Judges: EDMUND G. BROWN JR., Attorney General
Filed Date: 4/12/2010
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
EDMUND G. BROWN JR. Attorney General SUSAN DUNCAN LEE Supervising Deputy Attorney General
THE HONORABLE ALBERTO TORRICO, MEMBER OF THE STATE ASSEMBLY, has requested an opinion on the following questions:
1. Is an international express delivery and logistics company that provides no commercial passenger transportation a "transportation company" within the meaning of article
2. Is such a company prohibited from offering its private corporate passenger aircraft for the flying needs of state elected or appointed officials at the "fair market value" of the flights as determined for gift-reporting purposes under the California Political Reform Act? *Page 2
2. The company may offer its private corporate passenger aircraft to state elected or appointed officials at the "fair market value" of the flights as determined for gift-reporting purposes under the California Political Reform Act.
We are further informed that the company wants to make its corporate passenger aircraft available to various elected or appointed state officials at rates matching the flights' "fair market values" as determined by the Fair Political Practices Commission ("FPPC") for gift-reporting purposes.1 We are asked to address two questions: First, would such a company come within the definition of a "transportation company" as that term is used in article
We begin with an examination of Section 7, which provides:
A transportation company may not grant free passes or discounts to anyone holding an office in this state; and the acceptance of a pass or discount by a public officer, other than a Public Utilities Commissioner, shall work a forfeiture of that office. A Public Utilities Commissioner may not hold an official relation to nor have a financial interest in a person or corporation subject to regulation by the commission.
A similar restriction was adopted at the Constitutional Convention of 1879 as article XII, section 19, 2 one of several measures intended to limit the influence of railroads on state politics.3 At the time the ban was adopted, America had just seen the completion of its long-awaited transcontinental railroad, 4 and along with it an extraordinary rise in the power and influence of the great railroad magnates. While railroad interests were powerful all over the country, the situation was particularly acute in California. By the mid-1870s, the Southern Pacific company owned more than 85 percent of the railroad track in the state, owned more than 10 percent of the land in the state, and was the state's largest employer as well as its largest taxpayer.5 "[T]he railroad so far overshadowed any possible competitors in point of number of men employed, invested capital, and value to a community, that it stood alone in terms of crude social power."6
Social discontent with the conglomerate's brute uses and abuses of power directly fed a movement to form a convention to revise the state constitution in an effort to exert some control over the railroads.7 One of the products of that convention was the *Page 4 provision forbidding transportation companies from giving "free passes or discounts" to state officials.
Much has changed since then. California's economy is no longer dependent on the railroad magnates; new technology has transformed the way people work, travel, and interact; and California law holds public officials to much stricter standards of ethical dealings and financial transparency. Nevertheless, despite several proposals to remove the free-transportation ban from the Constitution, the Legislature and voters have so far left it intact.
With this background in mind, we proceed to the threshold question: Is a package-delivery company a "transportation company" to which the prohibition applies?
We note that an express-delivery company has the capacity to offer special benefits services to public officers in at least three different forms: (1) the company could offer to ship public officers' packages, documents, or other physical materials, or to expedite delivery thereof, at no charge or at reduced rates; (2) the company could transport public officers on whatever seating is available on its cargo aircraft; or (3) as here, it could offer to make its private corporate aircraft specially available to public officers. In the first two instances, the capacity to offer special treatment may be unique to companies in the express-delivery business; but in the third case — our case — it is not. It has become increasingly common in recent years for businesses and wealthy individuals engaged in a wide variety of non-transportation enterprises to purchase or lease aircraft and to retain the necessary flight crews, thereby facilitating their business travels while providing their executives and agents with greater convenience, independence, communications, service, and comfort than might be afforded on regular commercial airline flights. We think it likely that the capacity to offer transportation of this kind to public officers is shared by a broad spectrum of business enterprises and individuals. Nevertheless, Section 7, by its terms, restricts only those businesses that qualify as "transportation companies."12
Some interested parties have suggested that the term "transportation companies," as used in article XII, should be construed to include only companies that are regulated by the Public Utility Commission, arguing that Section 7's ban on gifts is intended to prevent only such regulated businesses from improperly influencing the PUC's (and the Legislature's) oversight of their rates, routes, schedules, and other operations — oversight *Page 6 that the Legislature and the PUC do not currently exercise with respect to the express shipping company in question here.13 We believe, however, that this approach is not sound.
It is true that the principal focus of Article XII is the PUC. But the language of Section 7 is simply too broad to support the constitution that it applies only to companies regulated by the PUC. Section 7 forbids transportation companies from granting free passes or discounts to "anyone holding an office in this state" (italics added), and it outlaws the acceptance of such proffered gifts by anyone who is "a public officer." We are not free to assume that the drafters' omission of the clause "subject to PUC regulation" was accidental, nor are we free to read the clause into a sentence where it has been left out. To the contrary, we are constrained to assume that the drafters deliberately employed the phrase in one context and excluded it from the other, and that they did so with the intention of conveying two different ideas.14
Accordingly, we are persuaded that the degree to which the express-shipping provider in question does or does not come within the PUC's regulatory purview is immaterial to the determination of the company's status as a "transportation company." Rather, we believe that a business's identity as a "transportation company" for purposes of the Section 7 ban on free or discounted transportation turns on whether the company is engaged in the business of transportation, whether of passengers or of property.15 *Page 7
We find additional support for our view in a 1992 decision, SquawValley Ski Corporation v. Superior Court, 16 in which the Court of Appeal considered closely parallel facts. The court agreed that the petitioner ski-lift operator had been exempted by statute from PUC regulation as a common carrier, but held that the lift operator nevertheless remained a common carrier and a transportation company for other purposes and, specifically, for purposes of tort liability.17 Here, of course, the package-delivery company's exemption from PUC regulation derives from federal preemption rather than from state statute, but we don't think that fact makes the Court's analysis and conclusion any less applicable to our circumstances. Applying the SquawValley court's reasoning to our circumstances, we conclude that the company's exemption from PUC regulation of its routes, schedules, and fares does not take it outside the realm of "transportation companies" for purposes of Section 7.
We therefore conclude that the express package and freight delivery company in question is indeed a "transportation company" within the meaning of Section 7, notwithstanding that Congress has, through federal preemption, eliminated the PUC's regulatory authority over the company's intrastate operations, and notwithstanding that the company provides no commercial passenger services.
To begin with, we reject the suggestion that Section 7 should be narrowly construed as applying only to a transportation company's regularly scheduled day-to-day services for which regular public fares are set. Under that theory, the rule against granting "free passes or discounts" would prohibit only a reduction or waiver of a company's usual public fares for commercial transportation services, and the term "discount" or "free pass" would be read to presuppose the existence of a regular public *Page 8 fee schedule. In the case of a passenger-transportation company, this narrow construction would mean only that the company could not offer office holders a reduced rate or a free pass for travel on the company's commercial passenger trains or planes or buses. In the case of a freight company, it would mean only that the company could not provide office holders with shipping or delivery services at a reduced rate or at no charge.
We cannot accept such a cramped reading of the constitutional ban on gifts of transportation. A seat on the corporate jet of a package-delivery company is no less "transportation" than a seat on a regularly scheduled flight of a commercial passenger airline — or, to put the point in its historical context — access to a private railroad car attached to a freight train is no less "transportation" than a seat on one of the passenger cars of a commuter train. If the ride is offered for free, it amounts to a prohibited "free pass" within the meaning of section 7 in any case.
Here, however, the ride would not be offered for free. It would be offered at "fair market value." While there may be a range of definitions for the term "discount," for present purposes we need not define it too precisely. Given the history of the rule and the plain meaning of the words, we are satisfied that, in this context at least, "discount" means something other than "fair market value." Therefore we conclude that the offer does not violate the rule against "free or discount passes."
Of course, it is not always easy to agree on what constitutes "fair market value" for a good or service. Fortunately, that is not a problem here. The California Political Reform Act imposes various gift-limit rules and gift-reporting requirements on certain public officials.18 The FPPC, as the agency charged with administering that California Political Reform Act, 19 has developed methods for determining the "fair market value" of a variety of gifts — including gifts of free or discounted transportation — for purposes of clarifying the statutory gift restrictions and measuring compliance therewith.20 We believe that the FPPC's existing guidelines are an appropriate measure of the "fair market value" of transportation services for this purpose as well.
Accordingly, we find that a transportation company may offer its private corporate passenger aircraft to state elected or appointed officials at the "fair market value" of the flights as determined for gift-reporting purposes under the California Political Reform Act.
federal-express-corporation-v-california-public-utilities-commission , 936 F.2d 1075 ( 1991 )
Horwich v. Superior Court , 87 Cal. Rptr. 2d 222 ( 1999 )
Bekins Van Lines, Inc. v. State Board of Equalization , 62 Cal. 2d 84 ( 1964 )
People v. Woodhead , 43 Cal. 3d 1002 ( 1987 )