Huckins Hotel Co. v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.

1925 OK 958, 245 P. 838, 117 Okla. 229, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 637
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 24, 1925
Docket15712
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 958 (Huckins Hotel Co. v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huckins Hotel Co. v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., 1925 OK 958, 245 P. 838, 117 Okla. 229, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 637 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

ESTES, C.

Eor convenience, the telephone company, plaintiff below, will *230 be referred to as plaintiff, and the hotel company, as defendant. In 1912, defendant, as first and second parties, entered into a written contract with Pioneer Telephone Company, as third party, of which company, plaintiff is the successor, providing that plaintiff should maintain not to exceed 450 telephones in the guests’ rooms of the Huckins Hotel belonging- to defendant, in which defendant had already installed its system of wires and the like for such purpose; and to maintain a private branch telephone exchange in said hotel, it being contemplated that the service should be for both local and long distance purposes; that plaintiff should furnish the necessary help for the operation of such exchange, but that defendant should pay all wages therefor; that the contract should continue for three years, and thereafter until terminated by 30 days written notice from either party to the other. Among other things, the contract also provided -.

“The said party of the third part is to receive as compensation for the installation of said private branch exchange and for maintaining the same as provided in this contract, a rate of 25 cents per month per telephone, payable monthly in advance, on the first day of each month, and a fee of five cents for each and every call from the hotel to any telephone in the city exchange of said party of the third part, and the regular out of town or toll charges in any and all calls from within the hotel to any out of town point. The party of the second part agreeing to pay to the party of the third part, the Pioneer Telephone & Telegraph Company, weekly all such charges, both for connections with the city exchange and out of town toll charges, as above specified, deducting no fee or commission for such collection.
“It is agreed that the party of the second part is to receive 50 per cent, of the revenue derived from the collection of local calls only from telephone stations in the hotel, it being understood, however, that this refers only to the revenue derived from the connection of the private branch exchange to the city exchange in Oklahoma City, and does not include any toll chaiges for connections outside of the city of Oklahoma City.”

Said parties operated under said contract, the defendant charging its guests five cents for each local call, and paying one-half thereof to the. plaintiff, from 1912 until January, 1920. Prom and after January, 1920, the defendant collected from its various patrons ten cents for each local call and remitted one-half thereof for about seven months to tne plaintiff, at which time the defendant demanded the return of $1,149.57, since said January, in excess of 2% cents per call. On failure of ilie plaintiff so to do, the defendant'retained said amount out of tolls on long distance calls. In this action, the plaintiff, in its first cause, asks judgment for $2,075.82 and interest, being the difference between 2% cents per call, conceded and paid by defendant from August 21, 1920, to June 20, 1921, and five cents per call, the amount claimed by plaintiff during said time. In its second cause of action, ‘the plaintiff asked judgment for said $1,149.-57 and interest. To the petition of plaintiff was exhibited the said written contract. The defendant answered, admitting the contract and its performance in manner substantially as outlined above, alleging that there never was a verbal agreement between the parties with reference to the raising of the said rate from five to ten cents; that when the contract was made in 1912, labor was cheap, and that the retention by defendant, as provided in said contract, of 2% cents per local call was sufficient for the purpose only of paying the actual expense of such calls to said hotel until 192(1; that then, because of the increased expense of clerical help and the like, in charging and keeping the book accounts of such calls, with the guests of the hotel, it was necessary to increase the charge for local calls from the hotel, and that it did so without any knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, and that such charge was made for the service rendered to its guests, and, in effect, that same, was of no concern to the plaintiff; that the auditor of defendant inadvertently and by error paid tbe plaintiff one-half of ten cents per call for said seven months, instead of 2% cents; that the defendant refused to pay said sum to the plaintiff and had retained said sums on notice to the plaintiff for such purpose; that such sums never were due the plaintiff under the terms of the said contract; that under the regulations of the Corporation Commission, plaintiff could not lawfully charge more than said five cents and, having agreed to pay defendant one-half thereof, was limited to 21/£ cents, as the net amount to plaintiff. The motion of the plaintiff for judgment on the. pleadings was. by the trial court, sustained, from which the defendant appeals. The sole question presented involves the construction of said contract.

The first quoted paragraph- of the contract divides the compensation to be received by the plaintiff for furnishing said service — like all. Caul — into three parts. The first is a fixed compensation of 25 cents per month, payable monthly in advance for each telephone installed in the hoi el: second, five cents for each local call; and third, *231 all tolls for long distance calls. Tlie second and third were to be paid weekly, “deducting no fee for such collection.” This paragraph constituted the running gears of the contract — the quid pro quo — the service to he rendered by the one and the payments to be made by the other. Tt expressed the purpose which the parties sought to accomplish. There is nothing uncertain about it. Tt is alleged by plaintiff, in substance, and so contended in the brief, that the defendant was bound to pay the five cents as firmly as it was bound to pay the other items; and that plaintiff was to furnish the service for the fixed price of five cents, called a fee, for local calls, and the other considerations named. We concur with both paties in such construction of the first paragraph.

In passing, we note that this contract was not prepared with the usual legal precision. The second paragraph evidently means that sometime, the exact time or times not being fixed by the contract, the plaintiff should pay the defendant for the services rendered in collecting and remitting for both local and long distance calls — a sort of recoupment under this contract. The circumstances, gathered from the pleadings, further show that the defendant had wired its building, was paying the operators and housing the fixtures for the private exchange, booths and the like; collecting, accounting for and remitting all receipts for both local and long distance calls, besides paying 25 cents per month for each guest phone in the rooms. The basis of such payment was “50 per cent, of the revenue derived from the collection of local calls.” It thus appears that the intention of the parties to this contract is plain and fairly dedneible. unless it be in one respect. The contention of plaintiff, as alleged in its petition, is that :

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Opinion No. (1999)
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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 958, 245 P. 838, 117 Okla. 229, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huckins-hotel-co-v-southwestern-bell-telephone-co-okla-1925.