The Korea Herald

지나쌤

Seoul court rules van-hailing service Tada not illegal

Acquitted Lee Jae-woong welcomes verdict, but hurdles remain

By Kim Da-sol

Published : Feb. 19, 2020 - 15:16

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Socar CEO Lee Jae-woong speaks to reporters as he walks out of the Seoul Central District Court on Wednesday. (Yonhap) Socar CEO Lee Jae-woong speaks to reporters as he walks out of the Seoul Central District Court on Wednesday. (Yonhap)

The Seoul Central District Court on Wednesday found Socar CEO Lee Jae-woong and VCNC CEO Park Jae-wook not guilty of violating transportation laws with their ride service that is strongly opposed by the taxi industry. Socar is the parent of VCNC, which runs Tada, an 11-seat van-hailing mobile app service.

The court said in a ruling that Tada is seen as an “innovative mobility business” that cannot be categorized based on the existing transportation business frame. 

“Tada service is operated based on a contract agreed by a user who makes minute-based reservation for one’s convenience,” the ruling read.

The court stated Tada is a “rent-a-car service based on the mobile application,” dismissing the prosecution’s earlier opinion that Tada users are not hirers of the service but the passenger, and that therefore it is an “illegal call-taxi service.”

The ruling also said that even if Tada was to be considered illegal, it cannot be seen that it was upon the intention of the two CEOs to violate laws.

Regarding the operation of Tada, the court cited evidence that neither the Transport Ministry nor Seoul Metropolitan Government took administrative measures or conducted a crackdown on the service. 

“It will become a learning effect for players in the mobility industry including taxi drivers to discuss together for a constructive solution regarding the issue,” the court said, also referring to the fact that Seoul’s taxi revenues increased last year despite the operation of Tada. 

After the court’s decision, Socar CEO Lee Jae-woong wrote via Facebook, “Tada is not guilty and the innovation is the future.”

He added he will “think about cooperative measures with the taxi industry to make the mobility ecosystem better.”

He said Tada will be separated from its parent company Socar to make a new economy, model and rules. 

Socar also released a statement immediately after the judgement, saying, “The court chose the way to the future. Tada, which dreamed of an innovation within legal boundaries, will continue to run toward the sustainable future.”

Prosecutors, meanwhile, said they will closely review the ruling to decide whether to appeal. 

The decision is also expected to rekindle a wave of protests from taxi drivers, particularly ahead of the April 15 general elections. 

In February last year, former and current executives of Seoul’s private taxi drivers’ association filed a lawsuit against the two CEOs for operating a taxi-like service.

Last week, the prosecution sought one year of jail and a fine of 20 million won ($16,800) each for the two CEOs.

The prosecutors argued that Tada has been illegally operating taxi services using the 11-seat rental minivans -- Kia Motors’ Carnival -- without obtaining a license from the Transport Ministry, noting customers regard themselves as passengers. 

But VCNC has argued that Tada’s operations are within the ambit of current laws, namely the Transportation Act’s Article 18, allowing rental car businesses to offer driving services for large vehicles. 

Unlike predecessors such as Uber and Kakao Mobility, which eventually withdrew or reached an agreement with the taxi industry, Socar CEO Lee has refused to back down, arguing the service is legal.

Amid the controversy, taxi drivers have taken to the streets to protest Tada. A total of three taxi drivers have died separately by setting themselves on fire in protest.

The National Assembly also joined the fray, with Democratic Party of Korea lawmakers led by Rep. Park Hong-geun authoring a revision bill to the transportation law in October to tighten chauffeur services allowed for car rental businesses, and ultimately banning Tada’s operation. The bill, currently pending at the National Assembly, suggests renting a van that can sit more than 11 to 15 people should be limited to less than six hours. The rental place should also be limited to either airports or seaports, according to the amendment.

Such moves have been countered by the country’s startup industry.

A coalition of 280 startup company CEOs submitted a petition to the prosecution to appeal that the innovation that Tada has achieved cannot be considered criminal. 

Some 16 startup and venture associations also filed a petition asking for the prosecution to allow Tada “for the sake of innovation.”

Launched in October 2018, Tada has garnered an accumulated 1.25 million registered users on the app over a year, while outsourced Tada drivers number around 9,000. 

By Kim Da-sol (ddd@heraldcorp.com