Home Telephone Co. v. Granby & Neosho Telephone Co.

126 S.W. 773, 147 Mo. App. 216, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 550
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 773 (Home Telephone Co. v. Granby & Neosho Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Telephone Co. v. Granby & Neosho Telephone Co., 126 S.W. 773, 147 Mo. App. 216, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 550 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit in equity. Plaintiff seeks to enjoin further breaches of a contract between it and the defendant. Upon a hearing, the court dismissed the bill and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal. There is no question presented as to the form of the remedy pursued and that matter will remain unnoticed. Both plaintiff and defendant are telephone companies incorporated and existing under the laws of this State. The plaintiff, Home Telephone Company, maintains offices and telephone exchanges at Joplin, Carthage, Car-terville and other points in southwest Missouri and southeast Kansas. The defendant, Granby & Nleosho [223]*223Telephone Company, owns and operates a telephone line from Granby to Neosho and maintains its offices and an exchange in each of those cities. Both companies, desiring to extend their business, entered into an arrangement in writing whereby they agreed to transmit messages over their lines destined to points in the territory-occupied by the other company. Among other things therein stipulated, this contract required the plaintiff company to construct a connecting line from the city of Carthage to the city of Granby, a distance of about twenty miles, and connect the same with the defendant’s exchange at the latter point. Partly in consideration of this contemplated connection by the extension of plaintiff’s lines from Carthage to Granby, it. was further provided in section four of the contract that each of the telephone companies agreed to transmit all messages destined to points in the territory of the other company, not reached by its own system of wires, to and over the lines of the other party. It was also stipulated that neither party would enter ihto any contract with any other person, firm or corporation whereby any of the rights, privileges or advantages therein assured should be impaired. By its terms the contract was to continue for a period of twenty-five years. It assured to each company an exclusive privilege of physical connection with the exchange of the other and assured as well an exclusive privilege to each company to transmit over its lines all messages originating or passing over the lines of the other destined to points not reached by the initial carrier and which were reached by the lines of the connecting company. The companies assumed mutual obligations with respect to. transmitting the messages of the other and each agreed to at all times keep the lines and connections in proper repair for the use of the other. A further provision is made in subsequent portions of the instrument with respect to the division of the compensation received for transmitting the messages over the respective lines'[224]*224therein contemplated. The two sections of the contract which are relevant to this controversy are as follows :

“Second: Each party hereto grants a license to the other party to connect with the telephone exchange or system of the other party, through its switchboard at Carthage and Joplin and Granby, so that an interchange of business may at all times be carried on between said parties. Said connections to be made as. soon as the lines are completed, it being understood and agreed that the line of both parties hereto shall be so operated that service may be given from all lines owned, controlled or connected with the line or lines of either of the parties hereto over the lines of the other and its connections. And each party hereto agrees not to enter into any contract with any other person, firm or corporation whereby any of the rights, privileges or advantages herein acquired by either party may be impaired.
“Fourth: Each party agrees to transmit all messages destined to points on the lines of the other party hereto not reached by its own system of wires, to and over the lines owned and controlled by the other party. In consideration of the benefits to be derived by each of the parties hereto from the toll service herein provided to be furnished by each, each party agrees to transmit all business to points reached by its own line or lines, and those to be constructed or acquired over the lines of the parties hereto.”

It appears the plaintiff constructed the telephone line from Carthage to Granby, as required, and that the two systems were connected thereby. A physical connection of the lines was established under the contract by means of a switchboard in the defendant’s exchange at Granby with the new line constructed thereto from Carthage by the plaintiff. For a considerable period the parties operated under this contract without any disagreement whatever, and it appears that at all times plaintiff faithfully transmitted all messages received [225]*225by its lines and destined to points on the lines of tbe defendant company, which were not reached by the lines of plaintiff, to and oyer the lines of defendant company. For a time, the defendant did likewise; that is to say, it transmitted all messages originating on its lines destined to points on the lines of the plaintiff company, which were not reached by the wires of defendant, to and over the lines of the plaintiff company to the point of destination. It appears, however, that after this arrangement had been in force and carried out for some time, the Missouri & Kansas Telephone Company, commonly known as the Bell System, interposed and refused to have certain business relations with the defendant, Granby & Neosho Telephone Company, unless that company would accord it equal privileges with the plaintiff, Home Telephone Company. In view of this, the defendant company acceded to the demands of the Missouri & Kansas Company to the extent of transmitting such messages as were received by it destined to points on the lines of both plaintiff company and the Missouri & Kansas Company, which were not reached by the wires of the defendant and at which points the Missouri & Kansas Company maintained individual telephones in offices or residences for patrons. The defendant company also permitted the Missouri & Kansas Telephone Company to enter its exchange at Granby and accorded it a physical connection with its lines by means of a switchboard, for the purpose of affording it equal facilities with the plaintiff, Home Tele: phone Company. Of course, this operated to violate the stipulations contained in the contract between the plaintiff and defendant to the effect that all messages received by defendant, destined to points on the lines of the plaintiff, not reached by the wires of defendant, should be transmitted by it over plaintiff’s lines, and it operated also to violate the provision of the contract with respect to assuring the plaintiff an exclusive [226]*226right to a physical connection Avith the defendant’s exchange at Granby. After having failed to induce the defendant to abide the stipulations vouchsafing the exclusive privileges mentioned, the plaintiff company instituted this proceeding to the end of enjoining further breaches of the contract. As before stated, the circuit court dismissed the bill on the grounds that in its opinion the contract was void as against public policy and therefore unenforcible.

Plaintiff prosecutes an appeal from that judgment and argues that the contract is a valid • arrangement between the parties for the reason that it amounts to no more than an arrangement between connecting carriers whereby each selects the agency to forward initial business originating on its lines and thus enlarges the scope of a beneficial use.

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251 S.W. 53 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)
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233 F. 827 (W.D. Missouri, 1916)
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196 F. 699 (E.D. Washington, 1912)
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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 773, 147 Mo. App. 216, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-telephone-co-v-granby-neosho-telephone-co-moctapp-1910.