Automatic Fire Alarm Co. v. Bowles

143 F.2d 602, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3156
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1944
DocketNo. 105
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 F.2d 602 (Automatic Fire Alarm Co. v. Bowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Automatic Fire Alarm Co. v. Bowles, 143 F.2d 602, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3156 (eca 1944).

Opinion

MARIS, Chief Judge.

The complainants are three corporations engaged in New York, Philadelphia and Boston, respectively, in the business of rendering fire alarm protective service. One of them also furnishes burglar alarm service.

On August 4, 1943, the Price Administrator amended Section 1499.101(c) of Maximum Price Regulation No. 165 — Services, by adding to the services to which the Regulation applies the following additional services: ■

“(66) Equipment used for the detection of, and protection against fire, theft, burglary and sabotage (including but not limited to fire alarms, burglar alarms, watchman boxes, sprinkler systems, and electrical or mechanical devices used in connection therewith for the detection of, and for protection against, loss or damage by fire, theft, burglary, or sabotage)— maintenance, repair, rental, supervision, operation, inspection, or installation (except installation of sprinkler systems).”1

On October 1, 1943, complainants filed a joint protest against this amendment of the Regulation. The protest was denied on November 3, 1943. Thereupon the present complaint was filed which seeks to set aside the amendment to the Regulation in question in whole or in part. The complaint is based upon the ground that paragraph (66) above quoted is invalid as beyond the power of the Administrator under the Emergency Price Control Act. Before discussing this question it will be helpful to consider the nature of the business in which the complainants are engaged and which the Administrator has sought to bring under price control by the amendment in question.

The complainants solicit and obtain contracts for automatic central office fire alarm service, central office sprinkler valve alarm service, central office sprinkler supervisory service, manual central office fire alarm service, and combination manual central [604]*604office and interior fire alarm service. Pursuant to such a contract a complainant installs in its customer’s premises the equipment required for the detection of fire, or of waterflow in the customer’s sprinkler system, as the case may be, for the electrical transmission to the central office of appropriate signals and in some instances the ■ringing of bells in the protected premises, and also for the transmission to the central office of supervisory or trouble signals indicating that the complainant’s equipment or the customer’s sprinkler system is not in normal operating condition. The use, .control, and, with very infrequent exceptions, the ownership of the devices thus installed in the customer’s premises are retained by the complainant. The devices are connected by telephone wires, leased from the local telephone company, with the central office at which the various signals are received.

At a complainant’s central office fire signals received from-a customer’s premises are relayed to the local fire department as are waterflow signals when received outside of business hours. When waterflow signals are received during business hours the customer is communicated with by telephone and the cause ascertained. Upon receipt of any signal, whether fire, water-flow, tank alarm, supervisory or trouble, a complainant’s practice is for one of its employees from the central office to respond immediately by visiting the customer’s premises from which the signal was received, investigating and ascertaining the cause and if possible restoring the equipment to normal operation. An employee at the central office also communicates by telephone with the person in charge of the pro-' tected building.

These protective systems are installed, operated, maintained and kept in repair by the complainants. They are periodically inspected by the complainants’ employees to the end that they may be kept in proper operating condition. The complainants also solicit and enter into sprinkler valve alarm and sprinkler supervisory service contracts for operation by the American District Telegraph Company, which company installs the necessary equipment, the complainants paying for the transmitters and manual fire alarm boxes installed and receiving a percentage of the revenue. The complainants do not, however, participate in any way in the installation, maintenance, or operation of equipment thus installed by the American District Telegraph .Company nor do they render any service with respect thereto.

Only in unusual instances are the systems which we have described sold. On the contrary the almost universal practice is for title thereto and control thereof to be retained by the complainants or the American District Telegraph Company, as the case may be, the contracts providing that the equipment “shall be and remain personal property owned solely by” them and that they are authorized to maintain, inspect, test and repair it. The contracts are normally for five year periods and provide for automatic renewal from year to year unless a specified notice of termination is given by either party. They provide for a charge, usually payable annually in advance, for the maintenance and operation of the system. It is established by the record and admitted by the Administrator in his answer that no charge is made by the complainants for repairs or replacements and that only in rare and exceptional cases do complainants make any charge for installation.

It will be seen that the Administrator by the amendment here under attack has sought to bring within the purview of Maximum Price Regulation No. 165 services rendered in the maintenance, repair, rental, supervision, operation, inspection and installation of equipment used for the detection of and protection against fire. It is the complainants’ basic contention that insofar as the Administrator seeks by the Regulation to establish a maximum rate of charges for services rendered in the maintenance, supervision, operation and inspection of such equipment he is exceeding the authority conferred upon him by the Act. They do not seriously contest the Administrator’s right to establish maximum charges for services rendered in the repair, rental or installation of such equipment, but they point out that they do not rent their equipment and make no charges for its repair and only in very rare instances for its installation. In this contention they are, as we have already said, supported by the record. The Adnfinistrator contends, however, that since the complainants obligate themselves unde'r their contracts “to maintain such signalling system in good working order” they have the equivalent of an obligation to keep the system in repair. From this he argues that keeping the signalling equipment in repair is the major [605]*605consideration for the charges which the complainants make.

We think that the Administrator’s contention is untenable. The equipment which the complainants install in their customers’ premises is and remains their own property. It constitutes the tools with which they perform the protective services for which their customers pay. Of course the complainants install the equipment and keep it in repair but in installing and repairing it they are merely installing and repairing their own tools and for so doing they customarily make no charge. What they do charge their customers for is the protective service which they render those customers through the continuous daily and hourly use of these tools.

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Bluebook (online)
143 F.2d 602, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 3156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/automatic-fire-alarm-co-v-bowles-eca-1944.