Baxter Telephone Co. v. Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Ass'n

146 P. 324, 94 Kan. 159, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1915
DocketNo. 19,046
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 146 P. 324 (Baxter Telephone Co. v. Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baxter Telephone Co. v. Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Ass'n, 146 P. 324, 94 Kan. 159, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 62 (kan 1915).

Opinion

[160]*160The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The Baxter Telephone Company is a Kansas corporation, which for several years past has enjoyed a franchise from the city of Baxter Springs, a city of the second class, in Cherokee county, Kansas. This franchise authorizes it to exercise its corporate rights in the streets and alleys of the municipality, which rights include the maintenance of a telephone exchange and the proper cables, poles, wires and other equipment pertinent to the telephone business. This company was lawfully exercising these privileges prior to the enactment of the public utilities law of 1911, and since its enactment that company has complied with its provisions and has duly and regularly made its report to the public utilities commission.

The Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Association is an unincorporated association of persons and local telephone companies for the mutual exchange of telephone messages in Cherokee county, and to some extent it provides for long-distance connection and toll-line service to points in northern Kansas, and to Missouri and Oklahoma.

Baxter Local No. 121 of The Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Association is a voluntary telephone association of twenty-six persons residing in and about Baxter Springs and is organized for the purpose of giving mutual telephone service to its membership. It contemplates an affiliation with The Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Association upon an understanding that when it is ready and fully equipped for business it may become a member of The Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Association for the interchange and transmission of messages.

On July 3, 1913, the city of Baxter Springs published an ordinance granting a franchise to Baxter Local No. 121,- to operate a telephone exchange and to use the streets and alleys of the city for its telephone [161]*161business; and pursuant thereto, and without any license under section 31 of chapter 238 of the Laws of 1911, from the public utilities commission, Baxter Local No. 121 set about the establishment of its local exchange and telephone system within the city limits.

Thereupon The Baxter Telephone Company, the established corporation engaged in the telephone business in Baxter Springs, brought suit against The Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Association and Baxter Local No. 121, and certain of the officers and members of those voluntary associations as representatives of their whole memberships, alleging that the plaintiff corporation was serving the public in the city with efficient and sufficient service on reasonable and satisfactory terms, and that it had an investment in the telephone business in Baxter Springs of about $16,000 to $20,000, and that the construction of another exchange in Baxter Springs would cause the plaintiff great and irreparable injury and damage other and different in kind from that suffered by any other person, firm or corporation, by reason of the parallel and intersecting lines of the other associations interfering with the plaintiff’s lines and with the construction of future lines of the plaintiff as they would be required; and that the stringing of wires, cables and the setting of poles over the streets and across the lines of the plaintiff would interfere with and impair the high-class service furnished by plaintiff and cause plaintiff an increase in cost of maintenance and a loss of patronage and reduction of revenue.

On the plaintiff’s petition, summarized as above, temporary and permanent injunctions were asked against the county and local associations and against a number of officers and members of those associations to restrain them from constructing the proposed telephone system in Baxter Springs.

The district court granted a temporary injunction and the defendants filed a demurrer and a motion to [162]*162set aside the temporary injunction. Affidavits, oral testimony and documentary evidence were introduced in support of the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction, and the motion and demurrer were heard and considered together. The motion was allowed and the demurrer was sustained.

From these rulings of the trial court the plaintiff below submits two propositions for our consideration: (a) Has The Baxter Telephone Company such a peculiar interest in this matter different from the general public that it may maintain this suit in its own behalf; and if so, (5) does the public utilities law require Baxter Local No. 121 of The Cherokee County Mutual Telephone Association to secure a license from the public utilities commission before engaging in business in Baxter Springs?

Ordinarily the usurpation of a corporate privilege or public franchise can only be challenged by an action in the name of the state by its proper officer.

In Kansas that proper officer would be the county attorney. (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2226; The State, ex rel. County Attorney, v. Eble, 77 Kan. 179, 93 Pac. 803.) The attorney-general is likewise frequently called upon to challenge the exercise of some unauthorized corporate power. (The State, ex rel. Attorney-general, v. Stock Yards Co., ante p. 96, 145 Pac. 831; The State, ex rel. Attorney-general, v. Garfield County, 54 Kan. 372, 38 Pac. 559.)

The cases of Houser v. Smith, 80 Kan. 260, 101 Pac. 1001, and The State, ex rel. Attorney-general, v. Bentley, 80 Kan. 227, 101 Pac. 1073, considered together, are instructive. The former, although but briefly reported, was an injunction suit against the county treasurer of Gove county to restrain him from collecting a hig-h-school tax on the ground that “there was and is no high school in said county of Gove which has been established or created according to law.” (p. 260.) The plaintiffs were private citizens and were [163]*163nonsuited. But a radically different result was obtained when an officer of the state challenged the legality of the organization of the high school. In .the latter case the organization of the high school was declared void.

By the railroad and utilities acts the power is conferred upon the attorney for the public utilities commission to challenge the exercise of unauthorized corporate acts. (Gen. Stat. 1909, §7182; Laws 1911, ch. 238, §§ 2, 7; The State, ex rel. Attorney for the Public Utilities Commission, v. Gas Co., 88 Kan. 165, 127 Pac. 639.) The latter case is-quite pertinent. There the gas company had received the assent of the city to raise the rates for gas; but it had not received the assent of the public utilities commission. In the case at bar the appellee, Baxter Local No. 121, has received the assent of the city, but that of the state commission is still wanting, if such assent is required. These illustrations show that if there is a usurpation of powers by the appellees, the state has provided itself with officers to challenge such usurpation.

A private plaintiff who is likely to be injured in some special manner or whose situation is peculiarly affected by the exercise of a usurped power could maintain the action, but no such case is presented here.

In Mining and Gas Co. v. Gas and Mining Co., 55 Kan. 173, 40 Pac. 326, it was said:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baltimore Steam Co. v. Baltimore Gas & Electric Co.
716 A.2d 1042 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1998)
United Cities Gas Co. v. Brock Exploration Co.
995 F. Supp. 1284 (D. Kansas, 1998)
General Communications System, Inc. v. State Corp. Commission
532 P.2d 1341 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1975)
KAKE-TV & RADIO, INC. v. City of Wichita
516 P.2d 929 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1973)
In re O'Harra Bus Lines, Inc.
12 Alaska 129 (D. Alaska, 1948)
Eureka Building & Loan Ass'n v. Greenwood Hotel Corp.
103 P.2d 46 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1940)
Gas Service Co. v. Consolidated Gas Utilities Corp.
65 P.2d 584 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1937)
Depew v. Wichita Retail Credit Ass'n
42 P.2d 214 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)
Wichita Transportation Co. v. Peoples Taxicab Co.
34 P.2d 550 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1934)
State ex rel. Morgan v. City of Newton
23 P.2d 463 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1933)
Kansas Gas v. Public Service Commission
261 P. 592 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1927)
Kansas Gas & Electric Co. v. Public Service Commission
251 P. 1097 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1927)
Shields v. City of Loveland
218 P. 913 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1923)
Schur v. Rural High-school District No. 1
210 P. 1105 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1922)
Porto Rico Railway, Light, & Power Co. v. Amador
11 P.R. Fed. 170 (D. Puerto Rico, 1919)
School District No. 36 v. Board of Education
171 P. 1154 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1918)
Lindsley v. Dallas Consol. St. Ry. Co.
200 S.W. 207 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)
Memphis Street Ry. Co. v. Rapid Transit Co.
138 Tenn. 594 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1917)
Desser v. City of Wichita
153 P. 1194 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P. 324, 94 Kan. 159, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-telephone-co-v-cherokee-county-mutual-telephone-assn-kan-1915.