the inter-island or coastwise trade.[1]  Sec. 13 (a) first paragraph of the Public Service Law expressly provides that the Commission  "shall have no  authority to require steamboats, motorships and steamships lines *  * * to  obtain certificates of public convenience or to  prescribe their definite routes or lines of service".

To be specific, we hold that in the circumstances, Caparros & Co. needed  no previous certificate  of public convenience, its "motorboat"  being a "motorship".

Indeed, being of  that opinion, we dismissed as without merit, the previous petition of Jugueta  (G. R. L-11772) to set aside the  order  of Judge  Vicente del Rosario of Quezon  Province,  dissolving the  preliminary  injunction previously issued  to prevent Caparros & Co. from operating this motorboat along the Alabat-Atimonan route.  The injunction had been issued on the basis  of lack of certificate from the  Commission.   Said Judge adhering to our Javellana  decision, thought  such  certificate  unnecessary, and  therefore  dissolved  the  injunction.   Our  dismissal resolution sustained him: certificate not needed.

The  appealed  order  is  hereby  affirmed,  with costs against petitioners.

Paras, C. J., Padilla, Montemayor, Reyes, A., Bautista Angela, Labrador, and Concepcion, JJ., concur.



[1] In Brown vs. Sueso, 104 Phil., 388, we held, a motor launch ferrying between coastal towns needed no certificate of public convenience.

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