Allied Telephone Co. v. Ark. Public Service Comm.

393 S.W.2d 206, 239 Ark. 492, 1965 Ark. LEXIS 1022
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 24, 1965
Docket5-3540
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 393 S.W.2d 206 (Allied Telephone Co. v. Ark. Public Service Comm.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allied Telephone Co. v. Ark. Public Service Comm., 393 S.W.2d 206, 239 Ark. 492, 1965 Ark. LEXIS 1022 (Ark. 1965).

Opinions

Ed. F. McFaddin, Associate Justice.

The important question in this case is whether the appellant should be allowed to use a machine called “Telfast” for completing long distance calls to points in Arkansas served by Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. A minor question relates to an injunction.

The appellant, Allied Telephone Company (hereinafter called “Allied”), is an Arkansas corporation owning and operating telephone exchanges in the cities of Sheridan and Fordyce, as well as in several other cities in Arkansas. Southwestern Bell Telephone Company (hereinafter called “Southwestern”) is a corporation (being a subsidiary or affiliate of American Telephone and Telegraph Company) operating telephone exchanges and long distance lines in Arkansas and several other states. The Bell system of American Telephone and Telegraph Company (of which Southwestern is a part) is nation-wide, whereas Allied is one of several so-called independent companies operating in Arkansas.

In order that the subscribers of the independent telephone companies may complete long distance calls to points on the Southwestern system throughout Arkansas,1 and in order that Southwestern subscribers in other Arkansas cities may complete long distance calls to subscribers served by independent companies, there exists a so-called standard “Traffic Agreement” between Southwestern and the various independent companies specifying how long distance calls will be handled over the long distance lines of Southwestern throughout the State. Thus long distance calls are available from any point in the State to any telephone exchange having-such Traffic Agreement with Southwestern. The present Traffic Agreement between Allied and Southwestern was signed on July 21, 1961, and was for one year and then automatically renewable until notice of termination should be given by, either party. Two of the provisions in the Traffic Agreement are:

“V. TOLL OPERATING. The toll operating-(tick-ting and timing) required hereunder shall be performed as may be agreed upon from time to time between the parties.
“VI. METHODS AND PRACTICES. With respect to all matters covered by this Agreement, each company will adopt and comply Avith standard Bell System operating methods and practices and Avill observe the rules and regulations of the lawfully established tariffs. Each company -will, upon request, furnish to the other such information relating- to the interchanged business covered herein as may reasonably be required.”

There are at least three methods now in use for making and completing long distance calls:

(1) Call the operator2 at a local exchange and place the long distance call to the place, number, and/or person desired; and the operator handles interchange and communications, and the person placing the call has only to wait until his desired number or person is reached. This is called the “Operator Method.”

(2) Use the method of “Distance Direct Dialing,” whereby the person making a station to station call dials an area code, exchange number, and the number of the telephone at the destination desired. This is called the “DDD Method.”

(3) Use the method known as “Person to Person Called Special” whereby the person making the long distance call may dial direct to the desired city but have an operator come on the line to control completion of the call and the billing of the charges either to the person called or to a credit card or to a third party number. This method is called “PPCS.”

The foregoing three methods are now in operation in various exchanges; but the problem involved in this litigation arises because of a fourth method which Mr. Hugh E. Wilbourn, President of Allied, has invented and desires to use at the Allied telephone exchange in Sheridan, Arkansas. This fourth method for handling of long distance calls is called “Telephone Fully Automatic Switching and Ticketing,” and is herein referred to as “Telfast.” Below we copy the description of “Telfast” as contained in Allied’s brief in this Court:

‘ ‘ Tape recording equipment is added to the existing automatic ticketing machines of a PPCS system. Station to station prepaid calls work like DDD and PPCS. The difference comes in sending other types of toll calls. To operate the equipment, the subscriber dials three digits: the first activates the machine, the second indicates the type of call that he wishes to make, and the third designates which station on a party line is making the call. Then the subscriber dials the area code (if the call is to another state), followed by seven digits of the desired number. Both the calling and called number are recorded in a computer, and the call is stored in the machine. At this point, the subscriber is connected with the tape recorder and a periodic beep tone commences. The tape recording tells the caller what type of call he has dialed and gives him instructions (e.g. for a credit card call, the recording might state, ‘when you hear the bell, give your credit card number’). After a certain period of time, up to twenty (20) seconds, the machine rings the called number. When a party answers at the called number, the subscriber, in a person to person call, asks for the desired person, or in a collect call, asks if the party will accept the charges. During this period the tape recorder is running to make sure that the correct party has reached the phone or that the charges will be accepted. When the desired party is reached, or charges are accepted, the calling party dials the digit 2 which disconnects the tape recorder (including the beep tone), and the call is timed and ticketed automatically. If, for any reason, a subscriber does not wish to use the Telfast equipment, e.g. if he wants time and charges, he may dial the digit ‘O’, get the operator, and proceed to complete his call with operator assistance.”

There is no Telfast machine now in use in any telephone exchange in the United States., Mr. Wilbourn’s invention of Telfast has been patented during the course of this litigation and the Kellogg Division of the International Telephone Telegraph Company is ready to manufacture and install a Telfast machine in Allied’s exchange in Sheridan, Arkansas.

With the above background matters, we come to the present litigation. On June 14, 1963, Southwestern filed before the Arkansas Public Service Commission3 a complaint against Allied regarding Telfast. The complaint alleged the traffic agreement between Allied and Southwestern; that Southwestern had been notified of Allied’s intention to install a Telfast machine in the Sheridan exchange; “that the use of such equipment would create numerous problems and have much a detrimental effect on long distance telephone service that Southwestern could not agree to Allied’s proposal.” The complaint also alleged:

“The use of the aforesaid ticketing equipment in the mailing of long distance calls will conflict with Bell System standard practices and, therefore, violate the parties’ Traffic Agreement.

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Related

Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission
593 S.W.2d 434 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1980)
City of Dewitt v. Public Service Commission
451 S.W.2d 188 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
393 S.W.2d 206, 239 Ark. 492, 1965 Ark. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allied-telephone-co-v-ark-public-service-comm-ark-1965.