The million-peopled city
Garwood, John
1853
The Extortion complained of in Cabmen.
A second snare to which cabmen are especially exposed is that of extortion, and they are exposed to great opprobrium from the public on this account. The practice cannot be justified, but the public frequently do not sufficiently con- sider the difficulty of the temptation, and they are too severe in their condemnation of the drivers as a class. It may therefore be desirable to explain their position. The public entertain the impression that the present fares, and especially with the small additions often made to them, leave a large profit. But such does not appear to be the case, and although efforts have been made to establish a company, the fares of whose cabs should be only 6d. a mile, they do not appear to have succeeded, and the general impression among practical men in the trade is that, even if a greatly increased trade was produced thereby, the price would not be remu- nerative. The cost of a good clarence cab is from 40l. to 501., of a good horse to draw it from 18l. to 201., and of harness from 4l. 10s. to 51. The license to the cab pro- | |
176 | prietor costs 51., and the duty on the cab is 10s. every week, to be paid in advance. The cab-driver has also to pay for a license 5s. a-year. The liability of being taken a long way from home, without being able to get a fare back, and the long time which will frequently elapse between one fare and another, with the maintenance of the horse, the cost of stabling, and the wear and tear of the cab render it a some- what expensive matter to embark and maintain a cab. The great majority of cabs are driven by men employed by cab proprietors, and it is reckoned in the trade that less than 14s. brought home daily by the driver in the season, and about 9s. out of the season,[1] will not be remunerative; and to earn this it is necessary for 2 horses to be employed, and for the driver to return home from wherever he may be taken by his fare twice during the day. For this sum the driver is required by the proprietor to " sign," as it is termed, and he is held responsible for the amount, whether he earns it or not, having, on the other hand, any excess of this amount which he may happen to earn as his own perquisite, and which constitutes the entire of his remunera- tion, as he receives no wages. Some of the less respectable proprietors, who are called "contractors," and who are generally Jews, require the drivers to sign for 16s. and 12s. a-week, according to the season. But the present fares strictly adhered to, it is generally considered by practical men, would scarcely allow even the former sums to be obtained, one day with another. The force of competition, and the hope of receiving some trifling addition to the legal amount in some of the fares, induce the drivers, however, to incur the risk. As a body, the difficulty which they experience in |
177 | obtaining a living after making up the amount for which they are answerable, a default in the payment of which loses them their places, and exposes them to the penalty of fine and imprisonment, more frequently leads to the demand of 6d. or ls. more than is legally due, than the desire to make undue gain or take unfair advantage of the public, although the public are disposed to accuse them somewhat hastily of the latter. |
Footnotes: [1] The cabman's season is from April or May till July or August. There is a great difference in the amount of earnings during different parts of the year, although latterly the winter months have somewhat improved, and the season has gradually become later. |