Bell Telephone Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission

197 A. 783, 130 Pa. Super. 514, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 153
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 19, 1937
DocketAppeal, 53
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 197 A. 783 (Bell Telephone Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell Telephone Co. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 197 A. 783, 130 Pa. Super. 514, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 153 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania has appealed from an order of the Public Service Commission (now Public Utility Commission) reading: “Now, to wit, December 8, 1936, it is ordered: That the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, respondent, pay to Dr. Caroline M. White, within fifteen (15) days from date of service hereof, the sum of $91.50, with simple interest at the rate of 6% per annum upon the individual amounts comprising the said sum of $91.50 from *516 the several dates of payment thereof to the date of repayment.”

Appellant contends this order is not in conformity with law for various reasons which will be stated and considered as we proceed. The commission did not award the reparation specified in the order because any of appellant’s published rates were unjust or unreasonable, in and of themselves, but upon the ground that appellant, in violation of Article III, Section 8, of The Public Service Company Law of July 26, 1913, P. L. 1374, 66 PS §262, had charged Dr. White for the telephone service rendered her a greater sum than it charged certain other persons “for a like and contemporaneous service under substantially similar circumstances and conditions.”

The proceedings which culminated in the order appealed from began before the commission in July 1935. At that time, and at least since September 1932, appellant’s tariffs for the City of Harrisburg contained a business rate of $6.00 per month and a residence rate of $3.00 per month for a two-party line service. The following applicable regulation was a part of the tariff:

“The primary and/or dominant use of the service by the subscriber is the criterion by which to determine whether residence or business rates apply.......

“(b) Residence rates apply in the office of a physician, surgeon, nurse, dentist, veterinary surgeon, osteopath, chiropractor, or Christian Science practitioner, located in the subscriber’s residence, where such office is not part of an office building, and all telephones are in locations which are part of the subscriber’s domestic establishment and the number of each telephone is listed in connection with an individual name. In such cases, the subscriber’s profession may be indicated after his name in the telephone directory.”

Caroline M. WThite, residing, and having her office, at 902 North Second Street, Harrisburg, held a* license *517 from the State Board of Medical Education and Licensure as a physiotherapist and engaged in the practice of electro-therapy, a branch of physiotherapy.

Since December of 1928 or January of 1929 she had subscribed to appellant’s telephone service at that number and street, paying the business rate of $6.00 per month. Although physiotherapists were not included in the classes of “practitioners” designated in the above quoted regulation as being entitled, under the specified conditions, to “residence” rates, Dr. White concluded appellant was unjustly discriminating against her in charging its regular business rate for the service rendered her.

On July 26, 1935, Dr. White filed her complaint with the commission at Complaint Docket No. 10856, charging, in substance, that although “all other physicians, osteopaths, chiropractors and Christian Science practitioners,” having their offices in their residences, were being rendered service at the “residence” rate of $3.00 per month, appellant was charging her the “business” rate of $6.00 per month for a like service, rendered under similar circumstances and conditions. Appellant filed an answer averring, inter alia, that a “physiotherapist is not in the same class of the healing arts as are physicians, osteopaths and chiropractors, and that a valid and reasonable distinction exists between physiotherapists and the others to which the residence rate is allowed.”

After a hearing, the commission filed its report and order on February 10, 1936. Material findings read: “The commission sees no valid distinction between telephone service to a physiotherapist, maintaining an office in a residence, and such service to a physician, surgeon, nurse, dentist, veterinary surgeon, osteopath, chiropractor, or Christian Science practitioner, all of whom receive residence rating where their offices are located in their residences.......To refuse service to com *518 plainant at a residential rate, and to grant service to those named in the exception at residential rates, where no valid reason appears for failing to include complainant within the exceptions, is unjustly discriminatory and unreasonably preferential.” (Italics supplied)

The action of the commission upon this complaint was thus expressed: “It is ordered: That the complaint be and is hereby sustained.” The telephone company applied for and was refused a rehearing; no appeal was taken from the order.

We do not agree with the contention advanced by counsel for the commission to the effect that the proceedings we have just reviewed were had under the reparation section of the statute, Section 5 of Article V, 66 PS §511, and therefore furnished a basis for the reparation order from which the present appeal was taken. It is clear that the complaint was filed and the proceedings had under Section 3 of Article V, 66 PS §492, which provides for the exercise by the commission of its quasi-legislative powers when it has determined upon its own motion, or upon a complaint, inter alia, that the rates charged by any public service company for any service rendered, are unjustly discriminatory against any particular person, by prescribing the “proper regulations and practices, as affecting such rates, to be observed by the public service company.” That is exactly what was done in this case and appellant, pursuant to the order of February 10, 1936, amended its regulations to include “drugless therapists, physiotherapists, chiropodists, midwives and optometrists” in the classes of patrons entitled to residential rates for telephones in their residences.

The present contention of the commission is ruled against it by the case of Centre Co. Lime Co. et al. v. P. S. C., 96 Pa. Superior Ct. 590, in which we held that in a complaint against rates or regulations under Section. 3 the only question the commission is authorised to *519 determine is whether the rates or regulations, in force at the time of its investigation, are unjust, unreasonable, discriminatory, etc., and will be for the future. That the commission so understood the extent of its jurisdiction under the complaint of July 26, 1935, is apparent from the fact that its finding was that the refusal of appellant to render service to Dr. White at residential rates “is unjustly discriminatory and unreasonably preferential.” We distinctly said in the case cited that the findings on the issues actually involved in a proceeding under Section 3 “furnish no basis for awarding or refusing reparation.” Manifestly, neither the complainant nor the commission had the matter of possible reparation in mind at the time that complaint was filed and disposed of by the commission. The complaint did not contain a prayer for reparation, nor did the report or order of the commission include any reference to that matter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 A. 783, 130 Pa. Super. 514, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-telephone-co-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-pasuperct-1937.