Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Railroad Commission of Louisiana

156 F. 823, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5372
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana
DecidedAugust 24, 1907
DocketNo. 61
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 156 F. 823 (Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Railroad Commission of Louisiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Railroad Commission of Louisiana, 156 F. 823, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5372 (circtedla 1907).

Opinion

SAUNDERS, District Judge.

1. The complainant is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Kentucky, and is domiciled in¡ and a resident of that state, and owns and operates an extensive system of telephone lines and exchanges in Louisiana and other states. The defendant, the Railroad Commission of Louisiana, is a public corporation organized under the laws of the state of Louisiana, and is empowered by the Constitution and laws of Louisiana “to adopt change or make reasonable and just rates, charges and regulations” for telephone companies operating in that state on their business between points therein. In the exercise of the power so conferred upon it, the Commission on December 13, 1905, adopted an order (No. 488) fixing a tariff of rates and charges on complainant’s intra Louisiana toll line messages. This tariff' was adopted by the Commission precisely as framed and proposed by complainant itself. On August 6, 1906, the Commission adopted another order (No. 552), whereby considerable reductions were made in the tariff contained in order 488. There is a preamble to order 552, which gives the reasons for the reduction in the rates as follows:

“Upon numerous complaints being made to the Commission against the charges made by the Cumberland Telephoné & Telegraph Company in regard to the rates for long distance conversations between points in the state of Louisiana, the Commission instituted this proceeding, and accordingly a hearing was had at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on August 6, 1906.
“The Commission has fully investigated the charges made by said company; believes they are unnecessarily high and excessive, and at the hearing the company failed to show any good reason why the reductions proposed by the Commission shall not be made.
“The Commission finds it necessary however to rearrange the rates proposed by it in the order and in accordance with its conclusions; and it is hereby ordered,” etc. [Then follows a detailed tariff of the rates as reduced.]

On August 16, 1906, complainant filed with the Commission a petition asking for a rehearing on its decision repealing the tariff contained in Order 488 and substituting the lower tariff contained in Order 552.' This petition gives the following as the grounds upon which it claimed a rehearing, viz.:

“The Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company hereby respectfully prays for a rehearing of the above case, and that the judgment therein rendered and filed on the 6th day of August, 1906, be set aside on the following grounds to wit:
“First. The judgment of the Commission states that numerous complaints have been made to the Commission against the charges made by this company for long distance conversations between points in the state of Louisiana, but at no time, either prior to or at the trial of this case, was any specific information given to this company of the character of the complaints, or of the [825]*825particular rates complained of, and the company was unable to meet any general or indefinite complaint, and was not placed in the position to meet specific complaints with specific evidence that this company was not furnished with the name of a single complainant.
“Second. That the Commission has not made any investigation which would allow it to reach a conclusion that the rates charged by the company were unnecessarily high or excessive; that this company was entitled under law to be confronted with some charges supported by evidence sufficient to establish a prima facie case before it could be called upon to answer; and that no evidence of any kind whatsoever was offered at the trial or produced to show that the long distance rates of this company were unreasonable or excessive, nor were any of the complaints made to the Commission brought to the knowledge or submitted for the inspection of or made known to this company.
“Third. That the long distance rates in force prior to this recent order, having been approved and put in force by the Commission, were in law presumed to be reasonable and proper until this presumption was met and overcome by proof, and this company could not legally and properly be called upon to offer any evidence until this presumption had been met and a prima facie case made out.
“Fourth. That the Commission proceeded upon the theory, as shown by its order, that the burden was upon the company to show good reason why the reduction proposed by the Commission should not be made; whereas, under the law, the rates then in force and established by the Commission were presumed to be reasonable and fair, and could not be reduced unless good reason were shown why the reductions proposed by the Commission should be made.
“Fifth. Because it was shown at the trial on behalf of this company that the long distance rates prevailing in Louisiana were as low as existed in other parts of the country, and that Louisiana was enjoying the lowest schedule of long distance rates promulgated by any telephone company in the United States, and this, notwithstanding the fact that in many portions of the United States much more thickly populated than Louisiana the revenues of long distance lines greatly exceeded those in Louisiana by reason of greater population, and the expense of. lines and equipment in Louisiana, by reason of its damp climate and soil, were and are greater than in other localities, and notwithstanding that it was additionally shown and known to the Commission that the proportion of swamps and navigable waters requiring to be crossed by cables was excessive in Louisiana.
“Sixth. Because the business of this company in this state has not heretofore, and does not now, justify the payment to tee stockholders of the company of more than 7 per cent, dividend which is less than what would be a reasonable return on capital invested, considering the nature and character of the business, and no showing whatsoever was made, and, in fact, there was no intimation of any kind, that the company was deriving excessive profits from its business.
“Seventh. That no evidence was offered, and no tender of any evidence made to show that the company’s receipts and expenditures from toll lines in the state or any examination whatsoever made into the revenues and expenses of toll lines.
“Eighth. Because the toll rates in force and approved by the Commission are in themselves reasonable and fair, and should not be disturbed.
“Ninth. Because it is not possible for the Commission to reach a satisfactory conclusion and be able to determine that the company's long distance toll rates are high or excessive unless it will make a thorough investigation into the revenues derived by the company from its business, the expenditures of the company, the depreciation, cost of maintenance, amount of investment, and other elements entering into the problem, which can only be arrived at by careful, painstaking, and expert investigation and examination, and no such investigation or examination has been made and no effort made to make such investigation.
“Tenth. Because the rates proposed to be established by the Commission in its order of August 6, 1906, if put in force, would be ruinous and cause irreparable injury to this company, because as this company operates, not only [826]*826In the state of Louisiana, but also in the states of Tennessee, Kentucky,.

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Related

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Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Railroad Commission of Louisiana
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Bluebook (online)
156 F. 823, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cumberland-telephone-telegraph-co-v-railroad-commission-of-louisiana-circtedla-1907.