Colorado Telephone Co. v. Wilmore

129 P. 204, 53 Colo. 585, 1911 Colo. LEXIS 399
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 3, 1911
DocketNo. 5954
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 P. 204 (Colorado Telephone Co. v. Wilmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Telephone Co. v. Wilmore, 129 P. 204, 53 Colo. 585, 1911 Colo. LEXIS 399 (Colo. 1911).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court:

Defendant below, plaintiff in error, The Colorado Telephone Company, is a corporation engaged in the business indicated by (its name, with its principal office in the city and county of Denver. Plaintiffs, defendants in error, reside in Jefferson count}', with places of business and residences just over the line dividing' that county from the city and county of Denver, but immediately tributary to the latter territory. On August 29th, 1901, a contract was made between the defendant and Wilmore, • one of the plaintiffs, under the terms of which the defendant has ever since been, and still is, furnishing him telephone service from its Denver system to his place of business. Similar contracts were also made between the other plaintiffs and the defendant, at different times thereafter, prior to the institution of this suit, under which they also' have had like telephone service, both for business and social purposes. Each of the contracts contains an express provision making it subject to termination, at the option of either party, upon thirty days’ notice in writing. When these several contracts were entered into there were only a few people located in the neighborhood of plaintiffs. Since that time, however, the community in the vicinity of their residences and places of business has grown in population, so that the number of residents therein, who demand, require, and are entitled to telephone service, has increased correspondingly, and it became necessary for the company to establish an exchange at the town of Arvada, situate some three or four miles north and west of the several respective locations of plaintiffs, from which to serve the people of that town and vicinity. The main purpose of the exchange at Arvada was to give service to and between those living in and near that village. The town, however, is connected by trunk lines with the Denver system, just as, for example, are the towns of Golden, Boulder and other state towns. Subscribers to> and those receiving service from, the Arvada exchange, in order [587]*587to communicate with the users of telephones connected with the Denver system, must do so over toll lines, and are subjected to a toll charge therefor, like, for example, subscribers in the Golden or Boulder exchanges. The testimony establishes, and the court in substance found, that, geographically, the plaintiffs are in a territory immediately tributary to Denver, and are, and can be, more readily and naturally connected with the Denver telephone system than with the Arvada exchange.

After-the new exchange had been established notice was given to each of the plaintiffs, agreeable to the provision contained in the several contracts between them and the defendant, that the particular contracts would be terminated at the expiration of thirty days, when, if the plaintiffs, or any of them, so desired, other contracts would be made by which telephone service would be furnished to them through the Arvada exchange, at the same rate, with like facilities, and of the same character and quality as that furnished to other users in that neighborhood connected with that exchange.

Upon receipt of this notice plaintiffs brought a common suit to enjoin the defendant from exercising its option under these respective contracts to terminate them, or any of them, and to compel it to furnish each of the plaintiffs with telephone service at the same rate, in the same manner, and through the same exchange, as had previously been done, and for' general relief. The real object of the action, as is clearly apparent from the averments of the complaint considered as a whole, is to prevent threatened discrimination between users of telephonic service similarly situated. While plaintiffs were not entitled to the specific relief prayed and given, still there is sufficient alleged in the complaint, accepted as true, to afford, under the general prayer, relief from proposed discrimination by defendant between plaintiffs and others of its patrons, all entitled to like service on the same terms.

[588]*588All purely technical objections urged will be disregarded, and matters affecting the merits of the controversy only will be considered and determined, that there may be an end to litigation.

The record shows that plaintiffs have for years been receiving telephone service from the defendant company, out of its maip exchange in the city of Denver, under special contracts, which could by their terms be terminated by either party on thirty days’ notice. The plaintiffs were, for all these years, recognized and furnished service, as being in the Denver telephone zone, and according to the proof are geographically well within the limits of the local business of the defendant, as carried on in and about the city of Denver. They are, therefore, because of their established and settled status in that zone, and geographically, entitled to continue to have, as in the past, telephone service upon the same terms and conditions, in all particulars, which others, like or similarly situated in that particular territory, have and receive it; no more, no less, so long as that service is fair, just and reasonable.

It may be admitted that the specific contracts, under which service has been furnished by the company and received by the plaintiffs, can be lawfully terminated, upon compliance with their conditions as to notice; but the question here is not one of termination of contract, but termination, or change of character and quality of service. The service to plaintiffs may not be terminated at will by the defendant, or the character or quality of it. changed, so as to make such service essentially different from, inferior to, and more expensive than, that which is now being furnished to other users, like or similarly situated in the Denver zone, so long as they are ready to receive and pay for it, after the same man-' ner and upon the same terms and conditions that others in that territory do. In other words, plaintiffs are entitled to have direct connections with the Denver system, through sone exchange in that recognized telephone zone, so that they may reach all users of the service out of the main and all other ex[589]*589changes in the Denver system, just as other subscribers therein do.

It is clear that the claim of the plaintiffs to the right of direct connection with the main or central switch-board is untenable, and can neither be upheld nor enforced. But the attempt in this case is to1 put plaintiffs into the Arvada exchange, where a toll charge is made, both to them, when they call a person in Denver, and also to any one in Denver calling them. This is clearly an inferior service to that which has been, and yet is being, furnished plaintiffs, and admittedly would be greatly more expensive; and it is also inferior to, and more expensive than, that which is still furnished, to other users of like service in the Denver zone, to which latter territory plaintiffs belong, because of'the past recognition of and established service to them by defendant, from its main exchange of the Denver system, and also because of their geographical position. In other words, they .have for years been recognized, accepted and given service by the defendant, as belonging to1 that territory, and a status for them has been created in that respect; so that the company will not now be heard to say otherwise, or to discontinue service to1 them from some exchange of the Denver system, unless replaced by some other service equally advantageous.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 P. 204, 53 Colo. 585, 1911 Colo. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-telephone-co-v-wilmore-colo-1911.