Block v. Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Company

103 N.W.2d 312, 170 Neb. 531, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 96
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1960
Docket34722
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 N.W.2d 312 (Block v. Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Block v. Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Company, 103 N.W.2d 312, 170 Neb. 531, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 96 (Neb. 1960).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

This is an action or proceeding which was commenced by Elmer Block, Merle Wilhelm, and Roca Elevator Company, complainants, by the filing of a complaint with the State Railway Commission against Lincoln Telephone and Telegraph Company, a corporation, Capitol Telephone Company, a corporation, and Martell Telephone Company, a corporation, defendants. Hereinafter Elmer Block will be referred to as Block, Merle Wilhelm as Wilhelm, Roca Elevator Company as Roca, Lincoln Telephone and Telegraph Company as L. T. & T., Capitol Telephone Company as Capitol, and Martell Telephone Company as Martell.

To the extent necessary to point out here, it is set forth in the complaint that Block and Wilhelm are farmers living in Lancaster County, Nebraska; that Block had been a subscriber for telephone service from L. T. & T. at his farm location since 1944; that Wilhelm had been a subscriber at his fariri location since 1917; that Block was the president and managing officer of Roca; that Roca had been a subscriber for telephone service from Martell since 1923; that on or about August 14, *533 1958, L. T. & T. advised Block and Wilhelm that it would not furnish them telephone service after December 1, 1958; that the stated reason for this was that their locations were in territory which had been granted to Capitol; and that on or about September 4, 1958, Martell advised Roca that it would not be able to serve it with telephone service after December 1, 1958, for the reason that Roca was within the territory of L. T. & T.

So that confusion may be avoided it is stated here that Capitol is the real party defendant in interest with L. T. & T. It is successor to the rights of Martell under approval of the commission.

The complainants allege that they are entitled to retain and be furnished the service which had been supplied prior to December 1, 1958, on the basis of convenience and necessity, and on account of failure of notice to them of change of territory of L. T. & T. and Capitol.

The prayer of the complaint was for a hearing, an investigation, and a mandate of the commission requiring the continuance of the preexisting telephone service.

By answer Capitol and Martell admitted the alleged notices of discontinuance of service had been given by Martell and L. T. & T. It is alleged that in 1944 the telephone service furnished to Block at his farm location was in territory served by Martell; that L. T. & T. and Capitol, in the spring of 1958, agreed that this was in Capitol territory; that the commission so established these territories by its order on June 18, 1958; that the status of the service to Wilhelm was the same as that of Block; and that this order excluded Roca from the Capitol territory. In this connection it is alleged that this order of the commission involved no change in the territory which had theretofore been occupied by L. T. & T. and Capitol.

L. T. & T. filed an answer by which it admitted the notice of Martell to Roca, and also the notice to Block and Wilhelm that it would not be able to serve them after December 1, 1958. By the answers the status of *534 the defendants as common carriers declared in the complaint is admitted. By prayers of the answers the. commission was asked to dismiss the complaint.

A hearing was had on the complaint, after which the commission made findings and entered an order by which, among other things, it dismissed the complaint. The other matters are not within the purview of the issues presented by the pleadings or the record of the hearing. The order contains an exaction that L. T. & T. forthwith discontinue furnishing telephone service to Block and Wilhelm at their residences, and that Capitol forthwith discontinue telephone service to Roca. No request for such action was presented to the commission by this or any other formal proceeding.

The questions presented by the briefs are numerous, but the primary question which was presented to the commission and to this court on appeal is that of whether or not under the Constitution and statutes of Nebraska, L. T. & T. had the right, under the circumstances, to withdraw and refuse telephone service to Block and Wilhelm, and whether or not Capitol had the right to withdraw and refuse telephone service to Roca. .

The State Railway Commission was created and its powers declared by Article IV, section 20, of the Constitution of Nebraska. The powers therein declared are the following: “The powers and duties of such commission shall include the regulation of rates, service and general control of common carriers as the Legislature may provide by law. But, in the absence of specific legislation, the commission shall exercise the powers and perform the duties enumerated in this provision.”

Within the meaning of the Constitution telephone companies are common carriers. Farmers & Merchants Telephone Co. v. Orleans Community Club, 116 Neb. 633, 218 N. W. 583. In this case appears the following: “Telephone "companies operating in this state are subject ta all reasonable orders of the state railway commission, entered upon hearings duly and legally had, as to rates *535 to be charged, and time and manner of service to be rendered; and such orders will not be disturbed unless cleárly wrong.”

■ A matter of . significance is that it is pointed out in that opinion, which was rendered in 1928, that the validity of the orders of the commission depend upon hearings duly and legally had.

The' question of whether or not these companies had the right of withdrawal must depend, at least to some degree, upon their status in 1958 and prior thereto, which necessarily includes the manner of acquisition of status, if that may be ascertained.

It may be stated with certainty that the record presented to this court fails to disclose authentically that prior to 1958 any action or attempt at action was taken by the commission to declare or define the territory of Martell or its successor, Capitol. There is testimony that in 1958 there was a grant of a certificate of convenience and necessity, which was a part of an order confirming a transfer of. Martell to Capitol. The record in this case, however, does not contain that order. The record fails to disclose that the commission, until the hearing herein, ever attempted officially to make any declaration as to the territory or boundary of L. T. & T. at any time prior to the action taken in the proceeding from which the appeal herein was taken.

Attention has not been called to any constitutional or statutory provision requiring such action by the commission. This is not to say, however, that the commission lacked or lacks the power to so act.

How the aréa of operation and service of Martell, to which Capitol has succeeded, and that of L. T. & T. were originally established, and when, is not disclosed. Thé dividing line between the two, according to the evidence of witnesses, was established by agreement between Martell and L. T. & T. The time when this was done does not clearly appear, but the reasonable inference is that this was at leást as early as 1944. It appears *536 that in that year Martell and L. T. & T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 N.W.2d 312, 170 Neb. 531, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/block-v-lincoln-telephone-telegraph-company-neb-1960.