Bell Telephone Co. v. Philadelphia Warwick Co.

50 A.2d 684, 355 Pa. 637
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 1947
DocketAppeal, 213
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 50 A.2d 684 (Bell Telephone Co. v. Philadelphia Warwick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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. Philadelphia Warwick Co., 50 A.2d 684, 355 Pa. 637 (Pa. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Horace Stern,

The denial by the court below of jurisdiction over the subject-matter of this action springs from a not un *638 common confusion between the question of jurisdiction and that of the plaintiff’s right to recover.

Plaintiff, The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, on June 19, 1942, entered into a written agreement with defendant, Philadelphia Warwick Company, which operates the Warwick Hotel in Philadelphia. The contract provided for the installation by plaintiff on defendant’s premises of a semi-public branch exchange system consisting of a switchboard and other equipment, for the use and maintenance of which defendant was to pay a monthly charge. Defendant, acting as plaintiff’s agent, was to collect for it the established public telephone rate of ten cents for each local message from the hotel premises and the established charges for toll messages, and was to receive from plaintiff a commission of 60% of the gross receipts from local messages and 20% from toll messages, not to exceed 25 cents on any one message. The contract was to continue in force from month to month until terminated by ten days’ notice in writing from either party to the other. It was not filed with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, but plaintiff had on file with the Commission the tariffs specifying local and toll message rates.

Defendant, in conformity with the practice of other hotels, made and collected surcharges from its guests for telephone service; such surcharges were not provided for in the tariffs filed by plaintiff, and' the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission notified plaintiff that surcharges billed by hotels on telephone calls placed by guests over semi-public branch exchanges constituted a violation of its tariffs, and directed it to institute the necessary measures to compel a discontinuance of such practice. Plaintiff informed defendant of this order of the Commission, but apparently to no avail in spite of the fact that the Federal Communications Commission also held that the practice of hotels in making and collecting surcharges not provided for in plaintiff’s filed tariffs was improper as to interstate calls over semi-public branch exchanges. On February 12, 1944, plain *639 tiff gave defendant notice that their contract would be terminated at midnight February 23, 1944, notice on March 1, 1944, that plaintiff’s filed tariffs provided for the collection of its established charges only and not for any surcharges by hotels, and notice on April 3, 1944, that plaintiff would, after April 15,1944, make commission payments only to hotels which in writing had advised plaintiff of their compliance with the tariff provisions by discontinuing their practice of making surcharges. Defendant did not respond to these notices and, since February 23, 1944, no contract for the payment of commissions has been in force between the parties.

The present action is to recover the sum of $5,670.28, being an amount retained by defendant as commissions out of collections which it had made for toll messages from the telephone stations on its premises from April 15,1944, to July 3,1945. It is plaintiff’s contention that during that period defendant was illegally collecting surcharges in addition to the rates in effect under the filed tariffs and that after the termination of the contract between the parties on February 24,1944, defendant had no right to any commissions whatever.

After plaintiff filed its statement of claim defendant presented a petition under the Act of March 5, 1925, P. L. 23, challenging the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the commissions properly payable to defendant and the contract between the parties in reference thereto entered into the question of rates, 1 that the subject involved in the suit was therefore within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, that plaintiff should have filed with the Commission its contract with defendant 2 and subse *640 quently its cancellation of that contract, 3 and that, until the Commission had determined the portion of the collections to which plaintiff was entitled as diminished by proper compensation for defendant’s services as plaintiff’s agent, no suit to recover such collections could be brought in the Court of Common Pleas. The court upheld this contention and made absolute defendant’s rule to show cause why the action should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. From this order plaintiff appeals.

The ruling of the court was erroneous. We are not concerned here with the merits of the controversy. Plaintiff argues that the right of defendant to commissions was at all times a matter solely of contract between the parties and did not involve any determination of rates by the Public Utility Commission, that it was suing only to recover the amount due it under the schedule of the filed rates which were legally binding unless and until set aside or modified by the Commission, 4 that the Commission had power to prescribe rates prospectively only, not retroactively, and could not require it to file tariffs covering past periods, 5 and that it was incumbent upon the defendant to turn the collections over to plaintiff and if subsequently the Commission took any action giving support to defendant’s claim the latter’s remedy would then be by way of reparation. 6 *641 Assuming, however, though without deciding, that .defendant is right in its contention that its contract with plaintiff should have been filed by the latter, that the rate of commissions to which it was entitled had never actually been established or approved by the Commission, that plaintiff’s cancellation of the contract had never been so approved, and that plaintiff could not recover in this action until such approval had been obtained, nevertheless the jurisdiction of the court over the present cause of action would not be affected by these considerations or any of them.

In Lackawanna, County v. James, 296 Pa. 225, 145 A. 817, which was a suit by the county on official bonds of its treasurer to recover sums for which he should have accounted, he challenged the jurisdiction and contended that he could not be held to liability unless and until the amounts due by him had been ascertained on settlement of his accounts by the county controller. But it was held, that the court had jurisdiction of the cause of action.

In Skelton v. Lower Merion Township, 298 Pa. 471, 148 A. 846, the treasurer of the township sued to recover from it moneys claimed to be due him as commissions on collections. The township insisted that no recovery could be had unless and until the claim had been submitted to and allowed by the township auditors, and accordingly it pleaded lack of jurisdiction. But the court said (p. 473, A. p. 846) : “Whether or not a plaintiff has averred sufficient facts in his statement of claim to entitle him to recover, is not a matter open for consideration under the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A.2d 684, 355 Pa. 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-telephone-co-v-philadelphia-warwick-co-pa-1947.