Gardner v. Providence Telephone Co.

49 A. 1004, 23 R.I. 262, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 25, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 A. 1004 (Gardner v. Providence Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Providence Telephone Co., 49 A. 1004, 23 R.I. 262, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 129 (R.I. 1901).

Opinions

Douglas, J.

There is little, if any, dispute as to the facts of this case which is set forth by the complainant as follows :

This is a bill in equity brought by Clarence T. Gardner, of the City of Providence, against the Providence Telephone Company, a corporation engaged in the business of renting telephone instruments and affording means of communication by electric telephones in Providence and elsewhere in the State of Rhode Island; to restrain said corporation from depriving him of telephone service at his residence and office.

The bill sets forth the business of the respondent corporation and that for the purposes of said business it is authorized by its charter to use and does use the public streets and highways; that it rents telephones to its customers which are connected with a central exchange and that by means thereof such customers or subscribers are enabled to communicate with the defendant’s other subscribers, and also with persons in other cities, and that the respondent is the only person or corporation which can legally carry on such business in said-city of Providence.

That the plaintiff is now and has been for many years a customer of the defendant, renting a telephone instrument both at his office and residence; that he has paid all rentals demanded by the defendant, and has used his telephone properly and in accordance with all reasonable rules and *264 regulations of the defendant, and is willing to pay such rentals and comply with such rules ; that he is a physician in active practice both in Providence and throughout the State ; that a large proportion of the calls for his services as a physician are received over the telephone, and that deprivation of telephone service would be detrimental to his practice.

That the defendant on the twenty-third day of February, 1897, notified the plaintiff that it would, at the expiration of one month from the date of said notice, cut off his telephone service, refuse to answer his calls and refuse to connect him with other subscribers.

The bill, as heretofore stated, prays that the defendant may be enjoined from taking such action.

The answer of the defendant admits that it is a corporation carrying on the business described in the bill; that it uses for the purposes of such business the public streets and highways, and that it is the only person or corporation which can legally carry on such business in the city of Providence. It admits that the plaintiff is one of its customers and has paid all charges made against him for telephone service.

The answer denies- that the plaintiff has used his telephone properly and has complied with all reasonable rules and regulations of the defendant, and alleges that he has violated a regulation of the defendant which provides that no telephone or telephonic instrument shall be used by any customer except such as may be furnished by the company; that the defendant itself furnishes extension sets, so-called, as a valuable part of its business; that such extension sets consist of a second telephone and transmitter, connected by wire with the original telephone and transmitter placed in the subscriber’s premises, the second set being in another part of such premises; and that the plaintiff in violation of such rule (claimed by the defendant to be reasonable) has installed both in his office and his residence an extension set not furnished by the defendant.

The answer admits that by reason of this alleged violation of a regulation of the defendant the defendant did threaten to deprive the plaintiff of telephone service,, and would have *265 done so had not this hill been filed, and claims that it has the legal and equitable right so to do.

The answer also contains an extended argument as to the reasonableness of this regulation forbidding the use of private extension sets, based upon the following claims, to wit:

(1) That it has expended large sums of money in license fees paid to a parent company for certain portions of its apparatus, in constructing poles and underground lines, in putting up wires and cables, and' for other purposes, and that the furnishing of extension sets is a valuable and legitimate part of its business, by means of which in part it receives a return for these expenditures. That it is willing to furnish such extension sets to all its customers, and that the use of private extension sets is a destruction of its legitimate income and vested rights.

(2) That by attaching the wires- connecting his private extension set (called by the defendant a clandestine instrument) to the wires placed by the company on the customer’s premises, the subscriber or customer trespasses upon the company’s property.

(3) That the wires of the extension sets are hidden from view of the company’s inspectors to avoid detection, and the company’s property is endangered by the possible presence of strong currents coming over such wires, and the company is made liable for the destruction thereby of other property and injury to persons.

(4) The answer does not allege, but much testimony has been introduced in the attempt to show, that the use by a subscriber of a private extension set is liable to interfere with the working of the compaziy’s systezn.

The testimony shows that the plaintiff is a physician, with a lai-ge pi-actice in Providence and vicinity. That in 1ST 9 oils 80 he had put in, both at his office and at his residence, a telephone instrument furnished by the defendant company and connected with its exchange. These were groundedcii-cuit instruments; that is, they were connected with the defendant’s exchange by a single wii-e, the current returning through the gz-ound. These telephones are on a private line; *266 that is, there are no other subscribers having instruments connected with the wire which connects the plaintiff’s office and residence with the defendant’s exchange. The instruments furnished by the defendant- are of the Blake transmitter type, so-called, consisting of a board about twenty inches in length, to which is attached the transmitter, a box with a pressed carbon attached to a spring, and a bell, and also beneath, a large box containing a battery, all these being attached to the wall of the subscriber’s premises (pp. 15 and 16). At the plaintiff’s office this instrument is attached to the wall about twenty feet from the plaintiff’s desk; at his residence it was placed on the wall of his bed-room. For the use of these instruments the plaintiff has paid and now pays to the defendant the sum of eighty-two dollars per annum. About the year 1896 the plaintiff purchased two extension instruments and paid, for them fifty dollars each. These he connected with the defendant’s wires inside the complainant’s premises at office and residence. The one at the office is placed upon the plaintiff’s desk; that at the house in his lower hall. These instruments are of what is called the long-distance type,' consisting of a shaft placed upon a standard with a switch on which hangs á watch-case receiver, a granular carbon transmitter, and a platinum diaphragm — not differing materially except in superior lightness and elegance of construction from the long-distance extension instruments chiefly used by the defendant (pp. 143, 144, 191, and 191).

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1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 158 (Illinois Circuit Court, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 1004, 23 R.I. 262, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-providence-telephone-co-ri-1901.