General Telephone Co. of Southwest v. Cities Littlefield

498 S.W.2d 375, 1973 WL 302569
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 1973
Docket8373
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 498 S.W.2d 375 (General Telephone Co. of Southwest v. Cities Littlefield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Telephone Co. of Southwest v. Cities Littlefield, 498 S.W.2d 375, 1973 WL 302569 (Tex. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

JOY, Justice.

This is a telephone rate case. General Telephone Company of the Southwest, appellant, brought this appeal from a judgment granting a temporary injunction favorable to the cities of Littlefield, Amherst, and Anton, appellees. This injunction prohibits appellant from increasing rates for telephone service furnished to subscribers living within the corporate boundaries of the cities. Affirmed.

The record discloses that Littlefield is a duly incorporated home rule city in Lamb County, Texas, and Anton and Amherst are general law cities, situated in Hockley and Lamb Counties, respectively. Appellant furnishes these cities with what is commonly referred to as “extended area service.” Basically, the service provides individual subscribers with purely local telephone service, as well as the privilege of making an unlimited number of toll-free calls between the cities, for a single monthly rate; however, subscribers in Anton and Amherst cannot place toll-free calls between those two cities. In addition, subscribers in the city of Littlefield are able to make toll-free calls to subscribers in the cities of Spade and Whitharral. By letter dated December 26, 1972, Mr. E. R. Richardson, appellant’s district manager, notified appellees that rates for the extended area service would be increased effective January IS, 1973. The cities brought this suit for a temporary injunction to enjoin appellant from placing the proposed rate increase in effect. Appellant answered, contending the cities had no rate making *377 jurisdiction over the type service in question. Appellant, in the alternative, contended that if the cities were found to have such jurisdiction, the rates then in existence which had been approved by ap-pellees’ city commissioners were so low as to deprive appellant of its right to earn a fair return on its investment. Appellant prayed for an injunction prohibiting appel-lees from interfering in any way with appellant’s collecting a fair rate of return.

The cause was tried without a jury. The trial court, after hearing the evidence, found appellees to have jurisdiction over the type rate involved and granted the cities a temporary injunction restraining appellant from charging the proposed increased rates to resident subscribers. In support of this order, the trial court found that the cities having such jurisdiction had previously rejected the proposed rate increase. The court found no evidence, or in the alternative, insufficient evidence, that the rates in existence subjected appellant to confiscation of its property. The court found sufficient evidence that the rates in existence yielded appellant a fair rate of return.

Appellant brings this appeal on two points of error. By its first point, appellant contends the trial court erred in granting the cities’ request for a temporary injunction and denying appellant’s request for a temporary injunction because the rates for extended area service were not within the jurisdiction of the cities, and consequently, the appellant was not required to obtain the cities’ approval before placing the same in effect.

Appellant bases its argument upon two cases: City of Carrollton v. Southwestern States Tel. Co., 381 S.W.2d 401 (Tex.Civ. App. — Eastland 1964, writ ref’d n. r. e.) and City of Weslaco v. General Telephone Co. of S.W., 359 S.W.2d 260 (Tex.Civ. App. — San Antonio 1961, writ ref’d n. r. e.). In both the Carrollton and Weslaco cases the court held the cities had no regulatory jurisdiction over intrastate telephone rates. Appellant argues the extended area service furnished subscribers in this case is intrastate in nature; consequently, appel-lees have no jurisdiction to regulate the rates for such service. A careful examination of the record reveals a substantial distinction between the situation reported in this case and those reported in the Weslaco and Carrollton cases, and necessitates a different result from those reached therein.

In Weslaco the trial court permanently enjoined the city from enforcing the terms of a long distance rate regulatory ordinance. The telephone company contended that (1) the local rates were confiscatory; and (2) that the city had no authority to regulate charges for intrastate long distance calls. The court held that while local service was dependent upon a franchise, hence subject to municipal regulation, intrastate service was not, and the city had no jurisdiction to regulate intrastate long distance telephone rates. In Weslaco there was a separation between the purely local rate regulation and the long distance intrastate regulation, whereas, in the present case, the extended area service was a combined type service with no distinction being made between purely local and extended area service. A thorough perusal of the record in this case reveals no attempt to segregate the two types of service or their rates bases, so the system must be treated as a single unit for regulatory purposes.

In the Carrollton case the city brought suit for a temporary injunction which would have prohibited the telephone company from putting into effect new and increased rates for extended area telephone service between the city of Carrollton and the city of Dallas, Texas. The court in that case, citing Weslaco, reiterated the principle that a city has no authority to regulate intrastate telephone rates and refused to grant the city’s request for an injunction. (It should be noted, however, that the judgment in no way affected the authority of the city to regulate purely local service.) The extended area service involved in the Carrollton case was optional in the sense that a subscriber might sub *378 scribe to purely local service without subscribing to the extended area service. Appellant argues that in the Carrollton case, the intrastate Dallas service, once it was purchased, included purely local service and this did not alter the court’s decision in denying the city regulatory authority over the combined or extended area service.

Appellant contends that the fact that the extended area service in this case was not optional, but that the system included purely local service, should have no bearing on a decision of this court in denying the cities’ rate making jurisdiction. Appellant argues, in effect, that by accepting the integrated extended area service, the cities, as they have no rate making authority over such service, relinquished their authority to establish rates for the purely local service. An examination of the record in this case reveals that prior to the institution of extended area service, the cities adopted amendments to the telephone franchise ordinances, which provided for the institution of such service, wherein Clause 18 provided that it was “mutually understood and agreed” that the rates to he charged for the extended area service in lieu of strictly local service would he fixed and regulated by the governing bodies of such cities, 1

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Bluebook (online)
498 S.W.2d 375, 1973 WL 302569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-telephone-co-of-southwest-v-cities-littlefield-texapp-1973.